190 likes | 365 Views
Association between Hypertension, Kidney Disease & Obesity. Samir T. Kumar, M. D. Nephrology Associates of Northern Illinois Certified Clinical Hypertension Specialist. JNC-7: Scathing Assessment . 122 million Americans are overweight or obese.
E N D
Association between Hypertension, Kidney Disease & Obesity Samir T. Kumar, M. D. Nephrology Associates of Northern Illinois Certified Clinical Hypertension Specialist
JNC-7: Scathing Assessment • 122 million Americans are overweight or obese. • Mean sodium intake is approximately 4100mg for men and 2750 mg/day, 75% of which comes from processed foods • Fewer than 20% of Americans engage in regular physical activity and fewer than 25% consume 5 or more servings of fruits and vegetables daily
Obesity and Hypertension • More than 30% of US adult population is obese (BMI > 30) • Any weight gain, even to a level that is not obese, is associated with increased risk of Hypertension • BMI > 30 is a significant predictor of incident Hypertension • Hypertensive effect of weight gain is related to increased abdominal visceral fat.
Obesity and Hypertension • Each 10% increase in BMI is associated with a 3.9mm increase in SBP • Dose dependent relationship between severity of obesity and risk of hypertension
Obesity and Hypertension • Africans in rural Cameroon – 10%, BMI is 22 • Jamaica – 25%, BMI 25 • African Americans in Illinois – 40% BMI 35
Obesity and Hypertension • Adipose tissue is not just for storage • Release of “Adipokines” (Leptin, Angiotensinogen, etc) • Sympathetic over activity, blunted production of adiponectin, RAAS over activity • Retention of salt and water, and oxidative stress leads to endothelial dysfunction and vascular proliferation
Trial of non-pharmacologic Interventions in the Elderly –TONE(Whelton et al, JAMA 1998) • 975 men and women age 60-80 years; hypertension controlled with 1 med • Randomized to reduce sodium intake, weight loss, both or none • After 3 months, antihypertensives were withdrawn • 30 month follow up – number of normotensives 44% with both interventions, 35% with one, 16% with neither
Fructose and HTN • Some data suggest than fructose intake may be a component of HTN in obesity and the metabolic syndrome • American diets are high in sucrose (50% fructose) and high fructose corn syrup (55% fructose) • Not confirmed in all studies • Fructose appears to enhance sodium absorption in the intestine
Trials of Hypertension: Prevention II Study (Stevens et al Annals of Internal Med 2001) • 595 moderate obese patients – 10-65% above IBW • High normal DBP’s (83-89 mm Hg) • Intense weight loss program • 595 controls – observed • 4.5 kg weight loss • Significant reduction in BP and 65% lower risk of hypertension
Does diet alone work for Hypertension? • Sacks et al, NEJM 2001 – 412 patients average age 48 – SBP 120-159/DBP 80-95 randomized to typical US diet US DASH diet, additionally 3 levels of sodium intake • 30 days – significant benefit to both DASH and low sodium diets • PREMIER trial – (Elmer et al, Annals of Int Med 2006) • DASH diet vs Normal • Pts prepared their own meals • Only 1.1/0.9 difference in BP between the 2 groups
How about Bariatric Surgery? • Batsis et al, Mayo Clinic proceedings 2008 • Retrospective study 180 patients with bariatric surgery vs 157 without surgery • Surgical group had 7/6 mm greater reduction in BP compared to non surgical group at 3.4 year follow up
How about Bariatric Surgery? • Swedish obese subjects bariatric intervention • Initial BP reduction of 4.4/5.5 mm Hg • Did not persist 10 years out
Obesity/Sleep Apnea and HTN • Sleep heart health study • 2470 pts without HTN at enrollment • Stratified by AHI (Apnea Hypopnia Index)
Treatment of Sleep Apnea • Treatment with CPAP very effective for OSA symptoms • Treatment with CPAP has had mixed results in pts with HTN, ineffective in several studies • Pts with OSA who underwent weight loss had decrease in BP • Relationship between OSA and HTN may be largely related to obesity • Younger pts < 50 with resistant HTN respond better to CPAP.
Obesity and Focal Sclerosis • Focal and Segmental glomerulosclerosis – is the most aggressive primary idiopathic Nephrotic syndrome • Affects predominantly African Americans, untreated, almost 90% will have ESRD in 10 years • Secondary FSGS – Obesity is an important cause • Treatment of Obesity reduces proteinurea and stabilizes or improves renal function
Obesity and Chronic kidney disease • Obesity accelerates progression of chronic kidney disease by increasing insulin resistance, increasing sympathetic activity and activating renin angiotensin aldosterone system • ACE inhibitor therapy appears to be more effective in reducing risk of progression of chronic kidney disease in obese pts, highlighting the effects of activation of RAAS
Obesity and Chronic kidney disease • Obesity is a well recognized risk factor for progression of chronic kidney disease, regardless of etiology • KDIGO guidelines 2013 • Undertake physical activity compatible with cardiovascular health and tolerance (aiming for at least 30 mins, 5 times/wk) • Achieve a healthy weight (BMI 20-25 kg/m2) • Stop smoking