Percutaneous Coronary Interventions and Other Interventional Procedures
2071CHAPTER 276
aorta (counterpulsation). This results in an increase in coronary blood
flow and a decrease in afterload. It is contraindicated in patients with
aortic regurgitation, aortic dissection, or severe peripheral artery
disease. The major complications are vascular and thrombotic. Intravenous heparin is given in order to reduce thrombotic complications.
Another support device is the Impella (Abiomed, Danvers,
Massachusetts). The Impella catheter is placed percutaneously from the
femoral artery into the left ventricle. The catheter has a small microaxial
pump at its tip that can pump up to 2.5–5 L/min from the left ventricle
to the aorta. The smaller devices can be placed percutaneously, but
the larger devices need surgical access. Other support devices include
TandemHeart (CardiacAssist, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), which involves
placement of a large 21-French catheter from the femoral vein through
the right atrium into the left atrium using the transseptal technique
and a catheter in the femoral artery. A centrifugal pump can deliver
5 L of blood per minute. It may be useful in patients in shock or with
STEMI or very-high-risk PCI. Patients can also be placed on peripheral
extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) using large cannulas
placed in the femoral artery and vein. This technique can be performed
emergently or electively in the catheterization laboratory and is useful
for support of patients with acute respiratory failure or cardiac failure.
■ INTERVENTIONS FOR PULMONARY EMBOLISM
The treatment of deep vein thrombosis is intravenous anticoagulation,
with placement of an inferior vena cava filter if recurrent pulmonary
emboli (PE) occur or anticoagulation is not possible. Post-phlebitic
syndrome is a serious condition due to chronic venous obstruction
that can lead to chronic leg edema and venous ulcers. Randomized data
show that mechanical treatments may have a selective role in treatment
of large iliofemoral deep-vein thrombosis.
PE should be treated with fibrinolytic agents if massive and in some
cases if submassive. Surgical pulmonary embolectomy is an option for
the treatment of massive PE with hemodynamic instability in patients
who have contraindications for systemic fibrinolysis or those in whom
it has failed. Catheter-based therapies for submassive and massive PEs
are still evolving, but studies have shown promise. The techniques
employed include the use of aspiration of the clot with a large catheter
(10 French), intraclot infusion of a thrombolytic agent followed by aspiration, ultrasound-assisted catheter-directed thrombolysis, and use of
rheolytic thrombectomy. Success for these techniques has been reported
to be 80–90%, with major complications occurring in 2–4% of patients.
■ INTERVENTIONS FOR REFRACTORY
HYPERTENSION
The recent recognition of the importance of the renal sympathetic
nerves in modulating blood pressure has led to a technique to selectively denervate renal sympathetic nerves in patients with refractory
hypertension. The procedure involves applying low-power radiofrequency treatment via a catheter along the length of both renal arteries.
Despite promising nonrandomized data, in the randomized Symplicity
HTN-3 trial, renal denervation did not significantly reduce blood
pressure compared with medical therapy. Further optimization of the
technique is ongoing with some evidence from small randomized trials
of modest efficacy, with larger scale evaluation ongoing.
CONCLUSION
Interventional cardiology continues to expand its borders. Treatment
for coronary artery disease, including complex anatomic subsets, continues to advance. Technological advances such as drug-eluting stents,
now already in their second generation, are improving the results of
PCI. PCI is the treatment of choice for patients with acute coronary
syndromes. For patients with stable coronary disease, PCI is effective
in symptom alleviation. Use of a Heart Team is the best way to make
decisions concerning which revascularization—PCI or CABG—is best
for an individual patient. Treatment of peripheral and cerebrovascular
disease can be effective with percutaneous techniques. Structural heart
disease is increasingly being treated with percutaneous options, with
interventional approaches such as TAVR becoming preferred over surgical aortic valve replacement. Further growth of invasive procedures
is anticipated in years to come.
■ FURTHER READING
Bhatt DL: Cardiovascular Intervention: A Companion to Braunwald’s
Heart Disease. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2016.
Faxon DP, Williams DO: Interventional cardiology: Current status
and future directions in coronary disease and valvular heart disease.
Circulation 133:2697, 2016.
Neuman FJ et al: 2018 ESC/EACTS guidelines on myocardial revascularization. Eur Heart J 40:87, 2019.
Vahl TP et al: Transcatheter aortic valve replacement 2016: A modernday “through the looking-glass” adventure. J Am Coll Cardiol
67:1472, 2016.
A
D E
B C
FIGURE 276-5 Peripheral interventional procedures have become highly effective at treating anatomic lesions previously amenable only to bypass surgery. A. Complete
occlusion of the left superficial femoral artery. B. Wire and catheter advanced into subintimal space. C. Intravascular ultrasound positioned in the subintimal space to
guide retrograde wire placement through the occluded vessel. D. Balloon dilation of the occlusion. E. Stent placement with excellent angiographic result. (Reprinted from A
Almahameed, DL Bhatt: Contemporary management of peripheral arterial disease: III. Endovascular and surgical management. Cleve Clin J Med 2006; 73(suppl 4):S45-S51.
