Title: HYPERTENSION ABC
1HYPERTENSIONABC Update
- Mahmoud Khattab, Ph.D.
- Professor of Pharmacology Toxicology
2Development of Structural and Functional
Alterations in the Hypertensive Vessel Wall
3Smooth Muscles Endothelial Morphologic Changes
In Hypertension
- The smooth muscle content of arteries can be
augmented by an increase in cell number
(hyperplasia) or an increase in cell mass
(hypertrophy) - The volume of the endothelial cells increases and
the surface configuration becomes more globular,
so that the cells protrude into the lumen of the
vessel
4Linkage Between Structural Functional Changes
Poiseuilles Law Resistance a 1/r4
5Possible mechanisms of Apparent Increased
Sensitivity to Vasoconstrictors
- Patients with essential hypertension have
apparent - increased sensitivity to forearm infusion of
norepinephrine (0.40 µg/min) (increase in
resistance) - True increased sensitivity to vasoconstrictors
- Increased receptor sensitivity
- Increased activation of second messengers or ion
channels - Apparent increased sensitivity due to effects of
structure or function to increase resistance - Hypertrophy or hyperplasia
- Decreased endothelial-dependent vasodilator
mechanisms
6Characteristics of Hypertension
- Elevated BP at maintained cardiac output
- Interaction of environmental and genetic factors
- Both structural and functional changes in
arterioles leading to increased resistance - Structural changes resulting from growth or
remodeling of the vessel due to the positive
influence of growth factors or the removal of
growth inhibitors - Functional abnormalities involving endothelial
and vascular smooth muscle dysfunction - Abnormalities in membrane ionic control
mechanisms likely underlying abnormalities in
both contraction and growth - Enhanced vascular responsiveness to
vasoconstrictors
7AHA Classification
Classification SBP (mm Hg) DBP (mm Hg)
Normal lt120 AND lt80
Pre-hypertension 120-139 OR 80-89
Stage 1 Hypertension 140-159 OR 90-99
Stage 2 Hypertension 160 OR 100
8Classification and Goal
JAMA 200328925602572
- The seventh Report of the Joint National
Committee on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment
of High BP (JNC 7) classified hypertension as in
the given table - A clinical HTN is based upon two or more seated
BP measurements on two more occasions - Ultimate GOALs
- Decrease BP
- Reduce associated morbidity manifested as
TARGET-ORGAN DAMAGE - CVS risk factors increase frequency of target
organ damage (HPLVH CHF)
9Hypertension -related Target Organ Damage
- Brain stroke/transient ischemic attack
- Eyes retinopathy
- Heart LV hypertrophy, HF, angina
- Kidney chronic kidney disease
- Peripheral vasculature peripheral arterial
disease
10Hypertension -related Target Organ Damage
- Heart
- Promoting atherosclerotic changes (indirectly)
- Pressure-related
- Enhancement of CVD
- Increase risk for IHD (angina MI)
- Antihypertensive therapy reduce such risks
- Enhance the progress of LVH (LVHHP Framingham
Study Increased CHF)
- BRAIN
- HTN frequently leads to cerebro-vascular disease
as - Transient ischemic attacks
- Ischemic strokes
- Cerebral infarcts
- Antihypertensive therapy reduce the risk of
initial and recurrent stroke
11Hypertension -related Target Organ Damage
- Kidney
- HP leads to increased intraglomerular pressure
causing nephrosclerosis - HTN-Kidney lesion, What comes first?
