Link between blood pressure, anaemia, and protein levels?

One Response to “Link between blood pressure, anaemia, and protein levels?”

  1. gangadharan_nair Says:

    Systolic BP 178 means Hypertension Stage 2. High protein levels in the urine means kidney is involved.
    When the kidney arteries become narrow, less blood flows to the kidneys. The kidneys mistakenly respond as if your blood pressure is low and give off hormones that tell the body to retain salt and water. This causes your blood pressure to rise.
    Many different diseases can cause narrowing of the renal arteries. Hardening of the arteries from high cholesterol is one of the most common. Most patients have the typical risk factors for atherosclerosis, including high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and diabetes.
    In men and postmenopausal women, anemia is usually caused by gastrointestinal blood loss associated with ulcers, the use of aspirin or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDS), or certain types of cancer (esophagus, stomach, colon). High-risk groups include: People with a poor dietary intake of iron

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