Professional Documents
Culture Documents
in the Emergency
Department
Omoyemi Adebayo,
MD*,
Robert L. Rogers,
MD
KEYWORDS
Hypertension Hypertensive emergency Hypertensive crisis
KEY POINTS
Hypertensive emergency cannot be diagnosed based only on the combination of severely
increased blood pressure with symptoms such as headache, shortness of breath, and
blurred vision.
Hypertensive urgency is defined as severe hypertension in a patient with comorbidities
that place the patient at higher risk of end-organ dysfunction. Hypertensive emergency
is defined as objective findings of end-organ damage.
Asymptomatic and otherwise healthy patients with severe essential hypertension should
be referred to a primary care doctor within a week for nonurgent blood pressure control;
treatment of this group with aggressive intravenous medications can precipitate hypotension and subsequent end-organ damage.
Select a therapeutic agent that has rapid and reliable pharmacodynamics that can be
turned on and off easily.
The goal in treating most hypertensive emergencies is to reduce the blood pressure 25%
within the first 24 hours after diagnosis. An exception is in patients with aortic dissection,
which calls for much more rapid blood pressure reduction.
INTRODUCTION
In 2014, the American Heart Association (AHA) estimated that 77.9 million Americans
older than 20 years of age have hypertension (HTN).1 That is approximately 1 in every 3
adults, which is a staggering figure compared with other common diseases such as
diabetes and hyperlipidemia. In 2009, the AHA reported that almost a third of the population with HTN was unaware of their underlying diagnosis2; this percentage has
decreased to 19% according to recent figures from the National Health and Nutrition
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540
Examination Survey.1 Nearly 70% of all patients with a first-time myocardial infarction,
stroke, or congestive heart failure have poorly controlled blood pressure.1 However,
the 2014 Joint National Committee (JNC) guidelines for blood pressure management
recommend a less aggressive treatment approach for older hypertensive patients than
that proposed in the JNC 7 guidelines,3 which could increase the number of patients
found to be in a hypertensive crisis in the emergency department (ED).4
HTN is associated with significant short-term and long-term morbidity and mortality.
The effects of HTN often build to hypertensive crises that can affect numerous organ
systems either individually or simultaneously. The JNC 7 recommendations laid the
groundwork for the identification and treatment of hypertensive crisis, but they did
not clearly distinguish hypertensive urgency from hypertensive emergency. This
distinction is important because their treatment approaches for blood pressure control
are different. Despite the lack of large randomized controlled trials designed to establish evidence-based guidelines for the management of hypertensive emergencies,
general consensus exists regarding the need for a timely response to prevent adverse
outcomes.
This article discusses essential concepts in the evaluation and treatment of hypertensive emergencies that are encountered commonly in the ED. These emergencies
include encephalopathy, pulmonary edema, myocardial ischemia, aortic dissection,
nephropathy, and eclampsia (Box 1).
DEFINITION
Hypertension is defined as a systolic blood pressure greater than 140 mm Hg or a diastolic pressure greater than 90 mm Hg.4 Hypertensive crises are separated into 2
broad categories of urgency and emergency. They are both defined by a systolic
blood pressure greater than 180 mm Hg and a diastolic pressure greater than
120 mm Hg but are differentiated by the absence or presence, respectively, of endorgan damage.4 End-organ damage is typically manifested by dysfunction in the
cerebrovascular, cardiovascular, pulmonary, or renovascular systems. Organ
dysfunction is the sole element that dictates the rapidity and modality of treatment
required in a hypertensive crisis.
Hypertensive urgency is characterized by an acute increase of blood pressure that
is not associated with end-organ damage. Recognition of hypertensive urgency can
generate anxiety in emergency physicians (EPs), leading to the decision to administer
intravenous (IV) medications. This therapeutic approach could inadvertently cause hypotension and organ hypoperfusion. In its definition of hypertensive urgency, the JNC
includes symptoms such as headache, shortness of breath, and epistaxis. Many EPs
are opposed to the term hypertensive urgency, citing its lack of meaningful definition.
They prefer to refer to this entity as severe HTN.
Patients with hypertensive urgency are typically either noncompliant with prescribed medications or have been lost to follow-up and therefore lack proper titration
of their medication dosages. Optimal treatment in this population is close outpatient
follow-up with a gradual move toward oral antihypertensive medications.5 No validated studies have shown that acutely reducing blood pressure in ED patients who
present with severe HTN has any benefits in short-term risk reduction. In its 2013 clinical policy, the American College of Emergency Physicians discouraged initiation of
blood pressure medication in the ED for asymptomatic patients with HTN.6
In contrast, hypertensive emergencies are associated with significant short-term
and long-term morbidity and mortality: 5-year mortality approaches 100%.7 Hypertensive emergencies represent up to one-fourth of all ED visits.4 The JNC recommends
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Box 1
Causes of hypertensive crises
Essential hypertension
Endocrine
Pheochromocytoma
Cushing syndrome
Renin-secreting tumor
Primary hyperaldosteronism
Renovascular disease
Renal artery stenosis
Polyarteritis nodosa
Takayasu arteritis
Drugs
Cocaine
Phencyclidine
Sympathomimetics
Antihypertensive medication withdrawal
Amphetamines
Lead intoxication
Tyramine reaction with use of monoamine oxidase inhibitors
Serotonin syndrome from selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor use
Central nervous system
Cerebral edema
Cerebral hemorrhage
Brain tumor
Spinal cord injury
Coarctation of the aorta
Pain
Burns
the following therapeutic approach after a hypertensive emergency has been diagnosed: (1) mean arterial pressure reduction by w25% in the first 1 hour of treatment,
and (2) avoidance of precipitously reducing blood pressure (except in patients with
aortic dissection) to preclude organ hypoperfusion.4
EVALUATION
History
Hypertensive emergencies can be identified based on the patients past and present
history, results of the physical examination, laboratory analysis, and imaging. Any patient who presents to the ED with severely increased blood pressure should have a
thorough evaluation. The EPs evaluation and treatment algorithms are different for
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an acutely increased blood pressure in a patient with no history of HTN compared with
another patient with known chronic HTN. For example, a previously normotensive
woman who comes to the ED after her twentieth week of gestation with a severely
increased blood pressure and headache raises concern for preeclampsia requiring
emergent management; however, if the same gravid woman presents to the ED
with chronic pregestational HTN and a headache, the level of concern and management approach are different than for the patient described earlier.
The EP should obtain the patients current complete medication list: drug names,
doses, any recent changes in their administration, and sudden discontinuations
from previously taken prescriptions. Sympatholytic medications such as clonidine
are notorious for causing severe rebound HTN. Another pertinent piece of information
to obtain from the patient is the use of illicit substances. Cocaine and phencyclidine
are sympathomimetics that cause severe increases in blood pressure, as well as other
symptoms. A family history of sudden death, premature cardiac disease, or endocrine
disorders should prompt the EP to consider pheochromocytoma, multiple endocrine
neoplasm, and hyperthyroidism as possible causes of episodic blood pressure increase and tachycardia in a young healthy patient. The most vital part of the history
is assessment of signs and symptoms associated with the patients chief complaint
(eg, chest pain, shortness of breath, urine output, weakness, or sensory loss) and targeted evaluation of end organs. The presence of symptoms alone does not confirm a
hypertensive emergency, but it suggests that an organ might be affected, requiring
further assessment.
Physical Examination
If high blood pressure is detected during the triage process, the measurement must be
repeated in the examination room after the patient has rested for 5 minutes without
perturbation. The one-size-fits-all approach to blood pressure cuffs can produce
falsely high or low blood pressure readings; a cuff of appropriate size for each patient
is required for accurate measurements.8
When examining a patient with suspected hypertensive emergency, several crucial
parts of the examination indicate whether further testing is needed. Assessment of
mental status is one of the first steps in a thorough neurologic examination. Confusion,
delirium, or seizure without other cause or reason suggests hypertensive encephalopathy. Other telltale signs of neurologic impairment are motor or sensory deficits and
papilledema on funduscopic evaluation. A complete ocular examination is vital; if
not performed by the EP, ophthalmologic consultation is warranted to guard against
permanent vision damage. The pulmonary examination should focus on evidence of
rales, hypoxia, or tachypnea, which imply flash pulmonary edema. Murmurs heard
on cardiac examination (specifically, a diastolic decrescendo murmur of aortic regurgitation that was not previously known to exist in the patient) could signify a type A
aortic dissection. A careful vascular assessment of proximal and distal pulses and
blood pressures allows stratification of the likelihood of this rare, and potentially
deadly, diagnosis. Auscultation of an abdominal bruit should raise concern for renal
artery stenosis. An often-overlooked part of the examination of a hypertensive patient
is evaluation of volume status. An acute increase in blood pressure results in natriuresis, a physiologic response that decreases the blood volume in an effort to reduce
the blood pressure. This response becomes extremely important when IV medications
are administered to treat a hypertensive emergency; the combination of natriuresis
and the effects of a potent antihypertensive agent could induce a dangerously fast
reduction in blood pressure.
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Diagnostic Testing
Laboratory analysis should be based on which organ system the EP thinks could be
damaged. Any patient thought to have had a stroke, seizure, or any neurologic
derangement secondary to hypertensive emergency should undergo computed tomography of the head as a priority. Based on a small study, Roque and colleagues9
concluded that measurements of optic nerve sheath diameter by bedside ultrasonography can accurately predict which patients have increased intracranial pressure.
Every patient presenting with chest pain should have an electrocardiogram (ECG) to
assess for signs of cardiac ischemia or infarct. If the patients history of present illness
suggests acute coronary syndrome (ACS) (exertional chest pain, dyspnea, diaphoresis, fatigue, jaw/arm pain, and nausea with epigastric pain), cardiac biomarker measurements should also be obtained. Dyspnea has a myriad of causes (eg, an anginal
equivalent, pulmonary edema, renal failure, and anemia), all of which could stem from
a hypertensive emergency. Obtaining both a screening ECG and chest radiograph
(CXR) in dyspneic patients is recommended. If renal dysfunction is suspected, urinalysis and a basic metabolic panel should be requested. Abnormalities that suggest hypertensive nephropathy include proteinuria, muddy casts, and an increased blood
urea nitrogen or creatinine level. A complete blood count with manual differentiation
showing schistocytes suggests microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, which is another
sign of end-organ damage. Diagnostic testing should be tailored to focus on patient
complaints and the end organ in question to both maximize ED efficiency and minimize costly unnecessary work-ups.10
MANAGEMENT OF HYPERTENSIVE EMERGENCIES
The brain, like other organs, possesses an autoregulatory system to maintain a certain
cerebral perfusion pressure. The autoregulatory system of a normotensive patient
maintains a steady state, adequate for perfusion, by maintaining a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of 60 to 120 mm Hg. In normotensive patients who suddenly become hypertensive, the regulator system quickly becomes overwhelmed and can no longer
maintain autoregulation through vasoconstriction and dilation. In contrast, in patients
with long-standing hypertension, the autoregulatory system gradually adapts to
severely increased blood pressures and accommodates a higher set-point and thus
decreases the likelihood of a hypertensive emergency at moderately increased
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pressures. When the cerebral regulatory system becomes overwhelmed, the patient is
at risk for cerebral edema. The subsequent syndrome is known as hypertensive encephalopathy. It can manifest in many ways, including acute delirium, lethargy, confusion, severe headache, or seizure. In addition, it is important to consider other equally
dangerous causes of altered mental status (eg, infection and cerebrovascular accidents), because they have entirely different management strategies. In patients experiencing ischemic stroke, the blood pressure should not be reduced by more than 10%
to 15% over the first 24 hours, because it is thought that HTN protects the ischemic
penumbra of the brain.1114
The treatment of hypertensive encephalopathy begins with symptom control. Expert
opinion suggests that medications such as benzodiazepines, fosphenytoin, phenytoin,
or barbiturates should be given for delirium and seizure control; they provide the added
benefit of further blood pressure reduction.15 For blood pressure management of
hypertensive encephalopathy not complicated by cerebral vascular accident, the
MAP should be reduced by about 20% to 25% in the first 1 hour of treatment. Traditionally used medications include IV nitroprusside, labetalol, nicardipine, and enalapril
(Table 1). Centrally acting medications such as clonidine should be avoided for the
acute management of hypertensive emergencies because their sedative side effects
can make it difficult to appreciate the resolution of encephalopathic symptoms.15
Pulmonary Edema
Administration in 2008) has shown great promise in clinical trials for treatment of severe hypertension, particularly for pulmonary edema and postoperative hypertension.18 Clevedipine is a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker that has the added
benefit of not being metabolized by the kidney or liver.1921
Myocardial Ischemia
When a patient describes the sudden-onset chest pain that radiates to the back, the
EP should put aortic dissection (AD) at the top of the differential diagnosis. However,
more subtle presentations should not be overlooked: chest pain accompanied by pain
in any extremity, neurologic symptoms, abdominal or back pain, or gastrointestinal
bleeding should raise concern for AD. The mortality for AD increases 1% to 2% every
hour during the first 24 hours after the onset of symptoms. The Stanford classification
distinguishes dissections as either type A or type B. Type A involves the aortic arch
only; type B involves the descending aorta. Most type B dissections and some type
A dissections can be managed with medical therapy but that determination should
be made by the vascular surgeon. All type A dissections should be referred to a
vascular surgeon for likely surgical repair.
