| Literature DB >> 21234416 |
Anastasios Makris1, Maria Seferou, Dimitris P Papadopoulos.
Abstract
Resistant hypertension is defined as blood pressure above the patient's goal despite the use of 3 or more antihypertensive agents from different classes at optimal doses, one of which should ideally be a diuretic. Evaluation of patients with resistive hypertension should first confirm that they have true resistant hypertension by ruling out or correcting factors associated with pseudoresistance such as white coat hypertension, suboptimal blood pressure measurement technique, poor adherence to prescribed medication, suboptimal dosing of antihypertensive agents or inappropriate combinations, the white coat effect, and clinical inertia. Management includes lifestyle and dietary modification, elimination of medications contributing to resistance, and evaluation of potential secondary causes of hypertension. Pharmacological treatment should be tailored to the patient's profile and focus on the causative pathway of resistance. Patients with uncontrolled hypertension despite receiving an optimal therapy are candidates for newer interventional therapies such as carotid baroreceptor stimulation and renal denervation.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21234416 PMCID: PMC3014709 DOI: 10.4061/2011/598694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Resistant hypertension workup.
| (i) Perform proper measurements of blood pressure. | |
| (i) Ask the patient about use of any pharmacological/herbal substances that may increase blood pressure. | |
| (i) Evaluate renal function with estimation of glomerular filtration rate and modify treatment accordingly. | |
Tailor treatment according to patient characteristics using optimal doses of appropriate medications. If all fails refer to hypertension specialist.
Causes of resistant hypertension.
| Drug related (see | |
| Obesity | |
| White-coat hypertension | |
| (i) Common causes | |
| Renovascular disease | |
| (ii) Rare causes | |
| Aneurysm located at the bifurcation of the right renal artery | |
Drug related causes of resistant hypertension.
| Nonadherence | |
| (i) Drugs that regularly raise blood pressure: | |
| Anabolic steroids | |
| (ii) Drugs that often raise blood pressure: | |
| Ethanol (in excess) | |
| (iii) Drugs that occasionally raise blood pressure: | |
| Caffeine | |
| (iv) Drugs that cause hypertension on withdrawal: | |
| Clonidine | |
| (v) Drugs that cause hypertension by interaction: | |
| MAOIs | |