4.7 Article

Resistant Hypertension: Detection, Evaluation, and Management: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

Journal

HYPERTENSION
Volume 72, Issue 5, Pages E53-E90

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/HYP.0000000000000084

Keywords

AHA Scientific Statements; antihypertensive agents; hypertension; hypertension resistant to conventional therapy

Funding

  1. NIH
  2. ReCor Medical
  3. Bayer
  4. Janssen
  5. Vascular Dynamics
  6. AHA
  7. NHLBI
  8. Helene Fuld Health Trust
  9. Preventive Cardiovascular Nurses Association
  10. Glaxo SmithKline
  11. Indorsia
  12. Quantam Genomics
  13. American College of Physicians
  14. American Hypertension Specialist Certification Program
  15. Baxter
  16. NIDDK
  17. NHLBI [HL129941-02]

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Resistant hypertension (RH) is defined as above-goal elevated blood pressure (BP) in a patient despite the concurrent use of 3 antihypertensive drug classes, commonly including a long-acting calcium channel blocker, a blocker of the renin-angiotensin system (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker), and a diuretic. The antihypertensive drugs should be administered at maximum or maximally tolerated daily doses. RH also includes patients whose BP achieves target values on 4 antihypertensive medications. The diagnosis of RH requires assurance of antihypertensive medication adherence and exclusion of the white-coat effect (office BP above goal but out-of-office BP at or below target). The importance of RH is underscored by the associated risk of adverse outcomes compared with non-RH. This article is an updated American Heart Association scientific statement on the detection, evaluation, and management of RH. Once antihypertensive medication adherence is confirmed and out-of-office BP recordings exclude a white-coat effect, evaluation includes identification of contributing lifestyle issues, detection of drugs interfering with antihypertensive medication effectiveness, screening for secondary hypertension, and assessment of target organ damage. Management of RH includes maximization of lifestyle interventions, use of long-acting thiazide-like diuretics (chlorthalidone or indapamide), addition of a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (spironolactone or eplerenone), and, if BP remains elevated, stepwise addition of antihypertensive drugs with complementary mechanisms of action to lower BP. If BP remains uncontrolled, referral to a hypertension specialist is advised.

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