Title: Hypertension
1Hypertension
- Resting BP consistently
- gt140 mmHg systolic or
- gt90 mmHg diastolic
2Epidemiology
- 20 of adult population
- 35,000,000 people
- 25 do not know they are hypertensive
- Twice as frequent in blacks than in whites
- 25 of whites and 50 of blacks gt 65 y/o
3Types
- Primary (essential) hypertension
- Secondary hypertension
4Primary Hypertension
- 85 - 90 of hypertensives
- Idiopathic
- More common in blacks or with positive family
history - Worsened by increased sodium intake, stress,
obesity, oral contraceptive use, or tobacco use - Cannot be cured
5Secondary Hypertension
- 10 - 15 of hypertensives
- Increased BP secondary to another disease process
6Secondary Hypertension
- Causes
- Renal vascular or parenchymal disease
- Adrenal gland disease
- Thyroid gland disease
- Aortic coarctation
- Neurological disorders
- Small number curable with surgery
7Hypertension Pathology
- Increased BP ? inflammation, sclerosis of
arteriolar walls ? narrowing of vessels ?
decreased blood flow to major organs - Left ventricular overwork ? hypertrophy, CHF
- Nephrosclerosis ? renal insufficiency, failure
8Hypertension Pathology
- Coronary atherosclerosis ? AMI
- Cerebral atherosclerosis ? CVA
- Aortic atherosclerosis ? Aortic aneurysm
- Retinal hemorrhage ? Blindness
9Signs/Symptoms
- Primary hypertension is asymptomatic until
complications develop - Signs/Symptoms are non-specific
- Result from target organ involvement
- Dizziness, flushed face, headache, fatigue,
epistaxis, nervousness are not caused by
uncomplicated hypertension.
10HTN Medical Management
- Life style modification
- Weight loss
- Increased aerobic activity
- Reduced sodium intake
- Stop smoking
- Limit alcohol intake
11HTN Medical Management
- Medications
- Diuretics
- Beta blockers
- Calcium antagonists
- Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors
- Alpha blockers
12HTN Medical Management
- Medical management prevents or forestalls all
complications - Patients must remain on drug therapy to control BP
13Categories of Hypertension
- Hypertensive Emergency (Crisis)
- acute ? BP with sx/sx of end-organ injury
- Hypertensive Urgency
- sustained DBP gt 115 mm Hg w/o evidence of
end-organ injury - Mild Hypertension
- DBP gt 90 but lt 115 mm Hg w/o symptoms
- Transient Hypertension
- elevated due to an unrelated underlying condition
14Hypertensive Crisis
- Acute life-threatening increase in BP
- Usually exceeds 200/130 mmHg
15Hypertensive Emergency
- Severe hypertension associated with end organ
damage - Malignant hypertension (htn with retinal
hemorrhages, exudates or papilledema, also renal
involvement) - Hypertensive encephalopathy
- Subarachnoid/Intracerebral hemorrhage
- Acute pulmonary edema
- Dissecting aneurysm
- Angina
16Hypertensive Urgency
- Diastolic bp equal to or above 130 mm Hg
- No signs of end organ damage
17When you are called..
