0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:13
Hypertension 763
■“White-coat” HTN: ambulatory or portable BP measurements may
assist
■Sleep apnea
■Drug-induced: NSAIDs, COX-2 inhibitors, oral contraceptives,
cocaine, amphetamines, sympathomimetics, adrenal steroids,
cyclosporine, tacrolimus, erythropoietin, licorice and some chew-
ing tobacco, selected over-the-counter supplements/medications
■Renal disease (especially related to diabetes mellitus)
■Renal vascular HTN: 1–2% of cases
■Primary hyperaldosteronism
■Cushing’s syndrome or chronic steroid therapy
■Pheochromocytoma
■Coarctation of the aorta
■Pregnancy-associated
■Acromegaly
■Thyroid or parathyroid disease
management
What to Do First
■Initial therapy as per JNC VII by classification (without compelling
indications; for therapy with compelling indications, see Specific
Therapy below):
➣Normal: encourage lifestyle modifications; no antihypertensive
drug indicated
➣Prehypertension: treat with lifestyle modifications; no antihyper-
tensive drug indicated
➣HTN-Stage 1: treat with lifestyle modifications; start with single-
agent antihypertensive therapy (often thiazide diuretic)
➣HTN-Stage 2: treat with lifestyle modifications; most will require
at least two drugs in combination (usually thiazide diuretic and
ACE inhibitor or ARB or beta blocker or calcium channel blocker)
General Measures
■Lifestyle modifications important to preventing/reversing HTN and
limiting complications
➣Lose weight
➣Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) eating plan:
diet rich in fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy products; reduce
intake of dietary saturated fats and cholesterol
➣Increase aerobic physical activity
➣Reduce sodium intake (≤6 g NaCl/d)