- Chronic kidney disease can proceed to kidney
failure (dialysis) - Moderate (Stage 3) Kidney disease (GFR 30-59
mL/min) indicates target organ damage (Creatinine
1.3-1.5 mg/dL) - Albuminurea (gt300 mg/day or 200 mg albumin/g
creatinine) indicates target organ damage
12Hypertension -related Target Organ Damage
- Peripheral Arterial Disease
- An atherosclerotic vascular disease equivalent in
risk to CAD - BP reduction, risk factor modification
antiplatelets are needed to stop progress - Complications can attain infection necrosis
- EYE
- Hypertension can induce retinopathy that may
proceed to blindness - G 1 arterial vasoconstriction
- G2 Arteriovenous nicking (atherosclerosis)
- G3 Cotton wool exudates hemorrhage (untreated
HP or accelerated
13Major CVS Risk Factors
- Age more than 55 years men, 65 years women
- Cigarette smoking
- Diabetes mellitus
- Hypertension
- Dyslipedimia
- Obesity
- Physical inactivity
- Kidney disease GFR 60mL/min
14CVS Risk versus BP
- Direct correlation between risk of CVD BP
values (epidemiological studies) - Above 115/75 mm Hg, with each increment of 20/10
mm Hg, the risk of CVD doubles - Pre-hypertensive patients are at higher CVD risk
than normal - Clinically, elevated SBP is a more predictor of
CVD than elevated DBP in patients over 50 years
15BP Numerical Values Goal
- In most patients, the target BP value is reduce
BP lower than 140/90 mm Hg - In diabetic patients and chronic kidney disease
patients (estimated GFR 60 mL/min or
albumin-urea), Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) BP
goal is less than 130/80 mm Hg - In LV dysfunction, goal BP is lt120/80
- These patients are at high risk for target organ
damage
16Hypertension Misconceptios
- Stress-related Apart from white coat HP, most HP
patients have elevated BP independent of their
stress status - Headache (and other symptoms) have no correlation
with hypertension - Hypertension though asymptomatic, it has serious
long-term complications long-term therapy - Stress management is not that beneficial in
controlling HP - Clinically evidenced, a better quality of life
with proper medication drugs are NOT worsening
quality of life
17Patient Evaluation/Risk Assessment
- Absence or presence of various forms of
hypertension-related target organ damage - Identifiable (secondary) causes of hypertension
- Concomitant major CV risk factors, other
disorders, and assessment of lifestyle habits
18HYPERTENSION THERAPYLifestyle Modification
- For BP lowering reduction of CV risk
- In prehypertensives lifestyle modification leads
to BP lowering inhibition or minimizing HTN
progress - Possible reduction of dose and/or No of
antihypertensive drugs used - PATIENT EDUCATION IS NEEDED
19Lifestyle Modification
- Weight Reduction
- 5-10 wt reduction in overweight persons may
lower CV risk - For every 1 kg wt loss, there is lowering of SBP
DBP by 2.5 1.5 mm Hg respectively
- DASH Diet
- Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH)
diet is rich in fruits, vegetables low-at dairy
foods, combined to less saturated total fat - A 8-14 mm Hg reduction in SBP can be produced
20DASH Diet
21Lifestyle Modification
- Dietary Sodium Restriction
- Epidemiology positive correlation between BP and
sodium intake - Trials 2-8 mm Hg reduction in SBP on restricted
sodium diet 2.4 g/day
- Physical Activity
- There is 4-9 mm Hg reduction in SBP in most
patients upon regular PA - HTN patients with compromised CVD need medical
evaluation before PA - Physical activity at least 30 min for 3-5
days/week - Walking, running, cycling, swimming
22Lifestyle Modification
- Smoking Cessation
- The most important modifiable CV risk factor
- Cigarette smoking increases CV total mortality,
