In physiology and medicine, hypotension refers to an abnormally low blood pressure. This is best understood as a physiologic state, rather than a disease. It is often associated with shock, though not necessarily indicative of it. Hypotension is not to be confused with hypertension.
Decreased cardiac output despite normal blood volume, due to severe congestive heart failure, large myocardial infarction, or bradycardia, often produces hypotension and can rapidly progress to cardiogenic shock. Arrhythmias often result in hypotension by this mechanism. Beta blockers can cause hypotension both by slowing the heart rate and by decreasing the pumping ability of the heart muscle.
Excessive vasodilation, or insufficient constriction of the resistance blood vessels (mostly arterioles), causes hypotension. This can be due to decreased sympathetic nervous system output or to increased parasympathetic activity occurring as a consequence of injury to the brain or spinal cord or of dysautonomia, an intrinsic abnormality in autonomic system functioning. Excessive vasodilation can also result from sepsis, acidosis, or medications, such as nitrate preparations, calcium channel blockers, or ACE inhibitors. Many anesthetic agents and techniques, including spinal anesthesia and most inhalational agents, produce significant vasodilation.
Neurocardiogenic Syncope is a form of dysautonomia characterized by an inappropriate drop in blood pressure while in the upright position. Tilt-table testing is used to evaluate this. Neurocardiogenic syncope is related to vasovagal syncope in that both occur as a result of increased activity of the vagus nerve, the mainstay of the parasympathetic nervous system..
Another—albeit rare—form, is Postprandial hypotension, which occurs 30-75 minutes after eating. Because digestion sends a great deal of blood to the intestines, the body must increase heart rate and vasoconstriction to compensate for local blood volume changes. It is believed that this form of hypotension is caused by a disordered or aging autonomic nervous system not compensating appropriately while digestion takes place.
Low blood pressure is often accompanied by: (Most of these are related to causes rather than effects of hypotension.)
Hypotonie | Hipotensión | Hypotension artérielle | Ipotensione | Hipotensioni | Hipotansiyon
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