Treatment Pathway

Treatment of Hypertensive Emergency

A hypertensive emergency is a severe elevation in blood pressure (typically above 180/120 mmHg) with acute end-organ damage, including hypertensive encephalopathy, acute heart failure, acute coronary syndrome, or aortic dissection. It requires immediate blood pressure reduction in an intensive care setting.

NICE (UK)WHO Clinical GuidelinesAAFP (American Academy of Family Physicians)BMJ Best Practice
SymptomsCausesTreatmentWhen to See a DoctorRelated Questions

A hypertensive emergency is a severe elevation in blood pressure (typically above 180/120 mmHg) with acute end-organ damage, including hypertensive encephalopathy, acute heart failure, acute coronary syndrome, or aortic dissection. It requires immediate blood pressure reduction in an intensive care setting.

First-Line Treatment Principles

Non-Pharmacological Management

Treatment Goals

🎯Symptom control and quality-of-life improvement
🎯Prevention of complications and disease progression
🎯Minimise treatment burden and adverse effects
🎯Patient-centred shared decision making

Monitoring Parameters

Escalation Criteria

Special Populations

Elderly: polypharmacy risk, renal/hepatic dose adjustments, falls risk assessment
Pregnancy: check safety of all medications; specialist review if on multiple agents
Children: weight-appropriate dosing; developmental monitoring

Clinical Insights

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