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Clinical Care & Specialties

Hypertension

Hypertension is persistently elevated blood pressure that increases the risk of heart disease, stroke, and kidney damage; as a common comorbidity, it factors into preoperative risk assessment and anesthesia clearance for patients scheduled at surgery centers.

What is hypertension?

Hypertension is the medical term for persistently elevated blood pressure, meaning the force of blood against artery walls stays higher than normal over time. It frequently produces no obvious symptoms, which is why it is often called a silent condition and why routine measurement is so important.

Left uncontrolled, hypertension gradually strains the heart and blood vessels and raises the long-term risk of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and other serious problems. It is one of the most common chronic conditions among adults.

Why does hypertension matter for surgery centers?

Blood pressure status is a central element of preoperative evaluation, because poorly controlled hypertension can heighten the risk of cardiovascular complications during anesthesia and surgery. Clinicians assess whether a patient's pressure is stable enough to proceed safely on the planned date.

For an ambulatory surgery center, hypertension is among the comorbidities that shape patient selection and anesthesia clearance. Identifying and managing it ahead of time helps avoid last-minute cancellations and keeps same-day procedures both safe and on schedule.

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