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resistant hypertension; refractory hypertension
blood pressure that remains above goal despite treatment with optimal doses of 3 antihypertensives of different classes, including a diuretic (also see secondary hypertension) or uncontrolled blood pressure on >= 4 drugs [20]
Etiology:
- primary hyperaldosteronism (22% of patients with resistant hypertension) [20]
- renovascular hypertension (renal artery stenosis)
- chronic kidney disease (ESRD)
- pheochromocytoma [1]
- obstructive sleep apnea [8,9,17] (up to 83%)
- medication non-compliance
- consumption of substances that aggravate hypertension
- dietary salt
- excessive alcoholic beverage
- nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
- licorice
- decongestants
- pseudoephedrine
- phenylephrine [1,5]
Epidemiology:
- 20% of patients with chronic hypertension [20]
Laboratory:
- plasma aldosterone/plasma renin activity
- serum K+: hypokalemia inconsistently associated with primary hyperaldosteronism
- angiotensin-2 in plasma
- captopril-renin stimulation test
- plasma free metanephrines &/or 24 hour urine metanephrines
Special laboratory:
- ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (distinguishes from white-coat hypertension) [1,4]
- renal ultrasound for renal artery stenosis
- sleep study (polysomnography) for obstructive sleep apnea
* note BP goals for ambulatory blood pressure may differ from those of office blood pressure [1]
Differential diagnosis:
- white-coat hypertension (1/3 of cases) [2]
- secondary hypertension
Management:
1) see treatment of chronic hypertension
- patient presumably on ACE inhibitor or ARB, calcium channel blocker & a thiazide diuretic or loop diuretic
- if patient not on diuretic, prescribe one unless ESRD
- if patient not on a calcium channel blocker, prescribe one
2) general
a) confirm out-of-office BP measurement [1]
a) life-style modifications
- low sodium diet (< 2400 mg/day)
- achieve ideal body weight
- ensure adequate sleep hygiene, at least 6 hours/night [15]
- aerobic exercise reduces 24-hour & daytime ambulatory blood pressure & office systolic systolic blood pressure [21]
b) discontinue offending medications include OTC [1,5]
c) correct underlying cause(s)
3) pharmaceuticals
- if medication noncompliance suspected, discontinue medications dosed > QD
- pre-packaging patient's pills in a blister pack less important than once a day dosing & including a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker
- addition of antihypertensive of a new class may be of benefit [14]
- consider switching HCTZ to chlorthalidone or indapamide [15]
- chlorthalidone more effective than hydrochlorothiazide [17]
- switch thiazide diuretic to loop diuretic if eGFR < 20 mL/min
- mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist if hyperaldosteronism [20]
- spironolactone as add on [11]
- spironolactone not inferior to clonidine & it is QD [13]
- inferior to renal artery angioplasty with fibromuscular dysplasia [1]
4) renal sympathetic denervation [3]
- renal denervation device in the SYMPLICITY HTN-3 trial failed to lower systolic BP by > 10 mm Hg [3]
- of no benefit [7]
5) arterial-venous Coupler device that mechanically lowers systolic blood pressure via AV anastomosis shows promise [10]
Notes:
- 29% of patients claiming complete adherence to therapy showed a marked blood pressure response when treatment was observed [18]
Interactions
disease interactions
General
chronic hypertension
References
- Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2009, 2012. 2015, 2018, 2021.
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Clinical features of 8295 patients with resistant hypertension
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PMID: 19332353
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Lancet 2009 Mar 30;
PMID: 19332354
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Renal Denervation in Patients With Uncontrolled Hypertension
(SYMPLICITY HTN-3)
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT01418261
- Meditronic News Release. Jan 9, 2014
Medtronic Announces U.S. Renal Denervation Pivotal Trial Fails
to Meet Primary Efficacy Endpoint While Meeting Primary Safety
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http://newsroom.medtronic.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=251324&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1889335&highlight=
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