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hypertension (HTN, high blood pressure, HBP)
Elevation of arterial blood pressure above normal range (> 140/90). Commonly called high blood pressure, frequently abbreviated HTN.
Classification:
- blood pressure (BP) classification of hypertension (adults)
stage systolic (JNC8) diastolic (JNC8) AHA/ACC ESC/EACTS
normal < 120 < 80 <120/80
elevated BP 120-139/70-89
prehypertension [1,2] 120-139 80-89 120-129/<80
stage I (mild) 140-159 90-99 130-139/80-89
stage II (moderate) 160-179 100-109 >140/90
stage III (severe) 180-209 110-119 not applicable
stage IV (very severe) > 210 > 120 not applicable
* JNC8 vs AHA/ACC
* ACP (MKSAP19) uses AHA/ACC for staging, does not recognize JNC8
# elevated BP is a new class from European Society of Cardiology to capture virtually all healthy people (diastolic BP >=70 mm Hg)
Diagnosis:
- a blood pressure > 140/90 on 3 successive outpatient visits makes the diagnosis of hypertension
- a blood pressure > 140/90 based on an average of 2 or more readings > 1 minute apart at 2 or more visits [4]
- a single blood pressure reading is inadequate; multiple measurements are needed (2-5); combining home BP measurement with office-based measurements improves assessment [18]
- a minimum of 5-6 BP measurements is necessary to make the diagnosis of hypertension [18]
Etiology:
1) primary (essential) hypertension
- risk factors
- excessive dietary salt (see salt-sensitive HTN)
- excessive calorie intake
- stress
- African-American origin
- obesity
- family history of hypertension (see genetics)
- migraine or severe headaches (RR=1.25) [21]
2) secondary hypertension
a) pharmacologic causes:
- clonidine withdrawal
- corticotropin (ACTH)
- cyclosporin
- glucocorticoids
- monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors with sympathomimetics
- erythropoietin
- birth control pills
- non-steroidal anti-inflammatory action (NSAIDs)
- antagonism of beta-blockers & Ca+2 channel blockers
- sympathomimetics in over-the-counter cold remedies,i.e. pseudoephedrine, not significant
b) endocrine
- acromegaly
- adrenal cortical hyperfunction
- Cushing's disease
- hyperaldosteronism
- hyperthyroidism
- pheochromocytoma
- hyperparathyroidism
c) renovascular disease (including renal artery stenosis)
d) renal parenchymal disease (chronic kidney disease)
e) coarctation of the aorta
f) alcohol increases early morning blood pressure surge
g) smoking increases early morning blood pressure surge
h) 'white coat hypertension'
i) sleep deprivation [14,16]
j) sleep apnea [17]
k) toxins: bisphenol A
Epidemiology:
1) 10-20% of persons age 25-45 years
2) 30-40% of persons age 55-74 years
3) 60% of persons > 65 years of age
4) 40% of persons with hypertension not aware of their condition [19]
5) lower income persons with public insurance are less likely to have access to healthy food choices [24]
Pathology:
- renal sympathetic hyperactivity
- the renin angiotensin pathway is the major system influencing blood pressure
- both hypertensive crisis & chronic hypertension can result in multiple organ damage including damage to eyes, blood vessels, brain, heart & kidney
Genetics:
monogenic forms of hypertension
- Liddle syndrome
- glucocorticoid-remediable hyperaldosteronism
- apparent mineralocorticoid excess
- pseudohypoaldosteronism type 2 (Gordon syndrome)
- mineralocorticoid receptor activation
- mutations in peroxisome-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR-gamma)
- hypertension & brachydactyly
History:
- duration, baseline blood pressure, chest or back pain, headaches, dyspnea, orthopnea, dizziness, blurred vision, nausea/vomiting, tremor, palpitations, diaphoresis, diarrhea, edema, hematuria, dysuria, polyuria, flank pain, thyroid disease, heart failure, alcohol withdrawal, non-compliance with antihypertensive agents (esp clonidine or beta-blocker)
Clinical manifestations:
1) patients are generally asymptomatic
2) clinical manifestations of target organ disease
a) neurologic manifestations
- acute changes
- altered mental status including coma
- stroke
- headaches, dizziness, vertigo, tremors
- diplopia, diminished visual acuity
- focal deficits: numbness, weakness, slurred speech, cranial nerve palsies
- chronic changes
- stroke
b) cardiac manifestations
- acute changes
- chest pain, dyspnea, pulmonary edema
- chronic changes
- clinical or ECG evidence of CAD
- LVH by ECG or echocardiogram
- S3 & S4 heart sounds
- lateral displacement of PMI
c) vascular manifestations
- decreased peripheral pulses
- bruits - abdominal, femoral, carotid
d) retinal manifestations
- acute changes
- papilledema, hemorrhages
- chronic changes
- thickened arterial walls, blurred disk margins, focal areas of white exudate, arterial nicking
e) renal changes
- acute changes
- hematuria
- azotemia
- chronic changes
- elevated serum creatinine (> 1.5 mg/dL)
- proteinuria
f) clinical manifestations of secondary hypertension
- edema
- striae
- truncal obesity
- hyperpigmentation
- numbness of extremities
- foot ulcers
