Hypertension Flashcards

(33 cards)

1
Q

What is hypertension defined as in children?

A

A systolic and/or diastolic pressure greater than the 95th percentile for age, gender, and height on at least 3 occasions

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2
Q

What can hypertension be classified into?

A
  • Essential
  • Secondary
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3
Q

What is essential hypertension?

A

When no specific cause can be identified

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4
Q

What are the majority of cases of secondary hypertension caused by?

A
  • Renal parenchymal disease
  • Renovascular disease
  • Coarctation of aorta
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5
Q

What are the less common causes of secondary hypertension?

A
  • Raised ICP
  • Phaeochromocytoma
  • Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
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6
Q

What is the most common presentation of hypertension in children?

A

Incidental finding

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7
Q

What are the symptomatic presentations of hypertension?

A
  • Headache
  • Facial palsy
  • Acute emergency
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8
Q

What are the acute emergency presentations of hypertension?

A
  • Congestive cardiac failure
  • Cerebrovascular accident
  • Hypertensive encephalopathy
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9
Q

What are haemodynamics defined as?

A

Physical factors that govern blood flow

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10
Q

What is blood flow determined by?

A
  • The blood pressure gradient between arterial and venous blood
  • Resistance provided by blood vessel and viscosity of blood
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11
Q

Why is the blood inside arteries and smaller branches always under pressure?

A
  • Constant tension in the walls of the arteries
  • Peripheral resistance
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12
Q

What is meant by peripheral resistance in the context of haemodynamics?

A

The resistance offered to the passage of blood as it passes into smaller and smaller vessels

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13
Q

What provides the tension in the walls of arteries?

A

Muscle and elastic tissue

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14
Q

What happens to the pressure exerted on blood inside arteries when the left ventricle contracts?

A

There is a surge of pressure

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15
Q

What is the result of the surge of pressure produced by the contraction of the left ventricles?

A

It causes the larger arteries to distend and then recoil due to their own elasticity, causing a pulsation

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16
Q

What produces a greater change in arterial pressure during left ventricular contraction?

A

A greater stroke volume

17
Q

What is the aortic pulse pressure?

A

The maximal change in aortic pressure during systole

18
Q

How is the aortic pulse pressure calculated?

A

The systolic minus the diastolic pressure

19
Q

What factors determine the systolic and diastolic blood pressure?

A
  • Cardiac output
  • Total peripheral resistance
20
Q

What factors determine the rise in aortic pressure from diastolic to systolic?

A
  • The compliance of the aorta
  • The ventricular stroke volume
21
Q

Which vessel has the greatest compliance in the arterial system?

22
Q

Why is the compliance in the aorta important?

A

It dampens down the pulsatile output of the left ventricle - if the aorta were rigid, the pulse pressure would be very high

23
Q

Why is the energy from ventricular contraction not instantly transferred around the circulation after each heartbeat?

A

Because the circulatory system is elastic, and has resistance and other impediments to flow

24
Q

What is the result of the energy from ventricular contraction not being instantly transferred around the circulation?

A

The energy of venous flow is several heartbeats behind that of ventricular ejection

25
What factors is blood pressure determined by?
- Cardiac output - Peripheral resistance
26
What is the clinical relevance of BP being determined by cardiac output and peripheral resistance?
Clinical disorders that either raise cardiac output or peripheral vascular resistance can raise BP
27
What is cardiac output determined by?
- Stroke volume - Heart rate
28
What is the most commonly affected factor leading to an increase in cardiac output?
An increase in stroke volume
29
What can cause a rise in stroke volume?
Rise in intravascular volume
30
What can cause a rise in intravascular volume?
Fluid retention
31
What can cause excessive fluid retention?
- Decreased fluid output - Salt retention
32
What can cause decreased fluid output?
Oliguric renal failure
33
What can cause salt retention?
- Excessive salt intake - Activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS)