Hypertension: Difference between revisions
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* Secondary hypertension (5%): |
* Secondary hypertension (5%): |
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** Endocrine |
** Endocrine |
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*** Cushing syndrome |
*** [[Cushing syndrome]] |
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*** Conn syndrome |
*** [[Conn syndrome]] |
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*** Pheochromocytoma |
*** [[Pheochromocytoma]] |
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*** |
*** [[Hypothyroidism]]/[[hyperthyroidism]] |
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*** Hyperparathyroidism |
*** [[Hyperparathyroidism]] |
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** Renal |
** Renal |
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*** Chronic kidney disease |
*** [[Chronic kidney disease]] |
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*** Glomerulonephritis |
*** [[Glomerulonephritis]] |
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*** Renovascular disease |
*** [[Renovascular disease]] |
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** Other |
** Other |
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*** Obstructive sleep |
*** [[Obstructive sleep apnoea]] |
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*** Aortic coarctation |
*** [[Aortic coarctation]] |
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*** Drug- and medication-induced |
*** Drug- and medication-induced |
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**** Exogenous corticosteroids |
**** Exogenous corticosteroids |
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**** Cocaine |
**** [[Cocaine]] |
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**** Licorice |
**** [[Licorice]] |
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**** OCP |
**** [[OCP]] |
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== Diagnosis == |
== Diagnosis == |
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* Rule out white coat hypertension with ABPM, if suspected |
* Rule out white coat hypertension with ABPM, if suspected |
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* Hypertension without compelling indications |
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=== Lifestyle Changes === |
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* Consider doing these before starting medications if patient is low risk |
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* |
*Weight reduction, at least 10lbs |
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* Exercise 30min for 5 days weekly |
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* Low-sodium diet |
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* Restrict alcohol intake |
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=== Medications === |
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*** If more than 20/10 above target, start a combo pill right away |
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** If more than 20/10 above target, start a combo pill right away |
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** Start with low-dose ACEi/thiazide or ARB/thiazide combo pill |
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* Pregnancy: see [[Hypertension in pregnancy]] |
* Pregnancy: see [[Hypertension in pregnancy]] |
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=== Targets === |
=== Targets === |
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* In general, lower is probably better |
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** Framingham >15%, age ≥75, cardiovascular disease; excluded patients with diabetes |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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!Population |
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* Diabetes: <130/80 (ACCORD study) |
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!Threshold |
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* PKD: |
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!Target |
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!Notes |
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|≥160/100 |
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|<140/90 |
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|[[Diabetes mellitus]] |
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|≥130/80 |
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|<130/80 |
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|High risk (TOD or CV risk factors) |
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|≥140/90 |
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|<140/90 |
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|≥130 |
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|≤120 |
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|based on AOBP |
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|US guidelines for 10-year risk ≥10% |
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|≥130/80 |
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|<130/80 |
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|US guidelines for 10-year risk <10% |
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|≥140/90 |
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|<140/90 |
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* SPRINT study |
