Title: Severe Hypertension: In a Clinical Pearls Format
1Severe Hypertension In a Clinical Pearls Format
- Gregory W. Rutecki, M.D.,
- Bradley M. Wright, Pharm. D., BCPS, Molly Adams
Pharm. D., BCPS, U.niversity of S.outh A.labama
Auburn University
2What is a Clinical Pearls Format?
- At the 2001 American College of Physicians
Annual Conference, a new teaching format to aid
physician learning, Clinical Pearls, was
introduced. Understanding 3 qualities of
physician learners allowed the design of Clinical
Pearls to be created. First, physicians learn
from cases. Second they like practical points
they can use in their practice. Finally,
physicians take pleasure in problem solving. - Mayo Clin. Proc. 2010851046-1050.
3The Format
- A number of short cases dealing with severe
hypertension (180 or gt mm/hg systolic//110 or gt
diastolic) will be presented. - A multiple choice question will follow each.
- Clinical Pearls will be furnished. They are
defined as practical teaching points supported by
the literature/evidence. - This format has become one of the most popular
sessions at the National ACP.
4CASE 1.
- A 43-year-old black man presents to the Emergency
Department with a blood pressure of 240/162
mm/hg. - Physical Examination did not include a
funduscopic examination. - He is started on a nitroglycerin drip admitted
as a hypertensive urgency. - Previous BUN/Creatinine values were 20/1.3
mg/dl., now they have increased precipitously to
132/11.3 mg/dl for unknown reasons. - A new normocytic anemia schistocytes acute
renal failure are present.
5Question for Case 1
- Which of the following choices is most correct?
- a.) Information in the case presentation suggests
the patient has a hypertensive emergency. - b.) nitroglycerin is the correct therapy.
- c.) a funduscopic will not add much to the acute
evaluation. - d.) In his situation, the distinction between
urgency and emergency is not critical.
6Presence or Absence of Target Organ Injury is the
Key
- The Fundus
- Cardiovascular System
- Brain
- Hematology
- Kidney
- Grade 3 4 hypertensive retinopathy.
- An ischemic syndrome, failure, or dissection of
the aorta - Caveats with ischemic strokes a possible future
change in hemorrhagic strokes. Do you know about
PRES or Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy? - Remember the BAD old days of scleroderma and
schistocytes?
7Where have all the Ophthalmoscopes gone?
- Confessions of a midnight Ophthalmologist
8Lets look at the excuses
- MYTH Mydriatic drops can precipitate acute
narrow angle glaucoma (Angels and Ministers of
Grace Defend us!!!)
- BMJ studies comprised by 6760, 4870, 3654
persons dilated randomly 0.03, 0, and 0
developed narrow angle glaucoma. - Systematic Review 600,000 patients--risk of
glaucoma was 1 in 20,000. - 13 studies wherein persons WITH NARROW ANGLE
GLAUCOMA given drops, not one developed narrow
angle closure
9Malignant Hypertension//Hypertensive Emergency
10CP1098816-1
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13Case 1 Clinical Pearl
- It is NOT the blood pressure per se that
determines urgency versus emergency, BUT
RATHER whether severe hypertension (gt180/gt110
mm/hg) is associated with target organ
damage/injury. The most accessible site for the
clinician to uncover that damage is the fundus.
14Eight days in the ICU what do you get, (not a
little bit older.debt)
- Blood Pressure in a 28 y.o. of 200s/130s mm/Hg.
- Treated as a stubborn urgency in the ICU,
meaning that it took 8 days of concoctions
(hydralazine and labetalol) to reach a semblance
of control. - Transferred to floor and a funduscopic is
performed. Grade 3 hypertensive retinopathy
(hemorrhages and exudates) is discovered after
dilatation. - He has acute on chronic renal failure
(BUN/Creatinine 46/4.7 from 30/2.8 mg/dl) and
schistocytes.
15Clinical Case 2, question
- If the hypertensive emergency was discovered
earlier which agent below would have been the
most appropriate therapy? - A.) hydralazine parenterally
- B.) clonidine loading
- C.) fenoldopam
- D.) nitroprusside
- E.) nitroglycerin
16The Righteous Brothers were right Time does go
by slowly
- We have come a long way from diazoxide,
nitroprusside, clonidine, nitroglycerin,
hydralazine. - Our vocabulary must include nicardipine,
labetalol, clevidipine, fenoldopam. - Lets look at some subtractions some additions
to the severe hypertension armamentarium
17Lets look at Fenoldopam
- How does it work?
- It is a peripheral dopamine type-1 receptor
agonist dilating coronary, renal, mesenteric,
peripheral arteries. An gt in renal blood flow
GFR can be seen with fenoldopam. Studies
comparing fenoldopam to nitroprusside in the
setting of hypertensive emergencies have
demonstrated NO DIFFERENCE in time to goal blood
pressure or attainment of mean arterial pressure.
Studies post-cardiac surgery have reported
improved outcomes with fenoldopam over both
nifedipine and nitroprusside after CABG. AVOID
with neurological injury glaucoma.
18Lets look at Hydralazine/nitroglycerin -- /--
- How do they work?
- Hydralazine direct arterial vasodilator. Onset
of action 5-15 minutes, BUT its pharmacological
effect can last up to gt12 hours! In coronary
disease/dissection, it can worsen the
cardiovascular situation! It can RAISE
intracranial pressure. To our OB colleagues
meta-analysishydralazine increases maternal
hypotension c-sections, placental abruptions,
is associated with lower Apgar scores. - Nitroglycerin for hypertensive emergency when
the TOD/I is heart (ischemia, failure), but
exacerbates volume depletion hypotension and
gtICP.
19Lets look at clevidipine labetalol,
- Clevidipine, How does it work?
