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Published byAlban Harrell Modified over 9 years ago
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Richard Dionne MD CCFP-EM Assistant Professor Emergency Medicine – University of Ottawa Associate Medical Director – Regional Paramedic Program for Eastern Ontario Special Thanks : Dr Jason Frank April 1 st, 2010
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Goals & Objectives Differentiate malignant hypertension from secondary causes Understand the principles of managing hypertension and the risks associated Differentiate and identify the target-organ damage causes by hypertension emergencies
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Definition Essential hypertension > 140 systolic / > 90 diastolic BP = CO X PVR Blood Pressure = Cardiac Output X Vascular Resistance Autoregulation phenomenon overwhelmed Rapid rate rise in MAP : Mean Arterial Pressure MAP = 1/3 Systolic + 2/3 Diastolic Vascular endothelial stress injury pattern
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Causes Severe uncontrolled Hypertension : > 180 systolic / > 120 diastolic Hypertensive Emergency (Malignant): Acute target organ damage / effect Hypertensive Urgencies: At risk of short term end organ effect
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Differential Diagnosis Primary Hypertension Long standing, uncontrolled, drug withdrawal Secondary Hypertension A- Increased cardiac output Renal failure with fluid overload Acute renal disease Hyperaldosteronism B-Increased vascular resistance Renovascular hypertension Pheochromocytoma Drugs (sympathomimetics, MOA,etc.) Cerebrovascular (CVA, ICH, SAH)
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Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone Renin produced by the kidneys stimulates the formation of angiotensin II, a potent vasoconstrictor. DDX: Renal Artery Stenosis In turn promotes aldosterone release and consequently the retention of Na+ & water. Both increase in vascular resistance and intravascular volume will increase blood pressure.
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Hyperaldosteronism Na+ retention, water retention, increased CO Hypernatremia & Hypokalemia typical Primary: Adrenal adenoma / hyperplasia Secondary: Cushing’s, exogenous mineralocorticoids
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Pheochromocytoma Tumour in the adrenal gland (medulla) Increase in catecholamines (epi, norepi) Paroxysmal : HTN, HA, palpitations, diaphoresis, anxiety... Not panic attacks! Dx: urine metanephrines & vandillymandelic acid
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Break Down Malignant Hypertension & Emergencies Hypertensive Urgencies Severe Uncontrolled Hypertension
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Malignant Hypertension 1% of patient with primary hypertension will go on to have an accelerated malignant phase Severe Hypertension + End-organ damage Denotes an elevated blood pressure with the presence of papilledema on fundoscopy Grade 3: vascular injury with possible hemorrhages, cotton-wool spots, arterio-venous “nicking”
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End-organ damage CNS: Hypertensive encephalopathy / CVA CVS: Cardiac ischemia / Pulmonary edema / Aortic dissection Renal: ARF Heme: microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
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End-Organ Effects
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Clinical Evaluation Focus on “End-organ compromise”: Headache, Chest pain, Dyspnea,Visual disturbance, Change in mental status / confusion. Potential drug interactions, compliance to RX, etc. Examination: BP both arms with appropriate size cuff, fundoscopy, cardiac & neurological. Work-up: CBC, Lytes, renal function, ECG, urine & CXR. May need CT-head / urine tox screen, etc.
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Regulation Brain Vasculature Normal individual: Adapts with cerebral vasoconstriction if BP rises, and vasodilation if BP drops... Adaptation to a wide range of MAP changes Chronic Hypertensive: Cannot adapt as well, so a rapid drop in BP will cause drop in cerebral perfusion pressure, therefore a risk of cerebral ischemia... Caution with lowering the BP too fast !!!
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Management Goal 1- Decrease MAP 15-20% within 1 hour 2- Further reduction towards 160/100 mmHg within the following 6 hours 3- Gradual reduction to normal range over the next 24 hrs if the patient is stable
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Treatment Vasodilators: Nitroprusside: 0,25 – 10 ug/kg/min perfusion IV Vasodilator: decrease in MAP, afterload, preload & renal blood flow. Adrenergic inhibitors: Labetolol: 20 – 80 mg IV q 10 min, then infusion prn Beta-blocker with an alpha blocking property, reduces PVR with no reflex tachycardia...
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Hypertensive Urgencies Severe elevation in blood pressure that is not causing end-organ damage... Goal Control within 24hrs Consider if Diastolic BP > 115 – 130 Oral regiment may be all that is needed Captopril : 6.25 – 25 mg q 6h Clonidine: 0,1 – 0,2 mg q 12 – 24 h Labetolol : 100 – 200 mg q 12 h
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Severe Uncontrolled Hypertension Classification Stage 1: SBP 120-139 / DBP 80-89 “prehypertension” Stage 2: > 160 / 100 Categorize according to risk profile... Treatment regiment: Diuretics: older patients & African Americans ACE inhibitors: comorbidity, diabetes, etc. Beta-Blockers: cardiovascular disease, Hx: MI & angina
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Follow-up Hypertensive Emergency & Malignant crisis: Admission & IV start of treatment required Needs ICU & monitoring Hypertensive urgencies & Uncontrolled severe hypertension: Oral treament started in ER vs early outpatient, but mandatory close follow-up with primary care MD
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Conclusion Measure blood pressure appropriately Most patient do not require emergent treatment for their hypertension in the ED Severe hypertension = evaluate for end-organ effects Rapid recognition & lowering of BP in hypertensive emergencies Careful of over treating & risk of cerebral ischemia
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