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Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine

Hypertensive Emergencies

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Hypertensive Emergencies. Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine. HTN – What’s the Big Deal?. KEY objectives: Differentiate malignant HTN from secondary conditions Conduct initial HTN lowering treatment. OBJECTIVES: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Hypertensive Emergencies

Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPCDepartment of Emergency Medicine

Page 2: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN – What’s the Big Deal?

Page 3: Hypertensive  Emergencies

MCC OBJECTIVES – HTN EMKEY objectives:• Differentiate malignant HTN

from secondary conditions• Conduct initial HTN lowering

treatment

OBJECTIVES:• Differentiate non-localizing

neurologic symptoms• Determine presence of other

hypertensive emergencies• Interpret clinical & lab

findings• Conduct an effective

management plan, including specific Rx

Page 4: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 1

• 50 woman sent in by community MD & pharmacist for “HTN emergency”

• Pharmacy BP = 190/90• Extremely worried,

otherwise well• Q: What is the clinical

definition of HTN?

Page 5: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 2

• 65 male drove in from cottage• Feeling unwell• Flagged at triage with BP

200/100• Forgot BP meds at home…

missed 3 days

• Q: What is a “hypertensive urgency”?

Page 6: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 3

• 72 male with chronic HTN, PAFib, and arthritis.

• Referred to CDU with elev BP “for observation”.

• 180/115 at rest• Progressive SOB over the am.

• Q: What is the definition of a “hypertensive emergency”?

Page 7: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 4

• 45 CEO of an IT firm• Presents with cp, SOB,

intense anxiety• Sweating, tacky, BP

200/120• Admits to cocaine

• Q: Management?

Page 8: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 5• 33 F 1 week post-partum• Epigastric pain• Seizure• BP 160/95, P90, T37.2

• Q: Dx? Management?

Page 9: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 6

• 60 M presents with tearing RSCP

• Rad to back• Assoc with L headache

and R leg weakness• BP 190/100, P 95

• Q. Management?

Page 10: Hypertensive  Emergencies

This Session: HTN EM1. Define HTN

2. Classify HTN

3. Provide a DDx for the acutely hypertensive patient, including 2ndary causes

4. Describe the findings of a patient with a HTN emergency

5. Describe high-utility tests for HTN EM

6. Describe the management of each of the categories of HTN

7. Describe at least 2 controversies in the management of HTN EM

Page 12: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Define HTN?Joint National

Commission VIVII 2003

“Pre-HTN”

Page 13: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN Defined:

Page 14: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Primary or Secondary• Majority (90-95%) essential HTN• Of Secondary: ½ have a potentially curable cause

Page 15: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN in the Population vs the ED?

Page 16: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN in the Population vs the ED?

• Primary HTN– Chronic– “Essential”– >95%– >25% of NA pop’n– 50% adhere to Rx– 75% not optimal– More un-Dx

• Pre-HTN

Page 17: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Thinking about a HTN Definitions:

• Pre-HTN……………........• Primary chronic………….• Transient ………………..• Secondary……………….• “Tertiary” ...………………

• Malignant………….........• Also: accelerated, severe, crisis,

etc

• 130-139/80-89• >140/90• white coat, anxiety, pain, etc• Pathologic organ cause• Iatrogenic, ingestion,

withdrawal, etc • Bad (enceph & retinal)

Page 18: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN in the ED – a Taxonomy

• Transient HTN• Chronic HTN• HTN Urgency• HTN Emergency• HTN-associated Crisis

Page 19: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Transient HTN - Examples

• Anxiety• Pain• EtOH-withdrawal• White-coat

Page 20: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN “Urgency”

• HTN “threatening” end organ damage• “End organs at risk”

• Various definitions: DBP>110, DBP>115, DBP>120

• Goal: lower BP over hours; rarely requires treatment

• Concern: bogus category, may lead to harm (eg CVAs)-see Gallagher 2003

Page 21: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Malignant Hypertension

Severe HTN

& Evidence of acute end-organ damage

• Diastolic BP usually > 130 mm Hg or MAP > 160• Relative rise much more important than #• Affects 1% of hypertensive patients

Page 22: Hypertensive  Emergencies

MAP is What Matters:• At normal resting heart rates MAP can be approximated using

the more easily measured systolic and diastolic pressures, SP and DP

• or equivalently

• or equivalently

• where PP is the pulse pressure: SP − DP-Wikipedia

Page 23: Hypertensive  Emergencies

“The Delta Diastolic Threatens Death”

The change in DBP accounts for most of the change in MAP

“∆ DBP is where it is at”

(for the ED setting)

Page 24: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Hypertensive Emergency?