With permission from The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. © 2006. The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. All rights reserved.)
2072 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
Hypertension is one of the leading causes of the global burden of disease. Elevated blood pressure affects more than one billion individuals
and causes an estimated 9.4 million deaths per year. Hypertension
doubles the risk of cardiovascular diseases, including coronary heart
disease (CHD), congestive heart failure (CHF), ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, renal failure, and peripheral arterial disease (PAD). It
often is associated with additional cardiovascular disease risk factors,
and the risk of cardiovascular disease increases with the total burden
of risk factors. Although antihypertensive therapy reduces the risks of
cardiovascular and renal disease, large segments of the hypertensive
population are either untreated or inadequately treated.
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Blood pressure levels, the rate of age-related increases in blood pressure, and the prevalence of hypertension vary among countries and
among subpopulations within a country. Hypertension is present in all
populations except for small numbers of individuals living in isolated
societies. In industrialized societies, blood pressure increases steadily during the first two decades of life. In children and adolescents,
blood pressure is associated with growth and maturation, and blood
pressure “tracks” over time in children and between adolescence and
young adulthood. In the United States, average systolic blood pressure
is higher for men than for women during early adulthood, although
among older individuals the age-related rate of rise is steeper for
women. Diastolic blood pressure also increases progressively with age
until ~55 years, after which it tends to decrease. The consequence is a
widening of pulse pressure (the difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure) beyond age 60.
In the United States, based on criteria for defining hypertension prior
to 2018, ~78 million adults have hypertension. Hypertension prevalence is 33.5% in non-Hispanic blacks, 28.9% in non-Hispanic whites,
and 20.7% in Mexican Americans. Among individuals aged ≥60 years,
the prevalence is 65.4%. Recent evidence suggests that the prevalence
of hypertension in the United States may be increasing, possibly as a
consequence of increasing obesity. The prevalence of hypertension and
stroke mortality rates is higher in the southeastern United States than
in other regions. In African Americans, hypertension appears earlier, is
generally more severe, and results in higher rates of morbidity and mortality from stroke, left ventricular hypertrophy, CHF, and end-stage renal
disease (ESRD) than in white Americans. In the United States, hypertension awareness, treatment, and control rates have been improving for
decades. According to National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data, in 2009–2012, prevalence estimates for men and
women, respectively, were 80.2% and 85.4% for hypertension awareness,
70.9% and 80.6% for treatment (88.4% and 94.4% in those who were
aware), 69.5% and 68.5% for control in those being treated, and 49.3%
and 55.2% for overall control in adults with hypertension.
Both environmental and genetic factors may contribute to variations
in hypertension prevalence. Studies of societies undergoing “acculturation” and studies of migrants from a less to a more urbanized setting
indicate a profound environmental contribution to blood pressure.
Obesity and weight gain are strong, independent risk factors for hypertension. Hypertension prevalence is also related to dietary NaCl intake,
and the age-related increase in blood pressure may be augmented by
a high NaCl intake. Low dietary intakes of calcium and potassium
also may contribute to the risk of hypertension. The urine sodium-topotassium ratio (an index of both sodium and potassium intakes) is a
stronger correlate of blood pressure than is either sodium or potassium
alone. Alcohol consumption, psychosocial stress, and low levels of
physical activity also may contribute to hypertension.
277 Hypertension
Theodore A. Kotchen*
■ GENETIC CONSIDERATIONS
Although specific genetic variants have been identified in rare
Mendelian forms of hypertension, these variants are not applicable to the vast majority (>98%) of patients with hypertension. For
most individuals, it is likely that hypertension represents a polygenic
disorder in which a combination of genes acts in concert with environmental exposures to make only a modest contribution to blood pressure. Furthermore, different subsets of genes may lead to different
phenotypes associated with hypertension, e.g., obesity, dyslipidemia,
insulin resistance.
Adoption, twin, and family studies document a significant heritable
component to blood pressure levels and hypertension. Animal models
(including selectively bred rats and congenic rat strains) have identified a number of genetic loci and genes associated with hypertension.
Clinically, although replication has been a challenge, results of candidate gene studies and genome-wide association studies have identified
>25 rare mutations and >100 hypertension-related polymorphisms.
A number of these polymorphisms are involved in pathways that
regulate arterial pressure. However, blood pressure–related polymorphisms account for only ~3.5% of blood pressure variance, whereas
based on family studies, heritability of hypertension is estimated to be
in the range of 30–40%. One hypothesis to account for the “missing
heritability” is that epigenetic modifications of DNA contribute to the
heritability of blood pressure. Epigenetic processes are changes in gene
expression that occur without changes in DNA sequence. In contrast to
DNA sequence, the epigenome is relatively susceptible to modification
by environmental exposures.
Preliminary evidence suggests that there may also be genetic and
epigenetic determinants of target organ damage and vascular disease
attributed to hypertension, including let ventricular hypertrophy and
nephropathy. Specific genetic variants have been linked to CHD and
stroke. Additionally, recent studies have identified specific genomewide epigenetic modifications of DNA associated with hypertension
and with risk of future myocardial infarction and CHD.
