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Free Viability Check →Hypertension is one of the most prevalent health conditions in the veteran population, and one of the most underrated in terms of claim potential. For veterans with service-connected alcohol use disorder, hypertension caused by chronic alcohol use may qualify as a tertiary claim with real compensation value.
The relationship between chronic heavy alcohol use and elevated blood pressure is one of the best-established findings in cardiovascular epidemiology. The mechanisms are multiple and well-documented:
Published cardiovascular medicine literature shows a dose-response relationship between alcohol consumption and blood pressure: the more heavily someone drinks over time, the greater the expected blood pressure elevation. This is a recognized independent risk factor for hypertension, not just a contributing factor.
The legal structure follows 38 CFR 3.310 and the Allen v. Principi (237 F.3d 1368, Fed. Cir. 2001) framework:
Each link requires its own documentation and, for the tertiary link, a physician-authored nexus opinion.
See alcohol use disorder secondary to PTSD and substance use disorder as a secondary claim pathway for the earlier links in the chain.
Hypertension is rated under Diagnostic Code 7101. The rating criteria are based on diastolic and systolic blood pressure readings:
These ratings are measured without antihypertensive medication. If a veteran is adequately controlled on medication but was uncontrolled off medication, the rating should reflect the uncontrolled readings.
A 10-20% hypertension rating may not seem significant in isolation, but combined with other service-connected conditions in the VA's combined ratings math, it can move a veteran from 70% to 80% or from 80% to 90%. Those transitions have real dollar consequences. Moving from 80% to 90% adds approximately $500 or more per month in compensation for a veteran without dependents, based on published VA pay rates. Moving from 90% to 100% adds even more and can trigger additional benefits including free dental care and CHAMPVA eligibility for dependents. A 20% hypertension tertiary rating is not a minor filing. It can be the step that crosses a threshold.
Many veterans have multiple potential causes of hypertension: genetic predisposition, obesity, high-sodium diet, sedentary lifestyle, stress, and PTSD-related sympathetic activation. The AUD-related hypertension claim doesn't require that AUD be the sole cause. It requires that AUD substantially caused or aggravated the hypertension.
The nexus opinion should address:
If the veteran's blood pressure improved significantly during periods of sobriety or reduced drinking (a pattern that may be documented in treatment records), this directly supports the causal connection.
The physician-authored opinion must connect the AUD to the hypertension diagnosis. An internal medicine physician, cardiologist, or addiction medicine specialist can author this. The letter should address the specific mechanisms listed above and the veteran's individual clinical history.
Hypertension is a gateway condition to more severe cardiovascular disease. Service-connected hypertension can itself support tertiary claims for:
See AUD and cardiovascular disease secondary claims for the broader cardiovascular picture.
A tertiary hypertension claim requires a documented claim chain from the primary condition through AUD to the blood pressure diagnosis. Flat Rate Nexus provides physician-signed nexus letters for secondary and tertiary VA claims. Explore educational resources at flatratenexus.com/substance-use-disorder.html.
Thinking about your own claim? Every nexus letter we write goes through a full physician record review, cites peer-reviewed research, and is built around the actual evidence in your case.
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