Useful history, physical, and laboratory findings for predicting secondary hypertension in children and adolescents

Question clinique

What components of the clinical history, physical examination, and laboratory testing are useful for differentiating primary from secondary hypertension in children and adolescents?

L’Essentiel

A family history of secondary hypertension, a history of prematurity, age 6 years or younger, low body weight (10% or lower for age and sex), microalbuminuria, and serum uric acid concentration of 5.5 mg/dL or less are the most useful findings for an increased likelihood of secondary hypertension in children and adolescents. Obesity, family history of primary hypertension, and absence of hypertension-related symptoms (eg, headache, blurry vision, dizziness, chest pain, edema) are the most useful findings for ruling out secondary hypertension. 1a-

Plan de l'etude: Systematic review

Financement: Self-funded or unfunded

Cadre: Various (meta-analysis)

Reviewer

David C. Slawson, MD
Professor and Vice Chair of Family Medicine for Education and Scholarship
Atrium Health
Professor of Family Medicine, UNC Chapel Hill
Charlotte, NC


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Commentaires

ARUP KUMAR DHARA

Impact assessment

Excellent

Anonymous

Good to know

Good to know

Anonymous

Does headache distinguish secondary from primary hypertensio

In the "Synopsis" it states: Clinical findings associated with a decreased likelihood of secondary hypertension included obesity (LR- 0.34; 0.13 - 0.90) and the absence of hypertension-related symptoms (eg, headache, blurry vision, dizziness, chest pain, edema; LR- range 0.19 - 0.36).
PubMed Abstract states: Hypertension stage, headache, and left ventricular hypertrophy did not distinguish secondary from primary hypertension.
Looks like there is an error in one of the re headache.