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Hypertensive Emergencies

Hypertensive Emergencies. Trevor Langhan PGY-3 November 10, 2005. Objectives. Discuss cases of hypertension in ED How to lower BP and when not to do it How low is too low? Or too fast?. alpha-receptor Vasoconstriction iris dilation intestinal relaxation intestinal sphincter contraction

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Hypertensive Emergencies

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  1. Hypertensive Emergencies Trevor Langhan PGY-3 November 10, 2005

  2. Objectives • Discuss cases of hypertension in ED • How to lower BP and when not to do it • How low is too low? Or too fast?

  3. alpha-receptor Vasoconstriction iris dilation intestinal relaxation intestinal sphinctercontraction bladder sphincter contraction beta-receptor vasodilation (b2) cardioacceleration (b1) intestinal relaxation (b2) uterus relaxation(b2) bronchodilation (b2) Receptor sites

  4. quiz

  5. PRO Vasodilator Direct effect on smooth muscle Dose related BP reduction Drug of choice for most HTN emergencies Rapid onset Short duration CON Increase ICP Metabolized to thiocyanate by KD cyanide can build up ARF and prolonged use Avoid in pregnancy Must be IV Unstable in UV light Must be wrapped Supine to prevent orthostasis S/E due to decreased BP and vasodilation Nitroprusside

  6. PRO Peripheral dopamine agonist Improves renal function Rapid action Does not cross blood brain barrier Hypotension less often CON Tachycardia, flushing and h/a may occur Fenoldopam

  7. PRO Vasodilating agent venous Decreases LVEDP Reduces BP by decreasing preload and CO Sublingual or IV CON Limit to pts with cardiac ischemia or pulmonary edema Hypotension with pts who have RV dysfunction nitroglycerin

  8. PRO Direct arterial vasodilator Historically used ++ in PIH and eclampsia CON Reflex tachycardia May provoke angina Flushing, n/v, h/a Chronic use results in lupus like syndrome hydralazine

  9. PRO Selective alpha1 and non-selective beta blocker IV or oral No reflex tachycardia Less uncontrolled drops in BP May not need ICU Good for aortic dissection or cardiac ischemia CON IV use has deep orthostasis Supine post admin x 2-3 hours No effect on renal or cerebral blood flow Contraindicated: Heart block CHF Asthma pheo Beta-blockers - labetalol

  10. PRO Ultra short acting Selective beta1 Little BP effects Good for reflex tachy CON Thrombophlebitis Tissue necrosis Contraindicated: Heart block CHF Asthma Pheo cocaine Beta-blockers - esmolol

  11. PRO Alpha-blocker Use in catecholamine HTN crisis: Pheo MAOI crisis cocaine CON Reflex tachycardia alpha-blockers - phentolamine

  12. PRO IV CCB Titratable Less negative inotropy Less tachycardia Mostly vasodilator Safe in pregnancy CON Caution in poor LV fxn Liver metabolism H/a, flushing, tachycardia nicardipine

  13. PRO IV ace-I Infrequent hypotension Increasing evidence for use in cardiac Remodeling CON Not dose related May precipitate ischemia if MAP drop too steep Angioedema Cough ARF Toxic in 1st trimester Enalaprilat/enalipril

  14. quiz - fin

  15. Hypertension • What is normal BP? • SBP < 140 • DBP < 90 • What is hypertension? • SBP >160 • DBP >100 • Anything in between GRAY.

