FINAL CV/renal Flashcards
What is HTN?
Home BP of135/ 85 or greater
Risk factors for HTN
Increasing age, obesity, smoking, family hx, high sodium diet (>3g Na increases BP), excessive ETOH, physical inactivity, glucose intolerance
______ in 4 Canadians will have hypertension
1/4 Canadians will have HTN
Time course of HTN?
Usually develops gradually over a long period of time (months to years). Usually chronic.
Patho of HTN?
Complex. Since BP= COx SVR, anything causing increased blood volume or increased vascular resistance will cause increased BP.
Shift in the pressure natriuresis relationship means there is an increase in vascular volume due to decrease in renal salt excretion. Caused by many factors (genetics, increased SNS response, decreased dietary potassium, magnesium, calcium, increased dietary sodium, insulin resistance, obesity, renal glomerular/ tubular inflammation, dysfunctional natriueretic hormones, increased RAAS response, endothelial dysfunction)
Increased SNS response causes HTN by increased HT and systemic vasoconstriction, increasing renin and angiotensin levels, causing insulin resistance, and inducing vascular remodelling.
S&S HTN
usually no overt symptoms. Sometimes may include dizziness, headaches, visual problems, shortness of breath
Dx of HTN
Mean AOBP BP > 180/ 110 (automated office blood pressure)
ABPM daytime mean >135/ 85 or 24 hour mean >130/80 (Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring)
HBPM series mean >135/85 (Home blood pressure monitoring)
Preferred BP method to diagnose HTN?
ABPM (ambulatory blood pressure monitoring) (out of office)
Can HTN be diagnosed solely based on AOBP (automated office blood pressure)
Yes if >180/ 110
Otherwise no, need out of office measurement to rule out white coat HTN
(ABPM >135/85 daytime mean or >130/80 24 hour mean OR HBPM > 135/85)
George has diabetes and comes in with a blood pressure of 160/ 79. What should the provider do next to diagnose HTN?
Check OBPM (office blood pressure measure- electronic upper arm device with provider in room) on 3 different days. If these measurements are >130/80, he probably has HTN. However, he needs out of office BP measurement to rule out white coat HTN. If his ABPM is >135/85 (daytime mean) or >130/8- (24 hour mean) OR his HBPM is >135/ 85 then he will be diagnosed with HTN.
Sally does not have diabetes, but comes in with a blood pressure of 155/ 89. What should you do to diagnose HTN?
If AOBP (automated BP measured with provider not in room) is >135/85) or OBPM (automated BP measured with provider in room) is >140/90, the pt likely had HTN but need out of office measurement to rule out WCH. Sally will be diagnosed with HTN if her ABPM is >135/85 (daytime mean) or >130/80 (24 hour mean) or HBPM is >135/ 85
Besides measuring BP, what else should be checked in diagnosing HTN?
Routine labs, including urinalysis for proteinemia, blood chemistry cholesterol, triglycerides, ECG, history taking (risk factors like fam hx, etoh, smoking, dietary and physical activity, etc.)
What end organ damage can occur due to HTN?
Cardiovascular disease (CAD, ACS, angina, HF, LV dysfunction, LV hypertrophy)
Cerebrovascular disease (aneurysmal SAH, carotid artery disease, intracerebral hemorrage, ischemic stroke or TIA, dementia)
Hypertensive retinopathy
Peripheral artery disease (intermittent claudication, lower extremity trophic changes)
Renal disease (CKD, albuminuria)
How can HTN lead to stroke?
Reduced blood flow and oxygen supply, weakened vessel walls, accelerated atherosclerosis. Causes TIAs, cerebral thrombosis, aneurysm, hemorrage, and acute brain infarction
How can HTN lead to retinopathy?
Retinal vascular sclerosis and increased retinal artery pressures lead to hypertensive retinopathy, retinal exudates, and hemorrages
How can HTN lead to aneurysm?
Weakened vessels walls and higher artery pressures