1 / 28

Clinical Aspects of Hypertension

Clinical Aspects of Hypertension. Anna Maio, M.D. Incidence and Prevalence. 58-65 million Americans 30% incidence in the 18 and older age group 1/2 of people over 65 are hypertensive 15% of whites and 25% of African Americans--reason unknown

louvain
Download Presentation

Clinical Aspects of Hypertension

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Clinical Aspects of Hypertension Anna Maio, M.D.

  2. Incidence and Prevalence 58-65 million Americans 30% incidence in the 18 and older age group 1/2 of people over 65 are hypertensive • 15% of whites and 25% of African Americans--reason unknown • More common in men than in women up to the age of 50.

  3. JNC 7 Report-JAMA-May, 2003 Classification of BP

  4. Definition of Isolated Systolic Hypertension • Systolic blood pressure>160 mmHg • Diastolic blood pressure< or = 90 mmHg • Prevalence increases with age • 11.7% of individuals >80 years of age • 50% higher prevalence in women and African Americans

  5. Emergent/Urgent Hypertension • DBP>120 mmHg and papilledema (malignant) • Usually renal failure or stroke or chest pain or confusion or hemolytic anemia is present • Requires admission to an ICU, arterial line and parenteral treatment

  6. Risk Factors for Essential HTN • More common and more severe in blacks • Relationship between sodium intake and hypertension • Association between excess alcohol and HTN • Increased prevalence of obesity • More common among those with hostile attitudes

  7. Identifiable Causes of Hypertension • Chronic kidney disease and renovascular disease (5-10%) • Sleep apnea • Chronic steroid therapy/Cushing syndrome • Primary aldosteronism • Pheochromocytoma • Coarctation of the aorta • Thyroid or parathyroid disease

  8. Identifiable CausesDrug-Induced or Drug-Related • NSAIDS/COX-2 inhibitors • Cocaine, amphetamines, other illicit drugs • Sympathomimetics • OCPs • Adrenal steroids • Cyclosporine and tacrolimus • Erythropoietin • Licorice

  9. History • Duration of disease • Prior treatment including drugs, doses, side effects • Use of estrogens, steroids, sympathomimetics, etc. (drugs taken are essential) • Family history of HTN, early cardiac death, pheo, renal disease • ROS focuses on the target organs

  10. Physical Exam • Measurement of BP in both arms, BMI • Fundi • Auscultation for carotid, abdominal, and femoral bruits • Palpation of the thyroid • Heart, lungs, abdomen • Edema and pulses • Neuro assessment

  11. Laboratory and Other Studies • Urinalysis • Glucose, serum potassium, creatinine, calcium • Hematocrit? • TSH? • Pregnancy test? • EKG? • Lipids?

  12. Essential vs.. Secondary Causes • Use clues in the history and physical to order other testing • Acute BP rise over stable baseline • Age<20 or >50 years of age • Severe HTN with retinal involvement • Unexplained hypokalemia • No family history • Abdominal bruit

  13. Complication Associated With Untreated Hypertension • Coronary Artery Disease • Cerebrovascular Disease • Left ventricular hypertrophy with congestive heart failure • Renal failure • Aortic dissection • Retinal hemorrhages/papilledema

  14. Cardiovascular Disease Risk • Relationship is independent of other risk factors • The higher the BP the greater the chance of MI, HF, stroke, and kidney disease • Stage 1 and risk factors--12 mmHg decrease in systolic BP for 10 years will prevent 1 death for every 11 treated patients

  15. Benefits of Treatment • 35-40% mean reduction in stroke • 20-25% in myocardial infarction • 50% reduction in heart failure

  16. Initial Drug Therapy

  17. Treatment • Lifestyle changes • Treatment of hypertension with and without CI • Initiating therapy with 2 drugs if > 20/10 mmHg over goal/side effect problems • Use thiazide diuretics

  18. Lifestyle Modifications • Weight reduction BMI=18.5-24.9 • Adopt DASH eating plan Consume diet rich in fruits, veggies, and low-fat dairy • Dietary sodium reduction • Physical activity Regular aerobic activity at least 30 minutes/day most days/week • Moderation of alcohol consumption No more than 2/day

  19. Compelling Indications • HF-diuretic, beta-blocker, ACEI, ARB, aldosterone antagonist • Post-MI-beta-blocker, ACEI, aldosterone antagonist • High coronary disease risk-diuretic, beta-blocker, ACEI, CCB • Diabetes-diuretic, beta-blocker, ACEI, ARB, CCB

  20. Compelling Indications • Chronic kidney disease-ACEI, ARB • Recurrent stroke prevention-diuretic, ACEI

  21. Favorable Drug Effects • Thiazides are useful in slowing the demineralization in osteoporosis • Beta-blockers can be used to treat arrhythmias, migraine, thyrotoxicosis, tremor, or stage fright • CCBs can be used in Raynaud’s and some arrhythmias • Alpha-blockers may be useful in prostatic hypertrophy

  22. Unfavorable Drug Effects • Pregnancy--methyldopa, beta-blockers, and vasodilators; ACEI and ARBs are contraindicated because of fetal defects and should be avoided in women who are likely to get pregnant • Thiazides should be used with caution in gout or a history of hyponatremia • Avoid beta-blockers in reactive airway disease or heart block

  23. Creating a Drug Regimen • Choose first drug very carefully; often a thiazide • Bring patient back in 1-2 weeks • Add second drug if needed; if first drug is not a diuretic the second one should be • Third drug is often a CCB or an alpha2 agonist • If the patient requires a 4th drug it is usually a potent vasodilator

  24. Drug Regimen for Isolated Systolic Hypertension • Drugs shown to be of benefit (>33% reduction in stroke) are thiazide diuretics and beta-blockers • Always check orthostatic blood pressure since this can effect quality of life

  25. Drug Regimens for Accelerated Hypertension • All drugs should be given in a monitered setting-CCU or ICU; consider an arterial line • Drugs should be given parenterally • Volume overload is common; assess need for loop diuretic • Nitroprusside, Enalapril, Esmolol, Cardizem are just a few of the drugs available IV now

  26. Physicians’ Role • Strive for optimal blood pressure control • Look for identifiable causes and treat/eliminate when possible • Partner with the patient to choose the best drug regimen considering cost, convenience, side effects • Follow-up and education

  27. Improving Hypertension Control • Clinical inertia

  28. Questions?????

More Related