Psychosis Hypertensive

Hypertensive psychosis is a type of mental illness that is characterized by changes in a person's behavior, thinking, and emotions associated with high blood pressure. This is a serious mental illness that requires medical attention.

The causes of hypertensive psychosis may vary. For example, some people have a predisposition



Psychoses are the result of a number of different diseases, for example, nervous disorders, alcoholism, pregnancy and even progressive senile dementia.

Psychosis was characterized by signs expressed in painful mental experiences such as fear, hallucinations, nightmares, insomnia, obsessive states, chills, and so on.

Hypertension is a syndrome of increased blood pressure (BP) that occurs as a result of pathologies in the blood circulation or obstruction of blood flow. Unlike other pathologies, it is accompanied by a symptom of a psychopathic disorder. These manifestations generally worsen the quality of life of a person with H.P. More serious is the manifestation of arterial hypertension complicated by psychosis. The latter, when combined with an increase in systolic pressure (contractility of the left ventricle), can provoke pathologies of the heart and blood vessels.