End Organs - Health Alliance Blog
Transcription
End Organs - Health Alliance Blog
End Organs • The blood vessels • The heart • The kidneys • The brain • The eyes Effects on the Cardiovascular System • Ventricular hypertrophy (thickened heart muscle) • Heart failure • Heart rhythm disorders (esp., atrial fibrilla6on) • Coronary artery disease / heart aOack • Arterial aneurysm, dissec6on, and rupture • Peripheral arterial disease Effects on Other End-‐Organs • Impaired kidney func6on / kidney failure • Stroke – Hemorrhagic (bleeding into the brain) – Thrombo6c (disrup6on of blood supply to the brain) • Encephalopathy (a form of acute brain dysfunc6on) • Cerebral atrophy and demen6a • Eye damage: re6nal hemorrhages / re6nal detachment Hypertensive Crises • Hypertensive Urgency (Accelerated Hypertension): – Severely elevated BP without acute end-‐organ dysfunc6on – Examples: BP >180/100 mm Hg without severe headache, shortness of breath or chest pain • Hypertensive Emergency (Malignant Hypertension): – Severely elevated BP with acute end-‐organ dysfunc6on – Require emergent lowering of BP. – Examples: BP > 180/100 mm Hg with confusion, acute heart failure, shortness of breath, chest pain, or dissec6ng aor6c aneurysm J t i a W C N JNC Late JNC-8 Report. JAMA. 2014;311(5):507-520. Comparison of Recent Guidelines JNC 8 ESH/ESC AHA/ACC ASH/ISH >140/90 Threshold for Drug Rx >140/90 < 60 yr >150/90 >60 yr Eldery SBP >160 Consider SBP 140-‐150 if <80 yr >140/90 >140/90 <80 yr >150/90 >80 yr B-‐blocker First line Rx No Yes No No Ini6ate Therapy w/ 2 drugs >160/100 "Markedly elevated BP" >160/100 >160/100 JNC-8 Report. JAMA. 2014;311(5):507-520. JNC-8 Report. JAMA. 2014;311(5):507-520. Effect of Lifestyle Modifica6ons www.nhlbi.nih.gov HYVET* Trial Study Design • Prospec(ve, randomized, double-‐blind, placebo-‐controlled trial • Mean follow-‐up, 1.8 years • 3845 pa(ents ≥80 years with sustained hypertension and systolic blood pressure ≥160 mm Hg before randomiza(on Ac(ve treatment: 1.5 mg sustained-‐ release indapamide (n = 1933) Matching placebo dose (n = 1912) 2 years of follow-‐up • Primary end point: fatal and nonfatal strokes • Secondary end points: death from stroke, cardiovascular causes, cardiac causes, and any cause = Hypertension in the Very Elderly Trial *HYVET BeckeV NS, et al. N Engl J Med. 2008;358(18):1887-‐1898. Blood Pressure Changes with Therapy in 15 mmHg Median follow-up 1.8 years 6 mmHg Fatal Stroke (39% Risk ReducOon) Heart Failure (64% Risk ReducOon) How I Manage HTN in 2015? ü In pa6ents <80 y/o, I use ≥140/90 mmHg as the cut-‐off for both diagnosis AND ini6a6on of Rx for HTN, with a goal BP of <140/90, [<130/80 in the presence of diabetes, kidney disease (CKD), high risk or h/o of coronary disease, atrial fibrilla6on or heart failure] ü In pa6ents ≥80 y/o, I use ≥150/90 mmHg as the cut-‐off for ini6a6on of Rx for HTN, with a goal BP of <150/90, but if on-‐treatment BP is <140/90, and well-‐tolerated, do not modify therapy ü In pa6ents with BP >160/100 mmHg, I start with 2 drugs ü I rarely use beta-‐blockers as a first line or sole agent ü In Blacks, I use diure6cs & CCB preferen6ally to ACE-‐I/ARB, unless the pa6ent has CKD ü In CKD, I use ACE-‐I or ARB first, irrespec6ve of age or race ü I never combine an ACE-‐I and an ARB ü I do not use hydrochlorothiazide (use chlorthalidone or indapamide) Ques6ons?