Systolic Blood Pressure: Males, Age 60-69

Systolic blood pressure is the 'upper number', the peak pressure in your arteries when the heart contracts. The American Heart Association defines normal systolic BP as below 120 mmHg. Data are from NHANES 2001-2008 (n=19,921), a nationally representative survey of US adults. Age-standardized mean systolic BP in the US is above the global median (NCD-RisC, Lancet 2021), so upper percentiles may not generalize to all populations.

Systolic Blood Pressure Cardiovascular Males 60-69

Percentile Distribution (mmHg)

Percentile distribution (mmHg) 5th 5th: 108 mmHg 108 25th 25th: 120 mmHg 120 50th 50th: 130 mmHg 130 75th 75th: 142 mmHg 142 95th 95th: 164 mmHg 164 0 36 72 108 144 180 mmHg Percentile distribution (mmHg) 5th 5th: 108 mmHg 108 25th 25th: 120 mmHg 120 50th 50th: 130 mmHg 130 75th 75th: 142 mmHg 142 95th 95th: 164 mmHg 164 0 36 72 108 144 180 mmHg
Percentile Value (mmHg) Rating
5th 108 Excellent
25th 120 Above average
50th 130 Average
75th 142 Below average
95th 164 Poor

What these numbers mean for males aged 60-69

A score around 130 mmHg is typical (50th percentile) for males in this age group. Times below about 120 mmHg fall near the 75th percentile or higher, indicating above-average performance (faster is better). Times above about 142 mmHg fall near the 25th percentile; about 75% of the reference population ran faster.

Percentiles show how common a value is, not whether it is healthy.

Compare

Related Metrics