cessation lowers CVD incidence - It interferes with response to some drugs (ß
blockers) - Patient education
- Unproven Modifications
- High levels of K, Ca2, Mg2 relate to lower
BP, no reduction of CV risk - K Mg2 intake in HP/chronic renal disease may
be harmful (cardiac toxicity) - Caffeine drinks limitation is not essential
unless for other medical reason
23Algorithm for Treatment of Hypertension
Beta-blockers not first-line in AHA guidelines
2007
24 Patient Education About Treatment
- Assess patients understanding and acceptance of
the diagnosis of hypertension - Discuss patients concerns and clarify
misunderstandings - Tell patient BP reading and provide a written
copy - Come to agreement with the patient on goal BP
- Ask patient to rate (1 to 10) his or her chance
of staying on treatment - Inform patient about recommended treatment and
provide specific written information about the
role of lifestyle, including diet, physical
activity, dietary supplements, and alcohol
intake use standard brochures when available - Emphasize
- Need to continue treatment
- Control does not mean cure
- One cannot tell if BP is elevated by feeling or
symptoms BP must be measured
25Evidence-Based Hypertension Therapy SELECTION
- JNC7 drug therapy algorithm follows
evidence-based approach linked to clinical trials
interpretation - Thiazide-type diuretic-based therapy leads to
significant reductions in - Stroke (25-47), Heart attacks (13-27),
All-cause CVD (17-40), Survival improvement - Systolic Hypertension in Elderly Program (SHEP),
- Swedish Trial of Old Patients with Hypertension
(STOP-hypertension) - Medical Research Council (MRC)
26Thiazide-Based Therapy versus Newer Agents (The
ALLHAT study)
- Several clinical trials using newer agents (ACE
inhibitors, ARBs, and CCBs) found reduction of BP
and CV risk in a similar to thiazides - Possibly ACEIs having better effects
- The 2007 AHA HTN guidelines are now the most
recent for treatment (Circulation 2007, 115 2761)
27Algorithm for Treatment of Hypertension
Beta-blockers NOT 1st line in 2007 AHA guidelines
28The ALLHAT Study
- The Antihypertensive Lipid Lowering Treatment
to prevent Heart Attack Trial provides recent
evidence for thiazide efficacy as used by JNC7 - Designed to testify hypothesis of superiority of
newer drugs amlodipine, doxazosin lisinopril
over the thiazide diuretic chlorthalidone - End-point combined fatal CHD non-fatal MI
- 42,418 patients for a mean of 4.9 years
- Doxazosin arm prematurely terminated because of
increased HF risk
29The ALLHAT Study
- Outcome No significant difference between
chlorthalidone and either amlodipine or
lisinopril as regards combined end point - Secondary endpoints pointed to better efficacy of
thiazide over amlodipine (less HF) and lisinopril
(less combined CVD, HF, stroke) - Investigators concluded superiority of thiazide
diuretics or at least unsurpassed activity - A 2003 network meta-analysis of 42 clinical
trials found that low-dose diuretic were most
effective first-line treatment for prevention CVD
mortality - JAMA289 2534 (2003)
30Hypertension with Compelling Indications
Sequential Therapy 1ST Line Compelling Indication
thiazide diuretic, CCB or ß-blockers ACEI/ARB Diabetes Mellitus
ACEI/ARB Chronic Kidney Disease
thiazide diuretic for BP control, CCB for ischemia control ß-blockers ACEI (or ARB) Acute/Chronic CAD
ACEI thiazide diuretic, or ARB Prior Ischemic Stroke
Aldosterone antagonist in severe HF, Hydralazine/dinitrate in black ACEI (or ARB) thiazide (loop) diuretic ß-blockers Left Ventricular Dysfunction
31Starting Drug Therapy
- MONOTHERAPY when INITIAL BP IS CLOSE TO GOAL
VALUE, 15-20 mm Hg SBP 10 mm Hg DBP (JNC 7