MECHANISMS OF HYPERTENSION
To provide a framework for understanding the pathogenesis and
treatment options for hypertensive disorders, it is useful to understand
factors involved in the regulation of both normal and elevated arterial
pressure. Cardiac output and peripheral resistance are the two determinants of arterial pressure (Fig. 277-1). Cardiac output is determined
by stroke volume and heart rate; stroke volume is related to myocardial
contractility and to the size of the vascular compartment. Peripheral
resistance is determined by functional and anatomic changes in small
arteries (lumen diameter 100–400 μm) and arterioles.
■ INTRAVASCULAR VOLUME
The kidney is both a target and a cause of hypertension. Primary
renal disease is the most common etiology of secondary hypertension.
Mechanisms of kidney-related hypertension include a diminished
capacity to excrete sodium, excessive renin secretion in relation to
volume status, and sympathetic nervous system overactivity. Sodium
is predominantly an extracellular ion and is a primary determinant of
the extracellular fluid volume. When NaCl intake exceeds the capacity
of the kidney to excrete sodium, vascular volume may initially expand
and cardiac output may increase. Many vascular beds have the capacity
Arterial pressure
Cardiac output
Peripheral resistance
Stroke volume
Heart rate
Vascular structure
Vascular function
FIGURE 277-1 Determinants of arterial pressure. *
Deceased.
Hypertension
2073CHAPTER 277
to autoregulate blood flow, and if constant blood flow is to be maintained in the face of increased arterial pressure, resistance within that
bed must increase, since
Blood flow Pressure acrossthe vascular bed
Vascularresistance =
The initial elevation of blood pressure in response to vascular
volume expansion may be related to an increase of cardiac output;
however, over time, peripheral resistance increases and cardiac output
reverts toward normal. Whether this hypothesized sequence of events
occurs in the pathogenesis of hypertension is not clear. What is clear is
that salt can activate a number of neural, endocrine/paracrine, and vascular mechanisms, which have the potential to increase arterial pressure. The effect of sodium on blood pressure is related to the provision
of sodium with chloride; non-chloride salts of sodium have little or no
effect on blood pressure. As arterial pressure increases in response to
a high NaCl intake, urinary sodium excretion increases and sodium
balance is maintained at the expense of an increase in arterial pressure. The mechanism for this “pressure-natriuresis” phenomenon may
involve a subtle increase in the glomerular filtration rate, decreased
absorbing capacity of the renal tubules, and possibly hormonal factors
such as atrial natriuretic factor. In individuals with an impaired capacity to excrete sodium, greater increases in arterial pressure are required
to achieve natriuresis and sodium balance.
NaCl-dependent hypertension may be a consequence of a decreased
capacity of the kidney to excrete sodium, due either to intrinsic renal disease or to increased production of a salt-retaining hormone (mineralocorticoid) resulting in increased renal tubular reabsorption of sodium.
Renal tubular sodium reabsorption also may be augmented by increased
neural activity to the kidney. In each of these situations, a higher arterial pressure may be required to achieve sodium balance. Conversely,
salt-wasting disorders are associated with low blood pressure levels.
End stage renal disease (ESRD) is an extreme example of volumedependent hypertension. In ~80% of these patients, vascular volume
and hypertension can be controlled with adequate dialysis; in the other
20%, the mechanism of hypertension is related to increased activity of the
renin-angiotensin system and is likely to be responsive to pharmacologic blockade of renin-angiotensin.
■ AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
Adrenergic reflexes modulate blood pressure over the short term, and
adrenergic function, in concert with hormonal and volume-related
factors, contributes to the long-term regulation of arterial pressure.
Norepinephrine, epinephrine, and dopamine all play important roles
in tonic and phasic cardiovascular regulation.
The activities of the adrenergic receptors are mediated by guanosine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) and by
intracellular concentrations of downstream second messengers. In
addition to receptor affinity and density, physiologic responsiveness
to catecholamines may be altered by the efficiency of receptor-effector
coupling at a site “distal” to receptor binding. Receptor sites are relatively specific both for the transmitter substance and for the response
that occupancy of the receptor site elicits. Based on their physiology
and pharmacology, adrenergic receptors have been divided into two
principal types: α and β. These types have been differentiated further
into α1
, α2
, β1
, and β2
receptors. Recent molecular cloning studies have
identified several additional subtypes. α Receptors are occupied and
activated more avidly by norepinephrine than by epinephrine, and the
reverse is true for β receptors. α1
Receptors are located on postsynaptic
cells in smooth muscle and elicit vasoconstriction. α2
Receptors are
localized on presynaptic membranes of postganglionic nerve terminals
that synthesize norepinephrine. When activated by catecholamines, α2
receptors act as negative feedback controllers, inhibiting further norepinephrine release. In the kidney, activation of α1
-adrenergic receptors
increases renal tubular reabsorption of sodium. Different classes of
antihypertensive agents either inhibit α1
receptors or act as agonists
of α2
receptors and reduce systemic sympathetic outflow. Activation
of myocardial β1
receptors stimulates the rate and strength of cardiac
contraction and consequently increases cardiac output. β1
Receptor
activation also stimulates renin release from the kidney. Another class
of antihypertensive agents acts by inhibiting β1
receptors. Activation of
β2
receptors by epinephrine relaxes vascular smooth muscle and results
in vasodilation.