Volhard & Fahr, 1914

Page 25: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN Emergency

Acute elevation in MAP causing end organ damage:• ARF• CHF, ACS• Encephalopathy (>160 MAP)• CVA, ICH• Hemolysis• Retinal

– All have DBP >120…Mortality ~90% historically

Page 26: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN Emergency – Organ Incidence?

Acute elevation in MAP causing end organ damage:• CVA (24.5%)• CHF (22.5%)• Encephalopathy (16.3%)• ACS (12%)• ICH (4.5%)• ARF (?)• Hemolysis (?)• Retinal (?)

From Zampaglione, 1996

Page 27: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN Emergency

Pathophysiology:

• Failure of autoreg• Rapid rise in SVR• Endothelial injury• Arteriolar necrosis• Ischemia• …Cascade

Page 28: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Secondary HTN DDx

Page 29: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Secondary HTN

Increased CO• RF with fluid

overload• Acute renal disease• Hyperaldosteronism• Cushing’s syndrome• Coarctation of the

Aorta

Increased vascular resistance

• Renal Artery Stenosis• Pheochromocytoma• Drugs• Cerebrovascular (CVA,

ICH, SAH)

Page 30: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Renal Artery Stenosis• most common treatable cause (1-5%)• compromised renal perfusion => activation of RAA • 2 pt groups:

– Elderly with atherosclerotic disease– Young females with fibromuscular dysplasia

• Clinical: abdo bruit (40-80%), retinopathy, HTN resistant to Rx, hypoK

Page 31: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Aldosteronism

• Uncommon but treatable• Na retention, volume expansion, increased CO• Hypernatremia & Hypokalemia typical• Primary: Adrenal adenoma, hyperplasia• Secondary: Cushing’s, CAH, exogenous

mineralcorticoids

Page 32: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Pheochromocytoma

• Tumour, usually in adrenal medulla• Produces xs catecholamines (epi, NE)• Paroxysmal HTN…difficult to recognize• Episodic HTN, HA, palpitations, diaphoresis, anxiety…

not a panic attack!• Easy to diagnose: elevated urinary catecholamines,

metanephrines, vandillylmandelic acid

Page 33: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Coarctation of the Aorta• Rare but early surgical intervention can improve

prognosis• Clinical triad:

1) upper extremity HTN2) systolic murmur over back3) delayed femoral pulses

Page 34: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Drugs

• Cocaine, amphetamines• ETOH withdrawal• Withdrawal from clonidine, beta blocker• MAOI + tyramine containing foods or certain Rx

(meperidine, TCA, ephedrine)– Tyramine causes release of NE– Usually rapidly destroyed by MAO

Page 35: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Secondary HTN• Neuro:– Autonomic dysfunction (eg GBS, cord injuries)– CNS insult (HI, ICH)

• Renal:– Renovascular stenosis– Renal disease (eg GN, Chronic pyelo)

• Endocrine:– Pituitary tumours / ectopic ACTH– Pheochromocytoma; renin tumours; Hyperaldosteronism (egCushings)– Hyper & hypo thyroid & thyroid storm

• Vascular:– Coarctation of the Ao– Vasculitis; Collagen-vascular (eg Scleroderma)– Pre-/Eclampsia

• Sleep apnea

Page 36: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Iatrogenic / Lifestyle HTN (aka “tertiary”)

Too Much:• Tyramine-MAOI• Glucocorticoids• Thyroxine• Fluid overload• NSAIDS• Sympathomimetics

Too Little:• Clonidine withdrawal• Anti-HTN withdrawal• EtOH withdrawal

Page 37: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN – associated Crisis

• HTN is a critical issue relating to an emergency Dx:

• Aortic Dissection• Pre/Eclampsia• ICH• CVA• Cocaine

Page 38: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN in the ED – a Taxonomy 2

• Pre-HTN• Chronic HTN• Transient HTN• HTN Emergency• HTN-associated Crisis

• 1’, 2’, 3’

Page 39: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 1

• 50 yo woman sent in by community MD & pharmacist for “HTN emergency”

• Pharmacy BP = 190/90

• Extremely worried, otherwise well

Page 40: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 2

• 65 male drove in from cottage

• Feeling unwell• Flagged at triage

with BP 200/100• Forgot BP meds at

home…missed 3 days

Page 41: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 3

• 72 yo male with chronic HTN, PAFib, and arthritis.

• Referred to CDU with elev BP “for observation”.

• 180/115 at rest• Progressive SOB

over the am.

