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Nursing Care of Patients with Hypertension
Chapter 22 Nursing Care of Patients with Hypertension
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Hypertension Incidence
2005–2006: 29% U.S. Adults > 18 Years of Age Increases with Age Non-Hispanic Blacks: 41% Non-Hispanic Whites: 28% Mexican Americans: 22%
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Safety: Clean Stethoscope
Contaminated with Bacteria, Even MRSA Clean at Start of Shift Clean Between Every Patient Use Clean with Each Hand Hygiene Use Ethanol-based Cleanser or Isopropyl Alcohol Pads
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Taking Blood Pressure (BP)
Use Calibrated Instrument Have Patient Sit Quietly for 5 Minutes in Chair (Not Exam Table) with Feet on Floor, Arm Supported at Heart Level Use Cuff Bladder Encircling at Least 80% of Arm Take Two BP Measurements (Wait In-between) Tell Patient BP Reading
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Hypertension Normal BP is Below 120/80 mm Hg
Average of Two or More Readings on Different Dates Highest Reading Determines Category
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Classification of Hypertension
Systolic Diastolic Pre-hypertension –139 or 80–89 mm Hg Stage 1 Hypertension 140–159 or 90–99 mm Hg Stage 2 Hypertension >160 or >100 mm Hg
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Follow-Up Care Normal BP: 2 Years Pre-hypertension: 1 Year
Stage 1 Hypertension: 2 Months Stage 2 Hypertension: 1 Month >180/110 mm Hg: Immediate Treatment
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Blood Pressure Pressure Exerted by Blood on Walls of Blood Vessels
Determined by Cardiac Output, Peripheral Vascular Resistance, Vessel Stretch, Blood Viscosity, Blood Volume
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Pathophysiology Primary Hypertension Secondary Hypertension
Unknown Cause Secondary Hypertension Known Cause Isolated Systolic Hypertension SBP >140 mm Hg
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Hypertension Signs/Symptoms
None “Silent Killer” Rare Headache, Bloody Nose, Anxiety, Dyspnea Target Organ Disease Damage to Blood Vessels of Heart, Kidney, Brain, Eyes
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Diagnosis of Hypertension
History Signs and Symptoms Kidney or Heart Disease Medications Blood Pressure Readings Home Blood Pressure Measurements
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Diagnostic Tests ECG Blood Glucose Hematocrit Potassium Calcium
Lipoprotein, Cholesterol, Triglyceride
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Hypertension Risk Factors
Nonmodifiable: Unable to be Changed Modifiable: Changeable
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Nonmodifiable Risk Factors
Family History of Hypertension Age Ethnicity Diabetes Mellitus
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Modifiable Risk Factors
Weight Diet DASH Limit Sodium Limit Caffeine Alcohol Use Exercise Smoking Stress Management Adequate Sleep
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Hypertension Treatment
No/Low Risk Hypertensive Lifestyle Changes BP >140/90 mm Hg Over 6 Months Goal of Treatment <140/90 mm Hg <130/80 mm Hg Diabetes/Kidney Disease/ Proteinuria
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Hypertension Treatment (cont’d)
Lifestyle Changes and Antihypertensive Medications Initial Therapy: Thiazide-type Diuretics Combination Medications
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Medications for Hypertension
Diuretics Alpha Blockers Beta Blockers Calcium Channel Blockers
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Medications for Hypertension (cont’d)
Angiotensin-converting Enzyme Inhibitors Central Agents Peripheral Agents Vasodilators Aspirin 100 mg at Bedtime
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Complications of Hypertension
Atherosclerosis Coronary Artery Disease Myocardial Infarction Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Stroke Kidney/Eye Damage
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Hypertensive Emergency
SBP >180 mm Hg Systolic DBP >120 mm Hg Systolic Risk for/Progression for Target Organ Dysfunction Immediate Gradual Reduction of BP to Protect Target Organs Treatment: Nitroprusside (Nipride) IV
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Hypertensive Urgency Severe BP Elevation Without Target Organ Dysfunction Progression Severe Headaches, Nosebleeds, Shortness of Breath, and Severe Anxiety Oral Medication
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Nursing Process Deficient Knowledge
Ineffective Therapeutic Regimen Management
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Patient Education Lifelong BP Control Self-care Measures
Prescribed Medical Regimen
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