7. Disease
        Cardiovascular
Hypertension

Hypertension

A. Presentation

Primary hypertension is asymptomatic until complcations develops.

Hypertensive encephalopathy (due to severe hypertension and cerebral oedema) is associated with:

Early signs of hypertension

Late signs (retinal changes)

Late signs (arteriolar nephrosclerosis)

B. Investigation

Lab test

ECG

Highly specific but not sensitive for left ventricular hypertrophy.

Echocardiography

More sensitive than ECG in detecting LVH, but subject to interpretation variability.

Chest Xray

Usually not indicated because doesn't yield additional information

Renal ultrasound

To diagnose primary renal disease (e.g. polycystic kidney, obstructive uropathy) or renovascular abnormalities

Isotope renogram/renal arteriography/duplex doppler flow studies

To diagnose renovascular abnormalities

C. Treatment

For all patients with hypertension, lifestyle measures should be instituted first, then management plan depends on the risk profile.

Drug treatment

5 choices available:

  1. Thiazide diuretics (first line)
  2. Beta-blockers (first line)
  3. ACE-inhibitors
  4. Angiotensin II receptor antagonist (2nd line)
  5. Calcium channel blockers

All have similar efficacy as monotherapy in lowering BP, but because of the large amount of available evidences for thiazide and beta-blockers, thiazide diuretics and beta-blockers are the first line treatment in uncomplicated hypertension.

Thiazide diuretics

e.g. bendrofluazide, chlorthalidone, chlorothiazide, hydrochlorothiazide, indapamine

Reduces risk of stroke, cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, particularly in the elderly.

Side effects of thiazide diuretics:

Beta-blockers

e.g. atenolol, metoprolol

Atenolol, metoprolol, and propranolol have all been shown to reduce cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients following myocardial infarction.---> Atenolol, metoprolol, and propranolol are the first line treatment in MI.

Side effect of beta-blockers

ACE-inhibitors

e.g. captopril, enalapril, fosinopril, lisinopril, perindopril, quinapril, ramipril, trandolapril.

2nd line treatment in uncomplicated hypertension.

1st line treatment in hypertensive patients with LV dysfunction (esp. after MI), heart failure, diabetes, or non-diabetic nephropathy.

Side effect of ACE-inhibitor:

Angiotensin II receptor antagonist (AIIRA)

e.g. irbesartan, losartan, candesartan.

May be used as an alternative to ACE-inhibitors in patients with persistent troublesome dry cough.

Calcium channel blockers

Non-dihydropyridine: diltiazem, verapamil.

Dihydropyridine: amlodipine, felodipine, nifedipine.

Diltiazem has no advantage over diuretics or beta-blockers in terms of overall cardiovascular prevention (less stroke but more MI with diltiazem) or the total incidence of adverse effects.

Calcium channel blockers are inferior to other types of antihypertensive drugs in reducing the risk of several major complications of hypertension.

Use with caution in patients with heart failure. Verapamil and diltiazem are contraindicated in heart failures.

Side effects of calcium channel blockers:

Effective drug combinations

Drug combinations to avoid

Others

Consider the use of aspirin for primary or secondary prevention of coronary heart disease.

Lifestyle intervention

To help maintaining the change in the long term:

  1. Give regular encouragement
  2. Provide specific written instruction
  3. Reivew progress regularly
  4. Tailor to individual needs
Weight reduction

Can lower an average of 2mmHg per kg of weight lost.

Regular physical activity

At least 30minutes of moderate exercise on most days

Alcohol

Limit intake of alcohol to 2 standard drinks per day or less.

Salt

Response vary, and more likely in older patients

Low salt food =< 120mg of salt /100g

Aim for a dietary sodium intake of 40-100mmol/day.

Smoking cessation

The most important thing!

Health eating
Relaxation technique

?No evidence that it works, but it makes the patient feel better and increase compliance.

[treatment principles/general measures/medication regimes]

D. Other notes

[epidemilogy/risk factors/causes/mechanisms/compications/ddx/classification/staging/followups/prognosis/prognostic factors/prevention]

Risk factors

Aetiology

2 types: primary (essential or idiopathic) and secondary.

90% to 95% of hypertension are primary.

The most common secondary cause is renal disease.

Secondary causes

Renal

Endocrine

Cardiovascular

Neurologic

Drugs

Complication

Hypertension is a more important risk factor for stroke than for atherosclerotic heart disease.

Hyaline arteriolosclerosis

Morphology:

The lesion consists of a homogenous, pink, hyaline thickening of the walls of arterioles with loss of underlying structural details and with narrowing of the lumen.

Mechanism:

Leakage of plasma components across vascular endothelium and increasing extracelluar matrix production by smooth muscle cells.

Hyaline arteriolosclerosis is a major morphologic feature of benign nephrosclerosis.

Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis

Morphology:

Under light microscopy: onion-skin, concentric, laminated thickening of the walls of arterioles with progressive narrowing of the lumens.

The lamination consists of smooth muscle cells and thickened reduplicated basement membrane.

Frequently accompanied by deposits of fibrinoid and acute necrosis of vessel walls (necrotizing arteriolitis).

History taking in hypertension cases

Present complain

Other medical history

Life style/social history

Drug/medication history

Family history

Physical examination in hypertensive cases

Cardiovascular system

Respiratory system

Abdomen

Optic fundi

Nervous system

Classification

When systole and diastoic fall into different categories, the higher category should apply.

Follow-up of adults over 18y.o. after an initial BP test

Stratification of absolute cardiovascular risk to quantify prognosis

Patients with high or very high risk profiles should begin drug treatment immediately.

Risk factors - for the purpose of stratification

TOD=Target-organ damage

Associated clinical conditions

Cerebrovascular disease

Heart disease

Renal disease

Vascular disease

Advanced hypertensive retinopathy

About
Created20031015
Updated20031015


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