Circulating catecholamine concentrations may affect the number of
adrenoreceptors in various tissues. Downregulation of receptors may
be a consequence of sustained high levels of catecholamines and provides an explanation for decreasing responsiveness, or tachyphylaxis,
to catecholamines. For example, orthostatic hypotension is frequently
observed in patients with pheochromocytoma, possibly due to the lack
of norepinephrine-induced vasoconstriction with assumption of the
upright posture. Conversely, with chronic reduction of neurotransmitter substances, adrenoreceptors may increase in number or be upregulated, resulting in increased responsiveness to the neurotransmitter.
Chronic administration of agents that block adrenergic receptors may
result in upregulation, and abrupt withdrawal of those agents may produce a condition of temporary hypersensitivity to sympathetic stimuli.
For example, clonidine is an antihypertensive agent that is a centrally
acting α2
agonist that inhibits sympathetic outflow. Rebound hypertension may occur with the abrupt cessation of clonidine therapy, probably
as a consequence of upregulation of α1
receptors.
Several reflexes modulate blood pressure on a minute-to-minute
basis. One arterial baroreflex is mediated by stretch-sensitive sensory
nerve endings in the carotid sinuses and the aortic arch. The rate of
firing of these baroreceptors increases with arterial pressure, and the
net effect is a decrease in sympathetic outflow, resulting in decreases
in arterial pressure and heart rate. This is a primary mechanism for
rapid buffering of acute fluctuations of arterial pressure that may
occur during postural changes, behavioral or physiologic stress, and
changes in blood volume. However, the activity of the baroreflex
declines or adapts to sustained increases in arterial pressure such that
the baroreceptors are reset to higher pressures. Baroreflex control of
blood pressure deteriorates with advancing age, hypertension, and
atherosclerosis. The consequences are increased blood pressure variability and an increased incidence of orthostatic hypotension. Patients
with autonomic neuropathy and impaired baroreflex function may
have extremely labile blood pressures with difficult-to-control episodic
blood pressure spikes associated with tachycardia.
In both normal-weight and obese individuals, hypertension often
is associated with increased sympathetic outflow. Based on recordings
of postganglionic muscle nerve activity (detected by a microelectrode
inserted in a peroneal nerve in the leg), sympathetic outflow tends
to be higher in hypertensive than in normotensive individuals. Sympathetic outflow is increased in obesity-related hypertension and in
hypertension associated with obstructive sleep apnea. Baroreceptor
activation via electrical stimulation of carotid sinus afferent nerves
lowers blood pressure in patients with “resistant” hypertension. Drugs
that block the sympathetic nervous system are potent antihypertensive
agents, indicating that the sympathetic nervous system plays a permissive, although not necessarily a causative, role in the maintenance of
increased arterial pressure.
Pheochromocytoma is the most blatant example of hypertension
related to increased catecholamine production, in this instance by a
tumor. Blood pressure can be reduced by surgical excision of the tumor
or by pharmacologic treatment with an α1
receptor antagonist or with
an inhibitor of tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting step in catecholamine biosynthesis.
■ RENIN-ANGIOTENSIN-ALDOSTERONE
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system contributes to the regulation of arterial pressure primarily via the vasoconstrictor properties
of angiotensin II and the sodium-retaining properties of aldosterone.
Renin is an aspartyl protease that is synthesized as an enzymatically
inactive precursor, prorenin. Most renin in the circulation is synthesized in the renal afferent renal arteriole. Prorenin may be secreted
directly into the circulation or may be activated within secretory cells
2074 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
and released as active renin. There are three primary stimuli for renin
secretion: (1) decreased NaCl transport in the distal portion of the
thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle that abuts the corresponding
afferent arteriole (macula densa), (2) decreased pressure or stretch
within the renal afferent arteriole (baroreceptor mechanism), and (3)
sympathetic nervous system stimulation of renin-secreting cells via β1
adrenoreceptors. Conversely, renin secretion is inhibited by increased
NaCl transport in the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle, by
increased stretch within the renal afferent arteriole, and by β1
receptor
blockade. In addition, angiotensin II directly inhibits renin secretion
due to angiotensin II type 1 receptors on juxtaglomerular cells, and
renin secretion increases in response to pharmacologic blockade of
either the angiotensin-converting enzyme or angiotensin II receptors.
Once released into the circulation, active renin cleaves a substrate,
angiotensinogen, to form an inactive decapeptide, angiotensin I
(Fig. 277-2). A converting enzyme, located primarily but not exclusively in the pulmonary circulation, converts angiotensin I to the
active octapeptide, angiotensin II, by releasing the C-terminal histidylleucine dipeptide. The same converting enzyme cleaves a number
of other peptides, including and thereby inactivating the vasodilator
bradykinin. Acting primarily through angiotensin II type 1 receptors
(AT1
R) on cell membranes, angiotensin II is a potent pressor substance
and is the primary trophic factor for the secretion of aldosterone by
the adrenal zona glomerulosa. Utilizing various signal transduction
cascades, the AT1
R is believed to mediate most functions of angiotensin
II, resulting in hypertension, cardiovascular remodeling, and endorgan damage. The angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2
R) has the
opposite functional effects of the AT1
R. The AT2
R induces vasodilation,
sodium excretion, and inhibition of cell growth and matrix formation.