others) - STEPPED CARE,
- A single drug is chosen dose increased till BP
control occurred, max dose reached, or
dose-limiting toxicity - A second drug from a different class is added
32Starting Drug Therapy
- SEQUENTIAL THERAPY
- If goal BP is not achieved an alternative drug is
chosen, to replace an initial one - It is more advised when the initial drug is not
well tolerated or achieved poor BP efficacy - Combination Therapy
- Encouraged for patients stage 2 hypertension or
far from BP goal - Initial combination therapy can be useful for
chronic renal disease/diabetes/other resistant
patients
33THERAPY MONITORING
- Four aspects are considered upon monitoring
- BP control evaluated 1-4 weeks after therapy
initiation/modification - Initial BP lowering needs 1-2 weeks, but steady
BP up to 4 weeks - Average of 2 measurements is used
- Standing BP measurement for orthostatic
hypotension evaluation (whenever dizziness
occurs) - Compliance (adherence)
- Progression of the disease target-organ damage
points to therapy modification - Toxicity
34Diuretics
- Thiazides
- Are diuretic of choice achieving goal BP values
in 50-80 of patients - Hydrochlorthiazide (HCTZ) chlorthalidone are
the most frequently used - Dose of 12.5-25 mg once daily can lower SBP by
15-20 mm Hg DBP 8-15 mm Hg - Low-dose therapy is equi-effective for both
agents according to huge clinical evidence
35Diuretics
- Loop Diuretics
- HCTZ is more effective than loop diuretics though
less potent - Furosemide is the most frequently used agent, but
given more than once daily - They are diuretics of choice in hypertensive
patients with severe kidney disease or failure
(creatinine 2.5-3 mg/dL) - They are preferred in patients with CHF or severe
edema
36Diuretics
- K-sparing Diuretics
- Amiloride/triametrene are reserved for patients
developing diuretic-induced hypokalemia - Fixed-dose products including HCTZ K-sparing
diuretic are available, but initial usage to
avoid hypokalemia is not rationalized - They have modest antihypertensive effect when
used as monotherapy
37Diuretics
- Aldosterone Receptor Antagonists
- Spironolactone eplerenone cause hyperkalemia,
especially in chronic renal disease - Eplerenone is more specific, less gynecomastia
but causes greater hyperkalemia - Eplerenone is contraindicated in patients at
high risk of hyperkalemia including diabetic 2
patients/albuminurea - Spironolactone is beneficial in hypertensive
patients with CHF where it reduces morbidity
mortality - Eplerenone reduces mortality in HF LV failure
in early post MI patients
38DiureticsSide-Effects
Annoying Harmful Contraindication
Thiazide-Diuretics Urination (initial), weakness, muscle cramps, GIT upset, hyperuricemia Hypokalemia, hyponatremia, hyperglycemia, hypercalcemia, azotemia, skin rash, photosensitivity, lithium toxicity, hyper-TG -cholesterolemia Persistant anuria/oliguria, kidney failure
Loop Diuretics Urination (initial), weakness, muscle cramps, GIT upset, hyperuricemia Hypokalemia, hyponatremia, hyperglycemia, hypocalcemia, azotemia, skin rash, photosensitivity, lithium toxicity, hyper-TG -cholesterolemia Hearing loss (large IV doses) Not contraindicated in renal failure
Aldosterone Antagonists Hirsutism, menstrual irregularities, gynecomastia, GIT upset Hyperkalemia, hyponatremia Kidney failure, hyperkalemia, hyponatremia
39ß-Adrenoceptor Blockers
- ß-Blockers reduce morbidity mortality in
hypertensive patients with compelling
indications CHF, post-MI, high-risk CHD,
diabetes - All ß-Blockers have similar activity on BP
lowering - Incidence of side-effects is low in practice and
is dose-dependent, i.e., can be minimized with
low- to moderate-doses
40Pharmacologic Characteristics of ß-Blockers
