High blood pressure (hypertension) can contribute to the development of various cardiovascular conditions, including aneurysms in the aorta, but it is not a direct cause of pulmonary aneurysms. Pulmonary aneurysms, which occur in the pulmonary arteries, are more commonly associated with conditions such as pulmonary hypertension, infections, or congenital heart defects. While hypertension can exacerbate existing vascular problems, it is not the primary cause of pulmonary aneurysms.
can
Decreased pulmonary blood flow alone does not cause cyanosis. It is when decreased pulmonary blood flow is associated with right to left shunting (ie Tetralogy of fallot) that it is associated with cyanosis.
Yes
smoking
if it gets to bad yes
Primary pulmonary hypertension is generally classified as a disease of the lung, related to high blood-pressure. Essentially, the increased pressure causes some pulmonary arteries and veins to work at drastically different rates than others, creating an imbalance that can cause fatigue, shortness of breath, fainting, and a persistent cough.
About 90% of these embolisms are the result of DVT that forms in the legs or the pelvis and moves into the lung and blocks the pulmonary artery.
Pulmonary agents can cause pulmonary edema by disrupting the normal balance of fluid in the lungs, leading to fluid accumulation in the air sacs (alveoli) and interstitial spaces. This can result from mechanisms such as increased capillary permeability, inflammation, or increased hydrostatic pressure in the pulmonary circulation. Ultimately, this leads to impaired gas exchange and breathing difficulties.
my lung noduals have edges. what is the cause
yes it can so be careful
Pulmonary hypertension(P-h) is a syndrome that involves heart and lung. Diseases like COPD (chronic pulmonary disease) May also cause pulmonary hypertension. Not all the cardio-artery disease is related to P-h. Heart has valves. Dysfunction of these valves will cause tension to the blood flow, leading to p-h.