  16. Hypertension • Possible cardiovascular causes of increased BP: • Loss of vessel elasticity with age • Coarctation of aorta • Delayed femoral pulses • Hypertensive upper extremities • Bruit in upper back

  17. Hypertension • Endocrine causes for elevated BP: • Pheo • Excess steroids • Often iatrogenic • Cushings • Look for hypokalemia • Volume overload from Na retention

  18. Hypertension • Other causes include: • Withdrawal of sedative drugs • EtOH, benzo • Tyramine toxicity in MAO-I patients • Aortic dissection • Sympathomimmetic drug intoxication • Withdrawal of clonidine or beta blocking agents • Reno-vascular disease • Renin-angiotensin system abnormality

  19. Hypertension • HTN will present to the ED in a variety of ways: • 1. Hypertensive crisis/emergency • 2. Hypertensive urgency • 3. Mild hypertension without EOD • 4. Transient hypertension

  20. Malignant hypertension • Malignant hypertension: Term no-longer used • Prognosis of this d/o has changed much since first introduced in 1928 • 1-2/100 000 people in developed countries • 1 year survival has increased • <22% in 1939 – 90 % in recent series • Only age and renal function at presentation are independent markers of prognosis

  21. Hypertensive Emergency • Also called hypertensive crisis • Elevated blood pressure • signs of acute damage to target organs • Brain • Eyes • Heart • kidneys

  22. Hypertensive Emergency • Malignant hypertension • Hypertensive encephalopathy • Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia • Acute renal failure • Eclampsia/preeclampsia • Aortic dissection • HTN in setting of: • MI • Left ventricular failure • Bleeding • Thrombolytic therapy

  23. Hypertensive Urgency • Blood pressure elevation is an imminent risk for target-organ damage • No acute end organ damage but risk is high if BP elevation continues • Relative increase in BP more important than specific numbers

  24. Hypertensive Emergency • Rosen’s states: • True medical emergencies • Immediate reduction of BP in 1 hour

  25. Pathophysiology • Mild to moderate increase in BP leads to initial vasoconstriction • “autoregulation” • Maintains perfusion at relatively stable level • Prevents increased pressure from being transmitted downstream to smaller vessels • As BP further increases, autoregulation fails • Elevated BP disrupts vasc endothelium, causing narrowing

  26. Pathophysiology • Chronic increase in BP causes arteriolar hypertrophy • Will decrease the amount of pressure passed on to more distal vessels • Chronically hypertense people need diastolic BP’s >130 for symptoms • Normotensive people can have hypertensive crisis at DBP > 100

  27. Case 1 • 45 y male c/o 12 hour history of SOBOE, mild chest heaviness • Vomiting, drowsy • Bi-frontal headache • Blurred vision both eyes • BP 240/150, HR 102, RR 16, sats 95%

  28. Case 1 • PMHx: ? HTN, was on a “water pill” many years ago. No DM, no CAD, generally healthy • Labs normal, except Creat: 150 • Inx? DDx? Mgnt?

  29. Hypertensive Emergency

  30. Hypertensive Emergency

  31. Hypertensive Encephalopathy • Cerebral edema: • breakthrough hyper-perfusion from severe and sudden increase BP • BP has exceeded the capacity of autoregulation • vessels that can’t accommodate the pressure • leakage and edema (fibrinoid necrosis) • Autoregulation must be considered during treatment • Hypertrophied vessels can’t vasodilate • caution with lowering blood pressure • Avoid relative hypoperfusion

  32. Hypertensive Encephalopathy • True medical emergency • Is an acute presentation, but reversible • Progression of untreated cerebral edema leads to coma and death • Admission and invasive BP monitoring is the recommended mainstay of therapy

  33. Hypertensive Encephalopathy • Test: • 1) BP 140/90 • What is MAP? • What is goal MAP • 2) BP 240/140 • What is MAP? • What is goal MAP? Approx- 110 Goal – 85 Approx – 175 Goal - 130

  34. Hypertensive Encephalopathy • First hour goals: • Reduce MAP by 25% • Keeping DBP > 110 mmHg • Goal at 4-6 hours: • Reduction to pt’s normal BP • What agents? • Nitroprusside - titratable, easy off, potential toxicity • labetalol – alpha and beta blocker

