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Published byGwen Long Modified over 9 years ago
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Hypertension
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Phone Call Why is patient in hospital? Is patient pregnant (preeclampsia)? How high is BP and what has it been previously?
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Phone Call Does the patient have symptoms of hypertensive emergency? –Chest/back pain: aortic dissection –Chest pain: MI –SOB: PE –Headache, neck stiffness: subarachnoid hemorrhage –HA, vomit, confusion, seizure: hypertensive encephalopathy What antihypertensive has the patient been on?
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Thoughts Benign Hypertensive urgency: SBP>210 or DBP>120 with no end organ damage Hypertensive emergency: end organ damage Life threatening: –Eclampsia –Aortic dissection –Pulmonary edema –MI –Hypertensive encephalopathy
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Bedside Evaluation Vitals –BP in both arms: if atherosclerosis artifactually low, aortic dissection –HR: tachycardia in catecholamine crisis, bradycardia in increased intracranial pressure Symptoms of hypertensive emergency?
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Bedside Evaluation HEENT: arteriolar narrowing, hemorrhages, papilledema Lung: crackles, pleural effusions CV: elevated JVP, S3 Neuro: confusion, delirium, agitation, focal deficits
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Management Essential hypertension: –In asymptomatic patient no acute lowering of BP needed Hypertensive urgency: –Decrease MAP 25% in hours (can use PO meds) Hypertensive emergency: –Call your senior-transfer pt to ICU/CCU –Decrease MAP 25% in minutes to 2 hours using IV agents
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Management AgentDose *Nitroprusside 0.25-10 microgram/kg/min Nitroglycerine 17-1000 micrograms/min Labetalol 20-80mg bolus q 10 min or 0.5-2 mg/min Hydralazine 10-20mg q 20-30 min Phentolamine 5-15 mg q 5-15 min IV Agents *Cyanide toxicity-ms change,lactic acidosis, death AgentDose Captopril12.5-50 mg Labetalol200-1200mg Clonidine0.2 mg load, 0.1 mg qh Hydralazine10-25 mg PO Agents
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