Hey, the passing years exact a toll.
High blood pressure is the KEY indicator for stroke potential. There are other factors but they are less certain indicators.
To lower high blood pressure medication is important, but more important is weight loss, a low salt diet,
which you did not mention, and consistent exercise. As we age, walking, bicycle riding and swimming are manageable forms of good exercise for most. Got a bike? A scheduled 'Senior's' exercise class is very good but you are on the young side to exercise with the old folks.
I have found I will not exercise at home. I just won't do it. So I drive to a scheduled exercise class twice per week, practice Yoga twice per week in a Yoga studio, and bike six to eight miles either Saturday or Sunday. This works for me. (I am on my tractor ten to fifteen hours per week, but tractor time does NOT count as exercise.)
In my case, if my weight is at 205 or below, my blood pressure is 'normal' with the aid of Lisinopril and very low salt diet. I have to exercise almost every day for an hour to maintain 205. It I get to 215, my blood pressure zooms regardless of medication. My Cardiologist tells me MOST patients with high blood pressure have a similar "tipping point" with their weight.
PRIORITIZE TAKING CARE OF YOURSELF. Too many want to think a couple pills should do it. Medications are a help but only one of several factors. If you have a first stroke, the probability of further strokes is high. So, avoid the first stroke.
Both my Internist and Cardiologist recommend the low carbohydrate South Beach Diet for weight loss. South Beach also decreases likelihood of diabetes. If your blood sugar increases until you are diagnosed as diabetic, which for most males again gets back to body weight, and you have high blood pressure, your potential for a devastating stroke is WAY up there.
So, cookies, pie and cake are out; sugar is the enemy. Potato chips are out too. No salt nuts are OK.
What is your blood sugar and
what did your doctor say about salt?
I am age 69.
Blood Pressure : Salt's effects on your body
Consuming salt raises the amount of sodium in your bloodstream and wrecks the delicate balance, reducing the ability of your kidneys to remove the water. The result is a higher blood pressure due to the extra fluid and extra strain on the delicate blood vessels leading to the kidneys.