The AT2
R may improve vascular remodeling by stimulating smooth
muscle cell apoptosis and contributes to the regulation of glomerular
filtration rate. AT1
R blockade induces an increase in AT2
R activity.
Renin-secreting tumors are clear examples of renin-dependent
hypertension. In the kidney, these tumors include benign hemangiopericytomas of the juxtaglomerular apparatus and, infrequently, renal
carcinomas, including Wilms’ tumors. Renin-producing carcinomas
also have been described in lung, liver, pancreas, colon, and adrenals.
Renovascular hypertension is another renin-mediated form of hypertension. Obstruction of the renal artery leads to decreased renal
perfusion pressure, thereby stimulating renin secretion. Over time,
possibly as a consequence of secondary renal damage, this form of
hypertension may become less renin-dependent.
Angiotensinogen, renin, and angiotensin II are also synthesized
locally in many tissues, including the brain, pituitary, aorta, arteries,
heart, adrenal glands, kidneys, adipocytes, leukocytes, ovaries, testes,
uterus, spleen, and skin. Angiotensin II in tissues may be formed by
the enzymatic activity of renin or by other proteases, e.g., tonin, chymase, and cathepsins. In addition to regulating local blood flow, tissue
angiotensin II is a mitogen that stimulates growth and contributes
to modeling and repair. Excess tissue angiotensin II may contribute
to atherosclerosis, cardiac hypertrophy, and renal failure and, consequently, may be a target for pharmacologic therapy to prevent target
organ damage.
Angiotensin II is the primary tropic factor regulating the synthesis
and secretion of aldosterone by the zona glomerulosa of the adrenal
cortex. Aldosterone synthesis is also dependent on potassium, and
aldosterone secretion may be decreased in potassium-depleted individuals. Although acute elevations of adrenocorticotropic hormone
(ACTH) levels also increase aldosterone secretion, ACTH is not an
important trophic factor for the chronic regulation of aldosterone.
Aldosterone is a potent mineralocorticoid that increases sodium
reabsorption by amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channels (ENaC)
on the apical surface of the principal cells of the renal cortical collecting duct (Chap. 309). Electric neutrality is maintained by exchanging
sodium for potassium and hydrogen ions. Consequently, increased
aldosterone secretion may result in hypokalemia and alkalosis. Cortisol also binds to the mineralocorticoid receptor but normally functions as a less potent mineralocorticoid than aldosterone because
cortisol is converted to cortisone by the enzyme 11 β-hydroxysteroid
dehydrogenase type 2. Cortisone has no affinity for the mineralocorticoid receptor. Primary aldosteronism is a compelling example of
mineralocorticoid-mediated hypertension. In this disorder, adrenal
aldosterone synthesis and release are independent of renin-angiotensin,
and renin release is suppressed by the resulting volume expansion.
Mineralocorticoid receptors are expressed in a number of tissues
in addition to the kidney, and mineralocorticoid receptor activation
induces structural and functional alterations in the heart, kidney,
and blood vessels, leading to myocardial fibrosis and left ventricular
hypertrophy, nephrosclerosis, and vascular inflammation and remodeling, perhaps as a consequence of oxidative stress. These effects are
amplified by a high salt intake. In animal models, spironolactone
(an aldosterone antagonist) prevents aldosterone-induced myocardial
fibrosis. In patients with CHF, low-dose spironolactone reduces the
risk of progressive heart failure and sudden death from cardiac causes
by 30%. Due to a renal hemodynamic effect, in patients with primary
aldosteronism, high circulating levels of aldosterone also may cause
glomerular hyperfiltration and albuminuria.
Increased activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis is not
invariably associated with hypertension. In response to a low-NaCl diet
or to volume contraction, arterial pressure and volume homeostasis
may be maintained by increased activity of the renin-angiotensinaldosterone axis. Secondary aldosteronism (i.e., increased aldosterone
secondary to increased renin-angiotensin), but not hypertension, also
is observed in edematous states such as CHF and liver disease.
■ VASCULAR MECHANISMS
Vascular radius and compliance of resistance arteries are important
determinants of arterial pressure. Resistance to flow varies inversely
with the fourth power of the radius, and consequently, small decreases
in lumen size significantly increase resistance. In hypertensive
patients, structural, mechanical, or functional changes may reduce the
lumen diameter of small arteries and arterioles. Remodeling refers to
geometric alterations in the vessel wall without a change in vessel
volume. Hypertrophic (increased cell size and increased deposition
of intercellular matrix) or eutrophic vascular remodeling results in
decreased lumen size and, hence, increased peripheral resistance.
