~Maria Vogel’s Chapt 32 HTN—Med/Surg Page1~
Coronary arteries:
Originate inside aorta
Fill during diastole
RCA—Supply Rt atrium and ventricle and AV node and Bundle of His.
LCA—supply the leftatrium and ventricle.
Coronary arteries empty into the coronary sinus (venous flow), which empties into the Rt. Atrium.
HTN—Chapter 32
Increased HR = Increased Oxygen demand
BP = CO x SVR
Systemic Vascular resistance—force opposing the movement of blood within the blood vessels.
CO = SV X HR (total blood flow through the systemic or pulmonary circulation in one minute)
SV--blood pumped out from Lf. Ventricle each beat (aprox. 70 mL)
Normal CO = 4-8 L/min
1)Regulation:
a)Sympathetic nervous system Stimulation
Increases HR
Vasoconstriction
Release of rennin
Causes Angiotension Iand II
Release of aldosterone from adrenals –conserves Na and H2O—Increases fluid vol.
b)Parasympathetic Nervous System—Rest and digest
Decreases HR
Vasodilation—via vagus nerve (Vaso vagal response Dec. HR and dec. BP)
Baroreceptors—specialized nerve cells located in the carotid arteries and arch of aorta. They are sensitive to stretch. When BP increases it sendsinhibitory impulses to the sympathetic vasomotor center of the brain.
c)VascularEndothelium
d)
Produces vasoactivesubstance
Dilation
Constriction
Produces—endothelin (ET) an extremely potent vasoconstrictor.
Nitric oxide and endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF)—Causes vasodilation
--inhibits platelet aggregation
--Intact endothelium, non-reactive to platelets.
e)Kidneys—rennin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.
f)Endocrine System—releases aldosterone which causes Na retention and water retention—increases BP by increasing CO.
g)Increased Na+ stimulates release of ADH—increases fluid and increasedBP.
Stages of HTN:
2)HTN—sustained BP of >140/90
3 + readings
a) Stage I–140-159/90-99
b) StageII—160-179/100/109
c) Stage III-->180/110
Types of HTN:
a) Primary HTN
95% of case
Causeunknown
b) Secondary HTN
5% of cases
can identify cause—usually renal disease, sleep apnea, medications, estrogen and NSAID, and Coarctation aorta.
3)Pathophysiology—
~ Increased SNS stimulation = Increased HR and Increased CO Increased vascular resistance and Increased BP.
~ hyperinsulinemia or insulin resistance prevents nitricoxide release—prevents vasodilation.
4)Manifestations—Signs and Symptoms
~ Asymptomatic—no symptoms—SILENT KILLER
~ fatigued—nonspecific
~ Dizziness
~ Palpitations
~ Angina—advanced.
5)Complications of HTN
Evidence of target organ damage:
a) CAD—coronary artery disease
b) Left ventricular hypertrophy—most muscle mass in heart works harder it enlarges. Starling’s law—it can’t stretch anymore. Detected with chest x-ray and EKG
c) Heart failure
d) Stroke
e) Peripheral vascular disease
f) retinopathy
g)End stage renal failure.
6)Diagnostics:
a) H and P
b) Kidneys—UA BUN and creatinine signal kidney problems
c) chest x-ray
d) EKG
e) CBC
f) Lipids—cholesterol
g) Blood sugar
1.Treatment
Stage I<159/99 treat with lifestyle modification
Stage II and III lifestyle modification and drug therapy.
Lifestyle modifications cont. for one year:
a)dietary change: reduce Na, and fat. Maintain Ca, Mg and K. Increase K.
b)Exercise—activity
c)Limit ETOH consumption
d)Quit smoking—smoking release epi and norepi = Inc. HR. Vasoconstriction, release of CO2 in system competes with O2. Dec. O2 in system. Changes endothelial lining—becomes reactive to platelet aggregation over time.
- Medications—Stage II and III
I) Diuretics—Increase urinary output and dec. volume. A) Thiazides—K wasters
Diuril and hydrodiuril
NORMAL K LEVELS 3.5 – 5
B) Loop Diuretics
Lasix and Bumix
SE: Orthostatic Hypotension
C) K Sparing Diuretics
Aldactone and spironalactone
II. ACE inhibitors—vasocdilation, dec. fluid vol. Inhibits aldosterone release
Lotensin and Prinivil
SE: Hyperkalemia
3 Most common SE with antiHTN:
a) orthostatic hypotension
b) Dry mouth and frequent voiding
c) Sexual dysfunction
DAMAGE FROM HTN happens OVER TIME. - HTN Crisis: --Not over time It is a severe and abrupt elevation with elevation of > 130 Diastolic.
Causes—Failure to comply, inconsistentlytaking medications
~ Response to cocaine, crack and LSD
~ Eclampsia.
VASOCONSTRICTION triggers endothelial damage, which leads to MI, Stroke, and seizures.
Treatment:
Dec. Mean arterial pressure by 10-20% in first 1-2 hours.
MAP = Diastolic and 1/3 of pulse pressure
Pulse Pressure—difference between diastolic and systolic
Medications: Nitroprusside/Hyperstat
Apressoline
Given IV
Rx titrated for effect
Pt should be in intensive care because we don’thave an expected outcome. Adrenegic Blockers—NORMADINE—Alpha Beta adrenergic blocking properties—produces peripheral vasodilation, dec. HR whichreduces CO, SVR, and BP.
? Add an oral Rx—vasotec (ACE inhibitor)