CARDIOLOGY,  other

Orthostatic Hypotension

from

https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2022/0100/p39.html

Definition

  • SBP ≥20 mmHg or ↓ DBP ≥10 mmHg
  • Occurs within 3 minutes of standing from supine
  • Or during ≥60° head-up tilt testing
  • In supine hypertension, diagnostic threshold is SBP drop ≥30 mmHg

Epidemiology

  • ~5% middle-aged adults
  • ~20% adults ≥60 years
  • Up to 50–68% in nursing homes/geriatric wards
  • ↑ prevalence with diabetes, frailty, polypharmacy

Clinical Significance

  • ↑ risk of:
    • Falls and syncope
    • Coronary heart disease, MI, HF, stroke
    • All-cause mortality ↑ ~50%
  • Particularly high risk in:
    • Older adults
    • Diabetes mellitus
    • Neurodegenerative disease

Pathophysiology

  • On standing:
    • 500–1000 mL blood pools in legs/splanchnic bed
    • ↓ venous return → ↓ cardiac output
  • Normal compensation:
    • Baroreceptor-mediated ↑ HR, ↑ contractility, vasoconstriction
    • RAAS and vasopressin activation
  • OH occurs when:
    • Inadequate volume or
    • Impaired autonomic vasoconstriction

Symptoms (on standing, relieved supine)

  • Cerebral: lightheadedness, syncope, cognitive slowing, vertigo
  • Visual: blurred/dim vision
  • Cardiac: chest pain, palpitations
  • Pulmonary: dyspnoea, fatigue, platypnoea
  • Musculoskeletal: neck/shoulder pain (“coat-hanger syndrome”)
  • Symptoms not required for diagnosis

Risk Factors

  • Unexplained falls or syncope
  • Neurodegenerative disorders (PD, MSA, DLB)
  • Peripheral autonomic neuropathies (diabetes, amyloid, HIV)
  • Frailty, age ≥70
  • Polypharmacy
  • Postural dizziness only when standing

Diagnosis (Key Point)

  • Gold standard bedside test:
    • Supine BP/HR after 5 minutes
    • Standing BP/HR at 3 minutes
  • Supine → standing is most sensitive
  • If high suspicion but normal vitals → tilt table test

OH Variants

  • Classic: within 3 minutes
  • Initial: within 15 seconds
  • Delayed: after 3 minutes
  • Early OH (≤1 min) associated with ↑ falls and mortality

Classification

Neurogenic OH

  • Autonomic failure
  • Causes:
    • Parkinson disease
    • Multiple system atrophy
    • Lewy body dementia
    • Pure autonomic failure
    • Diabetic autonomic neuropathy
  • Features:
    • Blunted HR response
    • Other autonomic symptoms (urinary, GI, postprandial hypotension)

Non-neurogenic OH

  • Secondary to external factors
  • Causes:
    • Medications
    • Hypovolaemia
    • Endocrine/metabolic disorders
  • Preserved HR compensation

Heart Rate Response (Very Useful Clinically)

  • HR increase ≥0.5 bpm per mmHg SBP drop
    → suggests non-neurogenic OH
  • Sensitivity 91%, specificity 88%
  • Blunted/absent HR rise → neurogenic OH

Distinction from POTS

  • POTS:
    • HR ↑ ≥30 bpm (≥40 if age 12–19)
    • No hypotension
    • Standing HR often ≥120 bpm
  • OH:
    • BP drop is defining feature

Supine Hypertension

  • Present in ~50% of neurogenic OH
  • Defined as BP ≥140/90 after 5 min supine
  • Screen all neurogenic OH patients
  • Consider 24-hr ABPM (esp nocturnal HTN)

Initial Investigations

  • FBC – anaemia
  • BMP – electrolytes, renal function, diabetes
  • B12 ± MMA
  • TSH
  • ECG (± cardiology referral if abnormal)
  • Supine BP screening

Management Principles

  • Goal: reduce symptoms & improve QoL
    (not BP normalisation)

Step 1: Address Underlying Causes

  • Review & rationalise medications
  • Treat:
    • Anaemia
    • Dehydration
    • Endocrine disorders

Medications That Worsen OH

  • Antihypertensives:
    • Diuretics, nitrates
    • ACEi/ARBs
    • Alpha-1 blockers
    • Beta-blockers, non-DHP CCBs
  • Anticholinergics
  • Antipsychotics, TCAs, sedatives
  • Opioids
  • Dopaminergic agents

Non-Pharmacological Management (First-Line)

  • Avoid heat, prolonged standing
  • Small frequent meals (post-prandial OH)
  • Hydration: 2–2.5 L/day
  • Sodium intake: 2–3 g/day
  • Compression garments (30–40 mmHg waist-high)
  • Physical counter-maneuvers (leg crossing, squatting)
  • Exercise (avoid sudden posture changes)
  • Head-of-bed elevation (limited evidence)

Pharmacological Management

(Use with non-pharmacologic measures)

First-line

  • Midodrine
    • 2.5 mg TDS → up to 10 mg TDS
    • Avoid within 3–5 hrs of bedtime
    • SE: supine HTN, piloerection, urinary retention
  • Droxidopa
    • 100 mg TDS → up to 600 mg TDS
    • Avoid near bedtime
    • SE: headache, nausea
    • ↓ falls in PD-related OH

Second-line / Adjunct

  • Fludrocortisone (off-label)
    • 0.1–0.2 mg daily
    • Monitor K⁺
    • Long-term risks: LVH, renal failure, HF
  • Atomoxetine (off-label)
  • Pyridostigmine (off-label)

Key Practice Recommendations (SORT)

  • Supine → standing vitals preferred (C)
  • Tilt table if high suspicion despite normal vitals (C)
  • Treat symptoms, not BP targets (C)
  • Non-pharmacologic measures first (C)
  • Midodrine or droxidopa as first-line drugs (B)

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