Hypertension Flashcards
1
Q
Examination after new-diagnosis hypertension
A
- Pulse rate, rhythm, character
- Jugular venous pulse and pressure
- Evidence of cardiac enlargement (displaced apex beat, extra heart sounds)
- Evidence of cardiac failure (basal crackles on lung auscultation, peripheral oedema, pulsatile liver)
- Evidence of arterial disease (Bruits, AAA pulsation, absent femoral pulses, radio-femoral delay)
- Palpation of enlarged kidneys (Polycystic kidneys)
- Abnormalities of optic fundi (retinal haemorrhages, papilloedema, AV nipping, exudates of diabetic retinopathy),
- Evidence of endocrine abnormalities (Cushings, Hyperthyroidism, Conns, Phaeochromocytoma)
- Waist circumference
- ## BMI
2
Q
Investigations with new-diagnosis hypertension
A
- Urine dipstick for haematuria
- Urine ACR
- Fasting BSL
- Fasting Lipids
- EUC
- FBC
- ECG (looking for AF, LVH and evidence of previous IHD)
Note: no routine investigation of secondary causes. Use targeted approach
Cases to consider further investigation
- New onset at very young or old age.
- Abrupt onset of HTN with previously well-controlled BP.
- Drug-resistant HTN
- Presence of clinical cue for specific cause of HTN (abdominal bruit (?renovascular HTN), low serum K (Primary aldosteronism)