Apoptosis, low-grade inflammation, and vascular fibrosis also contribute to remodeling. Lumen diameter also is related to elasticity of
Angiotensinogen
Angiotensin I
Angiotensin II
AT1 receptor AT2 receptor
Renin
Aldosterone
Bradykinin
Inactive
peptides
ACE-kininase II
FIGURE 277-2 Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis. ACE, angiotensin-converting
enzyme.
Hypertension
2075CHAPTER 277
the vessel. Vessels with a high degree of elasticity can accommodate an
increase of volume with relatively little change in pressure, whereas in
a semi-rigid vascular system, a small increment in volume induces a
relatively large increment of pressure.
An association between arterial stiffness and hypertension is well
established. A stiffened vasculature is less able to buffer short-term
alterations in flow. Although it has been assumed that arterial stiffness
is a manifestation of hypertension, recent evidence suggests that vascular stiffness may also contribute to elevated arterial pressure. Clinically,
noninvasive determination of elevated pulse wave velocity between the
carotid and femoral arteries is often interpreted as an indicator of arterial stiffness. Due to arterial stiffness, central blood pressures (aortic,
carotid) may not correspond to brachial artery pressures. Ejection of
blood into the aorta elicits a pressure wave that is propagated at a given
velocity. The forward traveling wave generates a reflected wave that
travels backward toward the ascending aorta. Although mean arterial
pressure is determined by cardiac output and peripheral resistance,
pulse pressure is related to the functional properties of large arteries
and the amplitude and timing of the incident and reflected waves.
Increased arterial stiffness results in increased pulse wave velocity of
both incident and reflected waves. The consequence is augmentation
of aortic systolic pressure and a reduction of aortic diastolic pressure,
i.e., an increase in pulse pressure. The aortic augmentation index, a
surrogate index of arterial stiffening, is calculated as the ratio of central
arterial pressure to pulse pressure. However, wave reflections are also
influenced by left ventricular structure and function. Central blood
pressure may be measured directly by placing a sensor in the aorta
or noninvasively by radial tonometry. Central blood pressure and the
aortic augmentation index are independent predictors of cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality. Central blood pressure also appears
to be more strongly associated with preclinical organ damage than
brachial blood pressure.
Ion transport by vascular smooth muscle cells may contribute to
hypertension-associated abnormalities of vascular tone and vascular
growth, both of which are modulated by intracellular pH (pHi
). Three
ion transport mechanisms participate in the regulation of pHi
: (1)
Na+
-H+
exchange, (2) Na+
-dependent HCO3
–
-Cl–
exchange, and (3) cationindependent HCO3
–
-Cl–
exchange. Based on measurements in cell
types that are more accessible than vascular smooth muscle (e.g., leukocytes, erythrocytes, platelets, skeletal muscle), activity of the Na+-H+
exchanger is increased in hypertension, and this may result in increased
vascular tone by two mechanisms. First, increased sodium entry may
lead to increased vascular tone by activating Na+-Ca2+ exchange
and thereby increasing intracellular calcium. Second, increased pHi
enhances calcium sensitivity of the contractile apparatus, leading to an
increase in contractility for a given intracellular calcium concentration.
Additionally, increased Na+-H+ exchange may stimulate growth of vascular smooth muscle cells by enhancing sensitivity to mitogens.
Vascular endothelial function also modulates vascular tone. The
vascular endothelium synthesizes and releases several vasoactive
substances, including nitric oxide, a potent vasodilator. Endotheliumdependent vasodilation is impaired in hypertensive patients. This
impairment often is assessed with high-resolution ultrasonography
before and after the hyperemic phase of reperfusion that follows
5 min of forearm ischemia. Alternatively, endothelium-dependent
vasodilation may be assessed in response to an intra-arterially infused
endothelium-dependent vasodilator, e.g., acetylcholine. Endothelin is
a vasoconstrictor peptide produced by the endothelium, and orally
active endothelin antagonists may lower blood pressure in patients
with resistant hypertension.
■ IMMUNE MECHANISMS, INFLAMMATION, AND
OXIDATIVE STRESS
Low-grade inflammation and uncontrolled activation of the immune
system have been implicated in the pathogenesis of vascular injury and
hypertension for at least four decades. Both thymus-derived cells (T
cells) and bone marrow– or bursa-derived cells (B cells) are involved.
Activation has been attributed to increased sympathetic nervous system activity, mechanical forces in the vascular wall, interstitial sodium
concentration, and a high salt intake. Inflammatory cytokines and
free radicals secreted by activated immune cells may contribute to
vascular and target organ injury. Inflammation and exudative injury
are closely coupled. Inflammation, vascular stretch, angiotensin II, and
salt have all been shown to result in the generation of reactive oxygen
species (ROS), which modify T-cell function and further enhance
inflammation. ROS also attenuate the effects of endogenous smallmolecule vasodilators. Preliminary evidence suggests that hypertension is blunted and vascular endothelial function is preserved in
experimental models that lack both T cells and B cells. In animal
models of salt-sensitive hypertension, salt-related increases in renal
perfusion pressure induce the infiltration of immune cells into the kidney. The infiltrating cells release cytokines and free radicals that may
contribute to renal injury. Additionally, ROS within the renal medulla
may disrupt pressure-natriuresis and thereby potentiate the development of hypertension.
