That headline is deliberately alarmist, but there is a real medical idea behind it: some common pills and supplements can raise blood pressure or make hypertension harder to control. The important point is not to suddenly stop any medication on your own, but to know what to be cautious about and discuss with a doctor.
Here are the main categories that can affect blood pressure:
⚠️ Medicines that can raise blood pressure
1) Painkillers (NSAIDs)
Examples: ibuprofen, diclofenac, naproxen
- Can cause the body to retain salt and water
- May reduce the effectiveness of blood pressure medicines
- Risk increases with frequent or long-term use
2) Cold and flu medicines (decongestants)
Examples: pseudoephedrine, phenylephrine
- Narrow blood vessels to reduce nasal congestion
- That same effect can raise blood pressure and heart rate
- Especially risky for people with uncontrolled hypertension
3) Steroids
Examples: prednisone, dexamethasone
- Can increase fluid retention and blood pressure
- Usually only a concern with higher doses or long use
4) Stimulants
Examples: ADHD medications (like amphetamine-based drugs), some energy pills
- Increase heart rate and blood pressure
- Should be monitored closely in people with hypertension
5) Certain antidepressants
Examples: some SNRIs (like venlafaxine in higher doses)
- Can raise blood pressure in some people
- Usually dose-related and monitored by doctors
6) Hormonal medications
Examples: some birth control pills (estrogen-containing)
- May slightly raise blood pressure in susceptible people
7) Herbal / “natural” supplements (often overlooked)
- Licorice root → can significantly raise blood pressure
- Ephedra (ma huang) → strong stimulant (banned in many places, but still found online)
- Some “fat burners” or energy supplements
❗ Important reality check
- Not everyone will react the same way.
- Some of these medications are essential and still safe under supervision.
- The risk is usually about dose, duration, and individual health conditions.
👍 What you should actually do
- Don’t stop any prescribed medicine suddenly
- Check labels on cold/flu and pain medications
- Tell your doctor or pharmacist you have high blood pressure
- Ask for “BP-safe” alternatives when needed
If you want, tell me what pills you’re currently using, and I can help you check whether any of them are known to affect blood pressure.