Patients with arteriosclerotic renal disease may show manifestations of systemic arteriosclerosis, such as heart, brain, and peripheral vascular sclerosis, with or without hypertension. The manifestations of the benign phase of primary hypertension include overweight, headache, dizziness, palpitations, shortness of breath, nervousness, and chest pain, while the manifestations of the malignant phase include headache and hypertensive encephalopathy, weight loss, visual impairment, early renal sclerosis may see lumbar pain, lumbar pain, edema, hematuria, polyuria at night, and late renal function failure.
Patients with arteriosclerotic renal disease show manifestations of systemic arteriosclerosis, such as heart, brain, and peripheral vascular sclerosis, with or without hypertension. The blood pressure in the benign phase of primary hypertension is often moderately elevated, ultimately leading to congestive heart failure or cerebrovascular accidents, with only a few patients dying of renal failure, and in the malignant phase, the diastolic pressure is often13More than 0mmHg, papilledema is its prominent feature, and sometimes bleeding and exudates can be seen, often leading to renal failure.