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My doctor thought that blood pressure of 150/95was pretty good I have hypertension My doctor thought I was OK, because I was asymptomatic My doctor would not treat me because I was an unassigned patient My doctor maintained hypertension in the elderly to prevent orthostatic hypotension My doctor gave me the latest medication recommended by a drug rep My doctor thought that hypertension is a part of aging because of stiff arteryies Myocardial infarction and congestive heart failure Cerebral Vascular Accident Renal Insufficiency & Failure Why Do We Have To Talk About Hypertension again? Prevent Black Out Goals What is hypertension? Why we do what we do? Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure JNC 6 in 1997 Recall JNC 7 Candidates Intimidator Sybaritor Eliminator Hypertension is weapons of mass destruction, and we need to take a preemptive strike against this terrorist. Hypertension affect: 50 million people in the U.S 1 billion people in the world Hypertension is a part of the normal aging process? Myth Facts Two-third of patients with hypertension are over age 65 Normotensive patients age 55 have a 90% lifetime risk of developing hypertension What is hypertension? Blood pressure ≥ 140/90 mmHg On ≥ 2 different occasions Prehypertension Systolic blood pressure 120-139 mmHg Diastolic blood pressure 80-89 mmHg Risk of Prehypertension For patients age 40-70 with blood pressure range 115-185/75-115 mmHg With each incremental increase of 20 mmHg in systolic blood pressure and 10 mmHg in diastolic blood pressure, risk of cardiovascular disease doubles Moral of the story How Blood Pressure is Measured? Sit & Relax for at least 5 minutes Arm bared and at heart level Bladder within the cuff at least 80% of arm circumference Average of 2 readings 2 minutes apart Ambulatory vs. Office Measurement? Lower than office measurement Consider hypertension if mean blood pressure >135/85 mmHg Work-up Goals Identify secondary causes of hypertension Identify cardiovascular risk factors and concomitant disorders Assess target-organ damage and cardiovascular disease Secondary Causes of Hypertension? Drugs Sleep apnea Chronic renal disease Primary aldosteronism Cushing syndrome Pheochromocytoma Coarctation of the aorta Thyroid or parathyroid disease Major Cardiovascular Risk Factors? Cigarette smoking Obesity (BMI ≥ 30) Physical inactivity Dyslipidemia Diabetes mellitus Microalbuminuria or estimated GFR <60 mL/min Age: >55 for men and >65 for women Family history of premature cardiovascular disease: men <55 years or women <65 years Target-Organ Damage? Cardiac: LVH, MI, CHF Stroke Chronic kidney disease Peripheral arterial disease Retinopathy What is the most common cause of hypertension? Essential hypertension What Is The Most Common Presentation? Asymptomatic History: What Could Cause Elevated Blood Pressure? Medications: OCP, pseudoephrine, NSAID Diet: High sodium, alcohol Illicit drugs Smoking Psychosocial: Stress, work Axis of Evil Hypertension Diabetes mellitus Hyperlipidemia History: What are the cardiovascular risk factors? Metabolic syndrome Blood pressure ≥ 130/85 Glucose intolerance with FBS ≥ 110 mg/dL Triglyceride >150 mg/dL or HDL <40 mg/dL in males and <50 mg/dL in females Abdominal obesity with waist circumference >102 cm for males and >89 cm for female Past Medical History Coronary or cerebral vascular diseases Renal disease History: What are the symptoms of target organ damage? Increased intracranial pressure: headache, blurry vision, confusion Heart: chest pain Physical Exam? Fundoscopic: Hypertensive retinopathy Carotid bruit: Atherosclerosis JVD: Congestive Heart Failure Thyroid gland: Hyperthyroidism Heart: S3S4 in congestive heart failure Lungs: Rales in congestive heart failure Abdominal bruit: Renovascular stenosis Extremities: Edema in congestive heart failure, decreased