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  #1  
Old 03-25-2005, 07:50 PM
Nichole Nichole is offline
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I am trying to find information stating that pain can contribute to Hypertension. Does anyone have any suggestions?

Appeal on Monday and frantically trying to get everything together.
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Seattle,WA

ADR June 15, 2005 WOOOO HOOOOO
Herrniated L5-S1, Tear in Annulus
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  #2  
Old 03-26-2005, 09:58 AM
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Harrison Harrison is offline
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I can send you BP stats in Excel! It clearly shows my rising BP in relation to my back problem. Guess what happened to my BP after surgery?! It went right down -- within 10 days!

Sure, some of it had to do with the NSAIDs, but the other part was inflammation (did you see the Business Week a few months ago -- cover story?).

Chronic Pain Associated With Increased Prevalence of Hypertension

Chronic pain may be associated with an increased risk of hypertension, and early and aggressive management of chronic pain may have a beneficial impact on cardiovascular disease in this population, according to the results of a study from Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.

In healthy people, raised blood pressure is known to be associated with decreased sensitive-to-acute pain, but in individuals with chronic pain, such as chronic low back pain or chronic orofacial pain, elevated blood pressure is associated with increased acute pain responsiveness. Stephen Bruehl, PhD, and colleagues speculated that this difference reflects failure of overlapping systems modulating pain and blood pressure. They conducted a retrospective review on randomly selected records of 300 patients with chronic pain evaluated at a university tertiary care pain center and 300 "nonpain" internal medicine patients seen at the same institution. The pain group patients, all aged less than 65 years, had been evaluated for pain etiology, location, and duration, use of medications, clinical diagnosis of hypertension, and family history of hypertension. The nonpain group had no history of chronic pain or chronic headaches.

Statistical analysis revealed a significantly higher overall hypertension prevalence in the pain group compared with the nonpain group (39.3% vs 21.0%, P less than .001), reflected by a similar significantly greater proportion of patients in the pain group taking antihypertensive medications compared with those in the nonpain group (35.7% vs 18.3%, P less than .001). Similar differences were seen between the men and women in each group, although the difference between the women was twice as great compared with the men. Compared with prevalence of clinical hypertension in the US general population, according the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), there was no difference among men and women in the nonpain group, but in the pain group hypertension prevalence was significantly higher.

Chronic pain intensity, but not pain duration, was found to be a predictor of hypertension status, independent of the traditional risk factors for hypertension, such as older age, African American race, and a family history of hypertension.

Bruehl and colleagues speculate that the association between elevated blood pressure levels and chronic pain reflects fundamental alterations in the relationship between the cardiovascular and pain regulatory systems in patients with chronic pain, possibly mediated by central alpha-2 adrenergic activity. Although a large proportion of the patients with chronic pain were taking antidepressant medications, they dismiss these as a possible cause of hypertension, as similar percentages of patients with and without hypertension in this group were taking these medications (55% and 40%, respectively). Another reason for excluding antidepressants as a possible cause of hypertension in this group is that they are more likely to be associated with hypotensive effects according to previous studies, the researchers note. However, they may have increased the likelihood of obesity, which could have contributed indirectly to the relationship between chronic pain and hypertension.

Bruehl and colleagues point out that epidemiologic studies have reported that as many as 14% of the US population may be suffering from chronic pain, so that even a small influence of chronic pain on hypertension could have a meaningful clinical impact.

Medscape Cardiology. 2005
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"Harrison" - info (at) adrsupport.org
Fell on my ***winter 2003, Canceled fusion April 6 2004
Reborn June 25th, 2004, L5-S1 ADR Charite in Boston
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  #3  
Old 03-26-2005, 05:22 PM
Nichole Nichole is offline
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Thank you. That is exactally what I was looking for. Harrison, you are an Angel watching over me again. Thank you.
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Nichole
Seattle,WA

ADR June 15, 2005 WOOOO HOOOOO
Herrniated L5-S1, Tear in Annulus
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  #4  
Old 03-27-2005, 06:19 AM
ans ans is offline
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Nice addition. Odd that the authors didn't consider that those in pain are less fit, prone to emotional agitation (lacking a physiological endorphine outlet), and some are taking meds (e.g. ibuprofen) that increase BP.
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