Hypertensive Retinopathy Flashcards
Who commonly gets malignant hypertension
Young males
Causes of malignant hypertension
Pheochromocytoma
Treatment of malignant hypertension
Gradual reduction in blood pressure to minimise the risk of stroke
Hypertensive retinopathy
Damage to the retinal small blood vessels relating to systemic hypertension either gradually due to chronic hypertension or acutely due to malignant hypertension
Signs of hypertensive retinopathy
Silver wiring or copper wiring
Arteriovenous nipping
Cotton wool spots
Hard exudates are caused by damaged vessels leaking lipids into the retina.
Retinal haemorrhages
Papilloedema
Silver wiring
Arteriole walls become thickened and sclerosed causing increased reflection of the light
Arteriovenous nipping
Arterioles cause compression of the veins where they cross.
Due to sclerosis and hardening of the arterioles.
How are cotton wool spots caused
Due to ischaemia and infarction in the retina causing damage to nerve fibres
Hard exudates
Damaged vessels leaking lipids into the retina
Retinal heamorrhages
Caused by damaged vessels rupturing and releasing blood into the retina
Papilloedema
Caused by ischaemia to the optic nerve resulting in optic nerve swelling (oedema) and blurring of the disc margins
Keith-Wagener Classification
Stage 1: Mild narrowing of the arterioles
Stage 2: Focal constriction of blood vessels and AV nipping
Stage 3: Cotton-wool patches, exudates and haemorrhages
Stage 4: Papilloedema
Management of hypertensive retinopathy
Tight blood pressure control:
- ACEi
- ARBs
- Beta blockers
Reduce modifiable risk factors:
- smoking cessation
- lipid levels - healthy diet and atorvastatin