Veterinary Hypertension Management

Extrait de la fiche de révision

📋 Course Outline

  1. Systemic hypertension and causes
  2. Target organ damage and clinical signs
  3. When to start treatment
  4. Dog antihypertensive therapy
  5. Cat antihypertensive therapy
  6. Adverse effects and RAAS activation

📖 1. Systemic hypertension and causes

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Systemic hypertension : Systemic hypertension is persistently elevated pressure in systemic arteries that raises the risk of target organ damage.
  • Primary hypertension : Primary (essential) hypertension is idiopathic hypertension that is common in humans but extremely rare in dogs and cats.
  • Secondary hypertension : Secondary hypertension results from a specific underlying disease that drives the elevated blood pressure.
  • Target organ damage risk systems : The ocular, renal, cardiac, and neurologic systems are among the most vulnerable targets for organ damage.

📝 Essential Points

  • Chronic renal disease is the most common associated disease with systemic hypertension.
  • The treatment goal is to reduce blood pressure below 160 mm Hg to prevent lesions.
  • Diabetes mellitus is linked to systemic hypertension in 46% to 55% of dogs and in less than 2% of cats.

💡 Memory Hook

Think 160 as the “treat-under” number that prevents lesions.

📖 2. Target organ damage and clinical signs

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

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Aperçu du QCM

1. What best describes secondary hypertension in dogs and cats?

2. Which disease is most commonly associated with systemic hypertension in dogs and cats?

3. Which set of signs best reflects target organ damage from systemic hypertension?

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Aperçu des flashcards

Systemic hypertension — definition?

Persistent high pressure in systemic arteries.

Primary hypertension — cause?

Idiopathic, no identifiable underlying disease.

Secondary hypertension — cause?

Result of specific underlying disease.

Target organ damage — systems affected?

Ocular, renal, cardiac, neurologic.

Signs of TOD — common?

Retinopathy, azotemia, seizures, murmurs.

Start treatment — BP threshold?

SBP >160 mm Hg with active TOD.

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Questions fréquentes

Que contient la fiche de révision sur Veterinary Hypertension Management ?

La fiche de révision couvre les notions essentielles de Veterinary Hypertension Management. Elle est structurée par thématiques pour faciliter l'apprentissage et la mémorisation, avec des définitions clés, des explications et des synthèses.

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Combien de questions contient le QCM sur Veterinary Hypertension Management ?

Le QCM contient 12 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées et explications pour chaque réponse. Idéal pour tester vos connaissances et identifier vos lacunes.

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Comment réviser Veterinary Hypertension Management avec les flashcards ?

Revizly propose 12 flashcards interactives sur Veterinary Hypertension Management. Chaque carte présente une question au recto et la réponse au verso, permettant une révision active et efficace basée sur la répétition espacée.

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