Page 42: Hypertensive  Emergencies

DDx for the ED Hypertensive Patient

• Transient: pain, anxiety, sympathetic outflow• Chronic essential: poorly controlled• Chronic secondary: renovasc, pyelo, GN, pituitary, thyroid• Iatrogenic: fluid overload, pressors• OD/Ingestion: tyramine-MAOI, cocaine, amphetamines, • HTN-associated crises: Ao dissection, PIH, ICH, CVA, etc• HTN emergencies: CNS, ACS, CHF, retinal, RBCs

Page 43: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Assessment of the ED Hypertensive Pt?

Page 44: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Assessing the HTN Patient in the ED:

• Hx HTN & Tx• Rx use• PMHx• Symptoms of end-

organ damage• Pain

• Confirm BP • Good BP reading• End-organ damage• Heart sounds• Pulses• Fundoscopy

Page 45: Hypertensive  Emergencies

ED HTN Testing?

Page 46: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Testing for ED HTN:

• CBC, 7• EKG• CXR• Urine• CT head prn

r/o HTN emergency

Page 47: Hypertensive  Emergencies

ED HTN Management

Page 48: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN Management by Category:• Pre-HTN………………

• Chronic HTN………….

• Transient HTN………..

• HTN Emergency…......

• HTN-associated Crisis.

• Advise

• Advise, note, po Rx prn

• Assess, observe, benzo prn

• Assess, lower 20% ~1 hour

• Dx-specific tx

Page 49: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Anti-HTN agents in ED: Rosen

Page 50: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Key Agents for Canadian EM Practice:

• Metoprolol• Labetolol• Nitroglycerine

Also:• Nitroprusside• Magnesium• Esmolol• Phentolamine• Ramipril

• 25-100 po; 5 – 20 IV• 20 mg bolus IV to max 300 mg• 5-100 ug/min

• 0.25-10 ug/kg/min [Lancet, 1949]• 2-6g, then 2g/hr infusion• Load 500ug/kg/ 1min, then 50ug/kg/min, titrate• 5-10 mg/min• 2.5-5 mg po

Page 51: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Therapeutic Goals:• Do no harm!• End cascade• Ensure perfusion

– Risk further ischemia when BP dropped below >20% preTx

– Maintain CPP

Page 52: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Controversies & Issues

1. Few ED studies for HTN2. Accuracy of BP3. Missed Dx4. HTN “Urgency”5. Epistaxis6. Should EP’s treat?7. Best agents8. What benefit?

Page 53: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 1

• 50 yo woman sent in by community MD & pharmacist for “HTN emergency”

• Pharmacy BP = 190/90• Extremely worried,

otherwise well• Q: What is the clinical

definition of HTN?

Page 54: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 2

• 65 male drove in from cottage• Feeling unwell• Flagged at triage with BP

200/100• Forgot BP meds at home…

missed 3 days

• Q: What is a “hypertensive urgency”?

Page 55: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 3

• 72 yo male with chronic HTN, PAFib, and arthritis.

• Referred to CDU with elev BP “for observation”.

• 180/115 at rest• Progressive SOB over the am.

• Q: What is the definition of a “hypertensive emergency”?

Page 56: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 4

• 45 yo CEO of an IT firm• Presents with cp, SOB,

intense anxiety• Sweating, tacky, BP

200/120• Admits to cocaine

• Q: Management?

Page 57: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 5• 33 F 1 week post-partum• Epigastric pain• Seizure• BP 160/95, P90, T37.2

• Q: Dx? Management?

Page 58: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Case 6

• 60 M presents with tearing RSCP

• Rad to back• Assoc with L headache

and R leg weakness• BP 190/100, P 95

• Q. Management?

Page 59: Hypertensive  Emergencies

This Session: HTN EM1. Define HTN

2. Classify HTN in the ED setting

3. Provide a DDx for the acutely hypertensive ED patient, including 2ndary causes

4. Describe the findings of a patient with a HTN emergency

5. Describe high-utility tests for HTN in the ED

6. Describe the management of each of the categories of HTN in the ED

7. Describe at least 2 controversies in the management of HTN in the ED

Page 60: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN in the ED – a Taxonomy

• Pre-HTN• Chronic HTN• Transient HTN• HTN Emergency• HTN-associated Crisis

• 1’, 2’, 3’

Page 61: Hypertensive  Emergencies

**DO NO HARM**

“Treat patients, not numbers”

Page 62: Hypertensive  Emergencies

HTN – What’s the Big Deal in the ED?

Page 63: Hypertensive  Emergencies

Hypertension in the ED

Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPCDEM Academic Half Day

December, 2009