Hypertension induced by drugs and other substances.

Semin Nephrol

Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, USA.

Published: March 1995

The purpose of this article is to review and summarize the literature regarding the effects of medications and other substances on blood pressure. Many substances are known to cause or exacerbate hypertension, including sodium chloride, substances of abuse, nonprescription sympathomimetics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, sex steroids, immunosuppressive therapies, erythopoietin, antidepressants, ergot alkaloids, anesthetic agents, and other substances. With the population aging, the increasing incidence of polypharmacy, and the growth of over-the-counter pharmacological agents, including those which were previously available only by prescription, drug-induced hypertension is assuming heightened importance. Furthermore, these agents represent an important modifiable cause of secondary hypertension, and it is imperative that clinicians recognize this causal relationship.

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