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  • 11 hours ago
A visual representation of the brain’s white matter breaking down—symbolizing disrupted neural communication caused by early hypertension. Dynamic glitch effects and fading neural pathways highlight how brain signals begin to fail before blood pressure rises.
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00:00What if your brain was already under attack, before your blood pressure ever spiked?
00:04A groundbreaking study just revealed that hypertension starts damaging your brain days
00:08before doctors can even detect high blood pressure.
00:12Researchers found that in just three days, tiny brain cells begin to age faster,
00:17blood vessels weaken, and memory-regulating neurons start to break down.
00:21And the worst part? This all happens silently. No warning signs, no symptoms.
00:26These early brain changes may explain why people with hypertension
00:30face a much higher risk of Alzheimer's and memory loss.
00:34Even white matter, the brain's communication cables, starts unraveling before pressure rises.
00:39But there's hope. An existing drug called Losartan was shown to reverse some of this early brain damage in mice.
00:45Now scientists are racing to find better treatments that protect both your heart and your mind.
00:50Because the brain deserves care, long before the numbers on the blood pressure cuff start to climb.
00:56But I keep moving to the brain.
00:58Let's go.
00:58Let's go.
00:59Let's go.
01:00Let's go.
01:01Let's go.
01:05Let's go.
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