U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

Search results

Items: 2

1.

Essential hypertension

The Pickering school held that blood pressure has a continuous distribution, that multiple genes and multiple environmental factors determine the level of one's blood pressure just as the determination of stature and intelligence is multifactorial, and that 'essential hypertension' is merely the upper end of the distribution (Pickering, 1978). In this view the person with essential hypertension is one who happens to inherit an aggregate of genes determining hypertension (and also is exposed to exogenous factors that favor hypertension). The Platt school took the view that essential hypertension is a simple mendelian dominant trait (Platt, 1963). McDonough et al. (1964) defended the monogenic idea. See McKusick (1960) and Kurtz and Spence (1993) for reviews. Swales (1985) reviewed the Platt-Pickering controversy as an 'episode in recent medical history.' The Pickering point of view appears to be more consistent with the observations. [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
88442
Concept ID:
C0085580
Disease or Syndrome
2.

Elevated mean arterial pressure

An abnormal increase in the average blood pressure in an individual during a single cardiac cycle. [from HPO]

MedGen UID:
326719
Concept ID:
C1840376
Finding

Supplemental Content

Find related data

Search details

See more...

Recent activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...