Aim: To establish age and gender characteristics, nosological structure of comorbidity among persons 20-99 years with hypertension.

Materials And Methods: The study is based on data from 21 514 electronic health records of the population (20-99 years old) with hypertension, mean age 63.0 years, 68.2% women. Diseases associated with hypertension with a frequency above 10% were analyzed.

Results: In the sample of people with hypertension, concomitant diseases were detected in 82.7% of cases, 1 disease accompanies 21.0% of the sample with hypertension, 2 diseases 17.9%, 3 diseases 14.0%, 4+ diseases 29.8%. The frequency of association of hypertension with ≥1 concomitant disease at the 20-29 years is 60.8% of cases, at 30-39 years - 65.1%, at 40-49 years - 73.9%, at 50-59 years - 81.1%, 60-69 years - 85.8%, 70-79 years - 87.3%, 80+ years - 86.2% of cases. Among women with hypertension, the average number of concomitant diseases is higher compared to men (3.47 vs 2.4 cases; <0.001). Among young and middle-aged people, hypertension in most cases is associated with osteochondrosis, osteoarthritis, chronic pancreatitis, gastritis and duodenitis, retinal diseases, thyroid diseases, the female with hypertension accompanied by benign breast disease and menopausal disorders. Hypertension in the elderly is most often associated with cerebrovascular disease, coronary heart disease, diabetes mellitus, senile cataract, but osteochondrosis and osteoarthritis also do not lose their relevance.

Conclusion: The existing system of organization of medical care cannot meet the needs of patients with comorbidity, which indicates the need to reorient medical care towards patient-centered care.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.26442/00403660.2023.01.202039DOI Listing

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