NO-Donotaing
41Hemodynamic Response to ß-Adrenoceptor
Blockade
- BP decrease after acute response) is modest, with
continued treatment the BP decrease becomes much
larger in most patients - The magnitude of the decrease in heart rate and
cardiac output and the reactive increase in PVR
vary with the degree of ISA - These responses do not account for the long-term
decrease in BP
42Adverse Effects of ß-Adrenoceptor Blockers
Annoying Harmful Contraindication
Beta Blockers Bradycardia, Weakness, Lethargy, GIT disturbance Systolic heart failure (carvedilol metoprolol approved for systolic HF) Bronchospasm (asthma patients) Hypoglycemia (non-selectives can mask symptoms of /potentiate hypoglycemia Hyperglycemia (non-selectives can lower insulin secretion in Type 2 diabetes patients) Peripheral arterial disease aggravation Nightmares, insomnia, Impotence Hypertriglceridemia, decreased HDL Asthma (Severe) 2nd/3rd degree heart block Systolic HF exacerbation Brittle diabetes mellitus
43ß-Blockers
- Nonselective ß-Blockers are preferred in patients
with non-CV indications like migraine
prophylaxis/tremor - ISA ß-Blockers are indicated for patients
responding with severe bradycardia to non-ISA
ß-blockers - ISA ß-Blockers should be avoided in patients with
MI history where agonistic properties may worsen
the cardiac function
44 ß-BlockersLipid Solubility
- Lipid solubility is of max clinical relevance in
patients with renal/hepatic impairment - High lipid sol drugs like propranolol are
hepatically cleared - Hydrophilic ones (atenolol) have main renal
excretion (require dose adjustment) - Lipophilic agents are probably associated with
increases CNS side effects like nightmares,
depression - High lipid soluble drugs are desirable for
migraine prophylaxis due to better CNS access -
45ß-BlockersCompelling Indications
- Heart failure (systolic) metoprolol carvedilol
are approved with reduced CV morbidity
mortality - Start with LOW DOSE gradually increase it
- Post-MI acute MI patients (including relatively
contraindicated ones) have prolonged survival
reduced re-infarction - High-Risk CHD HTN patients with chronic angina
or acute CHD (non-ST segment elevation MI
unstable angina) may proceed to fatal MI or
others - Decreased HR, contractility myocardial O2
demand produced by ß-blockers reduce the risk
46ß-BlockersCompelling Indications
- Diabetes a cardio-selective agent is preferred
- ß-Blockers decrease coronary events, the renal
disease progression, and stroke in diabetics - All agents can mask symptoms of
epinephrine-associated hypoglycemia (tremors,
hunger palpitations) but not sweating - They cause insulin release inhibition
- Non-selective agents can worsen hypoglycemia
prolong recovery from hypoglycemia - ß-Blockers are best avoided in Type 1 diabetes
but hypoglycemic effects are less common in Type
2 - Non-selective agents should be avoided in
brittle diabetics especially insulin-dependent
patients
47ACE InhibitorsEffects of Chronic ACE Inhibition
on the RAA System
- Angiotensin II disappears from the circulation at
peak ACE block - Plasma renin activity, active inactive renin
concentrations increase - The hyperreninemia leads to a rise in plasma
angiotensin I levels - The plasma levels of aldosterone are reduced
during ACE inhibition - There is an induction of ACE synthesis during
long-term treatment
48ACE InhibitorsClinical Pharmacological Profile
- ACEIs lower BP via peripheral vasodilation with
no alteration of CO/HR/or GFR through RAA system
increased vasodilating bradykinin PGs - Beneficial effects include correction of
endothelial dysfunction, LVH regression, insulin
sensitivity improvement collateral vessel
