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sincomart 's List: Hypertension

      • Race

         

        Blacks have a higher prevalence and incidence of hypertension than whites.  The prevalence of hypertension was increased by 50% in African Americans. In  Mexican Americans, the prevalence and incidence of hypertension is similar to or  lower than in whites. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey  (NHANES) III reported an age-adjusted prevalence of hypertension at 20.6% in  Mexican Americans and 23.3% in non-Hispanic whites.

         

         

           
        • Are there ethnic differences in the pathogenesis of hypertension, and do  these differences influence the choice of treatment? To understand ethnic  influence, an understanding of the renin angiotensin system is essential. Renin  secretion is suppressed when the kidney detects that the amount of sodium  excretion is increased; thus, a clue to the excess sodium in the circulation.  Black people tend to develop hypertension at an earlier age and have lower  rennin activity; target organ damage also differs in black people from that in  white people. 
        • Most studies in the United Kingdom and the United States report a higher  prevalence and lower awareness of hypertension in black people than in white  people. Mortality from hypertension in African-Caribbean–born people is 3.5  times the national rate; similar data have been published for African American  citizens. Strokes are more common in black people, but coronary heart disease is  more common in Asians. Both groups have a higher incidence of chronic renal  failure than white people, but this is more due to hypertension in black people  and diabetes in Asians. 
        • Black people have a poorer response to treatment with ACE inhibitors  compared to white people; the evidence for beta-blockers being less effective in  black people is also clear. However, diuretics are more effective at a young age  in black people.
         

         

        Sex

         

        The age-adjusted prevalence of hypertension was 34%, 25.4%, and 23.2% for men  and 31%, 21%, and 21.6% for women among African Americans, whites, and Mexican  Americans, respectively. In the NHANES III study, the prevalence of hypertension  was 12% for white men and 5% for white women aged 18-49 years. However, the  age-related blood pressure rise for women exceeds that of men. The prevalence of  hypertension was reported at 50% for white men and 55% for white women aged 70  years or older.

         

        Age

         

        A progressive rise in blood pressure with increasing age is observed. The  third NHANES survey reported that the prevalence of hypertension grows  significantly with increasing age in all sex and race groups. The age-specific  prevalence was 3.3% in white men (aged 18-29 y); this increased to 13.2% in the  group aged 30-39 years. The prevalence further increased to 22% in the group  aged 40-49 years, to 37.5% in the group aged 50-59 years, and to 51% in the  group aged 60-74 years. In another study, the incidence of hypertension appeared  to increase approximately 5% for each 10-year interval of age. Age-related  hypertension appears to be predominantly systolic rather than diastolic. The  systolic blood pressure rises into the eighth or ninth decade, while the  diastolic blood pressure remains constant or declines after age 40  years.1


    • Hypertension is one of the most common worldwide diseases afflicting humans.  Because of the associated morbidity and mortality and the cost to society,  hypertension is an important public health challenge. Over the past several  decades, extensive research, widespread patient education, and a concerted  effort on the part of health care professionals have led to decreased mortality  and morbidity rates from the multiple organ damage arising from years of  untreated hypertension. Hypertension is the most important modifiable risk  factor for coronary heart disease (the leading cause of death in North America),  stroke (the third leading cause), congestive heart failure, end-stage renal  disease, and peripheral vascular disease. Therefore, health care professionals  must not only identify and treat patients with hypertension but also promote a  healthy lifestyle and preventive strategies to decrease the prevalence of  hypertension in the general population.

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    • In the next 10 years, 20.7 million people will die of cardiovascular disease in  the Americas if the level of intervention stays the same. Yet at least 80% of  all heart disease is preventable.
    • Although many cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) can be treated or prevented, an  estimated 17 million people die of CVDs each year. A substantial number of these  deaths can be attributed to tobacco smoking, which increases the risk of dying  from coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular disease 2–3 fold. The risk  increases with age and is greater for women than for men. In contrast, cardiac  events fall 50% in people who stop smoking and the risk of CVDs, including acute  myocardial infarction, stroke and peripheral vascular disease, also decreases  significantly over the first two years after stopping smoking.

       

      Continuing to smoke after myocardial infarction or coronary revascularization  can have serious clinical consequences. Even eight years after myocardial  infarction, the mortality of post-myocardial infarction patients who continue to  smoke is double that of quitters. Further, those who do not stop smoking after  coronary revascularization also have a two-fold higher risk of re-infarction and  death.

       

      Studies indicate that although doctors are knowledgeable about the risks of  CVDs associated with tobacco smoking, they are not sufficiently prepared to help  their patients stop smoking. Even though physicians identify a substantial  number of smokers during consultations, for example, many patients do not  receive counseling to help them quit. Smoking cessation is the most  cost-effective intervention for patients with documented CVDs, and efficacious  programmes have been developed. The challenge is to get these programmes more  widely used, and doctors and nurses should seize every opportunity to encourage  patients to stop smoking.

    • Hypertension is already a highly prevalent cardiovascular risk factor  worldwide because of increasing longevity and prevalence of contributing factors  such as obesity. Whereas the treatment of hypertension has been shown to prevent  cardiovascular diseases and to extend and enhance life, hypertension remains  inadequately managed everywhere.

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      Cardiovascular disease

           
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      Cardiovascular diseases

       

       

        

       

      Cardiovascular disease is caused by disorders of the heart and blood vessels,  and include coronary heart disease (heart attacks), cerebrovascular disease  (cerebrovascular disease), raised blood pressure (hypertension), peripheral  artery disease, rheumatic heart disease, congenital heart disease and heart  failure. The major causes of cardiovascular disease are tobacco use, physical  inactivity, and an unhealthy diet.

       

      Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death globally and is  projected to remain the leading cause of death. An estimated 17.5 million people  died from cardiovascular disease in 2005, representing 30 % of all global  deaths. Of these deaths, 7.6 million were due to heart attacks and 5.7 million  were due to stroke. Around 80% of these deaths occurred in low and middle income  countries (LMIC). If appropriate action is not taken, by 2015, an estimated 20  million people will die from cardiovascular disease every year, mainly from  heart attacks and strokes.

    • What causes heart attacks and strokes?

       

      Heart attacks and strokes are mainly caused by a blockage tat prevents blood  from flowing to the heart or the brain. the most common reason for this is  build-up of fatty deposits on the inner walls of the blood vessels that supply  the heart or the brain. This makes the blood vessels narrower and less flexible.  It is sometimes called hardening of the arteries or atherosclerosis. The blood  vessels are then more likely to get blocked by blood clots. When that happens,  the blood vessels cannot supply blood to the heart and brain, which become  damaged.

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    • Cardiovascular disease is caused by disorders of the heart and blood vessels,  and includes coronary heart disease (heart attacks), cerebrovascular disease  (stroke), raised blood pressure (hypertension), peripheral artery disease,  rheumatic heart disease, congenital heart disease and heart failure. The major  causes of cardiovascular disease are tobacco use, physical inactivity, and an  unhealthy diet.

       

      Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death globally and is  projected to remain the leading cause of death. An estimated 17.5 million people  died from cardiovascular disease in 2005, representing 30 % of all global  deaths. Of these deaths, 7.6 million were due to heart attacks and 5.7 million  were due to stroke. Around 80% of these deaths occurred in low- and  middle-income countries (LMIC). If appropriate action is not taken, by 2015, an  estimated 20 million people will die from cardiovascular disease every year,  mainly from heart attacks and strokes.

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