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Target organ involvement in hypertension: a realistic promise of prevention and reversal.

The major message from this discussion is that the end points from hypertensive disease (stroke, CHD, and hypertensive emergencies) are now preventable. Cardiac failure and ESRD, however, two exceedingly common end points from long-standing hypertension, remain as major disabilities and causes of death. The former is the most common cause of hospitalization in industrialized societies; hypertension and diabetes mellitus are the most common causes of the latter. The mechanisms of risk of these target organ diseases is not LVH per se, or the elevated arterial pressure alone in the kidney, but the coronary and renal ischemia, organ fibrosis, and, perhaps, apoptosis. Present day therapy now can effectively reverse these costly (economically and by human suffering) complications. Recent experimental studies suggest that, when used early enough, these newer pharmacologic agents may even prevent their occurrences and consequences. The very practical lesson from these experiences is that early detection and treatment of hypertension, effective control of arterial pressure, and the suppression of the underlying disease mechanisms markedly reduce the now increasing prevalence of both cardiac and renal failure.

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