Hypertensive Emergency: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment
A hypertensive emergency is a life-threatening rise in blood pressure requiring immediate medical treatment to prevent serious organ damage.
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A hypertensive emergency is a life-threatening rise in blood pressure requiring immediate medical treatment to prevent serious organ damage.
What is a Hypertensive Emergency?
A hypertensive emergency is a sudden and severe increase in blood pressure that is accompanied by acute damage to vital organs. Typically, systolic blood pressure exceeds 180 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure exceeds 120 mmHg. Unlike a hypertensive urgency (elevated blood pressure without organ damage), a hypertensive emergency requires immediate hospitalization and intensive medical care to prevent life-threatening complications.
Causes
Hypertensive emergencies often develop in patients with pre-existing but inadequately controlled high blood pressure (hypertension). Common triggers include:
- Sudden discontinuation of antihypertensive medications
- Kidney disease (e.g., renal artery stenosis, glomerulonephritis)
- Pheochromocytoma (adrenal tumor releasing excess adrenaline)
- Eclampsia or pre-eclampsia during pregnancy
- Use of certain substances such as cocaine, amphetamines, or interactions with MAO inhibitors
- Increased intracranial pressure
Symptoms
The symptoms of a hypertensive emergency are caused by acute organ damage. Common signs include:
- Neurological symptoms: severe headache, confusion, visual disturbances, seizures, loss of consciousness (hypertensive encephalopathy)
- Cardiac symptoms: chest pain, shortness of breath (signs of acute myocardial infarction or acute heart failure)
- Renal symptoms: reduced urine output, blood in the urine (signs of acute kidney injury)
- Vascular symptoms: sudden severe back pain (aortic dissection)
- Nausea and vomiting
Diagnosis
Diagnosis of a hypertensive emergency is based on clinical assessment and targeted investigations:
- Blood pressure measurement: measured in both arms to detect significant differences (important for ruling out aortic dissection)
- Laboratory tests: complete blood count, kidney function markers (creatinine, urea), electrolytes, cardiac enzymes (troponin), urinalysis
- ECG: to rule out acute myocardial infarction or arrhythmias
- Imaging: CT or MRI of the brain for neurological symptoms, chest CT for suspected aortic dissection, echocardiography for heart failure
- Fundoscopy: examination of the retina to assess hypertensive changes at the back of the eye
Treatment
Treatment of a hypertensive emergency takes place in an intensive care unit or emergency department. The primary goal is a controlled, stepwise reduction in blood pressure to prevent further organ damage. Lowering blood pressure too quickly can paradoxically cause harm, such as stroke due to reduced cerebral perfusion.
General Treatment Principles
- Intravenous administration of fast-acting antihypertensive agents (e.g., labetalol, urapidil, sodium nitroprusside, nicardipine)
- Continuous monitoring of blood pressure, heart rate, and oxygen saturation
- Target within the first 1-2 hours: reduction of mean arterial pressure by no more than 20-25%
- Treatment of the underlying condition (e.g., kidney disease, pheochromocytoma)
Specific Clinical Scenarios
- Hypertensive encephalopathy: labetalol or nicardipine are preferred
- Acute heart failure: nitrates and diuretics
- Aortic dissection: beta-blockers to reduce both blood pressure and heart rate
- Eclampsia: magnesium sulfate combined with labetalol or hydralazine
Prognosis and Follow-Up
With prompt and appropriate treatment, a hypertensive emergency can often be effectively managed. However, long-term outcomes depend on consistent management of underlying hypertension, including antihypertensive medications, regular medical follow-up, and a healthy lifestyle (low-salt diet, weight management, physical activity, smoking cessation). Patients who have experienced a hypertensive emergency face an increased risk of long-term complications such as stroke, myocardial infarction, or chronic kidney disease.
References
- Williams B et al. - 2018 ESC/ESH Guidelines for the management of arterial hypertension. European Heart Journal, 2018.
- Whelton PK et al. - 2017 ACC/AHA High Blood Pressure Guideline. Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2018.
- Peixoto AJ - Acute Severe Hypertension. New England Journal of Medicine, 2019; 381(19): 1843-1852.
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Related search terms: Hypertensive Emergency + Hypertensive Emergencies + Hypertensive Crisis