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CAUSES OF HYPERTENSION Increase of systemic arterial pressure greater than the normal values of 120 mm Hg systolic and 80 mm Hg diastolic leads to a constellation of changes known ashypertensive cardiovascular disease. The pathophysiologic basis of HTN is excessive arteriolar constriction leading to increased peripheral vascular resistance.This may be exacerbated by factors promoting increased cardiac output. The fundamental etiology of HTN is unknown in most patients, although genetic predisposition and certain environmental influences, particularly high sodium intake, are known to be important factors. This condition is known as essential, idiopathic, or primary HTN. In approximately 10% of patients, HTN is secondary to a recognizable lesion or disease. Parenchymal renal disease and renovascular disease are the most common of these entities thatare amenable to surgical treatment. Endocrine disorders and coarc-tation of the aorta are less common THE KIDNEYS IN HYPERTENSION: BENIGN AND MALIGNANT The natural history of HTN follows 2 general patterns. Benign HTN is characterized by mild to moderate increase of blood pressure and an asymptomatic period of several years before the inevitable onset of symptoms and end-organ damage (hence, the condition is not truly benign). Malignant HTN is characterized by marked increase of blood pressure and rapid progression over a few weeks to end-organ failure. Most patients with essential HTN follow the benign pattern, although it may accelerate to malignant HTN. The characteristic vascular lesion of benign essential HTN is widespread hyaline arteriolosclerosis manifest by thickening of the walls of the small arteries and arterioles composed of degenerated smooth cells and deposited plasma proteins. Hyaline arteriolosclerosis with associated small cortical scars (hyaline arteriolonephrosclerosis) is commonly seen in the kidneys. Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis, marked luminal narrowing by cellular intimal proliferation in a lamellar, "onionskin" pattern, is the characteristic lesion of malignant HTN. In severe malignant HTN, fibrinoid necrosis of the glomerular arterioles occurs. An associated ischemic injury develops rapidly, leading to petechial hemorrhages in multiple organs, including the kidneys (hyperplastic arteriolonephrosclerosis). by amorphous eosinophilic material THE HEART IN HYPERTENSION: CONCENTRIC HYPERTROPHY, Hypertension, even of moderate degree, leads rapidly to cardiac hypertrophy, a compensatory increase of mass of the LV. The typical pattern of concentric hypertrophy of the LV, characterized by a thick wall and a relatively small chamber volume, is produced by a pressure load (afterload) on the ventricle. The heart ssilhouette is relatively normal, but the ECG shows increased voltage. When the limits of compensation are reached, the patient may have progressive cardiacdecompensation accompanied by cardiac dilation. Cardiac hypertrophy is an independent risk factor for ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. ize on cardiac PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF HEART FAILURE Heart failure is a state in which the heart fails as a pump to provide sufficient volume of circulating blood to meet the metabolic demands of the body. Because the dominant symptoms usually result from pulmonary or systemic venous congestion, the condition is termed congestive heart failure (CHF). Most commonly, heart failure is of the low cardiac output variety, but some conditions, including thiamine deficiency (beriberi), thyrotoxicosis, and severe anemia, produce cardiac failure with an increased circulating blood volume (high output cardiac failure), as shown here. The failure may be left-sided, right-sided, or combined left- and right-sided heart failure. This illustration shows the major manifestations of failure of the left and right ventricles. Cardiac transplantation or an artificial heart is the last therapeutic option. The most common conditions necessitating cardiac transplantation are end-stage ischemic heart disease (ischemic cardiomyopathy) and dilated (congestive)cardiomyopathy. LEFT-SIDED HEART FAILURE: ECCENTRIC HYPERTROPHY, Most cases of CHF result from diseases that affect the LV initially or primarily, most commonly HTN and CAD. In response to chronic stress, the affected part of the heart undergoes compensatory hypertrophy. When the heart reaches a critical weight of 550 g, reserve is lost and progressive cardiac decompensation ensues. Heart failure results in progressive ventricular dilatation superim- posed on the hypertrophy, which produces a pattern of so-called eccentric hypertrophy, as shown here. A severe acute load on the heart can produce failure and cardiac dilatation without previous hypertrophy. Stress of the atria can result in atrial fibrillation and formation of mural thrombi. The frequent coexistence of HTN and CAD can result in myocardial infarction of the hypertrophied LV. ISSECTING ANEURYSM OF THE AORTA The effects of HTN with excessive hemodynamic trauma on a weakened aortic wall can lead to the formation of a hematoma in the media. The hematoma dissects longitudinally to split the media, which creates a dissecting hematoma or a dissecting aneurysm, a doublebarreled aorta with true and false lumens. In most cases, aproximal intimal tear allows blood to enter the false lumen under systemic pressure. In type A dissections, the proximal intimal tear is in the ascending thoracic aorta, whereas in type В dissections, the proximal intimal tear is in the aortic arch or the descending thoracic aorta. Type A dissections, which are prone to external rupture into the mediastinum or pericardial cavity, necessitate surgical intervention. Some dissections develop distal tears and become chronic with the potential for late rupture. Blood pressure control is key in the treatment of any aortic dissection.