15. Hypertension Flashcards

1
Q

What is hypertension?

A
  • Blood pressure at which intervention does more good than harm
  • Above 140/90 mmHg
  • Causes more deaths than any other single cause
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2
Q

How does Systolic and Diastolic blood pressure change with age?

A
  • Systolic BP rises in a linear way
  • Diastolic BP rises into old age, then declines
  • The gap between SBP and DBP (pulse pressure) increases
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3
Q

What is the relationship between blood pressure and the risk of stroke?

A

Exponential

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4
Q

When do most strokes (and MIs) occur in hypertensive people?

A

When their BP is well controlled

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5
Q

Give 6 causes of secondary hypertension (5% of hypertension - identifiable causes)?

A
  • Renal disease (most common)
  • Tumours secreting aldosterone (Conn’s syndrome)
  • Tumours secreting catecholamines (pheochromocytoma)
  • Oral contraceptive pill
  • Pre-eclampsia/pregnancy associated hypertension
  • Rare genetic causes
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6
Q

Give 2 examples of monogenic conditions (rare) in hypertension

A
  • Liddle’s Syndrome - mutation in amiloride-sensitive tubular epithelial Na channel
  • Apparent mineralocorticoid excess - mutation in 11b-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
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7
Q

How do complex polygenic conditions play a part in hypertension?

A
  • Multiple genes can have small effects (positive and negative)
  • Interactions with sex, other genes and environment
  • Common
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8
Q

How does the environment have an impact on hypertension?

A
  • Dietary salt
  • Obesity
  • Alcohol
  • Pre-natal environment (underweight babies)
  • Pregnancy (pre-eclampsia)
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9
Q

What are the haemodynamics of hypertension?

A
  • Increased total peripheral resistance
  • Reduced arterial compliance
  • Normal cardiac output
  • Normal blood volume
  • Central shift in blood volume (reduced venous compliance)
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10
Q

Why does total peripheral resistance increase in hypertension?

A
  • Active narrowing of arteries (vasoconstriction)
  • Structural narrowing of arteries (remodelling - thicker walls and smaller lumen)
  • Loss of capillaries (rarefraction - reduction in capillary density)
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11
Q

What is Isolated Systolic Hypertension?

A
  • Systolic BP > 140
  • Diastolic BP < 90
  • Tends to occur in people over 60 - increasing pulse pressure
  • Pulse wave is reflected - bounces off the walls of stiffened vessels
  • Greater by the time it reaches the brachial artery
  • No specific drugs as the normal diastolic blood pressure would be unnecessarily reduced
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12
Q

What are 3 possible causes of primary hypertension?

A
  • Kidney - regulates sodium/water/extracellular fluid volume
  • Sympathetic Nervous System - high activity
  • Endocrine/paracrine factors - inconsistent evidence
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13
Q

What are major risks, attributable to increased BP?

A
  • Coronary heart disease
  • Stroke
  • Peripheral vascular disease
  • Heart failure
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Dementia/cognitive impairment
  • Retinopathy
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14
Q

What changes to the heart can hypertension cause?

A
  • Wall of left ventricle could thicken (hypertrophy)

* Change in ventricular volume (remodelling)

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15
Q

What is heart failure?

A

Inability of the heart to adequately pump blood at normal filling pressures

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16
Q

What is the relation between the large arteries and hypertension?

A
  • Hypertension associated with hypertrophy of large arteries
  • Associated with the acceleration of atherosclerosis
  • May cause dilation of the large arteries (aneurysm)
  • Can lead to thrombosis or haemorrhage if the aneurysm ruptures
17
Q

What are Charcot-Bouchard Aneurysms?

A
  • Aneurysms of the brain vasculature
  • Small blood vessels
  • Associated with chronic hypertension
  • Cerebral haemorrhage
18
Q

What changes occur in the retina in hypertension?

A

• Microvascular damage

  • thickening of the wall of small arteries
  • arteriolar narrowing
  • vasospasm
  • impaired perfusion
  • increased leakage into surrounding tissue (exudates)
19
Q

What changes occur in the kidneys in hypertension?

A
  • Renal dysfunction - loss of albumin in urine (micro/macroalbuminuria)
  • Glomerular damage
  • Decline in Glomerular Filtration Rate with age
  • Kidney gradually loses nephrons and their function deteriorates
  • Diabetes can accelerate this process