development - They can raise serum K especially in renal
impairment patients - Acute renal compromise in patients with bilateral
renal stenosis can occur - Modest creatinine rise, NOT discontinue ACEIs
49ACE InhibitorsRisk of Hypotension
- First dose ACEIs can induce dizziness,
orthostatic hypotension, or even syncope in
volume depleted, hyponatremic or exacerbated HF
patients - First-dose response is related to increased
pretreatment activity of RAA system - Concurrent diuretic therapy may increase the
incidence of first-dose response in sensitive
patients - Elderly African American patients mostly have
low renin hypertension less responsive to ACEIs - Diuretic-ACEI combination overcome age-
race-related poor response
50ACE InhibitorsCompelling Indications
- Heart Failure ACEI (diuretic) is considered
fist-line standard regimen in HTN systolic HF - Post-MI ACEIß-blocker showed reduction of CV
risk independent of LV function BP - High-Risk CHD ACEIs must be early given in
non-ST elevation MI Unstable angina (as
ß-blocker) - In chronic angina ACEI can be added after
ß-blocker or non-DHP CCB - Diabetes ACEIs reduced hypertension-related CV
events nephropathy in diabetic (mostly type 2)
patients (HOPE UKPDS studies)
51ACE Inhibitors Compelling IndicationsDiabetes
- ACEIs are comparable or better than diuretics
better than CCBS in reduction of CV risk - NO adverse effect on glucose metabolism
- Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
- CKD increased intra-glomerular
pressuremesangial cell proliferation resulting
in proteinuria progressive renal damage
(reduced RBF-increased RAA-efferent arteriolar
vasoconstriction- renal impairment) - ACEIs dilate efferent arteriole-relieves
intraglomerular P - ACEIs may be of unique renal preserving apart
from its BP lowering properties - ACEIs are highly efficacious in preserving renal
function in diabetes type-1 -2
52ACE Inhibitors Compelling IndicationsRecurrent
Stroke Prevention
- ACEI Thiazide diuretic reduced the incidence of
stroke total vascular events in
hypertensive/non-hypertensive patients with
history of stroke/TIA - The reductions were independent of baseline BP
BP lowering ( the PROGRESS trial) - Elderly Patients
- ACEIs are less effective in lowering BP in
elderly - ACEIs ( CCBs) are equivalent to old agents
(diuretic- ß-blockers) in reduction of fatal CV
events (MI, Stroke, ..etc., STOP-2 trial)
53Angiotensin II Type-1 Receptor Blockers
(ARBs)Pharmacological Profile
- ARBs are the newest class of antihypertensive
agents - ARBs selectively block the effects of Angiotensin
II (ANG II) on type-1 receptors - Type-1 receptors mediate vasoconstriction,
aldosterone secretion (salt water retention),
myocyte and SM hypertrophy sympathetic NS
stimulation - Type-2 receptors mediate anti-profilerative
actions, tissue repair, cell differentiation
54ARBsPharmacological Profile vs ACI
- Unlike ARBs, ACE inhibition suppresses
stimulation of both ANG II type-1 -2 receptors - Hence, it is possible that ARBs are superior to
ACEIs in amelioration of HTN-related damage - However, this is just speculation, there NO
supportive clinical data - Vasodilating bradykinin increase with ACEI but
NOT with ARB, but without changing BP lowering
efficacy - Similar to ACEIs, combinations with a thiazide
diuretic are of high efficacy
55ARBsPharmacological Profile
- Losartan valsartan have lower blockade potency
of type-1 receptors than others, but NO
significant clinical difference exist agents - They can be dosed ONCE daily, but twice daily may
be used whenever high doses of losartan,
eprosartan or candesartan are needed - Initial dose may be lowered in elderly
diuretic-treated or volume-depleted patients?
