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Causes
Hypertension is referred to as essential (primary) when the doctor is unable to identify a specific cause. It is by far the most common type of high blood pressure. The causes of this type are unknown but are likely to be a complex combination of genetic, environmental, and other factors.
Genetic Factors. A number of genetic factors or interactions between genes play a major role in essential hypertension. Experts think that the chromosomes (13 and 18) house the genes responsible for blood pressure regulation, although pinning down the range of specific genes involved in hypertension is more difficult.
Abnormalities in the Angiotensin-Renin-Aldosterone System. Genes under intense study are those that regulate a group of hormones known collectively as the angiotensin-renin-aldosterone system. This system influences all aspects of blood pressure control, including blood vessel contraction, sodium and water balance, and cell development in the heart.
Experts believed that this system evolved millions of years ago to protect early humans during drought or stress by retaining salt and water and narrowing blood vessels to ensure adequate blood flow and repair injured tissue. With industrialization, however, this system wreaks havoc on modern humans by intensifying the effects of high-salt diets and sedentary lifestyle. Of particular importance in these harmful responses are the hormone aldosterone and a peptide (a component of proteins) called angiotensin II.
Inherited Abnormalities in the Sympathetic Nervous System. Studies suggest that some people with essential hypertension may inherit abnormalities of the sympathetic nervous system. This is the part of the autonomic nervous system that controls heart rate, blood pressure, and the diameter of the blood vessels.
Insulin Resistance and Type 2 Diabetes. Hypertension is strongly associated with diabetes, both type 1 and type 2. Kidney damage is generally the cause of high blood pressure in type 1 diabetes. Obesity and insulin resistance are the factors associated with hypertension in type 2 diabetes, the more common type. People with type 2 diabetes generally have normal or high levels of insulin, a critical hormone in the metabolism of sugar. However, they are unable to use the insulin, the condition called insulin resistance. Without insulin, blood glucose (sugar) levels rise, the hallmark of diabetes.
Some research indicates that obesity is the one common element linking insulin, type 2 diabetes, and high blood pressure. Obesity is common in both type 2 diabetes and hypertension. Oddly, however, studies have found a stronger association between hypertension and insulin resistance in thin patients as well as overweight people with type 2 diabetes. Some research indicates that insulin resistance may cause sodium retention, a contributor to high blood pressure.
In any case, regardless of the causal connections, people who have insulin resistance or full-blown diabetes plus hypertension have a significantly greater chance for heart attack, kidney disease, and stroke than people who have only high blood pressure. Obesity. Obesity on its own has a number of possible effects that could lead to hypertension. It may blunt certain actions of insulin that open blood vessels, and it may cause structural changes in the kidney and abnormal handling of sodium. It is also associated with alterations in the systems that regulate blood flow.
Low Levels of Nitric Oxide. The gas nitric oxide can be produced in the body, where it affects the smooth muscle cells that line blood vessels; it helps keep them relaxed, flexible. It may also help prevent blood clotting. Low levels of nitric oxide have been observed in people with high blood pressure (particularly in African-Americans) and may be an important factor in essential hypertension.
Secondary Hypertension
Secondary hypertension has recognizable causes, which are usually treatable or reversible.
Medical Conditions. A number of medical conditions can cause secondary high blood pressure:- Kidney disease is the most common cause of secondary hypertension, particularly in older people.
- Sleep apnea, a disorder in which breathing halts briefly but repeatedly during sleep, is now highly associated with hypertension. A weak but still higher than normal association with high blood pressure has even been observed in those who snore or have mild sleep apnea. The relationship between sleep apnea and hypertension has been thought to be largely due to obesity, but major studies are finding a higher rate of hypertension in people with sleep apnea regardless of their weight. Treating sleep apnea with a device known as nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) may have modest benefits blood pressure as well.
CPAP is an airway treatment using slight positive pressure during inhalation to increase the volume of inspired air and to decrease the work of breathing.
- Other medical conditions that contribute to temporary hypertension are pregnancy, cirrhosis, and Cushing's disease.
Reviewed By: Harvey Simon, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital.
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