Arterial stiffening provides sufficient explanation for primary hypertension
Klas H. Pettersen, Scott M. Bugenhagen, Javaid Nauman, Daniel A., Beard, and Stig W. Omholt

TL;DR
This study uses computer models to show that arterial stiffening alone can explain the development of primary hypertension with age, emphasizing a mechanogenic cause over other factors.
Contribution
It demonstrates through modeling that arterial stiffening is sufficient to cause primary hypertension, challenging previous views on its etiology.
Findings
Arterial stiffening explains age-related hypertension.
Impaired baroreflex response is a key factor.
Results align with experimental data.
Abstract
Hypertension is one of the most common age-related chronic diseases and by predisposing individuals for heart failure, stroke and kidney disease, it is a major source of morbidity and mortality. Its etiology remains enigmatic despite intense research efforts over many decades. By use of empirically well-constrained computer models describing the coupled function of the baroreceptor reflex and mechanics of the circulatory system, we demonstrate quantitatively that arterial stiffening seems sufficient to explain age-related emergence of hypertension. Specifically, the empirically observed chronic changes in pulse pressure with age, and the impaired capacity of hypertensive individuals to regulate short-term changes in blood pressure, arise as emergent properties of the integrated system. Results are consistent with available experimental data from chemical and surgical manipulation of the…
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