The researchers found that high variability was associated with a significantly higher risk of death by 127 per cent, heart attacks by 43 per cent and stroke by 41 per cent, compared to those who had stable measurements.
"Healthcare providers should pay attention to the variability in measurements of a patient's blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose levels as well as body weight," said Seung-Hwan Lee, Professor at the College of Medicine, Catholic University of Korea in South Korea.
"Trying to stabilise these measurements may be an important step in helping them improve their health," Lee added.
For the study, published in the journal Circulation, the team examined data on 6,748,773 participants who had no previous history of heart attacks and were free of diabetes, high blood pressure, or high cholesterol.
They looked separately at the effect of variability in participants who were more than 5 per cent improved or worsened on each measurement -- stable and high.
Records of the exams documented body weight, fasting blood sugar -- glucose test, systolic blood pressure and total cholesterol.
Systolic blood pressure refers to the amount of pressure in your arteries during the contraction of your heart muscle.
The results showed that in both the improved and the worsened groups, high variability was associated with a significantly higher risk of death.
(This story has not been edited by Social News XYZ staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
This website uses cookies.