General Introduction To Hypertension
General Introduction To Hypertension
General Introduction To Hypertension
DEFINITION
Hypertension is also called as High blood pressure, is a common
condition in which the force of blood on the walls of your arteries is
often too high.
Arteries are the blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart to
supply your tissues with oxygen and nutrients.In your heart, two
chambers, called ventricles,contract with each heartbeat to push blood to
your lungs and through the arteries to the whole body.
As blood flows through, the three main factors affect the pressure on the
artery walls.
The first is cardiac output, or the amount of blood your ventricles push
out of your heart each minute.
The third factor that affects the blood pressure is resistance, which is
anything working against the blood flow through your arteries.
The body is able to increase the diameter of the arteries to lower the
blood pressure, or reduce the diameter to raise the blood pressure.
When the heart beats, the pressure of blood on the walls of your arteries
is called systolic pressure.
When the heart relaxes between beats, pressure on the artery wall is
called diastolic pressure.
While the blood pressure may change throughout the day, it should
normally be less than 120 millimeters of mercury for systolic pressure,
and less than 80 millimeters of mercury for diastolic pressure.
Over time, high blood pressure will damage the walls of the arteries.
The artery wall may become weak and form an enlargement called an
aneurysm.
Or the wall may burst and bleed into the surrounding tissue.
Small tears in your artery wall may attract certain substances in your
blood, such as cholesterol, fat, and calcium, to form a build-up called a
plaque.
Blood cells can stick to the plaque and form solid clumps, called
clots,further reducing, or completely blocking, your blood flow.
Artery damage and reduced blood flow lead to conditions such as:
a stroke,
heart attack,
or kidney disease.
Smoking
Being overweight or obese
Lack of physical activity
Too much salt in the diet
Too much alcohol consumption (more than 1 to 2 drinks per day)
Stress
Older age
Genetics
Chronic kidney disease
TYPES
Mainly high blood pressure divided into two type firstly primary, or
essential hypertension and secondly Secondary Hypertension.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
The cause of hypertension is unknown but these unknown causes like
precipitating factor and predisposing leads to pathophysiology of HT.
First talk about predisposing factors. This predispoing factors means
these are the factors which are already present in the body like age,
gender, genetic, race. Coming to the other hand is the precpitating
factors like stress, obesity, kidney disorder etc..
Precipitating factors are nothing but environmental factors that affect the
human body leads to hypertension.
Due to the above causes disturbances in
system .so whenever your blood pressure falls known as hypotension the
kidneys are able to sense it and they activate the renin-angiotensin-
aldosterone system which acts on kidney as well as the blood vessels to
restore the blood pressure to the normal most of you know the kidneys
are supplied by a set of renal arteries which supply almost 20 to 25
percent of whole cardiac output two kidneys this blood reaches the
glomeruli through the efferent arteriol leaves the glomerular through the
afferent arterioles. These cells you see are the juxtaglomerular cells the
word juxta means near and these cells are located near the glomerulus
.These cells secrete a substance known as pro rennin and hypotension is
a main stimulator of converting pro renin into rennin. Renin is an
enzyme which acts on angiotensinogen.The word angio means vessels
the word Tennyson hojin means a substance which constricts the vessels
it is a plasma protein which is synthesized in the liver.Renin converts
angiotensinogen into angiotensin one the next step takes place in the
lungs when the enzyme angiotensin converting enzyme acts on
angiotensin 1 and converts it into angiotensin 2. The angiotensin 2 is a
powerful way so constructor which mediates the effects of renin-
angiotensin-aldosterone system.
Mean while the arterial baroreceptors produce baroreflexes which also manifest
greater vasoconstrictor responses. Due to this Constriction of the blood vessels
will result in an increase in the blood pressure also alters the cardiac Output.