I sincerely thank you for your lengthy response. As it turns out i have almost every one of those test completed over the period of several years, with some repeated several times (three MRI's of the head, two 24hr urine test to exclude Pheocromacytoma etc...) several days ago i was started on another medication called Physiotens (400mcg) to commence a combination therapy with my 75mg Atenolol. I am also on other medications, Seroquel XR 500mg, Sodium Valproate 400mg BD, Nexium 40mg, Prednisolone 50mg, Mobic 15mg and quite a few supplements. I also am currently seeing a Nephrologist every couple of months regarding this issue, he has not completed any tests (all tests were conducted by or under authorisation from my GP and psychiatrist) who was also worried about my BP. At times i have palpitations and extreme crushing chest pain... although this lasts only seconds, it is extremely distressing, and by the time i act on it (go to the Dr's or take my BP) the pain and pressure has resided. Once again thank you for the response, hope to hear from you shortly.
Hi!
I am sorry to hear that you have developed hypertension at such a young age. If one kidney is smaller than other, then a dopplar ultrasound should be done to see if the blood supply to the kidney is blocked or if there is infection or some other cause. You should consult a nephrologist regarding this. This could be a cause of high BP.
. High blood pressure can be due to genetic factors or due to some disease. To find whether you have blood pressure without a cause or essential hypertension you need to eliminate the various causes of hypertension. Recent head injury, hyperthyroidism, renal artery stenosis (by dopplar studies or MRI), abnormal kidney function (by kidney function tests), hyper function of adrenals, Cushing’s syndrome, abnormal liver function etc need to be ruled out. You should consult a cardiologist for high BP. To diagnose the cause tests like kidney function, liver function, lipid profile, thyroid, adrenal gland function, EKG, ECHO, tread mill etc are done. If no cause is found then what you have is essential hypertension. The doctor will need to adjust the type and dose of medication. This may need a few trials before a medication that suits you is adjusted at an optimal dose. Keep a morning evening record of your blood pressure for a few days. If your blood pressure remains high after medication, then there are two possibilities. Either the medication is not suiting you. OR there is some underlying cause which needs to be eliminated. Apart from medication you need to eat healthy, exercise regularly as advised by the cardiologist, reduce salt intake, take alcohol with caution or better avoid, quit smoking if you do and reduce total calorie intake in a day, maintain your weight, cholesterol and lipids under control. Do discuss this with your doctor and get yourself examined. Take care!