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

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Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine
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Page 1: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Hypertensive Emergencies

Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC

Department of Emergency Medicine

Page 2: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

HTN – What’s the Big Deal?

Page 3: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

MCC OBJECTIVES – HTN EM

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

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

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

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

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

Case 5

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

• Q: Dx? Management?

Page 9: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

This Session: HTN EM

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

Define HTN?

Joint National

Commission VIVII 2003

“Pre-HTN”

Page 13: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

HTN Defined:

Page 14: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Primary or Secondary

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

Page 15: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

HTN in the Population vs the ED?

Page 16: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

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

HTN in the ED – a Taxonomy

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

Page 19: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Transient HTN - Examples

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

Page 20: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

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

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

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

Hypertensive Emergency?

Volhard & Fahr, 1914

Page 25: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

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

HTN Emergency

Pathophysiology:

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

Page 28: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Secondary HTN DDx

Page 29: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

HTN – associated Crisis

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

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

Page 38: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

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

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

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

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

Assessment of the ED Hypertensive Pt?

Page 44: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

ED HTN Testing?

Page 46: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Testing for ED HTN:

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

r/o HTN emergency

Page 47: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

ED HTN Management

Page 48: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

Anti-HTN agents in ED: Rosen

Page 50: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

Therapeutic Goals:

• Do no harm!• End cascade• Ensure perfusion

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

– Maintain CPP

Page 52: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Controversies & Issues

1. Few ED studies for HTN

2. Accuracy of BP

3. Missed Dx

4. HTN “Urgency”

5. Epistaxis

6. Should EP’s treat?

7. Best agents

8. What benefit?

Page 53: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

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

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

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

Case 5

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

• Q: Dx? Management?

Page 58: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

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

This Session: HTN EM

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

HTN in the ED – a Taxonomy

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

• 1’, 2’, 3’

Page 61: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

**DO NO HARM**

“Treat patients, not numbers”

Page 62: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

HTN – What’s the Big Deal in the ED?

Page 63: Hypertensive Emergencies Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC Department of Emergency Medicine.

Hypertension in the ED

Jason R. Frank MD MA(Ed) FRCPC

DEM Academic Half Day

December, 2009


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