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Pharmacologic
Management of
Hypertension &CHF
John A. Kenna, MS, ACNP
Assistant Clinical Professor
University of Rhode Island
3/25/2014
Overview
 Cardiac Output/Venous Return
 Hypertension
 Heart Failure
Cardiac Output
 CO= HR x SVR
 Cardiac output: The quantity of blood pumped into the
aorta each minute by the heart
 Also the quantity of blood that flows through the circulation
 Perhaps the most important factor to consider in relation to
circulation
Normal Values for Cardiac
Output
 Varies widely with the level of activity
 The following factors directly affect CO
 Basic level of body metabolism
 Whether the person is exercising
 Age
 Size of the body
 Young healthy men resting CO about 5.6L/min
 For women, about 4.9L/min
Cardiac Index
 CI = CO/BSA
 The CO per square meter of body surface area
 The normal range of cardiac index in rest is 2.6 - 4.2
L/min per square meter
Control of Heart Rate (HR)
 The SA node of the heart is innervated by both sympathetic
and parasympathetic nerves
 Parasympathetic fibers release acetylcholine
 Decrease HR
 Sympathetic release norepinephrine and release of
epinephrine from the adrenal medulla.
 Increase HR
Control of Stroke Volume (SV)
 The ventricles of the heart empty only about 50% of their
volume during systole.
 During periods of exercise, the heart fills up with more blood
and the heart contracts more strongly.
 Stroke volume is increased by 2 mechanisms:
 increase in end-diastolic volume
 increase in sympathetic system activity
Control of Cardiac Output by
Venous Return
 This means it is NOT the heart itself that is the primary
controller of CO
 Peripheral factors usually more important in controlling CO
 Heart will pump regardless the amount of blood flowing into
the right atrium
 Frank-Starling law
 As a result of increased quantities of volume the heart will stretch
and eject blood with increased force
 Stretch of the right atrium with stretch the sinus node and
increase heart rate (remember for Afib)
End-diastolic Volume
 End- diastolic Volume: Volume of blood in the ventricles
at the end of diastole
 Larger end-diastolic volume will stretch the heart
 Stretching the muscles of the heart optimizes the
length-strength relationship of cardiac fibers, resulting
in stronger contractility and greater stroke volume
Frank Starling Law
Regulation of Blood Volume by
the Kidneys
 Regulation of water excretion directly affects blood volume
 Regulated by the kidneys, controlled by anitdiuretic
hormone (ADH)
 ADH
 Produced by the hypothalamus and secreted by the posterior
pituitary
 Regulated by hypothalamus based on plasma osmolality
Regulation of Blood Flow
 Blood flow = Pressure / Resistance
 If pressure in a vessel increases flow will increase
 However if resistance in vessel increases flow will decrease
 Resistance in the vessels effected by:
 Length of the vessel (the longer the vessel the greater the
resistance
 Viscosity of the blood (greater the viscosity the greater
the resistance
 Radius of the vessel (smaller the radius the greater the
resistance
Regulation of Blood Flow
 Extrinsic regulation
 Sympathetic control of arteriolar radius
 Norepinephrine causes vasoconstriction
 Vasodilation accomplished by decreased sympathetic
stimulation
 Endocrine control of arteriolar radius
 Epinephrine secreted by adrenals in response to sympathetic
response
 Intrinsic regulation
 Some organs regulate their own blood flow regardless of
what is happening elsewhere
Effect of Peripheral Resistance
on the Long-Term CO
 CO= Arterial Pressure/Total Peripheral Resistance
 Under most normal conditions the long term cardiac output
level varies reciprocally with changes in total peripheral
resistance
 As resistance increase the CO decreases and vice versa
Mean Arterial Pressure
 Average blood pressure in an individual
 3 most important variables effecting MAP
 Total peripheral resistance
 Cardiac output
 Blood volume
MAP= (COxSVR) + CVP
MAP= ((2x DP) + SP)/3
Total Peripheral Resistance
(TPA)
 TPA refers to the sum of total vascular resistance to
flow of blood in the systemic circulation
 Arterioles given their small radii provide the greatest
resistance
 If resistance increases then pressure increases
Cardiac Output/Blood Volume
 CO is a measure of blood flow and directly proportional
to pressure.
