Can high triglycerides cause high blood pressure?

Elevated triglycerides are generally not clearly related to hypertension, but people with elevated triglycerides may be combined with obesity, which may contribute to increased blood pressure, because obesity or poor lifestyle habits, long-term smoking, and alcohol consumption are all risk factors for hypertension. For people with hypertension combined with increased blood lipids, it is also important to pay attention to blood sugar and uric acid, as many people with metabolic syndrome have a combination of two or three or more increases. For people with hypertension combined with elevated blood lipids, it is important to actively lower blood pressure while lowering blood lipids, generally to control blood pressure below 140/90 mmHg, and to pay attention to a low-salt, low-fat diet, which helps to control blood pressure, while reducing fat can further reduce triglycerides.