Introduction High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, was once considered a condition that primarily affected middle-aged and elderly individuals. It was often associated with decades of poor dietary habits, aging arteries, and long-term health decline. But today, that narrative is changing rapidly. Increasingly, young adults in their 20s and 30s are being diagnosed with high blood pressure, sometimes during routine checkups, sometimes after experiencing troubling symptoms, and sometimes after a frightening health scare. This shift raises an important question: why is hypertension appearing earlier in life? The answer is complex. It involves modern lifestyle changes, chronic stress, poor dietary patterns, sleep disruption, metabolic dysfunction, sedentary behavior, and even digital overload. Understanding these factors is critical because early-onset hypertension can silently damage the body for years before symptoms appear. Understanding Blood Pressure and Why It Matters Blood...