 Therefore an increase in CO will cause an increase in
pressure (MAP)
 Blood volume is directly related to blood pressure
 As stroke volume goes up -> CO goes up -> BP rises
Summary of Factors the
Effect MAP
Baroreceptor Reflexes
Regulation of MAP
 Is controlled on a minute-to-minute basis by
baroreceptor reflexes
 Specialized stretch receptors located in the carotid
sinus and aorta
 Communicate with the brain stem to normalize BP
Baroreceptor Response in
Increased BP
EPIDEMIOLOGY
 HTN AFFECTS ABOUT 58 MILLION AMERICANS
 33.5% non-Hispanic blacks
 28.9% non-Hispanic whites
 20% in Mexican Americans
 PREVALENCE OF HTN INCREASING AS THE POPULATION AGES
 ESTIMATED ABOUT 1% OF HYPERTENSIVE PATIENTS WILL DEVELOP A HYPERTENSIVE EMERGENCY
 UNABLE TO KNOW FOR SURE THE PERCENTAGE OF OCCURANCE OF HYPERTENSIVE URGENCY
 ED PRESENTATION- 2-3% OF VISITS ANNUALLY
70% URGENCY, 3% EMERGENCY
 BOTH ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC FACTORS MAY CONTRIBUTE TO REGIONAL AND RACIAL VARIATIONS
Hypertension
Objectives
 Describe drug therapy options for chronic and acute
hypertension
 Explain the clinical pharmacology of commonly used
antihypertensive drugs
Chronic Hypertension
 Primary or “essential”
 No identifiable cause
 Also know as essential HTN
 Accounts for ~90% of cases
 Secondary
 Identifiable cause
 CRI, Cushing’s, pheochromocytoma, oral
contraceptives, etc.
Causes of Hypertension
 ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION
● MEDICATION NONCOMPLIANCE/UNDERTREATED
 SECONDARY HYPERTENSION
● AORTIC COARCTATION
● CUSHING’S SYNDROME
● ELEVATED ICP
● SLEEP APNEA
● RENAL DYSFUNCTION/OBSTRUCIVE UROPATHY
● PREGNANCY
● HYPERPARATHYROIDISM
● HYPERTHYROIDISM
● PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA
● PRIMARY ALDOSTERONISM
● MEDICATIONS-(OC’S, MOAI’S, TCA’S, STEROIDS, NSAIDS, NASAL
DECON, COLD REMEDIES AND COCAINE, APPITITE SUPPRESS)
● DC OF MEDS (BB, CLONIDINE)
● SPINAL CORD DISORDERS (GUILLAIN BARRE)
● POST –OP-(Cardiovascular)
Risk Factors
 Age > 60 years
 Male gender
 Smoking
 Diabetes
 Family history
 Heart failure
 PVD
 Hyperlipidemia
 Renal Disease
Mechanism of Hypertension
 Intravascular Volume
 Autonomic Nervous System
 Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone
 Vascular Mechanisms
Intravascular Volume
• BP = CO x Peripheral Vascular Resistance
• Autoregulation: (ie. Kidneys and Brain)
If constant blood flow is to be maintained in the face of
increased arterial pressure, resistance within that bed must
increase
– Initial  in BP is in response to vascular volume due
to increased CO; however reverts back to normal over
time (peripheral resistance remains elevated likely to due
to epithelial damage)
Intravascular Volume
 “Pressure- Natriuresis”
 Increased urinary excretions of sodium along with water to
maintain normal BP
 Involves subtle increase in GFR
 Decreased absorbing capacity in renal tubules
 Hormonal factor (atrial natriuretic factor/peptide)
Autonomic Nervous System
 Maintains cardiovascular hemostasis via:
 Pressure, Volume, Chemoreceptor signals
 3 endogenous catecholamines
 Norepinephrine
 Epinephrine
 Dopamine
 Alpha & Beta receptors 1,2
Hypertension
 Diagnosis
 A sustained elevation of SBP ≥ 140mm Hg or DBP ≥ 90 at
least 3 times on two different occasions.
