Special Considerations Flashcards

1
Q

Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH)

A

Independent risk factor that increases risk of CVD
Regression occurs with aggressive BP management: wt loss, sodium restriction, and tx with all classes of drugs except direct vasodilators hydralazine and minoxidil

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2
Q

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD)

A

equivalent risk to ischemic heart disease
Any class of drug can be used
Should use ASA
Other risk factors should be managed aggressively

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3
Q

Postural HTN

A

Decrease in standing SBP >10 mmHg, when associated with dizziness/fainting, more frequent in older SBP patients with diabetes, taking diuretics, venodilators, and some psychotropic drugs.

BP in these individuals should be monitored in the upright position.

Avoid volume depletion and excessively rapid dose titration of drugs.

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4
Q

HTN in Women

A

Oral contraceptives may increase BP, and BP should be checked regularly. In contrast, HRT does not raise BP.

Development of HTN—consider other forms of contraception.

Pregnant women with HTN should be followed carefully. Methyldopa, BBs, and vasodilators, preferred for the safety of the fetus. ACEI and ARBs contraindicated in pregnancy.

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5
Q

HTN in <18 yo

A

1-3% of the pediatric population
Pre-hypertension
Average systolic BP and/or diastolic BP greater than the 90th but less than the 95th percentile for gender, age, and height on 3 separate occasions.
Hypertension
Average systolic BP and/or diastolic BP >95th percentile for gender, age, and height on 3 separate occasions
Stage I
Average BP ranging from >95th to 5 mmHg above the 99th percentile for gender, age, and height
Stage 2
Average BP >5 mmHg above the 99th percentile for gender, age, and height. These patients require further evaluation within 1 week.

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6
Q

Tx <18yo

A

Use lifestyle interventions first, then drug therapy for higher levels of BP or if insufficient response to lifestyle modifications.

Drug choices similar in children and adults, but effective doses are often smaller.

Uncomplicated HTN not a reason to restrict physical activity.
Lifestyle therapy
Low salt diet, DASH diet, exercise, and weight loss
Medications
ACE I, ARB, B-blocker, CCB, diuretics

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7
Q

Causes of Resistant HTN

A
Improper BP measurement
Excess sodium intake
Inadequate diuretic therapy
Medication
 Inadequate doses
 Drug actions and interactions (e.g., nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), illicit drugs, sympathomimetics, oral contraceptives)
 Over-the-counter (OTC) drugs and herbal supplements
Excess alcohol intake
Identifiable causes of HTN
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8
Q

Secondary HTN Causes

A
Chronic ETOH use
Renal disease
Endocrinopathies
Sleep apnea
Medications
Coarctation of the aorta
Hyperthyroidism
 Pheochromocytoma
 Primary Hyperaldosteronism
Cushing’s  Syndrome
Coarctation of the  Aorta
Sleep  Apnea
Medications
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9
Q

Hypertensive Urgencies and Emergencies

A

Patients with marked BP elevations and acute TOD (e.g., encephalopathy, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, pulmonary edema, eclampsia, stroke, head trauma, life-threatening arterial bleeding, or aortic dissection) require hospitalization and parenteral drug therapy.

Patients with markedly elevated BP but without acute TOD usually do not require hospitalization, but should receive immediate combination oral antihypertensive therapy.

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10
Q

Hypertensive Urgency

A

Severe BP elevation with mild or no target organ damage

Must be reduced in hours

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11
Q

Hypertensive Emergency

A

Severe BP elevation with target organ damage

Must be reduced in minutes

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12
Q

Hypertensive Emergency Damage

A
Neurologic
Hypertensive encephalopathy
Acute CVA
Intracranial bleeding
Cerebral embolism/thrombotic stroke
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Acute head trauma/injury
Cardiac
Cardiac ischemia/ M.I.
Pulmonary edema/CHF
Vascular
Aortic dissection
Recent Vascular Injury
Epistaxis unresponsive to ant./post. packing
Acute Renal Damage
Pregnancy-related:  Eclampsia
Catecholamine excess states:	
Pheochromocytoma
Drug related: MAO-related, clonidine or aldomet withdrawl, cocaine or phencyclidine
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13
Q
Drug Tx
Acute Renal Damage
Pregnancy-related 
Pheochromocytoma
Drug-related
A
Acute Renal Damage
Pregnancy-related:  Eclampsia
Catecholamine excess states:	
Pheochromocytoma
Drug related: MAO-related, clonidine or aldomet withdrawl, cocaine or phencyclidine
Clonidine withdrawl:  Clonidine
Postop hypertension:  Nipride
Post-CABG hypertension: NTG
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage:  Nimodipine
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14
Q

Hypertensive Urgencies Tx

A

ACE inhibitors (enalapril 1.25 mg q 6 hr i.v. available)
Labetalol (r/o asthma, CHF due to LV systolic dysfx., heart block)
Nitrates
Clonidine

Goal: Lower BP to 110-100 range and RTC in 24-48hrs for recheck

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