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Hypertension

Hypertension. Classification of hypertension BP targets Basic evaluation When to evaluate for secondary causes Which drug(s) you should use Classes of antihypertensives. Classification of blood pressure in adults. Target BP. Patients with diabetes and CKD – 130/80

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Hypertension

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  1. Hypertension • Classification of hypertension • BP targets • Basic evaluation • When to evaluate for secondary causes • Which drug(s) you should use • Classes of antihypertensives

  2. Classification of blood pressure in adults

  3. Target BP Patients with diabetes and CKD – 130/80 Everybody else – 140/90

  4. Basic evaluation • History • HPI – onset of hypertension, antihypertensives (which ones used, side effects), severity of hypertension • PMH – all drugs used including OTC meds, herbals; other medical conditions • FH – specifically hypertension, renal disease • SH – EtOH, salt intake, increase in weight • ROS – HA, palpitations, sweating, thyroid sxs • Physical • BP in both arms • fundoscopic exam • thyroid exam • heart, lungs • abd – specifically listen for bruits • ext – pulses, edema

  5. Initial labs • BUN, creat(eGFR), urinalysis • Calcium • K • TSH

  6. When to eval for secondary causes • When basic eval suggests a secondary cause –e.g. variable BP, HA, palpitations, sweating – pheo; severe hypertension in a young female or sudden worsening of hypertension in an older person – renovascular hypertension • When history is not consistent with essential hypertension (positive FH, onset in 20’s, initially mild) • For resistant hypertension – elevated BP when patient is reliably taking adequate doses of three antihypertensives, one of which is a diuretic

  7. First drug with no other medical problems • Anything would work (the most important thing is to control the blood pressure) • Diuretics have been the most thoroughly studied and are safe, effective and inexpensive • I recommend starting with chlorthlidone 12.5 qd; if the BP is not controlled I would add lisinopril

  8. Compelling indications • CHF – ACE, ARB, BB, Aldo ant; also diuretics • Post-MI – BB, ACE • High CAD risk – BB, ACE; also diuretics, CCB • Diabetes – BB, ACE, ARB; also diuretics, CCB • CKD – ACE, ARB • Recurrent stroke prevention – ACE; also diuretics • BPH (not in JNC VII) – α-blocker

  9. Second and third drugs • If first drug is not a diuretic second one should be (almost all non-diuretic antihypertensives result in sodium retention which limits their efficacy) • Best 3 drug combo is appropriate dose of a diuretic, an ACE inhibitor and a calcium channel blocker

  10. Diuretics • Thiazides • qd for BP; chlorthalidone making a comeback • Loop • GFR < 30 - 50 • bid for BP (except for torsemide which is qd) • Aldo antagonists • primary aldo and aldo mediated hypertension more common than previously thought so consider these drugs in resistant BP • spironolactone – 25 qd is usually sufficient • eplerenone has few hormonal side effects but is very expensive (is half as potent as spironolactone)

  11. Calcium channel blockers • Decrease tone of LES/dose-dependent edema/can be used together • Dihydropyridines •  glomerular pressure in CKD so don’t use as first BP drug; OK if patient already on ACE or ARB • amlodipine is generic and has long half life without delivery system • Diltiazem •  glomerular pressure in CKD • neginotrope and chronotrope • Verapamil •  glomerular pressure in CKD • neginotrope and chronotrope • all older patients get constipated

  12. ACE inhibitors • 16% get dry cough, can start > 1 year after starting ACE • Angioedema • Captopril is short acting • Work great with diuretic

  13. Angiotensin receptor blockers • No cough • 8% of patients who get angioedema with ACE get it with ARB • Probably like an ACE without the cough • ONTARGET trial (25,000 patients with vascular disease or DM with end-organ damage) – proteinuria was decreased but CV outcomes and renal function were worse in patient treated with combo ACE/ARB as opposed to either drug alone

  14. Renin antagonists (aliskiren) • Very few clinical trials • Very expensive • No cough • Can cause angioedema

  15. ß-blockers • Use metoprolol, not atenolol • Metoprolol XL is now generic so is probably the preferred ß-blocker • Lower BP by decreasing renin levels so add little BP lowering to ACEs or ARBs

  16. α-blockers • Some risk of precipitating CHF • Only indication is BPH • First dose syncope can occur after stopping/restarting med or increasing dose • Tamsulosin is much better than doxazosin or terazosin for BPH so often times I am switching metoprolol to carvedilol instead of using doxazosin or terazosin

  17. Direct vasodilators • Hydralazine rarely indicated • frequent dosing • drug induced lupus • possibly indicated in patient with CHF who gets angioedema on ACE/ARB • Minoxidil • Extremely potent and effective • Hirsutism is a problem in females • Can cause severe fluid retention, tachycardia and pericarditis so should probably only be used by hypertension specialists

  18. Centrally acting agents • Clonidine • short acting so good for EtOH withdrawal or hypertensive urgencies • bedtime dose can be used for patients with PTSD • clonidine withdrawal can be severe – it is caused by rebound increase in centrally mediated α and β adrenergic stimulation; when patients are also on a β-blocker unopposed α stimulation can increase the BP • rash frequent with patch

  19. Rules of thumb • Never use ß-blocker and clonidine together • Never use ß-blocker and verapamil together • Be careful when using a ß-blocker and dilt together • Never use 10 mg of furosemide • A 25% increase in creat after starting an ACE is good, not bad • Don’t increase doses of long acting BP meds daily • Never use tidantihypertensives

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