That headline is written to scare people — but the real answer is more specific and depends on the type of pill.
If someone has high blood pressure (Hypertension), there are certain medicines that can raise it or make it harder to control. Here are the main ones to be careful with:
⚠️ Common pills that can raise blood pressure
💊 1. Painkillers (NSAIDs)
- Examples: Ibuprofen, Diclofenac, Naproxen
- Can:
- Increase blood pressure
- Reduce the effect of BP medicines
- Occasional use is usually okay, but frequent use is risky
🤧 2. Cold & Flu Medicines (Decongestants)
- Examples: Pseudoephedrine, Phenylephrine
- These tighten blood vessels, which raises blood pressure
- Many “cold relief” syrups/tablets contain them
💊 3. Some Hormonal Pills
- Birth control pills (with estrogen) can raise BP in some people
- Risk increases if:
- You already have hypertension
- You smoke or are overweight
💊 4. Steroids
- Example: Prednisone
- Can cause:
- Fluid retention
- Increased blood pressure (especially with long-term use)
☕ 5. Stimulant-type medications
- Some weight-loss pills or ADHD meds
- They can increase heart rate and blood pressure
⚠️ Important reality check
- Don’t suddenly stop any prescribed medicine without talking to a doctor
- Not everyone reacts the same way
- Sometimes the benefit of the medicine is more important than the risk
✅ What you should do instead
- Read labels (especially for cold medicines)
- Ask a doctor/pharmacist before taking new pills
- Monitor your blood pressure regularly
If you want, tell me which specific pills you saw in that post — I can break down whether they’re actually dangerous or just clickbait.