Subclinical Lunar Hypertension
Earth designation: Subclinical Hypertension
Subclinical presentation of Hypertension in lunar residents. Persistently elevated blood pressure. The lunar environment creates paradoxical effects: initial hypotension from fluid redistribution often gives way to hypertension in established residents, driven by stress, sleep disruption, altered sodium regulation, and potentially radiation effects on the ren...
Lunar Risk Factors
Chronic stress (isolation, confinement, occupational hazards). Sleep disruption from 14-day light cycles. High-sodium preserved foods in lunar diet. Radiation effects on renal function. Stimulant medication use.
Symptoms
Usually asymptomatic. Headache, visual changes, nose bleeds in hypertensive urgency/emergency.
Lunar Presentation
Headache in 1/6 gravity may also reflect intracranial pressure changes — distinguish carefully. Routine monitoring critical since symptoms are unreliable.
Diagnosis
Automated blood pressure monitoring. Target: <130/80 mmHg. Ambulatory BP monitoring over 24 hours to assess true baseline.
Treatment
Lifestyle modification, ACE inhibitors, ARBs, calcium channel blockers, diuretics.
Lunar Medical Bay Protocol
First line: lifestyle modification (exercise, sodium restriction, stress reduction). Pharmacological: amlodipine (calcium channel blocker) preferred — good stability in lunar storage conditions. ACE inhibitors (lisinopril) second line. Avoid beta-blockers as first line (may worsen exercise deconditioning). Monthly BP monitoring minimum.
Evacuation Criteria
Hypertensive emergency (>180/120 with end-organ damage). Uncontrolled hypertension with new neurological symptoms (rule out intracranial hemorrhage).
Prevention
Sodium-restricted diet, regular cardiovascular exercise, stress management, adequate sleep, routine monitoring.