  35. Case 2 • 67 y female known CAD, DM, smoker, atrial fib. • Presents with c/o weakness left side • BP 160/100, HR 94, RR 14, sats 99% • O/E left facial droop, markedly weak left upper/lower extremity • EKG: a fib, nil acute • Chest exam unremarkable

  36. Case 2 • Management? • How do you treat her elevated BP?

  37. Stroke syndromes • Most patients with this presentation are ischemic strokes (85%) not hemorrhagic • Likely don’t have acutely elevated BP • May have mild to moderate BP elevation • ***CAUTION*** • lowering BP as watershed area sensitive to hypoperfusion • Lowering BP may worsen ischemic brain injury

  38. Stroke syndromes • Rarely stoke with grossly elevated DBP > 140 • But a contraindication to tPA is a BP >185/110 • Patients receiving reperfusion therapy may require a lowering of BP • Titrate labetalol slowly to achieve decrease in MAP by a max of 20%

  39. Stroke syndromes • What if on CT it is an ICH? • Little data about acute BP lowering in ICH • Many centers lower MAP 20% • May be a negative thing to do • CPP depends on BP in setting of increased ICP • Most ICHs have elevations of ICP • If lowering is done, use an agent that dose not vasodilate • Avoid nitrates • Labetolol is best (ACE-I have some benefit)

  40. Case 3 • 55 year male known LV dysfunction (EF 30%) • Chronic HTN • On low dose lasix and daily asa, metoprolol • Was off his low Na+ diet over all-inclusive vacation to Mexico • Weighs 8 pounds more than usual • Legs swollen • HR 95, BP 190/120, sats 89%, RR 25

  41. Case 3 • Chronic pulmonary edema results in increased PVR and HTN • Acute decompensation in setting of CHF can have marked increase in BP due to catecholamines

  42. Case 3 • Standard treatment of CHF: • Morphine • Oxygen • Nitrates (nitroprusside better than NTG) • lasix • Improving evidence for use of ACE-I in setting of acute LV dysfunction and CHF • Be on lookout for stroke syndrome as result of acutely lowered BP in someone chronically HTN

  43. Case 4 • 32 y female awaiting “sweatgland” surgery from plastics for hyperhydrosis, c/o H/A, palpitations • BP 170/90, HR 150 sinus, RR 18 • Otherwise healthy • Treatment: • Nitroprusside if emergency • Phentolamine – 1-5 mg IV boluses (alpha-block) • Followed by beta-blockade

  44. Case 4 • Pheochromocytoma • Rare tumor – 0.2% of pts with essential HTN • Episodic H/A, tachycardia, sweating, HTN • Tumor secreting norepinephrine and epinephrine • Diagnosis: • Radiographic • measurement of urinary and plasma levels of catecholamines and metabolites

  45. Case 5 Hypertension in pregnancy • 25 y G2P1, LMP 6 months ago • When do you treat HTN in pregnancy? • SBP > 160 • Treat to goal of 140-155 • 5-10% of all pregnancies • Any acute DBP elevation >100 is a true HTN emergency • Eclampsia and preeclampsia may occur without extreme elevation of BP • Treatment: • Prevention and control of seizures • Early obs consult

  46. Ecclampsia Dx: • Elevated BP in late 2nd or 3rd trimester • SBP > 140, DBP >90 • Elevated urine proteins • Pedal edema • No mortality benefit treating SBP 140-170 • Expert consensus that SBP > 160 need treatment • Methyldopa, CCB, acute episodes with lobetolol or hydralazine • Eclampsia seizure risk peaks during delivery and 24-48 hours after – prevention of seizures with prophylaxis recommended

  47. Case 6 • 33 year male stock broker. Snorted a “couple of rails” of cocaine ½ hour ago. • Presents with crushing retrosternal chest pain, diaphoresis and H/A • BP 190/100, HR 130, RR 28, sats 96% • EKG ST segment elevation V1-V3 • Nurse asks “what do you want to give?”

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