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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Anatomy And Physiology > hypertension
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hypertension, Anatomy And Physiology

Related Category: Anatomy And Physiology

hypertension or high blood pressure, elevated blood pressure resulting from an increase in the amount of blood pumped by the heart or from increased resistance to the flow of blood through the small arterial blood vessels (arterioles). Hypertension is generally defined as a blood pressure reading greater than 140 over 90; presssures between 120–139 over 80–89 are now consider prehypertension. When the cause is unknown, the hypertension is called primary, or essential, hypertension. When a cause can be identified (e.g., a disorder of the adrenal glands, kidneys, or arteries), the condition is known as secondary hypertension. Factors such as heredity, obesity, smoking, and emotional stress are thought to play a role; the usual immediate cause is an imbalance in the body's vasoconstriction/fluid retention systems, often involving a decrease in the kidney's secretion of the regulatory hormone, renin.

Known as the "silent killer," hypertension often produces few overt symptoms; it may, however, result in damage to the heart, eyes, kidneys, or brain and ultimately lead to congestive heart failure, heart attack (see infarction), kidney failure, or stroke. African Americans and women are the most affected. Treatment of hypertension includes diets to reduce weight and salt and alcohol intake, increased exercise, quitting smoking, and various drugs, such as diuretics, beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, and calcium-channel blockers, as well as biofeedback. Treatment for persons with prehypertension includes dietary and other lifestyle changes. Recent research has questioned the importance of dietary salt as a major contributor to hypertension; some studies point to low calcium intake as a cause.

See also eclampsia.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

ACE inhibitor
aneurysm
arrhythmia
arteriosclerosis
beta-blocker
biofeedback
blood pressure
calcium-channel blocker
circulatory system
congestive heart failure
diuretic
eclampsia
fainting
heart disease
hypertrophy
impotence
infarction
nosebleed
obesity
sleep apnea
smoking
stroke

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Medicine > Anatomy and Physiology
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