56ARBs Compelling Indications
- Heart Failure
- ARBs are probable alternatives in hypertension
HF ACEI-intolerant patients (ACEI-induced
angioedema AHA ACC) - ACEIs ARBs are equivalent in symptomatic HF
relief, but ARBs are of similar or weaker
mortality rate reduction - Val-HeFT study Patients with systolic HF treated
with valsartan have less combined morbidity/
mortality vs placebo
- Diabetes
- ARB reduce diabetic nephropathy progression
especially in type2 diabetes more than CCBs - ARBs are the only antihypertensive agent showing
evidence of reduction of renal failure in type 2
diabetes nephropathy - Benefits are BP lowering-independent
- ARBs are recommended to lower nephropathy in HTN,
diabetes proteinuria (American Diabetes
Association
57ARBs Compelling Indications
- Chronic Kidney Disease ARBs, similar to ACEIs,
protect against renal damage in CKD - Both ACEIs ARBs dilate the efferent arteriole
- For non-diabetic renal disease, evidence is
weaker, ARBs are reserved as ACEIs alternatives
- Hypertension with LVH
- FDA approved losartan for stroke reduction in
hypertensive patients with LVH - The LIFE trial found reduced CV events (mainly
stroke) with losartan more than atenolol
58Side Effects of ACEIs ARBs
Annoying Harmful Contraindication
ACE Inhibitor Dizziness, faintness, lightheaded-ness, cough, taste changes Hypotension (elderly), skin rash (disappear or discontinue), proteinuria, leukopenia Bilateral renal stenosis, volume depletion, hyponatremia, pregnancy
ARBs As ACEIs Except cough Same as ACEIs Same as ACEIs
59Calcium Channel Blockers (DHPs) Amlodipine,
felodipine, isradipine, lacidipine,
lercanidipine, nicardipine, nitrendipine,
nifedipine
- They are effective antihypertensive agents
- Elderly African American get better BP lowering
than other agents - They have no metabolic effects
- Addition to a diuretic is additive
Verapamil Diltiazem Dihydropyrines
Peripheral Vasodilation Increase Increase marked increase
Heart Rate Marked decrease decrease increase
Contractility Marked decrease decrease No change /decrease
SA/AV conductivity Decrease Decrease NO change
Coronary B Flow Increase Increase Marked increase
60Immediate-Release (IR) Nifedipine
- IR CCBs-MI link was first reported in 1995
- Observational analysis showed that IR CCBs are
associated with higher risk of MI compared with
thiazide diuretics ß-lockers - This risk is present with the three CCBs classes,
being strongest with NIFEDIPINE - FDA concluded that IR CCBs, especially
nifedipine, are neither SAFE nor EFFICACEOUS and
should be avoided
61Sustained-Release (SR) Formulations
- Except for AMLODIPINE, all CCBs are of short
half-lives, requiring frequent doses/day - SR preparations are preferred when CCBs are used
for hypertension treatment - Chronotherapeutic Verapamil Circadian rhythm of
BP MI incidence can be targeted by designed
formulations
62Calcium Channel BlockersCompelling Indications
- High Coronary Disease Risk
- CCBs can be used as alternatives, after
ß-blockers in chronic angina, unstable angina,
and non-ST elevation MI when intolerance occurs - Diabetes CCBs are option in hypertensive
diabetics no effect on glucose/insulin - Stroke risk is reduced by DHPs (clinical
evidence) - ACEIs have more CV protection than CCBS (FACET
ABCD trials)
63Fixed-Dose Combinations for Hypertension
64Fixed-Dose Combinations for Hypertension
65Special Populations
- Black patients (JNC AHA 2007)
- Black patients have higher HTN incidence, more
need for combination therapy - As monotherapy, thiazide diuretic and CCB are
highly effective - ACEI, ARB, or ß-blockers are less effective in
black patients but addition of a thiazide
diuretic greatly improve efficacy - Elderly Patients
- Patients of 65 years old have lower BP control
- Patients of 75 years old respond best to thiazes
CCB and less to ACEI, ARB, and ß-blockers
66Recall (Self-Assessment) Questions
- Define different stages of HTN according to JNC-7
2003 - Enumerate the first-line HTN therapeutics
according to AHA 2007 guideline. - Mention five HTN-related target organ damage.
- Outline pharmacological HTN treatment algorithm
- For Each of the 1st 2nd line HTN therapeutics
- Mention the name of two drugs
- Three harmful adverse effects and a
contraindication - Compelling indication (s) for each group
- Drugs most- least-effective in black elderly
patients - JAMA 289 2534 (2003) JNC-7
- Circulation 115 2761 (2007) AHA guidelines