Whenever AD is suspected, it is important to measure the blood pressure in both arms
and to assess the pulses in all 4 extremities. It is critical not to rely on classic findings:
w19% of patients with type A dissections and w9% of those with type B dissections
have no identifiable pulse deficits.26 More reliable is identification of a new diastolic
murmur suggestive of aortic regurgitation, which is seen in up to 44% of type A
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Table 1
Pharmacologic agents for hypertensive emergencies
Drug
Dose
Adverse Effects
Indications
Nitroglycerin
25
530 min
Sodium
nitroprusside
0.2510 mg/kg/min as IV
infusion
Immediate
12 min
510
Most hypertensive
emergencies; caution of
coronary steal with cardiac
ischemia
Vasodilators
Nicardipine
515 mg/h IV
hydrochloride
Most hypertensive
emergencies; caution with
high intracranial pressure
or azotemia
Fenoldopam
mesylate
<5
30 min
Tachycardia, headache,
nausea, flushing
Enalaprilat
1.255 mg every 6 h IV
1530
612 h
Significant reductions in
blood pressure in highrenin states
1020 IV
2030 IM
14 h IV
46 h IM
Tachycardia, flushing,
headache, vomiting,
worsening angina
Hydralazine
1020 mg IV
hydrochloride 1040 mg IM
515 min
Esmolol
250500 mg/kg/min IV bolus, 12
hydrochloride
then 50100 mg/kg/min by
infusion; repeat bolus after
5 min if needed or increase
infusion to 300 mg/min
1030 min
Labetalol
2080 mg IV bolus every
hydrochloride
10 min; alternatively, 0.5
2 mg/min IV infusion
510
36 h
Most hypertensive
emergencies except acute
heart failure; ideal for
preeclampsia
Phentolamine
12
1030 min
Tachycardia, flushing,
headache
Pheochromocytoma and
other catecholamine excess
states
Clevidipine
24
Adrenergic Antagonists
Initial infusion of
12 mg/h, titrate
every 510 min
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dissections.26 A CXR obtained as part of the work-up might show a widened mediastinum, but as many as 15% of patients with AD have normal chest radiographs.27
The goal of medical therapy for AD is rapid and large reduction of vascular sheer
stress and blood pressure. The initial medication should be able to reduce the sheering force; a b-blocker is typically used for this purpose, because this drug group both
decreases the heart rate (HR) and prevents reflex tachycardia when arteriodilators are
introduced. Esmolol is an ideal agent for this purpose because of its rapid on/off qualities and its ability to reduce the HR to less than 60 beats per minute. A medication is
also needed to reduce the systolic blood pressure to less than 120 mm Hg. Nitroprusside has long been used for this purpose and is a reasonable option for fast and reliable blood pressure control.27
Acute Renal Failure
Acute renal failure (ARF) can be either the direct cause or an observed effect of a hypertensive emergency. A patients history, specifically renal transplant and renal function, can help differentiate cause from effect. Assessment of the patients volume
status is also important to determine the need for adjunctive therapies, such as
positive-pressure ventilation or diuretics for patients who present with dyspnea from
fluid overload. Calcium channel blockers (eg, nicardipine) are typically preferred in
ARF because they do not affect renal perfusion or clearance. Nitroprusside and fenoldopam are also commonly used. Nitroprusside is effective in reducing blood pressure,
but it places the patient at risk of cyanide toxicity because it decreases renal clearance
and thus causes a buildup of metabolites. Fenoldopam is a more desirable secondline medication. An arterial vasodilator, it not only decreases blood pressure but
also promotes renal excretion via its specific effects on the dopamine receptors in
the nephron. It produces no toxic metabolites and has been shown to be as effective
in blood pressure reduction as nitroprusside.28,29 In the special case of scleroderma
renal crisis, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (eg, captopril and enalapril)
are first-line agents for effect management.30
Sympathomimetic Crisis
Pregnancy causes many deviations from womens pregravid physiology. Blood pressure decreases in the second trimester of pregnancy before increasing back to
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Hypertension is a multifaceted disease process that affects the US and global populations in massive proportions. The most accurate indicator of hypertensive emergency is the presence of end-organ damage. The EPs role is pivotal in rapidly
identifying and differentiating hypertensive emergency from hypertensive urgency
and providing the appropriate intervention. Actions that are fundamental to identifying
individuals at risk include obtaining a targeted history, performing a careful physical
examination, and requesting the appropriate laboratory and diagnostic screening.
Many medications are available to treat hypertensive emergencies but none is universally recognized as being superior to the others. Important considerations in drug selection include an understanding of the underlying physiology of the crisis, the
patients comorbid conditions, and associated risk factors. Once a drug is chosen,
it should be given quickly because time is tissue in hypertensive emergency. Patients should be managed in an intensive care unit because critical care monitoring
is required. With appropriate identification and management, hypertensive crises
can be halted and reversed.
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