Aetiology Pathophysiology of Hypertension Flashcards
What are the most common causes of death due to raised blood pressure?
Ischemic heart disease and stroke
What end organ damage is associated with hypertension?

Describe blood pressure throughout the day
Fluctuates widely -
Physcial stress and mental stress
What is the definintion of hypertension?
That blood pressure above which the benefits of treatment outweigh the risks in term of morbidity and mortality
What is the blood pressure distribution in a population?
Exhibits a normal bell shaped curve
Each population has its own bell shaped curvre

What is the relationship between increased blood pressure and stroke/cardiovascular disease?
•Risk however rises exponentially and not linearly with pressure
Age also plays a significant role
What is ‘optimal’ blood pressure in terms of american opinion?
Opt <120/<80
What blood pressure is hypertension diagnosed at?
Varies - roughly 140/90
What does ABPM stand for?
Ambulatory blood pressure monitor – measures blood pressure every half hour – inflates the cuff every half hour at night time?
What is defined as stage 1 hypertension?
Clinic blood pressure is about 140/90 mmHg or higher
ABPM daytime average 135/85 mmHg or higher
What is defined as stage 2 hypertension?
•Clinic blood pressure is 160/100 mmHg or higher
ABPM daytime average 150/95 mmHg or higher
What is defined as severe hypertension?
Clinic systolic blood pressure is 180 mmHg or higher or diastolic blood pressure is 110 mmHg or higher
What is more common, primary and secondary hypertension?
Primary - where no cause is found
90% of cases
What are some of the causes of secondary hypertension?
Chronic renal disease
Renal artery stenosis
Endocrine disease - cushing’s, conn’s syndrome and paechromocytoma, GRA
How many deaths worldwide is high blood pressure responsible for?
The number 1 medical cause of death world-wide
Directly and indirectly responsible for >20% of all deaths
Which factors increase risks associated with hypertension?
Cigarette smoking
Diabetes mellitus - –5-30 X increase MI
Renal disease
Male - 2 x risk
Hyperlipidaemia
Previous MI or stroke
Left ventricular hypertrophy - 2 x risk
What parts of the human body are responsible for blood pressure?
–Cardiac output
- Stroke volume
- Heart rate
–Peripheral vascular resistance
What is the effect of the sympathetic nervous system on:
Stroke volume
Heart rate
Total peripheral resistance?
–increased cardiac output - contractility increases
–reflex tachycardia
–vasoconstriction
These increase blood pressure.
•The actions of the sympathetic system are rapid and account for second to second blood pressure control
What type of bloo pressure control is RAAS responsible for?
Long term
What is RAAS responsible for?
Maintainance of sodium balance
Control of blood volume
Control of blood pressure
What is RAAS stimulated by?
–fall in BP
–fall in circulating volume
–sodium depletion
- Any of the above stimulate renin release from the juxtaglomerular apparatus
- Renin converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin I
- Angiotensin I is converted to angiotensin II by angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE)
Angiotensin is a potent?
Vasoconstrictor
Anti-natiuretic peptide
Stimulator of aldosterone release from the adrenal glands (aldosterone increases the reabsorption of sodium from the loop of henle - reduces diuresis)
What is the effect of angiotensin 2 on myocyte and smooth muscle?
Causes myocyte and smooth muscle hypertrophy in the arterioles - arteries eventually get small and narrow and the can’t dilate - •can’t respond appropriately to relaxation - highly susceptible to damage.
In general what are the aetiologies of hypertension?
–Polygenic
- Major genes
- Poly genes
–Polyfactorial
- Environment
- Individual and Shared
