Hypertension 102 Flashcards
Approximately how many mm Hg decrease can you expect to get by adding Spironolactone as fourth agent?
~ 20 point decrease when added to 3 existing agents
In which patients should you avoid spironolactone?
Any patient with K >5
Any patient with Cr > 2.5
Have to consider risk of gynecomastia in male patients
What are the five classes of drugs that you can use as fourth agent for HTN (after thiazide, ACE/ARB and CCB)?
aldosterone antagonists - spironolactone
Vasodilatory BB - Carvedilol, nebivolol, labetalol
Clonidine
Alpha blockers
Direct vasodilators - Minoxidil and hydralazine
Describe how to start spironolactone? What dose do you use and what labs do you get and when?
Start at 12.5 mg and double dose every 2 weeks (takes 2 weeks to appreciate effect)
Must stop for SCr increase to > 4 or K >5 for this reason you have to monitor BMP closely
Check BMP at 1 week, then monthly for 3 months then every 3 months for 1 year then yearly
What are two advantages of vasodilatory beta blockers over other beta blockers?
More significant BP reduction
Not associated with new onset DM
Name some uses for Clonidine other than HTN.
off label use in ADHD and for sleep in pediatrics, migraine prophylaxis, restless leg syndrome, smoking cessation, excessive sweating salivation, opiate/ETOH withdrawal symptoms
Name 4 important side effects of Clonidine
Rebound HTN with sudden withdrawal for this reason it is not a good choice for patient with compliance issues
Dry mouth - 40%
Drowsiness - 33%
Dizziness - 16%
What are the pros and cons of using alpha blockers?
Pro- may help men with BPH
Cons - not very powerful antihypertensive, associated with orthostasis so should avoid in elderly
What are the side effects of direct vasodilators (Minoxidil and Hydralazine)?
edema and tachycardia which have to be mediated by furosemide and BB
hirsutism with minoxidil
generally use this last of all the 4th line agents
What is “dipping” with regards to HTN?
Improved cardiovascular outcomes when overnight BP is controlled. New recommendation that at least one antihypertensive given at night
Every morning your patient is taking HCTZ 25mg, Lisinopril 20mg , Amlodipine 10 mg and Atenolol 100 mg what 4 things can you do to improve BP without adding another class of medication?
Maximize dosages - increase lisinopril to 40mg
Address dipping - move one medication to PM
Change HCTZ to chlorthalidone because it is more powerful
Change atenolol which is weak antihypertensive to vasodilatory BB like carvedilol (superior BP lowering, added benefit of alpha blockade, no MM data for atenolol)
When should you consider referral to renal for resistant HTN?
For any patient with CKD
In patient on maximal dose of four agents including thiazide who is not controlled
When should you consider work-up for secondary causes of HTN?
In any patient with clinical suspicion for secondary cause
At the time of diagnosis of HTN you should think through possible secondary causes
In any patient on maximal doses of 3 agents usually thiazide, ACE/ARB and CCB
What is the work up for secondary causes of HTN?
Consider compliance
Consider medications that cause HTN (NSAIDs, OCP, prednisone, illicit drugs, amphetamines, high dose Effexor)
Check the following labs on everyone (CMP - looking for Cushing’s renal disease, UA - renal disease, TSH - thyroid disease, PTH - hyperparathyroidism)
Consider adding aldosterone
Consider sleep apnea order sleep study
Renal ultrasound with doppler looking for renal vascular disease
ECHO - coarctation of aorta
Consider pheochromocytoma - if patient c/o flushing palpitations and has big swings in BP
Which medication class should be avoided in women of reproductive age and what is the exception to the rule?
ACE/ARB
Unless they have diabetes and they should then have extensive counseling and consider dual contraception