- Ask about mental status changes, chest pain
- Obtain all vital signs
- Determine the reason for admission
- Ask about the patients blood pressure over the
last 24 hours
18When you get to the bedside
- Measure the bp again in BOTH ARMS
- jvd, thyromegaly, fundoscopic exam
- New cardiac murmer, S3, S4, tachycardia
- Renal or aortic bruits
- Edema to the extremities
- Brief mental status exam, gross motor exam
19If you determine this to be a hypertensive
urgency
- There is no evidence of end organ damage
- There is NO PROVEN BENEFIT to rapid reduction in
bp in asymptomatic patients. - Aggressive antihypertensive therapy can induce
cerebral or myocardial ischemia
20If you determine this to be a hypertensive
urgency
- Your goal is to get the patient to around 160/110
mmHg over several hours with conventional oral
therapy
21Labs
- Lytes, BUN/CR
- Cardiac enzymes if pt has angina/chf
- CXR if indicated if pt in angina/chf
- EKG if indicated if pt has angina/chf
- CT head if signs of encephalopathy
22Causes
- Sudden withdrawal of anti-hypertensives
- Increased salt intake
- Abnormal renal function
- Increase in sympathetic tone
- Stress
- Drugs
- Drug interactions
- Monoamine oxidase inhibitors
- Toxemia of pregnancy
- Pheochromocytoma
23Signs/Symptoms
- Restlessness, confusion, AMS
- Vision disturbances
- Severe headache
- Nausea, vomiting
- Seizures
- Focal neurologic deficits
- Chest pain
- Dyspnea
- Pulmonary edema
24Hypertensive Crisis Can Cause
- CHF
- Pulmonary edema
- Angina pectoris
- AMI
- Aortic dissection
25Hypertensive Emergencies
Stroke Encephalopathy
Aortic Dissection
Decompensated Heart Failure
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Acute Renal Failure
26Hypertensive Crisis Management
- Immediate goal lower BP in controlled fashion
- No more than 30 ? in first 30-60 mins
- Not appropriate in all settings
- Oxygen
- Monitor ECG
- Drug Therapy
- Targeted at simply lowering BP, OR
- Targeted at underlying cause
27Drug Therapy Possibilities
- Sodium Nitroprusside
- Potent arterial and venous vasodilator
- Vasodilation begins in 1 to 2 minutes
- 0.5 ?g/kg/min by continuous infusion, titrate to
effect - increase in increments of 0.5 ?g/kg/min
- 50 mg in 250 cc D5W
- Effects easily reversible by stopping drip
- Continuous hemodynamic monitoring required
- Cover IV bag/tubing to avoid exposure to light
- Used primarily when targeting lower BP only
28Drug Therapy Possibilities
- Nitroglycerin
- Vasodilator
- Nitropaste simplest method
- 1 to 2 inches of ointment q 8 hrs
- easy to control effect but slow onset
- Sublingual NTG is faster route
- 0.4 mg SL tab or spray q 5 mins
- easy to control but short acting
- NTG infusion, 10 - 20 mcg/min
- seldom used for hypertensive crisis
- Commonly used prehospital when targeting BP
lowering only especially in AMI
29Drug Therapy Possibilities
- Nifedipine
- Calcium channel blocker
- Peripheral vasodilator
- 10 mg Sublingual
- Split capsule longitudinally and place contents
under tongue or puncture capsule with needle and
have patient chew - Used less frequently today! Frequently in past!
- Concern for rapid reduction of BP resulting in
organ ischemia
30Drug Therapy Possibilities
- Furosemide
- Loop Diuretic
- initially acts as peripheral vasodilator
- later actions associated with diuresis
- 40 mg slow IV or 2X daily dose
- most useful in acute episode with CHF or LVF
- Often used with other agents such as NTG
31Drug Therapy Possibilities
- Hydrazaline
- Direct smooth muscle relaxant
- relax arterial smooth muscle gt venous
- 10-20 mg slow IV q 4-6 hrs initial dose 5 mg for
pre-eclampsia/eclampsia - Usually combined with other agents such as beta
blockers - concern for reflex sympathetic tone increase
- Most useful in pre-eclampsia and eclampsia
32Drug Therapy Possibilities
- Metoprolol, orLabetalol
- decrease in heart rate and contractility
- Dose
- Metoprolol 5 mg slow IV q 5 mins to total 15 mg
- Labetalol 10-20 mg slow IV q 10 mins
- Metoprolol is selective beta-1
- minimal concern for use in asthma and obstructive
airway disease - Labetalol both alpha beta blockade
- Most useful in AMI and Unstable angina
33Hypertensive Emergency
- Enalapril
- IV prep of ACE Inhibitor
- Response is variable (probably b/c these pts have
variable plasm renin activity) - Contraindicated in pregnancy
- Start at 1.25 mg iv and up to 5 mg iv q 6 hrs
- Onset of action 15 minutes, peak effect 4 hrs
- Duration of action 12-24 hours
34Hypertensive Crisis Management
- Avoid crashing BP to hypotensive or normotensive
levels! - Ischemia of vital organs may result!
35Hypertensive Crisis Management
- Must assure underlying cause of ?BP is understood
- HTN may be helpful to the patient
- Aggressive treatment of HTN may be harmful
What patients may have HTN as a compensatory
mechanism?