• 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 213  (3) , 183-190
Abstract
Middle-aged women [1462] aged 38-60 participated in a population study and 1302 were re-investigated 6 yr later in a follow-up study. Studied cross-sectionally, headache and nycturia were more common in both untreated and treated hypertensives than in a non-hypertensive reference group. The prevalences of headache seemed to be U-shaped when related to the BP [body pressure] levels, with the highest prevalences in the lowest and highest quintiles of BP levels. In the longitudinal study, headache did not occur more often in those women who had started antihypertensive treatment than in the others. Dizziness as a new symptom occurred more often in women who had started to take antihypertensive drugs than in those who had not, and was more common in those who had started taking diuretics than in those starting on .beta.-blockers. The prevalences of eyeground phenomena and ECG changes seemed to increase linearly with increasing BP levels. Evidently some symptoms and signs are related to BP levels, and some of the symptoms in hypertensive women may also be related to antihypertensive treatment as such and to the type of antihypertensive treatment given.