The pathogenesis of essential hypertension.

Investigative & cell pathology Pub Date : 1978-04-01
J B Ferriss
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Abstract

Essential hypertension is a quantitative abnormality, the pathological effects and risks increasing with the blood pressure level. In Western countries blood pressure rises with age in most individuals, so essential hypertension is more frequent in middle and older age groups. It is likely that an individual's blood pressure level is determined by many interacting factors. These include heredity, which probably acts multifactorially, and many environment influences, including psychological stress and obesity. Specific factors may be of varying importance in different individuals and in different populations. Several physiological mechanisms control the blood pressure level and may be altered in essential hypertension. In early hypertension sympathetic nervous activity is sometimes increased, although in long-standing hypertension this is less marked. Cardiac output may be increased in borderline hypertension but is normal in established hypertension, when total peripheral resistance is increased. Total exchangeable sodium is normal, while the renal pressure-natriuresis balance is altered, so that for a given pressure the hypertension kidney excretes less sodium. In some patients, plasma renin is low, probably as a result of renal adaption to prolonged hypertension. The pathogenic sequence in essential hypertension is uncertain. Increased autonomic activity may cause vasoconstriction in renal and other arterioles and increase cardiac output, leading to a rise in blood pressure. Elevated pressure itself produces structural changes in the resistance vessels, including those of the kidney, which eventually maintain the hypertension even when the initiating stimulus is removed. The way in which heredity and environment influence pathogenic mechanism is also uncertain. Heredity might, for example, influence the autonomic response to stress or the liability to irreversible changes in the resistance vessels or in the kidney. Environmental factors may also increase autonomic activity, enhance vascular reactivity or alter renal function.

原发性高血压的发病机制。
原发性高血压是一种定量异常,其病理影响和危险性随血压升高而增加。在西方国家,大多数人的血压随着年龄的增长而升高,因此原发性高血压在中老年人群中更为常见。一个人的血压水平很可能是由许多相互作用的因素决定的。这些因素包括可能起多因素作用的遗传因素,以及许多环境影响,包括心理压力和肥胖。具体因素在不同的个体和不同的人群中可能具有不同的重要性。几种生理机制控制血压水平,并可能在原发性高血压中发生改变。在早期高血压中,交感神经活动有时增加,但在长期高血压中,这种情况不太明显。心输出量在交界性高血压时可能增加,但在确定的高血压时,当总外周阻力增加时,心输出量是正常的。总可交换钠是正常的,而肾脏压力-尿钠平衡被改变,因此在给定压力下,高血压肾脏排出的钠较少。在一些患者中,血浆肾素较低,可能是由于肾脏对长期高血压的适应。原发性高血压的发病顺序尚不确定。自主神经活动增加可引起肾小动脉和其他小动脉血管收缩,心输出量增加,导致血压升高。血压升高本身会引起阻力血管(包括肾脏血管)的结构变化,即使初始刺激被移除,最终也会维持高血压。遗传和环境影响致病机制的方式也不确定。例如,遗传可能影响对压力的自主反应或抵抗血管或肾脏的不可逆变化的倾向性。环境因素也可能增加自主神经活动,增强血管反应性或改变肾功能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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