Acute Hypertension-Hypertensive Urgency and Hypertensive Emergency
Acute Hypertension-Hypertensive Urgency and Hypertensive Emergency
Acute Hypertension-Hypertensive Urgency and Hypertensive Emergency
Authors:
Gregary D. Marhefka, MD
Citation:
Consultant. 2016;56(3):222-232.
"There is some truth in the saying that the greatest danger to a man with a high blood pressure
lies in its discovery, because then some fool is certain to try and reduce it, said British
physician John Hay, MD, in 1931.1 We have learned a great deal about acute hypertension in the
85 years since Dr Hay was quoted. Nevertheless, despite dramatic advances in modern medicine,
a significant void still exists in its evidence-based management.
Acute hypertension is common and can be divided into hypertensive urgency or hypertensive
emergency, which is blood pressure greater than 180/120 mm Hg without or with target organ
damage, respectively. In a recent retrospective study of more than 1.2 million patient hospital
admissions from 114 US hospitals, Shorr and colleagues2 reported that 13.8% were found to
have acute hypertension in the emergency department (ED). From 2006 to 2011, visits to EDs
for essential hypertension have increased by 25%.3
The paucity of data about hypertensive urgency and emergency is reflected in the fact that the
latest 2014 guideline for the management of high blood pressure in adults from the Eighth Joint
National Committee (JNC 8) does not even mention acute hypertension or hypertensive urgency
or emergency.4
HYPERTENSIVE URGENCY
Definition of hypertensive urgency. Because the JNC 8 does not comment on hypertensive
urgency in its 2014 guideline, one must refer to expert opinion from the 2003 JNC 7 guideline.5
Hypertensive urgency is defined as a blood pressure greater than 180/120 mm Hg in the absence
of progressive target organ dysfunction. These patients are often therapy-nonadherent or
inadequately treated. They may present with headache, shortness of breath, epistaxis, or anxiety
but often are asymptomatic.
The JNC 7 notes, Unfortunately, the term urgency has led to overly aggressive management of
many patients with severe, uncomplicated hypertension.5 The American College of Emergency
Physicians (ACEP) 2013 policy statement6 chooses the phrase asymptomatic elevated blood
pressure rather than hypertensive urgency. The colleges policy statement notes that most
clinical trials use a blood pressure above 180/100 mm Hg, but they chose to define asymptomatic
elevated blood pressure as that consistent with JNC 7s stage 2 hypertension, 160/100 mm Hg or
greater. The 2013 hypertension management guidelines from the European Society of
Hypertension (ESH) and the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) define hypertensive urgency
as blood pressure greater than 180/120 mm Hg without acute organ damage7 (Table 1).
a
Uses phrase asymptomatic elevated blood pressure instead of hypertensive urgency.
The ACEP 2013 policy statement on asymptomatic elevated blood pressure recommends against
routine screening for acute target organ injury unless the patient is less likely to follow up, or if
there is question of admission to the hospital, in which case screening for an elevated creatinine
level is suggested.6 In primary care, JNC 7 guidelines suggest a thorough physical examination
including assessment of bilateral blood pressures, body mass index, and optic fundi; palpation
and auscultation of carotid arteries, femoral arteries, abdominal aorta, thyroid, heart, lungs,
abdomen (for enlarged kidneys or distended bladder), and extremities (for edema and pulses);
and a neurologic examination. Screening tests should include electrocardiography for left
ventricular hypertrophy, urinalysis, and serum glucose, hematocrit, potassium, creatinine, and
lipid levels.5
The 2013 ESH/ESC guideline states, Isolated large BP elevations without acute [organ
dysfunction] should not be considered an emergency.7 They recommend reinstitution or
intensification of oral drug therapy without any mention of specific agents (Table 1).
In 1989, Zeller and colleagues8 prospectively followed 64 asymptomatic ED patients with severe
hypertension (diastolic blood pressure of 116-139 mm Hg) not recently on antihypertensives.
Each patient initially had received oral clonidine and hydrochlorothiazide, then each was
randomized to 1 of 3 treatment arms: (1) up to 4 hourly doses of oral clonidine until a 20 mm Hg
drop in diastolic pressure or to a diastolic pressure of 105 mm Hg, followed by maintenance
therapy; (2) an initial dose of oral clonidine followed by hourly oral placebo and subsequent
maintenance therapy; or (3) no serial doses and only oral maintenance therapy. They found no
difference in the time required to achieve blood pressure control between groups 1 and 2, and no
difference at 24 hours in pressure reduction between groups 1, 2, and 3. Of the 44 patients who
followed up at 1 week, blood pressure had been adequately controlled across all groups, with no
difference between groups.
Levy and colleagues9 retrospectively reported on 1016 patients discharged from an urban
teaching hospital ED in 2008 with a primary diagnosis of hypertensive urgency (>180/100 mm
Hg) without target organ damage. A total of 435 patients (42.8%) (average age, 49.2 years;
94.5% African American) were treated, mostly with oral clonidine (in 88.5% of those treated).