- Short acting Ca Channel Blocker with utility in
multiple settings except aortic stenosis, heart
failure, egg and soybean allergy. - Labetalol alpha-1 beta antagonist. Across the
board and no fetal distress. - Know about phentolamine, nicardipine, esmolol
20Clinical Pearl 2 Tailor made medications
- Haas AR. Marik PE. Current Diagnosis and
management of Hypertensive Emergency. Seminars In
Dialysis 2006 19502-12. - 1.) Myocardial ischemia/encephalopathy
- LABETALOL
- 2.) Acute/chronic renal failure
- FENOLDOPAM
- 3.) Pregnancy
- LABETALOL
- 4.) Aortic dissection
- ESMOLOL
- 5.) Sympathetic crisis
- NICARDIPINE (phentolamine)
21Cognizance of Systems Safety
- Improving quality and safety of hospital care a
reappraisal an agenda for clinically relevant
reform. Internal Medicine Journal 2008 3844-55. - Prevention of Medication errors Actively involve
clinical pharmacists in the medication use
process through attendance on ward rounds
22Case 3 an ambulatory person with resistant
hypertension
- Definitions, work up, and therapy
23Case 3 Resistant, ambulatory hypertension
- A 54 y.o. Latino man with DM2 and OSA sees you in
the office for a blood pressure of 210/140 mm/hg. - His BP management is enalapril 20 mg/day.
- He has no target organ damage/injury on
examination. - He brings screening laboratory work Na 141, K
1.8, Cl- 99, HCO3 51 meQ/L respectively. - ABGs pH 7.59, paO2 50 mm/Hg, pCO2 51 mm/Hg
- Urine lytes (SPOT) Na 46, K48, Cl- 84 meQ/L
respectively.
24Question, Case 3
- Which of the following statements regarding
resistant hypertension is most accurate (we will
revisit case 3, step by step after you answer) - a.) The definition of resistant hypertension is
failure to control after adherence with a 4 drug
regimen. - b.) beta blockers consistently lower blood
pressure across all demographic groupings. - c.) Maxing out monotherapy is superior to
multiple drugs at lower doses. - d.) Aldosterone/renin levels are a valuable
adjunct in the evaluation of the resistant
hypertensive.
25Debunking a Myth beta blockers are good
antihypertensives (defining a good regimen).
- Brewster L.M., van Montfrans G.A., Kleijnen J.
Systematic Review Anti-hypertensive Drug Therapy
in Black Patients. Ann. Intern. Med. 2004 141
614-627. - 1.) B-Blockers did not differ significantly from
placebo in reducing systolic blood pressure as
monotherapy in blacks. - 2.) Two Other studies (Br Med J/Jamaica Curr.
Med. Res. Opin./A.A.) found that both selective
and non-selective b-blockers increased blood
pressure relative to placebo in up to 38 of
participants. - (n 8,300/BP LVH) composite end points of
stroke, MI, CVD death was 13 less frequent in
the losartin group compared to the b-blocker
group
26The beta blocker moratorium continued
- ASCOT-BPLA (n 20,000) atenolol vs. amlodipine,
stopped early because of a 11 lower all-cause
mortality in the amlodipine limb. - J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 2009 Hindbrain belief
that tachycardia beta blocker. NO, unless there
is heart failure or another Evidence-based
rationale. - 6 trials/ 55,675 pts./ B-blockers conferred a
31 increased risk of new diabetes vs. placebo
11 vs. other antihypertensives. The DM persons
had a gt3x increase in CVD. In GEMINI, this
specific risk (DM) was mitigated by using
carvedilol instead of a pure beta-blocker.
27Conclusions
- Titration of beta blockers in treating
hypertension, B-blockade-induced bradycardia
(80,000 pts. in 9 trials) the lower the heart
rate, the higher the CV mortality, M.I.s,
strokes, and incidence of HF!!!! - AND ALLHAT (gt10,000 A.A.) A.A. randomized to a
ACEI mono had a 40 greater risk of stroke, a 32
greater risk of of HF, and a 19 greater risk of
CVD than those randomized to a diuretic.
28Resist the urge to Max out monotherapy!
- Wald D.S., Law M., Morris J.K., et. al.
Combination Therapy versus Monotherapy in
Reducing Blood Pressure Meta-analysis on 11,000
Participants from 42 Trials. Am J Med. 2009 122
290-300. - N 10,968
- Doubling the dose of one drug (or monotherapy)
had approximately one-fifth of the equivalent
incremental blood pressure lowering effect of
adding another drug class before trying to
max-out. - CAVEATS 50 mg hctz or combination diuretics!
(MAXIDER, for example).
29Love those guys Renin and aldosterone
- Lane et. al. (J Hypertens 2007 25 891-894.).
133 patients with resistant hypertension
spironolactone SBP decline 21.7 mm/Hg DBP
decline 8.5 mm/Hg. - Sens. Spec. PV --PV
- ARR gt20 78 83 56 93
- ARR gt50 10 99 86 80
-
- ARR gt20
- 57 88 57
88 - PAC gt15
-
30Back to Case 3
- Is he resistant? No, he would have required
treatment failure on a good 3 drug regimen. - Is he a hypertensive emergency?
- Why does he have hypokalemia, alkalemia, a high
urine chloride? - His aldosterone-renin values were 6 .8.
- Apparent mineralocorticoid excess His cortisol
was elevated. - His ACTH was sky high adrenals were massive
so?
31Clinical Pearl(s)
- When patients fail on a well thought out 3 drug
regimen, they need a workup (OSA?).
Aldosterone-renin profiling is a valuable
adjunct. Be circumspect when prescribing
beta-blockers for hypertension. - A future pearl All patients with hypertension
may be renin profiled and treated accordingly. - Thank you.