Fam HN
Fam HN
Fam HN
121303150
Klinik Kesihatan Peringgit
Patient Details
Age : 49 years
Gender : Female
Race : Malay
Occupation : Housewife
Chief Complaint
Patient was diagnosed with hypertension 2 years ago after she went to private clinic due to
headache and neck pain. The blood pressure at the time of diagnosis was 158/110 mmHg
and she was prescribed anti-hypertensive medication. She took the medication regularly. She
also diagnosed with hyperlipidemia and currently on medication which she took together with
the anti-hypertensive regularly. Patient did not complaint from blurring of vision, lethargy or
swelling of the leg. The blood pressure taken this morning is 135/84 mmHg.
Past History
No significant medical (DM, IHD, renal disease, BA) and surgical history.
Menstrual History
She attained menarche at the age of 14 years old. The cycle was regular. No menorrhagia or
dysmenorrhea.
Muhammad Hafizuddin Bin Ahmad Razid
121303150
Klinik Kesihatan Peringgit
Family History
Both of her parents has passed away due to old age. Her mother has hypertension. She is the
second child out of 3 siblings. No other illness runs in the family.
Personal History
She is a non-alcoholic, non-smoker, not taking any illicit drugs. No known allergy to food or
medication. Normal bowel and bladder habit.
Socioeconomic History
She lives with her husband and 3 children in a housing area with good water and electrical
supply. The monthly income mainly given by her children and it is adequate.
General Examination
Patient is alert, cooperative and sitting comfortably on the chair. She is moderately built and
moderately nourished.
Vital signs
Temperature : 37.2C
Mouth : Oral hygiene is good. Throat is not injected and the tongue is moist.
Muhammad Hafizuddin Bin Ahmad Razid
121303150
Klinik Kesihatan Peringgit
Systemic Examination
Investigations
Diagnosis
Controlled hypertension
Management
Discussion
Hypertension is one of the most common chronic diseases in the human population,
affecting more than 1 billion people worldwide. As blood flows through arteries it pushes
against the inside of the artery walls. The force against the walls of arteries forms blood
pressure. When the heart beats to push blood out into the arteries, blood pressure is highest
and called systolic pressure. When the heart relaxes to fill with blood again, the pressure is at
its lowest point and called diastolic pressure. Hypertension (high blood pressure) is defined
as a repeatedly elevated blood pressure reaching or exceeding 140 over 90 mmHg (a systolic
pressure 140 with a diastolic pressure 90) for adult.
Patient should be seated for at least 5 minutes, without smoking, meal, caffeine intake
or physical exercise for at least 30 minutes. The position must be seated, with back and arms
supported and in a quiet room. Legs must be uncrossed. The correct cuff must be used and
should be placed at heart level.
A detailed history and physical examination is essential for identifying risk factors and
stratifying patients to target those who need more aggressive therapy to achieve goal BP. The
history should include details of dietary salt intake and should explore lifestyle patterns and
social and psychosocial stressors that could potentially affect BP levels. Ophthalmologic
assessment and funduscopic examination are simple techniques to identify the severity of
disease and target organ damage by grading retinal changes
65 in female, and physical inactivity. The treatment for hypertension is initiated based upon
risk stratification of the individual patient.
In patient with stage 1 hypertension, treatment should be started with monotherapy at low
dose. Monotherapy can lower BP to <140/90 mmHg in approximately 40 to 60% of patients.
If after sufficient period of treatment (up to 6 weeks) with monotherapy BP is still not controlled,
three options are available namely:
Properly selected antihypertensive combinations may also mitigate the adverse effects of
each other. In patients presenting with stage 2 hypertension or beyond, combination therapy
as first line is recommended.
The follow up intervals should be individualized as well based on the stratified risk, pre-
treatment BP and drugs used. High risk and very high risk patients may have frequent follow
up to bring down the BP to target within 3 to 6 months. Once the target BP is reached follow
up at 3 to 6 months interval.
Reflections
From this case, I learnt that hypertensive is one of the most common presentations in the
clinic. Be it hypertension alone or it can be presented together with diabetes mellitus or
hyperlipidemia. The most important thing to handle any case of hypertension or any illnesses
is patients knowledge to their current condition. As a physician, we may prescribe all kinds of
medications to control as well as prevent the disease from progressing but in the end, it all
comes back to the willingness of the patient to cooperate with a healthcare provider in order
to control/heal their illness.
Reference
II. www.clevelandclinicmeded.com/medicalpubs/.../nephrology/arterial-hypertension/