Resistant arterial hypertension: modern view of the problem

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Abstract

In clinical practice, uncontrolled arterial hypertension remains a difficult but solvable task, given the available arsenal of antihypertensive drugs. However, resistant arterial hypertension is diagnosed in 10%–15% of these cases. A significantly higher risk of cardiovascular complications indicates the extreme importance of the successful treatment of this pathology. Resistant hypertension is defined as above-goal high blood pressure in a patient despite concurrent use of three antihypertensive drug classes, commonly including a long-acting calcium channel blocker, a renin–angiotensin blocker (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker), and a diuretic. All antihypertensive drugs should be administered at maximum or maximally tolerated doses. Resistant hypertension also includes cases in which blood pressure targets are achieved with ≥4 antihypertensive medications. The diagnosis of resistant hypertension requires assurance of antihypertensive medication adherence and exclusion of the “white-coat effect” (office blood pressure above goal but out-of-office blood pressure at or below the target). Once antihypertensive medication adherence is confirmed and out-of-office blood pressure recordings exclude a white-coat effect, the evaluation includes the identification of contributing lifestyle issues, detection of drugs interfering with antihypertensive medication effectiveness, screening for secondary hypertension, and assessment of target organ damage. The management of resistant hypertension includes the maximization of lifestyle interventions, correction of sleep disorders, use of long-acting thiazide-like diuretics (chlorthalidone or indapamide), addition of a mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (spironolactone or eplerenone), and stepwise addition of antihypertensive drugs with complementary mechanisms of action to lower blood pressure if blood pressure remains high.

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About the authors

Alexey N. Kuchmin

Kirov Military Medical Academy

Email: kuchmin.63@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0003-2888-9625
SPIN-code: 7787-1364

MD, Dr. Sci. (Med.), Professor

Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg

Olga V. Diskalenko

Kirov Military Medical Academy

Author for correspondence.
Email: olgadiska1705@gmail.com
ORCID iD: 0000-0001-9927-7779
SPIN-code: 8139-5706

MD, Cand. Sci. (Med.)

Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg

Anna B. Izotova

Kirov Military Medical Academy

Email: suave77@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0001-8356-1863
SPIN-code: 8985-7950

MD, Cand. Sci. (Med.)

Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg

Sergey L. Morozov

Kirov Military Medical Academy

Email: morozovserg102@gmail.com
ORCID iD: 0009-0004-9992-1017
SPIN-code: 5138-3820

MD, Cand. Sci. (Med.)

Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg

Vitaly V. Ekimov

Kirov Military Medical Academy

Email: v.ekimov2012@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3750-4301
SPIN-code: 2901-9561

Senior lecturer

Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg

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Supplementary files

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2. Fig. 1. Strategy for diagnosing resistant arterial hypertension

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3. Fig. 2. Drug treatment strategy for resistant arterial hypertension

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