Hypertension Flashcards

1
Q

History needed?

A

Time of diagnosis
What were their initial readings (mild 140-159, moderate 1`60-179, severe > 180)
How well they responded to treatment - what they have had and why they changed
Complications - stroke, HF, PVD, renal failure

Potential secondary causes:

  • phaeochromocytoma - paroxysmal sweating, palpitations and headache
  • OSA
  • Renal artery stenosis or CKD
  • Aortic co-arctation
  • adrenal tumors
  • MEDS - COC, NSAIDs
  • Pregnancy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Other risk factors for vascular disease inc lifestyle

A

T2DM
Hyperlipidaemia
Family Hx or CAD or CVD

Lifestyle: obesity, low exercise, excessive alcohol, high salt

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Malignant Hypertension?

A

extremely high blood pressure that develops rapidly and causes some type of organ damage - presents with severe headache

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Examination

A
Cardiovascular disease (look for postural BP drop and BP in both arms) 
Signs of Cushing's (moonface, weight gain, purple striae, buffalo hump, proximal muscle loss) 
Radio-femoral delay = coarctation 
Fundoscopy - flame haemorrhages and cotton wool spots, AV nipping, exudates, papilledema
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Investigations

A
  • UEC =any renal disease
  • ECH = LVH or IHD
  • CXR = exclude cardiomegaly, LVH, CHF
  • Urine analysis =?proteinuria –> Urine ACR if positive
  • HbA1C and Lipids
  • Aldosterone/Renin ratio = to detect primary hyperaldosteronism i.e Conns (especially if hypokalaemic and not on diuretics) high PA:PRA ratio (plasma aldosterone:plasma renin activity) also renin secreting tumours
  • 24h catecholamines for phaeo
  • Serum cortisol if investigating Cushing’s/Decamethasone suppression test/ACTH stimulation test
  • Renal artery dopplers
  • Sleep study = ?OSA
  • Ambulatory BP
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Management stratification

A

Depends upon RISK
- gender, age, ethnicity, BP, TC:HDL, Smoke, DM, Fam Hx

CVD risk < 5%

  • lifestyle
  • Discuss harms, benefits of statin
  • further assess on 5-10 years

CVD risk 5-15%

  • indivualised lifestyle advice
  • commence BP lowering +/- statin
  • further assessment 1-2 years

CVD risk > 15% and established CVD or BP 160/100

  • intensive lifestyle advise
  • BP lowering + statin + anti-platelet
  • annual review

Target BP

  • 140/90 if > 80 years or significant worry of fragility/hypotension
  • 130/80 in most cases/high risk patients
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

NP management

A
Diet - reduced salt, fats and sugars 
Physical activity - 30 min a day and green prescription 
Weight - BMI < 25 
Smoking cessation 
Alcohol  reduction
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

P management

A

start on a low dose of one therapy followed by a low dose of a second therapy before up-titrating doses.

  1. ACEi if < 55 years or DM versus CCB if > 55 years
  2. Add other
  3. Thiazide diuretic
  4. beta blocker or spironolactone

ACEi can be swapped for ARB if SE (eg. cough)

CCB

  • Felodipine, diltiazem, verapamil
  • also useful if suffer from angina

BB

  • metoprolol, bisoprolol, carvedilol
  • useful in angina, HF, MI
  • not very good anti-HTN and contrindicated in asthma, DM, heart vlock and PVD

NB: BPH - alpha blocker = doxazosin

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly