Acute Hypertension
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Transcript Acute Hypertension
Jay Patel, MD
CR FIRM C
Initial Evaluation
What are the vitals?
EKG
Is this new or old?
What has the rate of increase been?
Is the patient mentating well?
Are there signs of acute end-organ damage?
Acute Hypertension
Is it urgent or emergent?
Urgent SBP >180 or DBP >120
Emergent Urgent + End-organ damage
End-organ damage
Cardiac: pulmonary edema, ACS, aortic dissection
Renal: ARF, proteinuria, hematuria ATN
Neuro: cerebral edema, CVA, TIA, ICH
Many patients will have headache from hypertensive urgency
but no other end organ damage.
Ophtho: retinal hemorrhage/exudate, papilledema
Acute Hypertension
Presentations c/w hypertensive emergency:
BP >180/100
AND
Encephalopathy
Dyspnea
Chest pain
Things Not to miss…
Aortic Dissection
Intracranial Bleeding
Acute Coronary Syndromes
Treatment: Hypertensive urgency
Titrate up current medications, Q2H BP checks until
<160/100
Add rapid onset/rapid offset oral medications to assess
response
Captopril: ~6.25-12.5mg
Clonidine: ~0.2mg
In this situation, try to avoid starting IV drips
DO NOT USE HYDRALAZINE
The goal is BP <160/100 in HOURS to DAYS
Physiology: Hypertensive Emergency
As blood pressure rises, arterial/arteriolar
vasoconstriction occurs (autoregulation) to protect
distal arterioles and maintain perfusion.
With increasing blood pressure, autoregulation fails.
The vascular endothelium loses integrity, and plasma
contents enter the vessel wall.
The vascular lumen is narrowed or obliterated, leading
to ischemia.
Treatment: Hypertensive Emergency
Use IV bolus/drips to rapidly correct blood pressure
Labetalol: 20mg initially, with repeat boluses (20-80mg)
Q10min to total 300mg. Then gtt 0.5-2mg/min.
Nitroprusside: 0.25-0.5mcg/min, titrate to goal BP with max
rate 10mcg/min.
Nitroglycerin: 5-100+mcg/min.
Nicardipine: 5-15mg/hr.
DO NOT USE HYDRALAZINE
The goal is to decrease diastolic BP to 100-105mmHg with
initial MAP decrease no greater than 25% in MINUTES to
HOURS
Nitrates
Nitroglycerin
Good for pulmonary edema and angina
Preload/afterload reduction
Tachyphylaxis occurs quickly
Need high doses to reduce BP
Will cause headache
Nitroprusside
Do not use in renal failure, due to cyanide metabolite
Beta-blockers
Labetolol
Good for rapid onset of action (<5 minutes)
Limited by bradycardia, can cause heart block
Do not use in acute CHF
Caution with underlying COPD/Asthma
Calcium channel blockers
Nicardipine
Effective, use if contraindications to other agents
Do not use in acute CHF, ACS
Case 1
J.B. is a 55 y.o. AAM with hx of HTN, GERD, in the ER
with chest pain and dyspnea
The patient looks extremely uncomfortable but is able
to answer questions appropriately… pain is 10/10 and
‘going right through’ his chest
195/120 105 24 96% RA
What is your initial DDx?
Case 1
Get BP in BOTH arms
R 190/100, L 165/95
What therapy do you start empirically?
What imaging/labs do you want?
Case 1
Case 1
Case 1
Therapy: IV labetalol and IV nitrate
Goal SBP <100, goal HR 60s
DO NOT USE HYDRALAZINE
Imaging:
Dissection protocol CT
TEE
Labs:
BMP, CBC, troponin, CK-MB, type/cross, PT, PTT
Consult vascular surgery
CT
Aortic Dissection
Types:
Type A/Proximal ascending aorta
Type B/Distal descending aorta only
Complications:
Valvular insufficiency
CVA/TIA
Tamponade
Renal/bowel ischemia
MI
Case 2
F.M. is a 84 y.o AAF with hx of HTN, DM2, CHF, and
CKD in the ER with chest pain and dyspnea
She missed several doses of medication (BB, ACE-I,
CCB, ASA) while out of town at a Ham Eating Festival
205/115 105 24 87% RA
What is your initial DDx?
Case 2
Get BP in BOTH arms
R 205/110 L 210/105
What therapy do you start empirically?
What imaging/labs do you want?
Case 2
Case 2
Case 2
Therapy: IV furosemide, IV nitroglycerin, O2
Goal: improvement in dyspnea, O2 requirement
Avoid beta-blocker in this patient
DO NOT USE HYDRALAZINE
Imaging:
CXR
Labs:
BMP, CBC, troponin, CK-MB, BNP
Case 3
A.C. is a 76 y.o WF with history of HTN, DM2, CAD
admitted for hypertension and headache
Initial workup including EKG, Trop, BMP, and CXR are
unremarkable… The patient’s HTN remains difficult
to control with oral agents.
On HD#1, you are called to see patient for “garbled
speech”
What is your initial DDx?
Case 3
BP 220/135 in both arms, HR 90, SaO2/RR stable
Exam notable for inability to follow commands and
agitation, no cranial nerve deficits, moving all four
extremities
What imaging/labs do you want?
Case 3
Case 3
Case 3
Therapy: IV labetalol or nicardipine
Goal: improvement in mental status, airway protection,
seizure precautions
DO NOT USE HYDRALAZINE
Imaging:
Brain MRI to follow up
Labs:
BMP, CBC, troponin, CK-MB
RPLE/RPLS/PRES
Results from disordered cerebral autoregulation,
endothelial dysfunction, and ischemia
Hypertensive encephalopathy, eclampsia, and
immunosuppressive drugs (esp. cyclosporine) are
associated conditions
Therapy involves control of blood pressure, removal of
offending agents (delivery, cyclosporine), and
management of seizures if they occur
CVA/Hemorrhage
Ischemic CVA:
Do not treat HTN unless BP >220/120 OR the patient
has concomitant ACS, CHF, aortic dissection, eclampsia
IV labetolol is drug of choice
If lytics are being used, BP has to be <180/105 and
maintained there for 24 hours post lytics
Intracranial/subarachnoid hemorrhage
Goal is SBP <200 or MAP <150, use IV labetalol
Call neurosurgery for ICP monitoring
Case 4
D.Y. is a 52 y.o male with history of HTN, DM2,
admitted for community acquired pneumonia
You are on night float and get a call that the patient’s
BP is 175/95.
How do you approach this?
Case 4
A) Review the patient’s medication list
B) Review the patient’s BP trends
C) A and B
D) Give 5mg IV hydralazine
Case 4
Inpatient hypertension that is not urgent or emergent
should be treated like outpatient hypertension.
Add appropriate anti-hypertensives as you would in
clinic and don’t aggressively add multiple agents.
Remember, amlodipine, lisinopril, etc. often take
several days to reach their effect.
Summary
Any patient with hypertension and chest pain or
dyspnea needs blood pressure measured BY YOU in
both arms.
Evaluate the hypertensive patient for signs of endorgan damage with EKG, troponin, and neurologic
exam.
Hypertensive urgency: Oral medications.
Hypertensive emergency: IV medications and consider
ICU transfer.
Inpatient hypertension: Treat like you would in clinic.
Why Hydralazine is Terrible
Reflex tachycardia can increase myocardial oxygen
demand and cause ischemia in patients with CAD.
Unpredictable hypotension can ensue, especially in
patient with pulmonary hypertension.
Patient with low GFR may have several dips in blood
pressure, resulting in drug stacking—hydralazine is
renally cleared.
Drug-induced lupus and neuropathy are long-term
risks, but those with HLA-DR4 genotype may be at
risk with IV dosing.