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** Included patients age ≥50 years with high risk status |
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***Clinical or sub-clinical [[cardiovascular disease]] |
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***[[CKD]] (non-diabetic nephropathy, proteinuria <1 g/d) |
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***Framingham 10-year risk >15% |
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***Age ≥75 years |
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**Excluded patients with diabetes and those with resistant hypertension |
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* ABPM targets are 5/5 mmHg (daytime average) or 10/10 mmHg (24h average) lower than office BP targets |
* ABPM targets are 5/5 mmHg (daytime average) or 10/10 mmHg (24h average) lower than office BP targets |
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Revision as of 17:37, 15 October 2021
Background
- Elevation in blood pressure that predisposes to cardiovascular disease
Epidemiology
- Based on the new American guidelines, about 40% of Americans have hypertension
Risk Factors
- Family history
Clinical Manifestations
- Usually detected on routine physical exam
History and Physical Examination
History
- Confirm the diagnosis
- Causes
- Cardiovascular disease risk factors (smoking, obesity, exercise, family history)
- Family history of hypertension
- Secondary causes: age of onset, renal disease, pheo (headache, palpitations, diaphoresis), hypothyroidism, OSA (snorking daytime fatigue), drugs (OCP, NSAIDs, corticosteroids, nasal deocongestants, calcineurin inhibitors), licorice use
- Complications
- Target organ damage: CAD, CHF, CKD, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, visual changes
- Comorbidities
- Diabetes, dyslipidemia
- Other: routine history
Physical Examination
System | Confirm | Causes | Consequences |
---|---|---|---|
General | BMI, Cushing syndrome (lemon-on-toothpicks) | LOC | |
Vitals | Gold-standard bilateral BP | BMI | |
HEENT | Thyroid exam, Cushing syndrome (moon facies, buffalo hump), OSA (thick neck, retrognathia, Mallampati) | Fundoscopy for retinal hemorrhages and papilledema, carotids for bruits | |
CVS | LVH (displaced apex with sustained impulse, S4), CHF (JVP, S3, periphedema), PAD (shiny hairless legs) | ||
Resp | Pulmonary edema | ||
GI | Renal and aortic bruits, AAA, striae, abdominal obesity | ||
MSK | |||
Neuro | Assess for signs of stroke | ||
Skin | Striae, ecchymoses | Shiny hairless shins |
Differential Diagnosis
- White coat hypertension: check ambulatory or home BP
- Primary or essential hypertension (95%): onset 20-50 years, family history
- Masked hypertension: check ambulatory or home BP
- Secondary hypertension (5%):
- Endocrine
- Renal
- Other
- Obstructive sleep apnoea
- Aortic coarctation
- Drug- and medication-induced
Diagnosis
- Out-of-office
- Ambulatory blood pressure monitor (gold standard), with the 24h average usually 10/10 mmHg lower than office and the daytime average 5/5 mmHg lower than office
- Home BP monitoring (HBPM), usually 5/5 mmHg lower than office
- In-office
- Automated office BP measurement (AOBP) ≥135/85
- Preferred office measurement
- Office BP measurement (OBPM), preferring electronic ≥140/90
- Casual office BP measurement
- Research-grade, Royal College-style office BP measurement
- Automated office BP measurement (AOBP) ≥135/85
- Any one-time measurements ≥180/110
- Any hypertensive emergency
Management
- Rule out white coat hypertension with ABPM, if suspected
Lifestyle Changes
- Consider doing these before starting medications if patient is low risk
- Weight reduction, at least 10lbs
- Exercise 30min for 5 days weekly
- Low-sodium diet
- Restrict alcohol intake
Medications
- Thiazide, ACEi, ARB, CCB, beta-blocker, or single-pill combos (ACEi/ARB + thiazide/CCB)
- Avoid alpha-blocker, avoid ACEi/ARB combos, and avoid beta-blockers in age >60
- If more than 20/10 above target, start a combo pill right away
- Fewer adverse events with lower-dose combo pills than high-dose single-drug pill
- Per STITCH trial
- Start with low-dose ACEi/thiazide or ARB/thiazide combo pill
- Uptitrate combo pill
- Add amlodipine
- Diabetes: prefer ACEi/ARB
- Pregnancy: see Hypertension in pregnancy
Intervention | Details | SBP/DBP |
---|---|---|
Salt reduction | 100 mmol/day | -6/-2.5 |
Weight loss | -4.5kg | -7/-6 |
Alcohol reduction | -2.7 drinks/day | -5/-2 |
Exercise | 3 times per week | -10/-7.5 |
Diet | DASH | -11/-5.5 |
Targets
- In general, lower is probably better
Population | Threshold | Target | Notes |
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General population or low risk | ≥160/100 | <140/90 | |
Diabetes mellitus | ≥130/80 | <130/80 | |
High risk (TOD or CV risk factors) | ≥140/90 | <140/90 | |
High risk (SPRINT eligible) | ≥130 | ≤120 | based on AOBP |
US guidelines for 10-year risk ≥10% | ≥130/80 | <130/80 | |
US guidelines for 10-year risk <10% | ≥140/90 | <140/90 |
- SPRINT study
- Included patients age ≥50 years with high risk status
- Clinical or sub-clinical cardiovascular disease
- CKD (non-diabetic nephropathy, proteinuria <1 g/d)
- Framingham 10-year risk >15%
- Age ≥75 years
- Excluded patients with diabetes and those with resistant hypertension
- Be careful in resistant hypertension or in frail elderly
- Included patients age ≥50 years with high risk status
- Pregnancy: see also Hypertension in pregnancy
- ABPM targets are 5/5 mmHg (daytime average) or 10/10 mmHg (24h average) lower than office BP targets