The Heart Under Pressure: Exploring the Cardiovascular
Annotatsiya
Since kidney and blood circulation are essential to the pathophysiology of renal hypertension, which directly affects the heart, renal hypertension, often referred to as secondary hypertension, is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease brought on by kidney failure. Due to elevated chronic pressure, renal hypertension also disrupts heart failure, atherosclerosis, and left ventricular outflow. Renal function deteriorates as renal hypertension worsens, and the risk of morbidity and death rises as heart damage increases.In addition to highlighting how reduced renal perfusion triggers the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone pathway, resulting in persistent hypertension and other issues, this article will examine the connection between renal dysfunction and vascular and cardiac activity. The study's goal would probably be to comprehend the intricate connection between the cardiovascular system and kidney failure, often known as renal hypertension. High blood pressure brought on by kidney illness, or renal hypertension, can also strain the heart and raise the risk of cardiovascular disease.
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