Clinically, patients with primary hypertension have increased circulating levels of autoantibodies, and markers of oxidative stress have
been described in both hypertensive and prehypertensive individuals.
Increased numbers of activated immune cells (either in the circulation
or tissue biopsies) and the inflammatory cytokines they produce also
occur in patients with preeclampsia, resistant hypertension, malignant
hypertension, and renal allograft rejection.
PATHOLOGIC CONSEQUENCES OF
HYPERTENSION
■ HEART
Heart disease is the most common cause of death in hypertensive
patients. Hypertensive heart disease is the result of structural and functional adaptations leading to left ventricular hypertrophy, increased
atrial size, CHF, atherosclerotic coronary artery disease, microvascular
disease, and cardiac arrhythmias, including atrial fibrillation. Independent of blood pressure, individuals with left ventricular hypertrophy
are at increased risk for CHD, stroke, CHF, and sudden death. Control
of hypertension can regress or reverse left ventricular hypertrophy and
reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Coronary artery calcium
score provides a noninvasive estimate of target organ injury and is
associated with cardiovascular events. However, there is currently relatively little information regarding the impact of improvement of this
subclinical marker on prognosis.
CHF may be related to systolic dysfunction, diastolic dysfunction,
or a combination of the two. Abnormalities of diastolic function that
range from asymptomatic heart disease to overt heart failure are common in hypertensive patients. Approximately one-third of patients with
CHF have normal systolic function but abnormal diastolic function.
Diastolic dysfunction is an early consequence of hypertension-related
heart disease and is exacerbated by left ventricular hypertrophy and
ischemia. Cardiac catheterization provides the most accurate assessment of diastolic function. Alternatively, diastolic function can be
evaluated by several noninvasive methods, including echocardiography
and radionuclide angiography.
■ BRAIN
Stroke is the second most frequent cause of death in the world; it
accounts for 5 million deaths each year, with an additional 15 million persons having nonfatal strokes. Elevated blood pressure is the
strongest risk factor for stroke. Approximately 85% of strokes are due
to infarction, and the remainder are due to either intracerebral or subarachnoid hemorrhage. The incidence of stroke rises progressively with
increasing blood pressure levels, particularly systolic blood pressure in
individuals aged >65 years. Treatment of hypertension decreases the
incidence of both ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes.
Hypertension is also associated with impaired cognition in an aging
population, and longitudinal studies support an association between
midlife hypertension and late-life cognitive decline. Vascular dementia
and Alzheimer’s disease often coexist. Hypertension is associated with
beta amyloid deposition, a major pathologic factor in dementia. In
addition to actual blood pressure level, arterial stiffness and visit-to-visit
2076 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
blood pressure variability may be independently related to subclinical
small vessel disease and subsequent cognitive decline. Hypertension-related cognitive impairment and dementia may also be a consequence
of a single infarct due to occlusion of a “strategic” larger vessel or multiple lacunar infarcts due to occlusive small vessel disease resulting in
subcortical white matter ischemia. Several clinical trials suggest that
antihypertensive therapy has a beneficial effect on cognitive function.
Cerebral blood flow remains unchanged over a wide range of arterial
pressures (mean arterial pressure of 50–150 mmHg) through a process
termed autoregulation of blood flow. In patients with the clinical syndrome of malignant hypertension, encephalopathy is related to failure
of autoregulation of cerebral blood flow at the upper pressure limit,
resulting in vasodilation and hyperperfusion. Signs and symptoms of
hypertensive encephalopathy may include severe headache, nausea
and vomiting (often of a projectile nature), focal neurologic signs, and
alterations in mental status. Untreated, hypertensive encephalopathy
may progress to stupor, coma, seizures, and death within hours. It
is important to distinguish hypertensive encephalopathy from other
neurologic syndromes that may be associated with hypertension, e.g.,
cerebral ischemia, hemorrhagic or thrombotic stroke, seizure disorder,
mass lesions, pseudotumor cerebri, delirium tremens, meningitis,
acute intermittent porphyria, traumatic or chemical injury to the brain,
and uremic encephalopathy.
■ KIDNEY
Hypertension is a risk factor for renal injury and ESRD. The increased
risk associated with high blood pressure is graded, continuous, and
present throughout the distribution of blood pressure above optimal
pressure. Renal risk appears to be more closely related to systolic than
to diastolic blood pressure, and black men are at greater risk than white
men for developing ESRD at every level of blood pressure.
Atherosclerotic, hypertension-related vascular lesions in the kidney
primarily affect preglomerular arterioles, resulting in ischemic changes
in the glomeruli and postglomerular structures. Glomerular injury also
may be a consequence of direct damage to the glomerular capillaries
due to glomerular hyperperfusion. With progressive renal injury, there
is a loss of autoregulation of renal blood flow, resulting in a lower blood
pressure threshold for renal damage and a steeper slope between blood
pressure and renal damage. The result may be a vicious cycle of renal
damage and nephron loss leading to more severe hypertension, glomerular hyperfiltration, and further renal damage. Glomerular pathology progresses to glomerulosclerosis, and eventually the renal tubules
may also become ischemic and gradually atrophic. The renal lesion
associated with malignant hypertension consists of fibrinoid necrosis
of the afferent arterioles, sometimes extending into the glomerulus,
and may result in focal necrosis of the glomerular tuft.
