A hypertensive emergency is defined as a severe elevation in blood pressure (typically ≥180/120 mm Hg) associated with acute target-organ damage such as encephalopathy, myocardial infarction, pulmonary edema, aortic dissection, or acute renal failure. Unlike hypertensive urgency, it requires immediate blood pressure reduction with intravenous (IV) medications to limit morbidity and mortality.
By BP Measurement (AHA/ACC Guidelines):
By Target-Organ Involvement:
Acute and severe hypertension overwhelms autoregulatory mechanisms in vital organs, causing endothelial injury, increased vascular permeability, fibrinoid necrosis, and microvascular thrombosis. This leads to acute ischemia or hemorrhage in critical tissues, especially the brain, heart, and kidneys.
Depends on the affected organ:
Drug | Use Case | Notes |
Nicardipine | Stroke, general use | Titrate slowly |
Labetalol | Stroke, eclampsia, dissection | Avoid in asthma, bradycardia |
Esmolol | Aortic dissection | Rapid onset, short half-life |
Nitroprusside | Heart failure, dissection | Risk of cyanide toxicity |
Nitroglycerin | ACS, pulmonary edema | Venodilator; avoid in ICP elevation |
Hydralazine | Eclampsia | Can cause reflex tachycardia |
Phentolamine | Pheochromocytoma, cocaine use | Alpha-blockade essential |
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