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Glossary

Starting with A for "ACE inhibitor" and continuing through to Y for "Yolk Sac Tumour", we give you succinct explanations for scientific and medical terms in clear and simple words.




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Hypertension
also known as arterial hypertension or high blood pressure

Continuous increase in blood pressure, with systolic (upper) values above 140 mm Hg and diastolic (lower) values above 90 mm Hg. Depending on the origin of the disease, a distinction is made between cardiac output hypertension and resistance hypertension. Cardiac output hypertension is characterised by a raised cardiac output per minute, which predominantly leads to an increase in systolic blood pressure, for example during excessive thyroid function (hyperthreosis). In resistance hypertension there is an increase in the tension of peripheral resistance vessels, which leads predominantly to an increase in diastolic blood pressure, for example in so-called essential hypertension. As a result of changes in vessels caused by hypertension, cardiac output hypertension transforms after some time to resistance hypertension.

I. Classification according to diastolic blood pressure. Definition of the World Health organisation (WHO).
Blood Pressure(mm Hg)
85-89 mm Hg: so-called borderline hypertension
90-104 mm Hg: mild hypertension
105-114 mm Hg: intermediate hypertension
from 115 mm Hg: severe hypertension

II. Classification according to organ damage
WHO Grade I: No clinically detectable damage to heart, kidneys or brain, normal eyeground, WHO Grade II: Damage to heart, kidneys or brain, changes in the eyeground, WHO Grade III: damage to several organs, severe changes in the eyeground.

Symptoms
Non-specific and very variable symptoms, including giddiness, headache, visual problems and others. The clinical course is also frequently asymptomatic or without symptoms until these occur as the result of organ damage, particularly early development of arteriosclerosis with coronary heart disease, disturbances in cerebral perfusion, sclerotic kidneys cause by arteriosclerosis, accompanied by long-term inadequate renal function (chronic renal failure) and peripheral occlusive arterial diseases.In so-called malignant hypertension, the diastolic blood pressure remains above 120 mm Hg, leading to the development of extremely severe changes in the eyeground and rapidly deteriorating kidney function, which, if untreated, often leads to death within 1-2 years.

Diagnosis
The criteria for the diagnosis of hypertension are raised values for blood pressure after measurements which are repeated twice and made at at least two times points. It frequently happens that the first measurement in the medical practice is too high. Out-patient long-term measurements of blood pressure (24 hours) under daily conditions give more reliable results.

Therapy
In primary hypertension (hypertension of unknown cause), the symptoms are treated with antihypertensive drugs and with non-specific measures, particularly salt reduction, weight reduction, reduction of stress factors and the practice of endurance sports, such as cycling, swimming and jogging. The aim is the extensive normalisation of blood pressure. In secondary hypertension, the treatment of the primary disease is of the greatest importance. Cf. indirect measurement of blood pressure, direct measurement of blood pressure

Glossary entries:  Roche and Walter de Gruyter, Berlin