Title: Pharmaceutical Care Hypertension
1Pharmaceutical CareHypertension
2Plan
- Definition and clinical risks
- Prevalence and aims of treatment
- Guidelines for management
- lifestyle /
medicines - Delivering pharmaceutical care to patients
3Diagnosis of hypertension
- ? BP ? 160/100mmHg
- ? SBP 140-159mmHg OR DBP 90-99mmHg
- target organ damage
- established cardiovascular disease
- diabetes
- 10 year CVD risk ? 20
410-year cardiovascular risk
- Based on Framingham data
- ? Age
- ? Gender
- ? Smoking status
- ? Blood pressure
- ? Ratio of TC/HDL cholesterol
- ? Family history of CVD
- ? Diabetic status - treated as established
cardiovascular disease
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6Definitions
- Essential hypertension 95
- Secondary hypertension - 5
- eg phaeochromoctyoma, renal artery stenosis
- Isolated systolic hypertension
- in elderly - normal DBP elevated SBP
- ? eg 190/80mmHg
- White coat hypertension
- 24 hour ambulatory monitoring / home
monitoring - ? elderly, female, non smokers
7Clinical effects of hypertension
- Major risk factor for
- ? Stroke (62)
- ? Coronary heart disease (52)
- ? Heart failure
- ? Renal failure (2-5)
- ? Retinopathy
8Ethnicity, hypertension and clinical risk
- ? British African Caribbean
- ? mortality x 3.5 cf white caucasian
- CVA / renal failure
- ? British South Asians
- ? mortality x 1.5 cf white caucasian
- MI / CVA
9Prevalence
- ? Major public health issue
- Scotland - 45 (2000) / England - 33 (2004)
- ? Increases with age
- 76 in patients ? 75 years
- ? Most common condition for GP consultation
- males ? 45 years
- females ? 65 years
- ? 15 of drug budget in UK (pre GMS)
10What does a hypertensive patient look like?
- Asymptomatic
- ? education re disease complications
- ? compliance / concordance
- Wide age range
- Lifelong
- ? lifestyle changes effected
11British Hypertension Society 2004Treatment goals
12Other UK guidelinesTreatment goals
13Control of hypertension
- ? Rule of halves
- 50 of population have diagnosis
- 50 of those diagnosed at target BP
- ? BP lt140/90mmHg
- England 1994 - 6 ? 2003 - 23
- Scotland 1999 - 18
- ? GMS contract 2005
- BP lt150/90mmHg
- National 70-100!?
- ?exclusion criteria / prevalence on register
14Public health risk and blood pressure
- ? Mortality /morbidity risk starts at SBP 115mmHg
- ? Reduction of 5mmHg in population
- ? decrease stroke by 14
- ? heart disease by 9
15Lifestyle Management
- Weight
- ? aim BMI 20-25??
- ? low calorie healthy eating diet reduces
- BP by 5-6mmHg (fruit and vegetables)
- Exercise
- ? 30-60mins aerobic exercise 3-5 x weekly
reduces - BP by 2-3mmHg
- Salt intake
- ? cutting sodium intake to lt6g/day reduces
- BP by 3-4 mmHg (average intake 12g)
16Lifestyle Management (cont)
- Alcohol
- ? 14u - 21u / week - no binging
- ? reduces BP by 3-4mmHg
- Smoking
- reduces overall cardiovascular risk
- Environmental stress
- ? relaxation therapies reduces BP by 3-4mmHg
- Caffeine
- ? gt5 cups / day increases BP by 1-2mmHg
17Choice of treatment
- ? ACEI/ A2A - decrease renin release
-
- ? Beta blockers - reduce cardiac output,
decrease renin release - ? Calcium Channel blockers - block Ca influx
to smooth muscle, decrease peripheral resistance - ? Diuretics (thiazides) - reduce cardiac
output and decrease peripheral resistance - ? Alpha blockers - block alpha 1 receptors,
decrease peripheral resistance
18ACE inhibitors
- Indications
- Heart failure, post MI ,type 1 diabetic
nephropathy - Contraindications
- Bilateral renal artery stenosis
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Cough, fatigue, angiooedema, renal
impairment, hyperkalaemia, rhinitis.
19Angiotensin 2 Antagonists
- Indications
- ACE intolerance, type 2 diabetic nephropathy,
left ventricular hypertrophy - Contraindications
- Bilateral renal artery stenosis
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Renal impairment, hyperkalaemia, rhinitis.
20Beta Blockers
- Indications
- Post MI, angina,heart failure
- Contraindications
- Asthma, severe COPD, heart block, PVD
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Wheeze, cold extremities, fatigue,bradycardia,
impotence.
21Calcium Channel BlockersDihydropyridines
- Indications
- ISH, angina
- Contraindications
- Aortic stenosis
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Ankle oedema, headache, flushing,gum
hypertrophy, constipation.
22Calcium Channel BlockersRate limiting
- Indications
- Angina
- Contraindications
- Heart block, heart failure.
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Ankle oedema, headache, bradycardia.
23Thiazide Diuretics
- Indications
- ISH, heart failure
- Contraindications
- Gout
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Gout, electrolyte imbalance,postural
hypotension
24Alpha Blockers
- Indications
- Benign prostatic hypertrophy
- Contraindications
- Urinary incontinence
- Adverse effects / monitoring
- Postural hypotension, dry mouth, headache
25Role of combination therapy
- ? Dual therapy LIFE
- 90 required ? 2drugs (?145/81mmHg)
- ? Triple therapy UKPDS
- 60 required ? 2 drugs
- 33 required ? 3 drugs
-
(?150/85mmHg) - CONSIDER USE OF FIXED DOSE COMBINATION
PRODUCTS!!! - (eg ACEI / thiazide)
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27NICE algorithm
28NICE
- In patients lt 55 years consider BB
- Recognition of different effects dependant on age
/ ethnicity - All classes similar effects mortality
- (alpha
blockers) - AB / CD
- ? no evidence of better CV outcomes
- ? no evidence of cost effectiveness
29- However most important
- factor
- morbidity / mortality
- ? BP target level achieved
30Medicines ? BP
- NSAIDs / COX2
- OCP
- Steroids
- Sympathomimetics (phenylpropanolamine)
- Liquorice
- Salt content eg soluble tablets
31Pharmaceutical Care Plan
- Social and psychological make up
- EDUCATION
- What does X/YmmHg mean?
- Why is it necessary to treat - asymptomatic?
- What is target and why?
- Why more than one drug?
- Can I stop taking when target reached?
- What happens if I miss doses?
32Pharmaceutical care plan (cont)
- Effectiveness
-
- Compliance / concordance
- Lifestyle management
- ADR / concurrent medication
- Choice of agent with co-morbidities
- BUT
- hypertension only 1 risk factor in overall CV
risk to the patient - dont treat in isolation!!