HTN Flashcards
Hypertension
Types of HTN:
1. PRIMARY (90-95%) – Cause is unknown
- SECONDARY (5-10%) – i.e. Tumor
- MALIGNANT: >180/120 mmHg – depending on the cause, treatment will vary in attempt to gradually reduce to normal
BP category:
- Normal: <120 SBP and <80 DBP
- Elevated: 120-129 SBP and <80 DBP
- HTN (stage 1): 130-139 SBP and 80-90 DBP
- HTN (stage 2): >140 SBP and >90 DBP
**Classified on 2 or more visits
Pathophysiology of primary HTN
Factors affecting BP:
- Cardiac output – Ability to pump blood (SV x HR)
- Vascular resistance – Peripheral resistance, water and sodium retention, RAAS
Factors affecting HTN:
- SNS – Stimulated = Increased BP and HR
- Vascular volume (water and sodium retention) – High Na intake
- RAAS – Low blood volume stimulates secretion of renin that converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin I, which further converts to angiotensin II (a powerful vasoconstrictor)
**Angiotensin II stimulates the secretion of aldosterone from the adrenal cortex which increases sodium and water resorption, increasing circulating volume and BP
Clinical manifestations of primary HTN
Clinical manifestations
1. Increased BP – No symptoms; Severe HTN: May experience painful HA, confusion, hallucination, vision problems, nosebleeds, N/V (increased ICP)
- Vascular damage due to HTN – Heart disease (CAD, HF), peripheral vascular disease (atherosclerosis), cerebrovascular disease (stroke), nephrosclerosis (elevated BUN, Cr., proteinuria, hematuria), retinal damage (blurred vision, retinal hemorrhage, vision loss)
Risk factors
HTN risk factors:
1. Age
- Alcohol and tobacco use
- DM
- Elevated serum lipids
- Na intake
- Gender (men)
- FHX
- Obesity – especially truncal
- Sedentary lifestyle
- Socioeconomic status
- Stress
Modifiable vs. fixed risk factors
MODIFIABLE risk factors:
- Current cigarette smoking, secondhand smoking
- DM
- DLP
- Hypercholesterolemia
- Overweight/obesity
- Physical inactivity
- Unhealthy diet
FIXED risk factors:
- CKD
- FHX
- Increased age
- Low socioeconomic/education status
- Gender (male)
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Psychosocial stress
Diagnostics
Tests:
1. BP – Sitting with back supported, no ingestion of caffeine/exercise/smoke within 30min. of reading, appropriate size cuff
- Rule out secondary cause
- Evaluate end organ disease
- Determine CV risk – EKG, lipid profile
- Establish baseline levels (prior to therapy)
- Labwork – CBC, chem panel (BUN, Cr., calcium), lipid profile (LDL, HDL, trigs.), serum uric acid, FBG
- 24 hr. Cr. clearance
- LFTs
- Serum thyroid stimulating hormone
- Eye exam
- Urinalysis
- EKG
Medical management
Non-pharmacologic:
Lifestyle changes – Diet, exercise, decrease stress, weight loss
Medication management:
1. ACE inhibitors (angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors)
- ARBs (angiotensin II receptor blockers)
- Calcium channel blockers
- Thiazide diuretics (retain calcium, excrete potassium)
Nursing management
- Assessment
- Monitor for end organ damage
- Non-pharmacologic intervention – Diet, exercise, weight loss, smoking cessation
- Medication management – BP prior to meds., monitor electrolytes, I&Os, decrease pill burden, drug teaching, BP monitoring at home, daily weight
Complications & end organ damage
Neuro – CVA, HTN encephalopathy (confusion, HA, convulsion)
Heart – MI, HTN cardiomyopathy (HF)
Lungs
GU – HTN nephropathy (CKF)
Periphery – HTN neuropathy (elevated BG)
Vision – HTN retinopathy
Diet
DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop HTN):
1. Potassium (3,500-5,000mg/day)
- Low sodium (<1,500mg/day) – Hidden sources: Condiments, cheese/dairy, canned soup/vegetables, breakfast cereals, baked goods, deli meat, “low salt”/”heart healthy”, salty sweets
- Limit alcohol intake – <2 drinks/day (men) and <1 drink/day (women)
Exercise
- Aerobic (90-150 min./week)
- Dynamic resistance (90-150 min/week)
- Isometric resistance
Decrease in HTN per intervention
Intervention:
1. DASH diet – 11 mmHg
- Reduction of sodium – 5-6 mmHg
- Potassium-rich diet – 4-5 mmHg
- Moderation of alcohol – 4 mmHg
- Weight loss – 1 mmHg/kg lost
- Aerobic exercise – 5-8 mmHg
Pt education
Promote:
1. Prevention of complications
- Identifying risk factors – Pt and family assessment (comprehensive dietary recall, lifestyle log, daily habits), resources
- Enabling self-care – daily BP, dangerous S/S, follow up PCP once/month