1 / 29

Drugs & Exercise for Treating Hypertension & Heart Disease

Drugs & Exercise for Treating Hypertension & Heart Disease. Chapter 12. Overview of Hypertension. High BP is a risk factor for stroke, CHF, angina, renal failure, LVH and MI Hypertension clusters with hyperlipidemia, diabetes and obesity

nili
Télécharger la présentation

Drugs & Exercise for Treating Hypertension & Heart Disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Drugs & Exercise for Treating Hypertension & Heart Disease Chapter 12

  2. Overview of Hypertension • High BP is a risk factor for stroke, CHF, angina, renal failure, LVH and MI • Hypertension clusters with hyperlipidemia, diabetes and obesity • Drugs have been effective in treating high BP but because of their side effects and cost, non-pharmacologic alternatives are attractive

  3. Classification of Blood Pressure

  4. Pathophysiology of Hypertension • Essential hypertension is characterized by increased DBP and related arteriolar vasoconstriction leading to increased SBP • BP is mainly determined by cardiac output and total peripheral resistance • High blood pressure may be linked to age-related vascular stiffening

  5. Pathophysiology of Hypertension • High blood pressure is also associated with obesity, salt intake, low potassium intake, physical inactivity, heavy alcohol use and psychological stress • Intra-abdominal fat and hyperinsulinemia may play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension

  6. Prevalence of Other Risk Factors With Hypertension

  7. Cardiovascular Consequences of Hypertension • Individuals with BP > 160/95 have CAD, PVD & stroke that is 3X higher than normal • HTN may lead to retinopathy and nephropathy • HTN is also associated with subclinical changes in the brain and thickening and stiffening of small blood vessels

  8. Cardiovascular Consequences of Hypertension • Increased cardiac afterload leads to left ventricular hypertrophy and reduced early diastolic filling • Increased LV mass is positively associated with CV morbidity and mortality independent of other risk factors • High BP also promotes coronary artery calcification, a predictor of sudden death

  9. Hypertension & CVD Outcomes • Increased BP has a positive and continuous association with CV events • Within DBP range of 70-110 mm Hg, there is no threshold below which lower BP does not reduce stroke and CVD risk • A 15/6 mm Hg BP reduction reduced stroke by 34% and CHD by 19% over 5 years

  10. Lifestyle Changes for Hypertension • Reduce excess body weight • Reduce dietary sodium to < 2.4 gms/day • Maintain adequate dietary intake of potassium, calcium and magnesium • Limit daily alcohol consumption to < 2 oz. of whiskey, 10 oz. of wine, 24 oz. of beer • Exercise moderately each day • Engage in meditation or relaxation daily • Cessation of smoking

  11. Medical Therapy and Implications for Exercise Training • Pharmacologic and nonpharmocologic treatment can reduce morbidity • Some antihypertensive agents have side-effects and some worsen other risk factors • Exercise and diet improve multiple risk factors with virtually no side-effects • Exercise may reduce or eliminate the need for antihypertensive medications

  12. Exaggerated BP Response to Exercise • Among normotensive men who had an exercise test between 1971-1982, those who developed HTN in 1986 were 2.4 times more likely to have had an exaggerated BP response to exercise • Exaggerated BP response increased future hypertension risk by 300% after adjusting for all other risk factors

  13. Exaggerated BP Response to Exercise • Exaggerated BP was change from rest in SBP >60 mm Hg at 6 METs; SBP > 70 mm Hg at 8 METs; DBP > 10 mm Hg at any workload. • Subjects in CARDIA study with exaggerated exercise BP were 1.7 times more likely to develop HTN 5 years later

  14. Possible Mechanisms of BP Reduction with Exercise • Reduced visceral fat independent of changes in body weight or BMI • Altered renal function to increase elimination of sodium leading to reduce fluid volume • Anthropomorphic parameters may not be primary mechansims in causing HTN

  15. Possible Mechanisms of BP Reduction with Exercise • Lower cardiac output and peripheral vascular resistance at rest and submaximal exercise • Decreased HR • Decreased sympathetic and increased parasympathetic tone • Lower blood catecholamines and plasma renin activity

  16. Exercise Prescriptions for Patients With Borderline-to-Moderate Hypertension

  17. Exercise Prescriptions for Patients With Borderline-to-Moderate Hypertension • Excessive rises in blood pressure should be avoided during exercise (SBP > 230 mm Hg; DBP > 110 mm Hg). Restrictions on participation in vigorous exercise should be placed on patients with left ventricular hypertrophy.

  18. Weight Training • Resistive exercise produces the most striking increases in BP • Resistive exercise results in less of a HR increase compared with aerobic exercise and as a result the “rate pressure product” may be less than aerobic exercise • Assessment of BP response by handgrip should be considered in patients w/ HTN • Growing evidence that resistive training may be of value for controlling BP

  19. Drug Therapy for Active Hypertensive Patients Hypertension only • Thiazide diuretics in combination with a potassium supplement are effective and inexpensive • Diuretics limit plasma volume expansion and decrease peripheral resistance • Other antihypertensive drugs can be used as monotherapy for this type of patient

  20. Drug Therapy for Active Hypertensive Patients Hypertension with other diseases CAD - calcium-channel blocker or a beta- blocker Diabetes - ACE inhibitor LVH but coughs with ACE inhibitor - angiotensin-2-receptor blocker Elderly men with prostatism - peripheral alpha-blocker (terazosin, doxazosin)

  21. Drug Therapy for Active Hypertensive Patients • Beta1-selective blockers such as atenolol or metoprolol are preferable to non-selective agents such as propranolol, nadolol or pindolol for hypertensive patients engaged in regular exercise

  22. Beta-blocker therapy and exercise • Non-selective Beta-blockers may increase a patient’s disposition to exertional hyperthermia. So patients should adhere strictly to guidelines for fluid replacement • Patients should use fluid replacement drinks with low concentrations of K+ to avoid the risk of hypokalemia

  23. Beta-blocker therapy and exercise • Exercise therapy is desirable during Beta-blocker therapy to offset the adverse alterations in lipoprotein metabolism contributed by some Beta-blocker medications

  24. Beta-blocker therapy and exercise • Exercise intensity for patients on Beta-blocker medications should be in accordance with traditional guidelines based on the results of individualized exercise testing performed on the medication

  25. Beta-blocker therapy and exercise • Non-selective Beta-blockers dramatically reduce peak aerobic capacity and at the same time increase a patient’s rating of perceived exertion for a given amount of work

  26. Beta-blocker therapy and exercise • Patients treated with Beta-blockers are capable of deriving the expected enhancement of cardiorespiratory fitness during training, irrespective of the type of drug used

  27. SUMMARY • Physical activity has a therapeutic role in the treatment of hypertension • No consistent relationship between reduced weight and lower BP • Exercise at lower intensities is effective in treating mild to moderate hypertension • Exercise testing may help identify exaggerated BP responses to exercise

  28. SUMMARY • Exercise prescription for HTN should be based on medical hx and risk factor status • Exercise prescription should be adapted to antihypertensive medications that may affect exercise HR, BP & performance • Incorporating resistive training into the exercise prescription may be of value for controlling blood pressure

More Related