Uncontrolled high blood pressure is one of the strongest predictors of heart attack, stroke, and heart failure. At Heart Health of the South Shore, hypertension isn't treated as a side note during a general checkup. Dr. David Hersh is a board-certified cardiologist who evaluates blood pressure as part of your complete cardiovascular picture, using advanced diagnostics like echocardiograms and stress testing to understand exactly how elevated pressure is affecting your heart.
Nearly half of American adults live with hypertension, and most feel perfectly fine while the damage builds silently. Dr. Hersh and his team work with patients across Bellmore, Merrick, Wantagh, Seaford, and the surrounding South Shore to catch that damage early and build treatment plans that actually hold up over time.
Every time your heart beats, it pushes blood through your arteries. When that pressure stays too high for too long, it gradually weakens blood vessel walls, forces your heart to work harder than it should, and accelerates plaque buildup inside your arteries. Over months and years, this silent process raises your risk for coronary artery disease, heart failure, kidney damage, vision loss, and stroke.
What makes hypertension especially dangerous is the absence of warning signs. You can carry a blood pressure reading of 160/100 and feel completely normal. That is why cardiologists treat blood pressure not just as a number on a chart, but as a window into how much strain your cardiovascular system is under right now.
Treatment at Heart Health of the South Shore starts with a complete cardiovascular evaluation, not just a blood pressure cuff reading.
Step 1: Full Cardiac Assessment Dr. Hersh reviews your medical history, performs a physical examination, and orders baseline testing that may include blood work, an EKG, and an echocardiogram. This gives a clear picture of how hypertension is impacting your heart structure and function before any treatment decisions are made.
Step 2: Building Your Treatment Plan Based on your results, Dr. Hersh creates a plan that fits your specific situation. For patients in the early stages, targeted lifestyle changes like sodium reduction, consistent exercise, and stress management can produce significant improvements. For patients who need more aggressive intervention, he prescribes from a range of proven medications, including ACE inhibitors, ARBs, calcium channel blockers, diuretics, and beta-blockers, selecting and adjusting based on your response and any side effects.
Step 3: Long-Term Monitoring Hypertension management doesn't end with a prescription. Dr. Hersh schedules regular follow-ups to track your blood pressure trends, recheck lab work, evaluate heart function, and adjust your plan as your health evolves. The goal is sustained, stable blood pressure, not just a one-time reading in the office.
Patients across Long Island's South Shore choose this practice because Dr. Hersh treats hypertension the way a cardiologist should, with the full cardiovascular context that a standard office visit often misses. As a Fellow of the American College of Cardiology with hospital privileges at Lenox Hill, St. Francis, and South Nassau, he brings the diagnostic depth of a hospital-based cardiologist to a comfortable, accessible Bellmore office.
You won't feel rushed, and you won't leave with unanswered questions.
For most people, high blood pressure is a chronic condition that requires ongoing management rather than a one-time fix. Some patients with mild hypertension can bring their numbers into a normal range through sustained lifestyle changes alone. However, the majority need a combination of lifestyle habits and medication maintained over time. Dr. Hersh monitors your progress regularly and adjusts treatment to keep your blood pressure consistently controlled.
A cardiologist evaluates blood pressure within the context of your entire cardiovascular system, using tools like echocardiograms, stress tests, and advanced blood work that go beyond a standard office visit. This allows Dr. Hersh to detect early heart damage caused by hypertension, identify secondary causes, and select medications based on how your heart is actually functioning rather than relying on blood pressure readings alone.
Most blood pressure medications begin lowering your numbers within a few days to two weeks, though it can take one to three months of adjustments to reach your target range consistently. Lifestyle changes like reducing sodium and increasing exercise can produce measurable improvements within four to six weeks. Dr. Hersh tracks your progress at regular intervals so your plan stays on course.
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