Systolic BP Diastolic BP
Normal < 120 < 80
Prehypertension 121-139 80-89
Stage 1 140-159 90-99
Stage 2 160 100
Blood Pressure Classification
Treatment Goals
 Prevent end-organ damage
 Reduce risk of cardiovascular events
 Maintain SBP < 140 and DBP < 90 mmHg
Hypertension
 Target Organ Damage
 Independent predisposing factor for heart
failure, coronary artery disease, stroke, renal
disease, and peripheral artery disease
Hypertension
 Heart
 Heart disease is most common cause of death in
hypertensive patients
 Structural Damage
 LVH
 Diastolic dysfunction
 CHF
 CAD
 Arrhythmias
Hypertension
 Brain
 Important risk factor for infarction and hemorrhage
 Incidence of stroke increases with increase in BP
 Treatment decreases incidence of both ischemic and
hemorrhagic stroke
 Associated with impaired cognition in aging
population
 May cause hypertensive encephalopathy
 Can lead to stupor, coma, seizures, death
Hypertension
 Kidney
 Risk factor for renal injury and ESRD
 The atherosclerotic, HTN-related vascular lesions
 Resulting in glomerular ischemia and atrophy
 Macro (urine albumin/creatinine ratio >300 mg/g) and
microalbuminuria (30-300 mg/g)
Hypertension
 Peripheral Arteries
 May be asymptomatic
 Intermittent claudication
 Aching pain in calves relieved by rest
Lifestyle Modifications
 Diet
 DASH diet rich in fruit, vegetables and low-fat dairy foods
 Reduce sodium intake to 2.4 grams/day
 Limit alcohol consumption
 Exercise
 Aerobic and weight-bearing activity
 Stop smoking!
Drug Dosing
 “Start low and go slow!”
 No need to drop BP immediately unless in an
emergency
Hypertensive Emergencies and Urgencies
 “Emergencies” (>180/120)
 Require immediate BP reduction to limit target organ
damage (TOD)
 Encephalopathy, ICH, AMI, pulmonary edema, aortic
aneurysm, eclampsia, etc.
 “Urgencies” (>180/120)
 Reduce BP over 1-2 days to prevent TOD
Goals of Therapy
 Reduce MAP by no more than 25% (within 2 minutes
to 2 hours)
 Achieve BP of 160/90 within 6 hours (drastic drops in
BP may induce ischemia)
 Elevated BP alone without target organ damage or
symptoms rarely requires emergency therapy
Management
 Use parental drugs for HTN emergency:
 Enalaprilat
 Esmolol
 Fenoldopam
 Labetalol
 Nicardipine
 Nitroglycerin
 Nitroprusside
 Phentolamine
 Use fast-acting, oral agents for HTN urgency:
 Loop diuretics
 BBs and CCBs
 ACE-Is
 Alpha-2 agonists (clonidine)

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Hypertension Congestive Heart Failure Pharmacology Talk Part 1

  • 1. Pharmacologic Management of Hypertension &CHF John A. Kenna, MS, ACNP Assistant Clinical Professor University of Rhode Island 3/25/2014
  • 2. Overview  Cardiac Output/Venous Return  Hypertension  Heart Failure
  • 3. Cardiac Output  CO= HR x SVR  Cardiac output: The quantity of blood pumped into the aorta each minute by the heart  Also the quantity of blood that flows through the circulation  Perhaps the most important factor to consider in relation to circulation
  • 4. Normal Values for Cardiac Output  Varies widely with the level of activity  The following factors directly affect CO  Basic level of body metabolism  Whether the person is exercising  Age  Size of the body  Young healthy men resting CO about 5.6L/min  For women, about 4.9L/min
  • 5. Cardiac Index  CI = CO/BSA  The CO per square meter of body surface area  The normal range of cardiac index in rest is 2.6 - 4.2 L/min per square meter
  • 6. Control of Heart Rate (HR)  The SA node of the heart is innervated by both sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves  Parasympathetic fibers release acetylcholine  Decrease HR  Sympathetic release norepinephrine and release of epinephrine from the adrenal medulla.  Increase HR
  • 7. Control of Stroke Volume (SV)  The ventricles of the heart empty only about 50% of their volume during systole.  During periods of exercise, the heart fills up with more blood and the heart contracts more strongly.  Stroke volume is increased by 2 mechanisms:  increase in end-diastolic volume  increase in sympathetic system activity
