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2002, Number S1

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Arch Cardiol Mex 2002; 72 (S1)

Rational treatment of hypertensive crisis

Juárez HU
Full text How to cite this article

Language: Spanish
References: 5
Page: 95-99
PDF size: 57.37 Kb.


Key words:

Hypertensive crisis, Hypertension, Antihypertension treatment.

ABSTRACT

The Hypertensive Crisis can be divided into Emergencies and Urgencies. Hypertension may be unknown at presentation. The Emergencies have acute or ongoing end-organ damage (neurological, renal or cardiovascular). It is crucial to recognize one from another already at the emergency room evaluation. There is no arbitrary level of blood pressure separating hypertensive emergencies and urgencies. Ideally, this patients must be treated in an intensive care unit. The level to which the blood pressure should be lowered and the election of the treatment, parenteral versus oral, depends on the patient’s general condition and should be individualized. The general recommendation is to reduce the mean arterial pressure gradually in the first 48 hours by no more than 20 percent or to a diastolic blood pressure not lower than 100 mmHg. A relatively asymptomatic patient, even with high diastolic lectures does not need to be treated with parenteral drugs. The patient should be evaluated for possible factors that may have contributed to the high of blood pressure and the progression of hypertension.


REFERENCES

  1. Venkata SR: Immediate Management of Severe Hypertension. Cardiology Clinics 1995; 13: 579-591.

  2. The Sixth Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure. Arch Intern Med 1997; 157: 2413-2446.

  3. Jerjes-Sánchez C, García A: Urgencias Hipertensivas. En Urgencias Cardiovasculares 2001, 2ª Ed, Carlos Jerjes-Sánchez Díaz, Monterrey NL México, 2001.

  4. Zamplaglione B, Pascale C, Marchisio M, Cavallo-Perin P: Hypertensive Urgencies And Emergencies. Prevelence and Clinical Presentation Hypertension 1996; 27: 144-147.

  5. Sanjay KG, Powers JC, Nomeir AM, Fowle K, Kitzman DW, Rankin KM et al: The Pathogenesis of Acute Pulmonary Edema Associated with Hypertension. N Engl J Med 2001; 344: 17-22.




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C?MO CITAR (Vancouver)

Arch Cardiol Mex. 2002;72