Objective: Objective: Hypertensive Cardiovascular Disease is a complex, multifactorial, and chronic illness, frequently beginning during childhood or adolescence, could develop functional and/or structural organ damage by the increase of arterial stiffness and the curve volume/pressure that in turn can raise the stress into the ventricular-arterial coupling and the appearance of arrhythmias. The aim of this study was to assess systemic inflammatory diseases according to non-invasive arterial tonometry and their possible complications. Design and method: Design & Method: This cross-sectional study registered 339 patients, women 77%, both sexes, presented various systemic inflammatory diseases such as Psoriasis (123), Rheumatoid Arthritis (26), Celiac disease (13), Sjögren's disease (9), Crohn's disease (7), Ulcerative colitis (10), Endometriosis (10), Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (141). Anthropological data, Systolic/Diastolic Blood Pressure, and Heart Rate were measured. Central Hemodynamic Parameters (Central Aortic Pressure, End-Systolic Pressure, Mean Arterial Pressure, Pulse Pressure, Augmentation Pressure) and the difference between the maximum normal level and the observed value of the Augmentation Index (Diff-AIx), the surrogated value of arterial stiffness, were assessed with the SphygmoCor System-PVX, according to established protocols by sex and age. Results: Results: The mean age of women and men was 45-51 years. The mean of Systolic/Diastolic Blood Pressure among women and men was 132.5/81.6-135.2/85.9 mmHg, respectively. The Diff-AIx among women was 4.8 and among men was 5.4. The most important finding of the assessment of the systemic inflammatory diseases was the presence of hypertensive cardiovascular disease, considering the measurements of high systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and the abnormal Central hemodynamic parameters. The most important complication observed was the brief phases of atrial fibrillation during the 24-hour Holter monitoring (7.4%), the mean age of patients was 64.2 years, range of 44-88 years, and the highest percentage of each group were Ulcerative colitis (20.0%), Rheumatoid Arthritis (15.4%), and Crohn's disease (14.3%), Psoriasis (10.6%), Endometriosis (10.0%). Conclusions: Conclusions: The systemic diseases can damage the arterial wall and contribute to the development of Hypertensive Cardiovascular Disease. Cardiologists and clinical physicians, in the anamnesis, should include the search for inflammatory systemic diseases for a more complete clinical evaluation and therapeutic guidance.