Hypertension
Chronic Venous Insufficiency
Peripheral Artery Disease
Heart Failure
Medications/Random
100
What is a MAP? What is the normal range for MAP?
Average pressure in arterial system during ventricular contraction and relaxation.


Normal Range: 90-100

100

Risk Factors

sitting or standing in one position for long periods of time

obesity

pregnancy

thrombophlebitis (a blood clot in a vein causing inflammation and pain)

100

What is atherosclerosis?

- most often caused by high cholesterol

- initiating factor is endothelial cell injury. Injury can be caused by smoking, elevated LDL, HTN.

Monocytes attach to endothelium, travel to tunica intima, and turn into macrophages. There they engulf lipids and turn into foam cells.

Foam cells and smooth muscle cells begin the formation of the plaque. Foam cell macrophages die, leaving deposits of necrotic debris and lipids in the vessel wall forming a "fibrous cap".

The fibrous cap formation is composed of smooth muscle cells, macrophages, leukocytes, elastin, and collagen. All of which forms the plaque.

100

Left Sided Heart Failure (causes, clinical manifestations)

-caused by hypertension, CAD, MI

-decreased cardiac output due to pulmonary congestion

-Clinical manifestations: fatigue, S3 heart sound, blood tinged frothy sputum, oliguria, pulmonary edema, orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea

100

Lisinopril

"ACE inhibitor"

-prevents conversion of angiotensin 1 to angiotensin 2

-prevents vasoconstriction and sodium/water retention.

-used to treat hypertension

200

Risk Factors

(Modifiable & Non-Modifiable)

Non-Modifiable: Age, Gender, Family History, Genetics, Ethnicity

Modifiable: Diet, smoking, alcohol use, sedentary lifestyle, stress, contraceptives, chronic disease(CKD,DM)

200

Causes of Chronic Venous Insufficiency

Increased hydrostatic pressure (prolonged standing)

incompetent valves

DVT's

Decreased function of skeletal muscle pumps

Inflammatory process

200

Risk Factors for PAD

Hypertension

Hyperlipidemia (high cholesterol)

Diabetes

Sedentary Lifestyle

Males, post menopausal females, older adults (increased risk)

200

Right Sided Heart Failure (causes and clinical manifestations)

caused by left side heart failure, COPD, pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary HTN

Congestion of peripheral tissues

Clinical Manifestations: JVD, dependent edema, ascites, hepatomegaly, fatigue and weakness, weight gain

200

Lasix

"Loop Diuretic" (furosemide)

used to treat HTN - inhibit sodium and chloride reabsorption from loop of Henle, increases urine flow

used to treat HF - reduces preload, and promotes excretion of fluid 

300

Hypertension Classifications

Normal: <120/<80 (both)

Elevated: 120-129/<80 (both)

Stage 1: 130-139/80-89 (either)

Stage 2: >140/>90 (either)

Hypertension Crisis: >180/>120 (both, either)

300

Clinical Manifestations for CVI

Edema (worse with long periods of standing)

Stasis Ulcers (medial malleolus, lower leg, brawny discoloration)

Dull leg discomfort (worse with standing)

Weeping (fluid seeping out) 

300

Clinical Manifestations

Intermittent Claudication (pain in calves occurring with walking)

Changes in appearance of leg (ulcers on bottoms of feet and toes, skin is shiny and thin, hair loss, cold, pulses weak or absent)



300

Cardiac Output

amount of blood heart pumps each minute

Factors of Stroke Volume: Preload, afterload, contractility

Factors of Cardiac Output: same as stroke volume PLUS heart rate

300

Hydrochlorothiazide 

"Thiazide Diuretic"

prevents tubular reabsorption of sodium

promotes excretion of sodium and water

reduces blood volume

400

Primary vs. Secondary Hypertension

Primary: presence of hypertension without evidence of specific cause. This is the primary risk factor for cardiovascular disease.


Secondary: elevation of blood pressure due to another disease/condition. Commonly caused by kidney disease, adrenal cortical hormone disorders (Cushing's disease), contraceptives, illicit drug use, diet pills, pregnancy, hypothyroidism.

400
What are varicose veins?

a vein where blood has pooled producing distended, tortuous, palpable vessels.

More common in women 

More common in people 30+ years old

400

Acute Arterial Occlusion 

Two main causes:

1) Embolus

2) Thrombus

Clinical Manifestations -7 P's:

1)Pistol shot

2)Pain

3)Polar

4)Paresthesia

5)Paralysis

6)Pulselessness

7)Pallor

400

Ejection Fraction

Percent of end diastolic volume ejected during systole.

normal range: 55%-70%

relation to heart failure: low EF indicates heart muscle is not contracting properly (indicative of systolic HF)

400
Heart Failure In Children (common cause, symptom, CM)

most common cause is a congenital or structural defect, or a genetic/inherited disorder

first symptom is respiratory distress

first systemic clinical manifestation is hepatomegaly

500

What is Renin Angiotensin Aldosterone System? How does it affect blood pressure?

When blood pressure is decreased kidneys release renin. 

Renin converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin 1.

ACE converts angiotensin 1 to angiotensin 2.

Angiotensin 2 increase peripheral vascular resistance, which increases blood pressure. Also causes decrease in sodium excretion, which increases salt and water retention in kidneys, and increases the blood pressure.

500

Testing and Treatment for CVI

Testing:

Doppler

Treatment:

Compression stockings, elevation, avoid crossing legs

500

Testing and Treatment for PAD

Testing: 

ABI (ankle brachial index): systolic blood pressure of ankle should be greater than systolic blood pressure in arm


Treatment:

Anti-Coagulants: heparin

Statins: lowers cholesterol

Smoking Cessation

500

Testing and Treatment for Heart Failure

Testing:

BNP - Brain Natriuretic Peptide; 

Normal Range: less than 100pg/mL


Echocardiogram - gold standard test


Treatment:

Diuretics and ACE inhibitors

500

Nitric Oxide (function)

Causes relaxation of vascular smooth muscles - vasodilates

inhibits platelet aggregation (clot formation)

Produced by the endothelium

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