  • 8. Control of Cardiac Output by Venous Return  This means it is NOT the heart itself that is the primary controller of CO  Peripheral factors usually more important in controlling CO  Heart will pump regardless the amount of blood flowing into the right atrium  Frank-Starling law  As a result of increased quantities of volume the heart will stretch and eject blood with increased force  Stretch of the right atrium with stretch the sinus node and increase heart rate (remember for Afib)
  • 9. End-diastolic Volume  End- diastolic Volume: Volume of blood in the ventricles at the end of diastole  Larger end-diastolic volume will stretch the heart  Stretching the muscles of the heart optimizes the length-strength relationship of cardiac fibers, resulting in stronger contractility and greater stroke volume
  • 11.
  • 12. Regulation of Blood Volume by the Kidneys  Regulation of water excretion directly affects blood volume  Regulated by the kidneys, controlled by anitdiuretic hormone (ADH)  ADH  Produced by the hypothalamus and secreted by the posterior pituitary  Regulated by hypothalamus based on plasma osmolality
  • 13. Regulation of Blood Flow  Blood flow = Pressure / Resistance  If pressure in a vessel increases flow will increase  However if resistance in vessel increases flow will decrease  Resistance in the vessels effected by:  Length of the vessel (the longer the vessel the greater the resistance  Viscosity of the blood (greater the viscosity the greater the resistance  Radius of the vessel (smaller the radius the greater the resistance
  • 14. Regulation of Blood Flow  Extrinsic regulation  Sympathetic control of arteriolar radius  Norepinephrine causes vasoconstriction  Vasodilation accomplished by decreased sympathetic stimulation  Endocrine control of arteriolar radius  Epinephrine secreted by adrenals in response to sympathetic response  Intrinsic regulation  Some organs regulate their own blood flow regardless of what is happening elsewhere
  • 15.
  • 16. Effect of Peripheral Resistance on the Long-Term CO  CO= Arterial Pressure/Total Peripheral Resistance  Under most normal conditions the long term cardiac output level varies reciprocally with changes in total peripheral resistance  As resistance increase the CO decreases and vice versa
  • 17.
  • 18. Mean Arterial Pressure  Average blood pressure in an individual  3 most important variables effecting MAP  Total peripheral resistance  Cardiac output  Blood volume MAP= (COxSVR) + CVP MAP= ((2x DP) + SP)/3
  • 19. Total Peripheral Resistance (TPA)  TPA refers to the sum of total vascular resistance to flow of blood in the systemic circulation  Arterioles given their small radii provide the greatest resistance  If resistance increases then pressure increases
  • 20. Cardiac Output/Blood Volume  CO is a measure of blood flow and directly proportional to pressure.  Therefore an increase in CO will cause an increase in pressure (MAP)  Blood volume is directly related to blood pressure  As stroke volume goes up -> CO goes up -> BP rises
  • 21. Summary of Factors the Effect MAP
  • 22. Baroreceptor Reflexes Regulation of MAP  Is controlled on a minute-to-minute basis by baroreceptor reflexes  Specialized stretch receptors located in the carotid sinus and aorta  Communicate with the brain stem to normalize BP
  • 24. EPIDEMIOLOGY  HTN AFFECTS ABOUT 58 MILLION AMERICANS  33.5% non-Hispanic blacks  28.9% non-Hispanic whites  20% in Mexican Americans  PREVALENCE OF HTN INCREASING AS THE POPULATION AGES  ESTIMATED ABOUT 1% OF HYPERTENSIVE PATIENTS WILL DEVELOP A HYPERTENSIVE EMERGENCY  UNABLE TO KNOW FOR SURE THE PERCENTAGE OF OCCURANCE OF HYPERTENSIVE URGENCY  ED PRESENTATION- 2-3% OF VISITS ANNUALLY 70% URGENCY, 3% EMERGENCY  BOTH ENVIRONMENTAL AND GENETIC FACTORS MAY CONTRIBUTE TO REGIONAL AND RACIAL VARIATIONS
  • 26. Objectives  Describe drug therapy options for chronic and acute hypertension  Explain the clinical pharmacology of commonly used antihypertensive drugs
  • 27. Chronic Hypertension  Primary or “essential”  No identifiable cause  Also know as essential HTN  Accounts for ~90% of cases  Secondary  Identifiable cause  CRI, Cushing’s, pheochromocytoma, oral contraceptives, etc.