The authors observed that most of the treated patients had a history of hypertension (93.1% vs
84.3%) and a higher initial mean blood pressure (202/115 vs 185/106 mm Hg). They found no
significant difference between treated patients and untreated patients in ED revisits at 24 hours
(4.4% vs 2.4%) and at 30 days (18.9% vs 15.2%), or mortality at 30 days (0.2% vs 0.2%) and 1
year (2.1% vs 1.6%).
Grassi and colleagues10 studied 549 ED patients (average age 59 years; 51% men) with
asymptomatic blood pressure greater than 180/100 mm Hg, without preexisting cardiovascular,
cerebrovascular, or renovascular disease. All patients were placed in a quiet room for 30 minutes
of rest; 175 patients (31.9%) had a significant reduction in blood pressure of at least 20/10 mm
Hg to below 180/100 mm Hg with rest alone. The remaining patients then were given oral
amlodipine, perindopril, or labetalol (decided by the attending physician of record), of which 296
of 394 (75%) had a significant reduction in blood pressure of at least 20/10 mm Hg to below
180/100 mm Hg. There were no complications noted in any of the groups at follow-up within 48
to 72 hours.
These studies demonstrate the safety and importance of rest and oral antihypertensive therapy
with close outpatient follow-up for the treatment of hypertensive urgency.
HYPERTENSIVE EMERGENCY
The one diagnosis that mandates an immediate rather than gradual reduction to normal blood
pressure levels is acute aortic syndrome (Table 1).12,13
Neurologic Damage
PRES is a neuroradiologic and clinical diagnosis that typically is associated with hypertensive
encephalopathy but also can be seen in pregnancy-associated, acute-onset, severe hypertension
syndromes (preeclampsia, eclampsia, HELLP syndrome) and with certain organ transplant
immunosuppressive medications such as tacrolimus and cyclosporine.15
The 2013 American Heart Association/American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA) guidelines for
the early management of patients with acute ischemic stroke16 recommend treatment of blood
pressures greater than 220/120 mm Hg in the setting of acute ischemic stroke. If the use of tissue
plasminogen activator (tPA) is indicated, the goal is to reduce blood pressure in these patients to
less than 185/110 mm Hg before tPa administration in order to reduce the risk of hemorrhagic
conversion. For systolic blood pressure greater than 140 mm Hg but less than 220 mm Hg, there
is no proof that any treatment is beneficial. If systolic blood pressure is less than 120 mm Hg in
the setting of acute ischemic stroke, the guidelines recommend placing the patient flat and
providing isotonic saline to minimize the potential for cerebral malperfusion. As the AHA/ASA
guidelines note, Unfortunately, an ideal blood pressure range has not yet been scientifically
determined.16
Seizures are a possible symptom of hypertensive encephalopathy and/or acute stroke and are
treated with benzodiazepines or antiepileptic agents. Retinopathy is a relatively common
complication of hypertension. Historically, retinopathy, along with acute nephropathy, was the
first organ pathology identified in malignant hypertension described in the 1920s.17 These
chronic hypertensive conditions had been considered malignant because of the associated high
mortality ratesof the 81 patients observed by Keith and colleagues,17 91% died within 4 years,
and the average lifespan of these patients was 8 months.
Hypertensive emergencies can be associated with acute retinopathy or acute choroidopathy and
associated vision loss. Involvement of the choroid typically is a sign of acute, dramatic rise in
blood pressure, often in a young person, in the setting of hypertensive emergency.18
Aortic Damage
Type A aortic dissection involves the ascending aorta and is a surgical emergency requiring
immediate operative repair, given that the mortality rate of nonsurgically treated cases is 50%
within the first 48 hours. Type B aortic dissection involves only the descending thoracic aorta
and generally is treated medically unless there are signs of organ malperfusion on presentation,
such as spinal cord or abdominal viscera ischemia.
The 2010 American College of Cardiology Foundation (ACCF) and AHA task force guidelines
for the diagnosis and management of thoracic aortic disease recommend reducing the velocity of
ventricular contraction (dP/dtmax), the rate of ventricular contraction, and the blood pressure with
-blockers, targeting a heart rate of less than 60 beats/min and a systolic blood pressure between
100 and 120 mm Hg while maintaining adequate organ perfusion.12
The 2014 ESC guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of aortic diseases recommend treatment
with IV -blockers to reduce heart rate and lower systolic blood pressure to 100 to 120 mm Hg
(Table 1).13 It is essential to start with a negative inotrope such as esmolol, because starting with
vasodilator therapy actually may increase dP/dt and therefore the sheer stresses on the acutely
injured aorta, leading to dissection progression and rupture. After -blockers have been
maximized, pure vasodilator medications such as nicardipine, clevidipine, nitroprusside, or
nitroglycerin may be needed to achieve the target blood pressure (Table 3).