- muscle weakness
- tachycardia
Laboratory:
1) serum chemistries
a) electrolytes
- serum K+: hypokalemia (off diuretics) should give consideration to hyperaldosteronism & renal artery stenosis
b) urea nitrogen
c) serum creatinine
d) serum glucose
e) serum calcium, serum phosphate
f) serum albumin
g) serum transaminases (serum ALT, serum AST)
h) serum alkaline phosphatase
i) serum bilirubin
j) serum cholesterol (lipid panel)
k) serum uric acid
l) plasma aldosterone/renin
m) thyroid function tests
2) urinalysis:
a) random U/A: leukocytes, protein, blood, glucose
b) urine albumin/creatinine [4]
c) 24 hour urine: metanephrines, cortisol
3) complete blood count (CBC)
4) captopril-renin stimulation test*
5) dexamethasone suppression test*
* refractory HTN or otherwise indicated
Special laboratory:
- electrocardiogram:
- evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy suggests chronic hypertension
- ambulatory blood pressure monitor
- goals: daytime systolic BP < 136 mm Hg; nighttime systolic BP < 125 mm Hg
- normals: 24 hour average blood pressure < 115/75 mm Hg, daytime average blood pressure < 120/80 mm Hg, nighttime average blood pressure < 100/65 mm Hg
- better predictor of cardiovascular outcomes than office-based blood pressure measurements, including left ventricular hypertrophy & cardiac death [4]
- home blood pressure monitoring may be an acceptable alternative [4]
- echocardiogram not routine
- useful for assessing LV hypertrophy [4]
Radiology:
1) renal ultrasound to evaluate kidneys
2) renal vein renin for hypertension refractory to therapy
3) renal arteriogram or magnetic resonance angiogroaphy if renovascular hypertension suspected
4) renal artery CT angiography for suspected fibromuscular dysplasia (adominal bruit in a young woman)
5) CXR: rib notching or indentation of or distal aortic arch with coarctation of the aorta
Management:
1) acute treatment of hypertension
a) goal is reduction of blood pressure by 25%
- do not lower blood pressure rapidly to < 140/80
- adverse effect include: cerebral hypoperfusion & acute tubular necrosis (ATN)
b) intravenous
- sodium nitroprusside drip
- esmolol drip
- labetalol drip
- indicated when offending agent has alpha-adrenergic receptor stimulating properties, i.e. cocaine
c) oral agents
- nifedipine 10 mg every hr
- captopril 10 mg every hr
- clonidine 0.1 mg every hr
d) nitropaste
e) hospitalize for:
- blood pressure > 210/120
- acute manifestations
f) see hospitalization for treatment of hypertension in hospitalized patients
- treatment of inpatient hypertension or intensifying antihypertensives at hospital discharge is not associated with improved BP control [20]
- intensive antihypertensive treatment of hospitalized older adults with elevated blood pressures is associated with a greater risk of adverse events [22]
- treatment associated with higher risks of acute kidney injury & myocardial injury [20]
g) an early drop in eGFR of > 15% with intensive treatment is associated with increased risk of end-stage renal disease [23]
2) chronic hypertension (see chronic hypertension)
3) screening recommended for all adults >= 18 years of age [15]
Follow-up:
1) Every 2 months for blood pressure 140-160/90-100
2) Every 2 weeks for blood pressure 160-180/100-110
3) Every week for blood pressure > 180/110
4) hospitalize for blood pressure > 210/120
Also consider:
1) ambulatory blood pressure monitoring*
2) home blood pressure monitoring*
* systolic BP goals of home blood pressure monitoring & of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring may differ from goals of office-based measurements
Interactions
disease interactions
Related
ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM)
antihypertensive agents & diabetes risk
blood pressure & hypertension in diabetes
blood pressure (BP)
early morning blood pressure surge (EMBPS)
etiology of arterial hypertension
home blood pressure monitoring
hypertension clinical trials
Joint National Committee on High Blood Pressure
medications that may raise blood pressure
poor prognostic indicators of hypertension
prevention of hypertension
salt-sensitive hypertension (ssHTN)
Useful
blood pressure in the very old
systolic hypertension (hypertension in the elderly)
Specific
chronic hypertension
hypertension during pregnancy
hypertension in adolescents & children
hypertensive crisis (malignant hypertension)
hypertensive urgency
masked hypertension
secondary hypertension
stage 1 hypertension
stage 2 hypertension
stage 3 hypertension
stage 4 hypertension
uncontrolled hypertension
upper body hypertension
white-coat hypertension
General
cardiovascular disease (CVD)
sign/symptom
References
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American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 1998, 2009, 2012, 2021
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Board Basics. An Enhancement to MKSAP19.
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Randomised controlled trial of dual blockade of renin-
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