Clinically, macroalbuminuria (a random urine albumin/creatinine
ratio >300 mg/g) and microalbuminuria (a random urine albumin/
creatinine ratio 30–300 mg/g) are early markers of renal injury. They are
also risk factors for renal disease progression and cardiovascular disease.
■ PERIPHERAL ARTERIES
Blood vessels are a target organ atherosclerotic disease secondary to
long-standing elevated blood pressure. Independent of blood pressure,
arterial stiffness (measured as carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity or
carotid pulse pressure) is associated with target organ disease, including stroke, heart disease, and renal failure. Hypertensive patients with
arterial disease of the lower extremities are also at increased risk of
future cardiovascular disease. Clinically, PAD may be recognized by
the symptom of claudication. The ankle-brachial index (ratio of ankle
to brachial systolic blood pressure) is a useful approach for evaluating
peripheral arterial disease. An ankle-brachial index <0.90 is considered
diagnostic of PAD and is associated with >50% stenosis in at least one
major lower limb vessel. An ankle-brachial index <0.80 is associated
with elevated blood pressure, particularly systolic blood pressure.
Whether arterial stiffness and vascular remodeling are primary
alterations or secondary consequences of elevated arterial pressure
remains to be established. Limited evidence suggests that vascular compliance and endothelium-dependent vasodilation may be
TABLE 277-1 Blood Pressure Classification in Adults
BLOOD PRESSURE
CATEGORY
SYSTOLIC
(mmHg)
DIASTOLIC
(mmHg)
Normal <120 and <80
Elevated 120–129 and <80
Hypertension
Stage 1 130–139 or 80–89
Stage 2 ≥140 or >90
Source: Reproduced with permission from PK Whelton et al: 2017 ACC/AHA/
AAPA/ABC/ACPM/AGS/APhA/ASH/ASPC/NMA/PCNA guideline for the prevention,
detection, evaluation, and management of high blood pressure in adults: Executive
summary: A report of the American college of cardiology/American heart
association task force on clinical practice guidelines. Hypertension 71:1269, 2018.
improved by aerobic exercise, weight loss, and antihypertensive agents.
It remains to be determined whether these interventions affect arterial
structure and stiffness via a blood pressure–independent mechanism
and whether different classes of antihypertensive agents preferentially
affect vascular structure and function.
DEFINING HYPERTENSION
From an epidemiologic perspective, there is no obvious level of blood
pressure that defines hypertension. In adults, there is a continuous,
incremental risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and renal disease
across levels of both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The Multiple
Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT), which included >350,000
male participants, demonstrated a continuous and graded influence of
both systolic and diastolic blood pressure on CHD mortality, extending
down to systolic blood pressures of 120 mmHg. Similarly, results of
a meta-analysis involving almost 1 million participants indicate that
ischemic heart disease mortality, stroke mortality, and mortality from
other vascular causes are directly related to the height of the blood
pressure, beginning at 115/75 mmHg, without evidence of a threshold.
Cardiovascular disease risk doubles for every 20-mmHg increase in
systolic and 10-mmHg increase in diastolic pressure. Among older
individuals, systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure are more powerful predictors of cardiovascular disease than is diastolic blood pressure.
Clinically, hypertension may be defined as that level of blood pressure at which the institution of therapy reduces blood pressure–related
morbidity and mortality. Clinical criteria for defining hypertension
generally have been based on the average of two or more seated blood
pressure readings during each of two or more outpatient visits. One
recent classification recommends hypertension be defined as systolic
blood pressure ≥130 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure ≥80 mmHg
(Table 277-1). In contrast, previous guidelines defined hypertension
as systolic blood pressure ≥140 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure
≥90 mmHg. Compared to the earlier definition, based on the new
definition, the prevalence of hypertension among U.S. adults is substantially higher (46 vs 32%). In children and adolescents, hypertension is generally defined as systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure
consistently >95th percentile for age, sex, and height. Blood pressures
between the 90th and 95th percentiles are considered prehypertensive
and are an indication for lifestyle interventions.
Out-of-office measurement of blood pressure can be helpful for
confirmation and management of hypertension. Ambulatory monitors are usually programmed to obtain blood pressure readings every
15–30 min throughout the day and every 15–60 min during the night.
Although ambulatory monitoring is generally accepted as the best
out-of-office measurement, home blood pressure monitoring with less
frequent measures is a more practical approach. Because ambulatory
blood pressure recordings yield multiple readings throughout the day
and night, they provide a more comprehensive assessment of the vascular burden of hypertension than do a limited number of office readings. Home blood pressures, including 24-h blood pressure recordings,
more reliably predict target organ damage than do usual office blood
pressures. Nighttime blood pressures are generally 10–20% lower than
daytime blood pressures, and an attenuated nighttime blood pressure
“dip” is associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk. Less well
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