Acute aortic syndromes also are unique because, unlike with other hypertensive emergencies, the
goal is to reduce systolic blood pressure to 100 to 120 mm Hg as quickly as possible, not only by
25% in the first hour or so. This requires strict ICU-level monitoring for sequelae of overly rapid
reduction of blood pressure that can occur due to potential loss of microvasculature
autoregulation at suddenly lower blood pressures. If this occurs, finding a median blood pressure
that reduces dP/dt on the injured aorta but allows other organ perfusion is individualized by
patient.
Cardiac Damage
Acute hypertension sometimes can be associated with acute MI, acute heart failure, or acute
pulmonary edema. In the differential diagnosis of ST segment elevation MI (STEMI), one must
always remember the possibility of acute type A aortic dissection with the dissection flap
occluding right coronary artery flow or, more rarely, left coronary artery flow.19
For hypertensive emergency with acute MI not associated with type A aortic dissection,
treatment with nitroglycerin is indicated, along with goal-directed therapies for non-ST segment
elevation MI or STEMI (Table 3). Nitroglycerin should not be used in cases of suspected right
ventricular infarction or if the patient recently has taken a phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor for
erectile dysfunction within the preceding 24 to 48 hours.
Per the 2013 ACCF/AHA guideline for the STEMI management,20 fibrinolytic therapy is
absolutely contraindicated in severe uncontrolled hypertension greater than 180/110 mm Hg that
is unresponsive to emergency medical therapy (Table 3). If there is severe hypertension greater
than 180/110 mm Hg at the time of admission, fibrinolytic therapy is relatively contraindicated
(Table 1). In addition to IV nitroglycerin, an IV -blocker (eg, metoprolol) also is reasonable for
ongoing hypertension or ischemia in the absence of acute heart failure, low cardiac output, or
bradyarrhythmias. Nitroprusside should be used carefully if at all in the setting of acute coronary
syndrome due to its potential for inducing coronary steal. The true clinical significance of this
potential complication is unknown.21
In acute heart failure, IV diuretics and IV nitroglycerin or nitroprusside are indicated. The IV
negative inotropes such as esmolol, labetalol, and diltiazem are generally contraindicated in
acute heart failure, because they could induce a low cardiac output state. Furthermore, the
dihydropyridine calcium-channel blockers nicardipine and clevidipine also have some degree of
negative inotrope properties and should be used sparingly in the setting of acute heart failure.
High-dose nicardipine continuous drips also contain a significant volume of fluid, which also can
potentiate heart failure.
Renal Damage
A less common renal hypertensive emergency is scleroderma renal crisis, which is acute
hypertension seen in approximately 5% of patients with systemic sclerosis.23 Scleroderma renal
crisis is the new onset of accelerated hypertension in association with oliguric or anuric acute
renal failure.24 It also can be associated with acute heart failure, encephalopathy, and thrombotic
microangiopathy. Pathologically, it is associated with autoimmunity, vasculopathy, and fibrosis.
Regardless of renal failure and function, treatment is with angiotensin-converting enzyme
inhibitors (ACEIs) (Table 3). Acutely, oral captopril is the medication of choice, regardless of
the serum creatinine level. If needed, hemodialysis may be instituted. Prognosis after an episode
of scleroderma renal crisis is significantly worse, with a 5-year survival rate of 65%.24 Lifelong
ACEI therapy is indicated following an episode, but interestingly, ACEI therapy before an
episode of scleroderma renal crisis has never proven to be preventive.
Hematologic Damage
Pregnancy
The 2015 ACOG guidelines11 define pregnancy and postpartum acute-onset, severe hypertension
as blood pressure of 160/110 mm Hg or greater persisting more than 15 minutes (Table 1). It is
associated with severe preeclampsia, eclampsia, and HELLP syndrome.11 It can occur in the
second half of pregnancy in previously nonhypertensive women, or in women with preexisting
hypertension who develop a superimposed preeclampsia with acutely worsening hypertension. If
a pregnant woman is found in the office to have acute-onset, severe hypertension of 160/110 mm
Hg or higher for more than 15 minutes, she should be referred immediately to the hospital.
While monitoring the fetus, the recommended first-line agents are IV labetalol, IV hydralazine,
or oral nifedipine (Table 3). Magnesium sulfate is not an antihypertensive medication but is used
to prophylactically reduce seizure risk in preeclampsia or to treat seizures in eclampsia.
Hydralazine can induce maternal hypotension. Labetalol can result in neonatal bradycardia and
should be avoided in patients with heart failure or asthma. Nifedipine can lead to maternal
tachycardia and hypotension.11
CONCLUSION
The optimal IV medication and the rapidity with which optimal blood pressure is achieved
depend on the type of end-organ damage.
Gregary D. Marhefka, MD, is the associate director of the Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit
and an associate professor of medicine in the Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology,
at the Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
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