Hypertension Systemic

Systemic hypertension is a pathological condition that is characterized by an increase in blood pressure above normal and an increase in its frequency. This disease is not primary, but is a symptom of other kidney diseases and other cardiovascular pathologies. The root causes of the development of systemic hypertension can be many factors: endocrine diseases, metabolic disorders, vascular pathologies, etc. In different cases, malignant, complicated or benign forms of systemic hypertension are diagnosed, which develops against the background of dangerous decompensations of previous diseases. Often the etiology of the disease remains unclear. Systemic hypertension affects people regardless of age; it is less common in children and very rare in older people. The progression of the disease is aggravated in the presence of other diseases, when several abnormalities simultaneously develop in the body, affecting the heart and blood vessels. This pathology occurs more often in women than in men. If not in a timely manner