  • 28. Causes of Hypertension  ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION ● MEDICATION NONCOMPLIANCE/UNDERTREATED  SECONDARY HYPERTENSION ● AORTIC COARCTATION ● CUSHING’S SYNDROME ● ELEVATED ICP ● SLEEP APNEA ● RENAL DYSFUNCTION/OBSTRUCIVE UROPATHY ● PREGNANCY ● HYPERPARATHYROIDISM ● HYPERTHYROIDISM ● PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA ● PRIMARY ALDOSTERONISM ● MEDICATIONS-(OC’S, MOAI’S, TCA’S, STEROIDS, NSAIDS, NASAL DECON, COLD REMEDIES AND COCAINE, APPITITE SUPPRESS) ● DC OF MEDS (BB, CLONIDINE) ● SPINAL CORD DISORDERS (GUILLAIN BARRE) ● POST –OP-(Cardiovascular)
  • 29. Risk Factors  Age > 60 years  Male gender  Smoking  Diabetes  Family history  Heart failure  PVD  Hyperlipidemia  Renal Disease
  • 30. Mechanism of Hypertension  Intravascular Volume  Autonomic Nervous System  Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone  Vascular Mechanisms
  • 31. Intravascular Volume • BP = CO x Peripheral Vascular Resistance • Autoregulation: (ie. Kidneys and Brain) If constant blood flow is to be maintained in the face of increased arterial pressure, resistance within that bed must increase – Initial  in BP is in response to vascular volume due to increased CO; however reverts back to normal over time (peripheral resistance remains elevated likely to due to epithelial damage)
  • 32. Intravascular Volume  “Pressure- Natriuresis”  Increased urinary excretions of sodium along with water to maintain normal BP  Involves subtle increase in GFR  Decreased absorbing capacity in renal tubules  Hormonal factor (atrial natriuretic factor/peptide)
  • 33. Autonomic Nervous System  Maintains cardiovascular hemostasis via:  Pressure, Volume, Chemoreceptor signals  3 endogenous catecholamines  Norepinephrine  Epinephrine  Dopamine  Alpha & Beta receptors 1,2
  • 34.
  • 35.
  • 36. Hypertension  Diagnosis  A sustained elevation of SBP ≥ 140mm Hg or DBP ≥ 90 at least 3 times on two different occasions.
