Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The high prevalence of blood hypertension together with a deficient control, make this one of the frequent causes requiring urgent medical attention. The concepts are reviewed and the treatment of the hypertensive urgency and emergency are described. The term hypertensive emergency means a serious affliction of vital organs caused by the increased of blood pressure, this needing a very close control and parenteral treatment. Hypertensive urgency is a less severe situation, which requires a less aggressive via-oral or sublingual treatment.
...
PMID:[Hypertensive crises and emergencies: the concept and initial management]. 210 71

Hypertensive emergency is a condition in which there is elevation of both systolic and diastolic blood pressure with the presence of acute target organ disease. Hypertensive urgency is a condition where the blood pressure is elevated (diastolic > 120 mmHg) with the absence of acute target organ disease. Hypertensive emergencies are best managed with parenteral drugs and careful intraarterial blood pressure monitoring. Hydralazine has been widely used in treatment of hypertension in eclampsia and preeclampsia, and its safety has been demonstrated in these patients. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP) has the most reliable antihypertensive activity, which begins immediately after its administration and ends when the infusion is stopped. As with diazoxide, it should be used with caution in patients with impaired cerebral flow. SNP is the preferred drug in obtaining controlled hypotension in patients undergoing neurovascular surgery. Intravenous nitroglycerin is useful in patients prone to myocardial ischemia, but should be avoided in patients with increased intracranial pressure. Esmolol is effective in controlling both supraventricular tachyarrhythmias and severe hypertension. Its short onset of duration of action make it useful in the emergent setting, but because of its negative inotropic effect its use should be avoided in patients with low cardiac output. Verapamil should not be used in patients with preexisting conduction abnormalities. Nicardipine is a potent arteriolar vasodilator without a significant direct depressant effect on myocardium. As with other afterload reducing agents, it should not be used in patients with severe aortic stenosis. Because angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors generally cause cerebral vasodilatation, enalaprilat may be particularly beneficial for patients who are at high risk of developing cerebral hypotensive episodes secondary to impaired cerebral circulation. Fenoldopam, a selective post-synaptic dopaminergic receptor (DA1) has been shown to be effective in treating severe hypertension with a lower incidence of side effects than SNP. Hypertensive urgencies can usually be managed with oral agents. Oral nifedipine, captopril, clonidine, labetalol, prazosin, and nimodipine have all been shown to be effective in these situations.
...
PMID:Management of hypertensive urgencies and emergencies. 852 30

Arterial hypertension is the increase in systemic arterial pressure above the values considered normal according to the age of the subject, referenced either to the systolic or diastolic pressure or to both. A diastolic arterial pressure above 120-130 mmHg is called hypertensive crisis, and is classified for its therapeutic management in: Hypertensive emergency that causes damage to target organs, i.e., brain, heart, and kidney, which require an immediate decrease in arterial pressure through the use of i.v. applied medication, although not necessarily down to normal values, and Hypertensive urgency, in which no acute damage is evidenced and treatment is focused on diminishing pressure values within the first 24 hours using oral or sublingual medication. Both conditions require strict surveillance and nursing care starting with the correct procedure to determine blood pressure.
...
PMID:[Nursing management in hypertensive crises]. 1156 40

Hypertension is one of the most common medical problems affecting approximately 1 billion individuals worldwide. Severe hypertension that is a potentially life-threatening condition refers to a hypertensive crisis. Severe hypertension is further classified into hypertensive emergencies or hypertensive urgencies. Hypertensive emergency refers to a severe hypertension that is associated with new or progressive end-organ damage. In these clinical situations, blood pressure should be reduced immediately to prevent or minimize organ dysfunction. Hypertensive urgency refers to severe hypertension without evidence of new or worsening end-organ injury. Blood pressure can be lowered less rapidly in this condition. In this review article it is discussed about clinical assessment of patients under these conditions, evaluating neurological, cardiovascular, renal end-organ damage; how much blood pressure should be lowered, which medication should be used to lower blood pressure, treating hypertensive emergencies and urgencies; and management of specific conditions (acute intracranial events, acute left ventricular dysfunction etc).
...
PMID:[Hypertensive emergencies and urgencies]. 1599 94

The key points of this article are: (1) A hypertensive crisis is present when markedly elevated blood pressure is accompanied by progressive or impending acute target organ damage. (2) Most instances of very elevated blood pressure encountered in the office setting will not be crises and will not require acute reduction of blood pressure. (3) Hypertensive crises are largely preventable and often result from inadequate management of hypertension or poor adherence to therapy. (4) Effective triage of patients into categories of severe hypertension, hypertensive urgency, and hypertensive emergency through an expeditious history, examination, and testing should guide therapy. (5) Hypertensive urgency is managed with oral medications and usually on an outpatient basis; a hypertensive emergency warrants intensive care unit admission and parenteral therapy. (6) Ensuring adequate follow-up after treatment of very elevated blood pressure is a critical step that is often mishandled.
...
PMID:Hypertensive crises. 1871 Jun 65

The prevalence of hypertension among the paediatric population is 1%-2%. The emergency physician should recognise potentially harmful blood pressure (BP) levels and ensure they are adequately treated, in order to avoid life-threatening complications. A hypertensive emergency is a severely elevated BP complicated by target organ dysfunction (cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and/or renal). Hypertensive urgency, however, is a severe elevation in BP without target organ dysfunction. This distinction is critical for the clinical approach. The authors present a case of a severe hypertension due to primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. In this case, the lack of BP measurement in the infant surveillance and the devaluation of an albuminuria detected in a previous routine urine examination, have culminated in a late diagnosis of a severe hypertension, with subsequent effects on target organs.
...
PMID:How important it is to determine the blood pressure in paediatric patients? 2278 90