Hypertension
in sentence
60 examples of Hypertension in a sentence
While she didn't have any medical evidence to back up her claim that there was a relationship between operatic arias and pulmonary hypertension, she was absolutely emphatic I was singing my own obituary.
I like to do things big, and it meant one thing: there is a big gun treatment for pulmonary
hypertension
called Flolan, and it's not just a drug; it's a way of life.
What if we take a new device, knock out the nerve vessels that help mediate blood pressure, and in a single therapy, basically cure
hypertension?
It's not pre-hypertension, it's actual hypertension, high blood pressure.
That's the primary care clinician, people on the care team who are there to manage your chronic conditions, your diabetes, your hypertension, there to give you your annual checkups, there to make sure your vaccines are up to date, but also there to make sure that you have a raft to sit on and usher yourself to safety.
This is a frontline treatment for
hypertension.
MR: Yes, she was finding herself unable to walk up the stairs in our house to her bedroom, and after several months of doctors, she was diagnosed to have a rare, almost invariably fatal disease called pulmonary arterial
hypertension.
I read every article that I could find on pulmonary
hypertension.
They made a decision not to develop any medicines for rare and orphan diseases, and maybe you could use your expertise in satellite communications to develop this cure for pulmonary
hypertension.
She says she wants to do all she can to help other people with orphan diseases get medicines, and today, she's our project leader for all telepresence activities, where she helps digitally unite the entire company to work together to find cures for pulmonary
hypertension.
The only cure for pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary fibrosis, cystic fibrosis, emphysema, COPD, what Leonard Nimoy just died of, is a lung transplant, but sadly, there are only enough available lungs for 2,000 people in the U.S. a year to get a lung transplant, whereas nearly a half million people a year die of end-stage lung failure.
And we've really spent the last 100 years trying to replicate that model over and over again in noninfectious diseases, in chronic diseases like diabetes and
hypertension
and heart disease.
Adrenaline causes your heart to beat faster and raises your blood pressure, over time causing
hypertension.
These are just for information: hypertension, diabetes, obesity, lack of exercise.
Right here in Tanzania, 30 percent of individuals have
hypertension.
If we can treat
hypertension
alone in Africa, we'll save 250,000 lives a year.
And perhaps in the future, their risks for heart attack or
hypertension.
Take, for example,
hypertension.
Half of adult Americans, on approximation, have
hypertension.
We have 500 preventable deaths from noncontrolled
hypertension
in the US every day.
Whether you have your
hypertension
treated is good.
What if we could actually help people that are suffering from diabetes or
hypertension?
You see,
hypertension
is actually treated regularly with a medication that has been developed from the toxin that is produced by a South American viper.
So Ms. Bertha is an 83-year-old lady with diabetes and
hypertension.
But while outbreaks of infectious illnesses such as Ebola, flu, Zika, SARS, and – hypothetically – Disease X tend to capture headlines, most global health practitioners understand that noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) like diabetes, hypertension, and cancer pose an even greater threat to health and economic stability.
But there was no significant improvement in clinical physical outcomes for conditions including hypertension, high cholesterol, or diabetes.
The latter approach is particularly relevant to conditions such as heart disease, hypertension, and diabetes, which most closely reflect individual behavior, physical context, and socioeconomic factors.
But free hemoglobin can wreak havoc in the human body, causing hypertension, cardiac arrest, or even death.
In 2012, researchers at the University of Oxford found that when white test subjects were administered propranolol, a beta blocker used to treat anxiety and hypertension, they experienced a temporary suspension of racial bias.
Some risk factors – moderate
hypertension
and high cholesterol, for example – have themselves become chronic diseases, requiring medical (and sometimes surgical) treatment and further contributing to the rise in illness rates.
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