Alcohol and hypertension - Does it matter? (no!)
Title
Alcohol and hypertension - Does it matter? (no!)
Publication type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2003
Authors
Journal
Journal of Cardiovascular Risk
Volume
10
Issue
1
Pagination
11 - 14
Date published
2003
ISBN
13506277 (ISSN)
Keywords
age, Age Factors, alcohol, alcohol consumption, Alcohol Drinking, alcohol liver disease, alcoholic beverage, Alcoholic Beverages, alcoholic cardiomyopathy, beer, blood pressure, cigarette smoking, drinking behavior, drug effect, epidemiology, ethnology, Female, fitness, gender, heart arrhythmia, human, Humans, hypertension, Liver Cirrhosis, male, mental stress, obesity, peripheral neuropathy, physical activity, Physical Fitness, priority journal, review, risk factor, Risk Factors, sex difference, Sex Factors, smoking, Stress, Psychological
Abstract
Good evidence suggests that alcohol probably has a causal relationship to hypertension, although many possible confounding factors that may exaggerate or attenuate the relationship, if true. Alcohol can also adversely affect other systems, including the heart (arrhythmias, alcoholic cardiomyopathy, etc.), the liver (alcoholic hepatitis, cirrhosis, etc.) and the nervous system (peripheral neuropathy, etc.). Hypertension is very common and it is unlikely that all (or most) of hypertensives can identify alcohol as causative. Indeed, hypertension is likely to be multifactorial and many factors would confound the relationship, if any, between alcohol and hypertension.