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Arterial hypertension and preventive cardiology

Arterial hypertension and preventive cardiology. Radka Adlová. Arterial hypertension (AH). Definition : Hypertension is defined as values of systolic pressure >= 140 mmHg and/or diastolic pressure >= 90mmHg. Arterial hypertension (AH). How to measure?

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Arterial hypertension and preventive cardiology

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  1. Arterial hypertension and preventive cardiology Radka Adlová

  2. Arterial hypertension (AH) Definition: • Hypertension is defined as values of systolic pressure >= 140 mmHg and/or diastolic pressure >= 90mmHg

  3. Arterial hypertension (AH) How to measure? • Patient sits for 3 - 5 minutes before beginning of measurements • Take at least two measurements, spaced 1 - 2 mins apart • Take repeated measurements • Use an appropriate bladder • When adopting the auscultatory method, use phase I and V Korotkoff sounds to identify systolic and diastolic blood pressure

  4. Arterial hypertension (AH) Prevalence:30 - 45% of the general population

  5. Arterial hypertension (AH) Blood pressure during our lives BP (mm Hg) Age

  6. Arterial hypertension (AH) Classificationof blood pressure levels (mmHg):

  7. Arterial hypertension (AH) Why is it important to talk about arterial hypertension? • an epidemic that is affects millions of people in developed countries • serious consequences for the patient (a close relationship between prevalence of hypertension and mortality for stroke)

  8. Consequences of AH ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION Endothelial damage Platelet activation Vascular remodeling Atherosclerosis Arterial thrombosis

  9. Consequences of AH Stroke, dementia Retinopathy Left ventricle hypertrophy, Coronary artery disease AH Nephropathy, renal failure Peripheral arterial disease

  10. Prognosis of AH Depends on: • the level of blood pressure (blood pressure achieved during treatment) • presence of risk factors • organ damage

  11. Prognosis of AH Risk factors (SCORE): • Age • Gender • Smoking • Dyslipidemia

  12. Total cardiovascular risk • ESH/ESC guidelines, 2013

  13. AH and total cardiovascular risk Total cardiovascular risk increases with the number of risk factors 12 Smoking LV hypertrophy No RF Dyslipidemia DM 10 8 6 4 2 0 SBP 155 140 170 185

  14. Examination of patient with AH Medical history Personal history Physical examination Laboratory investigations Searching for asymptomatic organ damage : • Heart - ECG, echocardiography • Blood vessels - carotid arteries, pulse wave velocity • Kidney - serum creatine, microalbuminuria • Eyes - fundoscopy • Brain - cerebral MRI

  15. Classification of AH • Primary (essential) 90 - 95% - polygenic, multifactorial • Secondary 5 - 10% - Renal - renal parenchymal disease - renal artery stenosis - Endocrine - primary aldosteronism, thyroid disease, pheochromocytoma, Cushings syndrome, acromegaly, … - Hypertension in pregnancy - Aortic coarctation - Others ( sleep apnea, cerebral disease, ...)

  16. Secondary hypertension • Renal artery stenosis

  17. Secondary AH Typical characteristics: • Moderate to severe hypertension • Sudden severe hypertension or sudden worsening of hypertension • Resistant hypertension (despite three drugs including diuretics no decrease of blood pressure) • Specific symptoms of secondary hypertension • Nondipping • Heavier grade of organ damage • Diagnosis can lead to permanent cure

  18. Treatment of AH Our goal: normal blood pressure of patient with hypertensive disease • A decision when and how to start • What type of drug to choose • Close co-operation with patient (smaller number of tablets and simple dosing improves adherence to treatment) • Even ifthe drug is administered once a day, the average patient at least once a week forgets to take this medication

  19. Treatment of AH

  20. Treatment of AH Blood pressure goals in hypertensive patients: • < 140/90 mmHg : patients at low cardiovascular risk • < 130/80 mmHg : young patients, patients with nephropathy • < 125/75 mmHg : patients with diabetes • < 150 - 140 mmHg (systolic blood pressure): elderly patients

  21. Treatment of AH Lifestyle changes: • Salt restriction • Moderation of alcohol consumption • Other dietary changes • Weight reduction • Regular physical exercise • Smoking cessation

  22. Treatment of AH When to start a pharmacological therapy ? • In elderly hypertensive patients when systolic blood pressure >160 mmHg • Patients with grade 2 and 3 hypertension with any level of cardiovascular risk • Patients with high cardiovascular risk because of organ damage, diabetes, cardiovascular disease or chronic kidney disease

  23. Treatment of AH Ideal pharmacological therapy • Reduces both systolic and diastolic blood pressure • Does not deteriorate metabolic situation • Does not affect the activity of the sympathetic nervous system • Is vasoprotective, nephroprotective and cardioprotective • Does not affect insulin sensitivity

  24. Treatment of AH What type of antihypertensive drugs? • Diuretics • Beta-blockers • Calcium channel blockers • Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors • Angiotensin receptor blockers • Centrally acting agents • Peripheral alpha receptor blockers

  25. Indications and contraindications :

  26. Treatment of AH Monotherapy or combination treatment ? • Monotherapy can reduce blood pressure in only a limited number of patients • Most patients require the combination of at least two drugs to achieve ideal blood pressure • Combination of two agents from any two classes of antihypertensive drugs deceases the blood pressure much more effectively than increasing the dose of one agent

  27. Treatment of AH

  28. Treatment of AH Benefits gained from blood pressure lowering

  29. Renal denervation (RDN) = Renal sympathetic denervation (RSDN) • A therapy for treatmentresistant hypertension (in case which do not respond to conventional drugs) • Endovascular catheter based procedure using radiofrequency ablation to the renal arteries and the nerves in the vascular wall • This causes reduction of renal sympathetic afferent and efferent activity

  30. Renal denervation (RDN) • The RF energy is delivered to a renal artery via standard femoral artery access • A series of 2-minute ablations are delivered along each renal artery to disrupt the nerves • This therapy is administered bilaterally

  31. Conclusion • Diagnosis and treatment of arterial hypertension is not simple • Treatment should be well-timed and consistent • Good treatment of arterial hypertension is useful because of reduction of cardiovascular risk • Our goal: ‘‘healthy‘‘ patient

  32. Thank you for your attention

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