  • 37. Systolic BP Diastolic BP Normal < 120 < 80 Prehypertension 121-139 80-89 Stage 1 140-159 90-99 Stage 2 160 100 Blood Pressure Classification
  • 38. Treatment Goals  Prevent end-organ damage  Reduce risk of cardiovascular events  Maintain SBP < 140 and DBP < 90 mmHg
  • 39. Hypertension  Target Organ Damage  Independent predisposing factor for heart failure, coronary artery disease, stroke, renal disease, and peripheral artery disease
  • 40. Hypertension  Heart  Heart disease is most common cause of death in hypertensive patients  Structural Damage  LVH  Diastolic dysfunction  CHF  CAD  Arrhythmias
  • 41. Hypertension  Brain  Important risk factor for infarction and hemorrhage  Incidence of stroke increases with increase in BP  Treatment decreases incidence of both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke  Associated with impaired cognition in aging population  May cause hypertensive encephalopathy  Can lead to stupor, coma, seizures, death
  • 42. Hypertension  Kidney  Risk factor for renal injury and ESRD  The atherosclerotic, HTN-related vascular lesions  Resulting in glomerular ischemia and atrophy  Macro (urine albumin/creatinine ratio >300 mg/g) and microalbuminuria (30-300 mg/g)
  • 43. Hypertension  Peripheral Arteries  May be asymptomatic  Intermittent claudication  Aching pain in calves relieved by rest
  • 44. Lifestyle Modifications  Diet  DASH diet rich in fruit, vegetables and low-fat dairy foods  Reduce sodium intake to 2.4 grams/day  Limit alcohol consumption  Exercise  Aerobic and weight-bearing activity  Stop smoking!
  • 45. Drug Dosing  “Start low and go slow!”  No need to drop BP immediately unless in an emergency
  • 46. Hypertensive Emergencies and Urgencies  “Emergencies” (>180/120)  Require immediate BP reduction to limit target organ damage (TOD)  Encephalopathy, ICH, AMI, pulmonary edema, aortic aneurysm, eclampsia, etc.  “Urgencies” (>180/120)  Reduce BP over 1-2 days to prevent TOD
  • 47. Goals of Therapy  Reduce MAP by no more than 25% (within 2 minutes to 2 hours)  Achieve BP of 160/90 within 6 hours (drastic drops in BP may induce ischemia)  Elevated BP alone without target organ damage or symptoms rarely requires emergency therapy
  • 48. Management  Use parental drugs for HTN emergency:  Enalaprilat  Esmolol  Fenoldopam  Labetalol  Nicardipine  Nitroglycerin  Nitroprusside  Phentolamine  Use fast-acting, oral agents for HTN urgency:  Loop diuretics  BBs and CCBs  ACE-Is  Alpha-2 agonists (clonidine)

Editor's Notes

  1. Of all of the factors that effect blood flow, the radius of the blood vessel is the most potent. Blood flow is proportional to the 4th power of vessel radius. This means that if the radius of a blood vessel doubles (by vasodilation) then the flow will increase 16 fold (2 to the 4th power is 16). On the other hand, if the radius of a vessel is reduce in half (by vasoconstriction), then the blood flow will be reduced 16 fold
  2. HYPERTENSION IS EXTREMELY COMMONEd PRESENTATIONS 2-3 % OF ALL VISITS ANNUALLY, 70% URGENCY, 30 % EMERGENCY
  3. ALPHA ADRENERGIC AGONISTS Causes:The most common hypertensive emergency is a rapid unexplained rise in BP in a patient with chronic essential HTN. Other causes include: Renal parenchymal disease - Chronic pyelonephritis, primary glomerulonephritis, tubulointerstitial nephritis (accounts for 80% of all secondary causes); Systemic disorders with renal involvement - Systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, vasculitides; Renovascular disease - Atherosclerotic disease, fibromuscular dysplasia, polyarteritis nodosa; Endocrine - Pheochromocytoma, Cushing syndrome, primary hyperaldosteronism; Drugs - Cocaine, amphetamines, cyclosporin, clonidine withdrawal, phencyclidine, diet pills, oral contraceptive pills.Drug interactions - Monoamine oxidase inhibitors with tricyclic antidepressants, antihistamines, or tyramine- containing food; CNS - CNS trauma or spinal cord disorders, such as Guillain-Barré syndrome; Coarctation of the aorta; Preeclampsia/eclampsia; Postoperative hypertension.SLEEP APNEASci-pts are prone to autonomic overactivity syndrome manifested by severe htn, bradycardia, HA and diaphoresis The syndrome is triggered by stimulation of dermatomes or muscles innervated by nerves below the sc lesion