Hypertension is called the quiet killer because it does not have usually any symptom.
Hypertension means the advanced pressure (tension) in the routes. Hypertension directly extends the risk of coronary cardiac disorder (which carries out to the heart attack) and race, particularly when it is present with the other blood pressure of the factors. High risk can occur in the children or of the adults, but it is more common among the age finished 35 people. Hypertension increases your chance to obtain the cardiac disorder and the disease of kidney, and to have a race. Generally the men have a greater likely of developing hypertension than women.
To begin with, I am a kidney transplant survivor myself so I know what I am writing about.
In 1992 I was 42 years old. I was also diagnosed with a serious kidney disease.
It is called Polycystic Kidney Disease or PKD. By the time I was diagnosed my kidneys were too far gone to save.
I was told by my doctor that if I was going to have a kidney disease, PKD was the one to have.
I remember the creeping weakness that seemed to control me as my kidneys slowly began to shut down.
After one visit my doctor looked rather shocked and said that he had almost waited too long.
He put me on dialysis immediately. We eventually learned how to do the dialysis at home (my sweet wife being the home helper).