femoral pulse in aortic coarctation Diagnostic Tests? Chemistry Sodium and potassium – high cortisol or aldosterone Bun and creatinine – kidney function Glucose – diabetes mellitus Calcium - hyperparathyroidism Fasting lipid panel Diagnostic Tests CBC Urinalysis Proteinuria Hematuria: glomerulonephritis EKG Cardiomegaly Blood Pressure Goal? General <140/90 mm Hg Diabetes mellitus and renal disease < 130/80 How Hypertension Is Treated? I would audit the PDR and get rid of wasteful medications How hypertension should be managed? Lifestyle modification Medications Lifestyle Modification BMI < 27 Lifestyle Modification: Weight Reduction Exercise, Exercise, Exercise Lifestyle Modification: Diet DASH: Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension High in fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy foods, protein, fiber, potassium, calcium, and magnesium Low in fat and cholesterol Lifestyle Modification: Diet Limit the salt to < 2.5 gm sodium or < 6 gm sodium chloride per day Lifestyle Modification: Alcohol Beer: 2 oz or 2 cans Wine: 10 oz or 1 glass Which Medication Should Be Started? Viagra How do we pick medications? Recurrent Themes: Target organ damage Cardiovascular risk factors and concomitant disorders Which medications should be used for uncomplicated hypertension? Diuretics Beta-Blockers Diuretics FOR???? Gout Potassium Side Note: Minimal effects on dyslipidemia and glucose intolerance Beta-blockers No, no…. •Asthma/COPD •Depression •Peripheral vascular disease •Class IV congestive heart failure Side Note: Minimal effects on dyslipidemia and glucose intolerance Which medication should be used in diabetics? Pick one…. ce-Inhibitors or ARB ACE-inhibitors Side Effect? Hyperkalemia Renovascular stenosis Which Medications Should Be Used In Ischemic Heart Disease? ce-Inhibitors Beta-Blockers Calcium-channel blockers Calcium-channel Blockers In what condition???? •Angina pectoris •Non Q-wave MI •MI without left ventricular dysfunction Only nondihydropyridines: diltiazem & verapamil Calcium-channel Blocker: Cautions Side Effect? Pitting edema Impotence (no illustration) Do not use short-acting calciumchannel blockers Which medications should be used in CHF? ce-Inhibitors Beta-Blockers Angiotensin receptor blockers Loop diuretics ± aldosterone blockers Which medication should be used in renal insufficiency? ce-Inhibitors Limitation: Hyperkalemia Which medication should be used in BPH? Alpha-blockers Combination Therapy Most patients need ≥ 2 drugs If blood pressure >20 mmHg systolic or 10 mmHg diastolic, initiate 2 drugs Combination drugs ACE-I and CCB ACE-I and diuretics ARB and diruetics Β-blockers and diuretics Central acting drug and diuretics Diuretics and diuretics Hypertensive Emergency & Urgency Emergency: Encephalopathy: Headache, nausea, vomiting, intracranial hemorrhage Heart: Acute MI or left ventricular dysfunction, dissecting aortic aneurysm Urgency: No acute target organ damage Hypertensive Emergency Control blood pressure within minutes to 2 hours Gradual reduction in blood pressure to avoid MI and CVA: 25% or 20 mm Hg initially and slowly to 160/100 mm Hg Medications: Sodium nitroprusside & esmolol because of quick onset of action and short duration (minutes) Hypertensive Urgency Control blood pressure within 24 hours Gradual reduction of blood pressure Medications: Oral (not sublingual) calcium-blockers, beta-blockers, aceinhibitors, 2-blockers Hypertension Why hypertension again? Confusion ????????? MD, BS, MS, DDS, OCP Hypertension Basic and Practical Approach to Hypertension Remember this basic dictum cold turkey Blood pressure 140/90 mmHg is NOT Stable or controlled Sophisticated Classification Category Optimal Normal High-normal Hypertension Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Systolic (mm Hg) <120 <130 130-139 140-159 160-179 180 Diastolic (mm Hg) < 80 <85 85-89 90-99 100-109 110