Secondary hypertension (or, less commonly, inessential hypertension) is a type of hypertension which has a specific and identifiable underlying primary cause. It is much less common than essential hypertension, affecting only 5-10% of hypertensive patients. It has many different causes including obstructive sleep apnea, kidney disease, endocrine diseases, and tumors. The cause of secondary hypertension varies significantly with age.[1] It also can be a side effect of many medications.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is one of the most common causes of secondary hypertension.[2] OSA is prevalent in older adults and should be considered in cases of resistant hypertension, hypertension refractory to appropriate aggressive medical therapy.[3] OSA remains an under-diagnosed cause of secondary hypertension, likely due to the fact that many of the risk factors associated with OSA such as obesity, advanced age, and cigarette smoking are shared with primary hypertension. The intermittent hypoxia and resultant hypercapnia that is characteristic of OSA leads to activation of the sympathetic nervous system and leads to elevated blood pressure.[4][5] As with all cases of secondary hypertension, the goal of treating patients with hypertension due to OSA is addressing the underlying cause.[6] Therefore, weight loss and noctural nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) are mainstays in treating hypertension secondary to OSA. Other approaches include the mandibular advancement splint (MAS), UPPP, tonsillectomy, adenoidectomy, or septoplasty.[7]
The normal physiological response to low blood pressure in the renal arteries is to increase cardiac output (CO) to maintain the pressure needed for glomerular filtration. Here, however, increased CO cannot solve the structural problems causing renal artery hypotension, with the result that CO remains chronically elevated.[citation needed]
Certain medications, including NSAIDs (ibuprofen/Motrin) and steroids can cause hypertension.[19][20][21][22][23] Other medications include estrogens (such as those found in oral contraceptives with high estrogenic activity), certain antidepressants (such as venlafaxine), buspirone, carbamazepine, bromocriptine, clozapine, and cyclosporine.[24]
High blood pressure that is associated with the sudden withdrawal of various antihypertensive medications is called rebound hypertension.[25][26][27][28][29][30][31] The increases in blood pressure may result in blood pressures greater than when the medication was initiated. Depending on the severity of the increase in blood pressure, rebound hypertension may result in a hypertensive emergency. Rebound hypertension is avoided by gradually reducing the dose (also known as "dose tapering"), thereby giving the body enough time to adjust to reduction in dose. Medications commonly associated with rebound hypertension include centrally-acting antihypertensive agents, such as clonidine[32] and methyl-dopa.[31]
Other herbal or "natural products" which have been associated with hypertension include Ephedra, St John's wort, and licorice.[24]
Pregnancy
Few women of childbearing age have high blood pressure, up to 11% develop hypertension of pregnancy.[33] While generally benign, it may herald three complications of pregnancy: pre-eclampsia, HELLP syndrome and eclampsia. Follow-up and control with medication is therefore often necessary.[34][35]
Neurogenic hypertension – excessive secretion of norepinephrine and epinephrine which promotes vasoconstriction resulting from chronic high activity of the sympathoadrenal system, the sympathetic nervous system and the adrenal gland. The specific mechanism involved is increased release of the "stress hormones", epinephrine (adrenaline) and norepinephrine which increase blood output from the heart and constrict arteries. People with neurogenic hypertension respond poorly to treatment with diuretics as the underlying cause of their hypertension is not addressed.[37]
Pheochromocytoma – a tumor that results in an excessive secretion of norepinephrine and epinephrine, which promotes vasoconstriction[citation needed]
A variety of adrenal cortical abnormalities can cause hypertension, In primary aldosteronism there is a clear relationship between the aldosterone-induced sodium retention and the hypertension.[38]
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia, a group of autosomal recessive disorders of the enzymes responsible for steroid hormone production, can lead to secondary hypertension by creating atypically high levels of mineralocorticoid steroid hormones. These mineralocorticoids cross-react with the aldosterone receptor, activating it and raising blood pressure.[citation needed]
17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency causes an inability to produce cortisol. Instead, extremely high levels of the precursor hormone corticosterone are produced, some of which is converted to 11-Deoxycorticosterone (DOC), a potent mineralocorticoid not normally clinically important in humans. DOC has blood-pressure raising effects similar to aldosterone, and abnormally high levels result in hypokalemic hypertension.[39]
Because of the ubiquity of arsenic in ground water supplies and its effect on cardiovascular health, low dose arsenic poisoning should be inferred as a part of the pathogenesis of idiopathic hypertension. Idiopathic and essential are both somewhat synonymous with primary hypertension. Arsenic exposure has also many of the same signs of primary hypertension such as headache, somnolence,[61]confusion, proteinuria,[62]visual disturbances, and nausea and vomiting.[63]
Potassium deficiency
Due to the role of intracellular potassium in regulation of cellular pressures related to sodium, establishing potassium balance has been shown to reverse hypertension.
[64]
Cancers: tumours in the kidney can operate in the same way as kidney disease. More commonly, however, tumors cause inessential hypertension by ectopic secretion of hormones involved in normal physiological control of blood pressure.
White coat hypertension: elevated blood pressure in a clinical setting but not in other settings, probably due to the anxiety some people experience during a clinic visit.
Perioperative hypertension is development of hypertension just before, during or after surgery. It may occur before surgery during the induction of anesthesia; intraoperatively e.g. by pain-induced sympathetic nervous system stimulation; in the early postanesthesia period, e.g. by pain-induced sympathetic stimulation, hypothermia, hypoxia, or hypervolemia from excessive intraoperative fluid therapy; and in the 24 to 48 hours after the postoperative period as fluid is mobilized from the extravascular space. In addition, hypertension may develop perioperatively because of discontinuation of long-term antihypertensive medication.[68]
Diagnosis
The ABCDE mnemonic can be used to help determine a secondary cause of hypertension.
A: Accuracy, Apnea, Aldosteronism
B: Bruits, Bad Kidney
C: Catecholamines, Coarctation of the Aorta, Cushing's Syndrome
^Méndez GP, Klock C, Nosé V (December 2008). "Juxtaglomerular Cell Tumor of the Kidney: Case Report and Differential Diagnosis With Emphasis on Pathologic and Cytopathologic Features". Int. J. Surg. Pathol. 19 (1): 93–98. doi:10.1177/1066896908329413. PMID19098017. S2CID38702564.
^Ziaja J, Cholewa K, Mazurek U, Cierpka L (2008). "[Molecular basics of aldosterone and cortisol synthesis in normal adrenals and adrenocortical adenomas]". Endokrynologia Polska (in Polish). 59 (4): 330–39. PMID18777504.
^Astegiano M, Bresso F, Demarchi B, et al. (March 2005). "Association between Crohn's disease and Conn's syndrome. A report of two cases". Panminerva Medica. 47 (1): 61–4. PMID15985978.
^Yudofsky, Stuart C.; Robert E. Hales (2007). The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Neuropsychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences (5th ed.). American Psychiatric Pub, Inc. ISBN978-1-58562-239-9.
^atsdr-medical management guidelines for arsenic trioxide
^Arsenic Author: Frances M Dyro, MD, Chief of the Neuromuscular Section, Associate Professor, Department of Neurology, New York Medical College, Westchester Medical Center
^Salerno, SM; Jackson, JL; Berbano, EP (8–22 August 2005). "Effect of oral pseudoephedrine on blood pressure and heart rate: a meta-analysis". Archives of Internal Medicine. 165 (15): 1686–94. doi:10.1001/archinte.165.15.1686. PMID16087815.