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#20: Hypertensive urgency and severe hypertension

#20: Hypertensive urgency and severe hypertension

FromThe Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast


#20: Hypertensive urgency and severe hypertension

FromThe Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast

ratings:
Length:
32 minutes
Released:
Dec 5, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Summary: On this episode we’ll teach you to dominate hypertensive urgency and severe hypertension (HTN) in the clinic, the ER, or on the hospital wards. The Curbsiders offer you this delicious serving of knowledge food so you can manage high blood pressure (BP) without making the same egregious errors that we made during our more formative years. Of note, The Curbsiders are guestless for this episode. Guestless? Is that a word? Our guest for this episode was supposed to be Dr. Wallace Johnson, a Cardiologist, and expert on HTN from the University of Maryland. He did a fantastic job, but, unfortunately, technical difficulties caused us to lose any useable audio. Our sincerest gratitude and deepest apologies to Dr. Johnson. Nevertheless, we pressed on and used one of our own, the illustrious Dr. Paul Williams, as our expert guest. Clinical Pearls: Hypertensive crisis is divided into hypertensive emergency and hypertensive urgency. “Emergency” needs IV therapy NOW “Urgency” needs increased oral therapy over next 24-72 hours History, physical exam, and familiarity with the patient are key for triage (e.g. verify BP readings, assess compliance, etc.) Severe HTN and hypertensive urgency can often be treated in the outpatient setting IV agents are not indicated outside of true hypertensive emergency (i.e. objective end organ damage) We recommend increasing dose or frequency of existing BP meds as 1st line (better long-term solution) Intermittent dosing of oral labetalol, clonidine, and captopril can be considered as 2nd line (short-term solution) Rule out uncontrolled pain, volume overload, alcohol withdrawal, illicit drug, and missed medications as cause of severe HTN Evidence from observational studies suggests that headaches are NOT caused by HTN Untreated severe HTN was historically fatal in months to years prior to development of antihypertensives Goal: Listeners will become proficient in the appraisal of severe hypertension/ hypertensive urgency and employ safe and practical management strategies. Learning objectives: By the end of this podcast listeners will: Confidently triage patients with severe hypertension and provide appropriate disposition in a variety of settings Employ a safe and common sense approach to the treatment of severe hypertension in the clinic, the ER, or on the wards Be familiar with pharmacologic management of severe hypertension in a variety of settings Recognize the common causes of severe blood pressure elevation in the inpatient setting Counsel patients on the relationship of severe hypertension and headache Recall the natural history of untreated severe hypertension Disclosures: The Curbsiders report no relevant financial disclosures, but hope to become successful enough to display an absurd list of disclosures in the future. Time Stamps 0:00 Hook 0:26 Intro 1:38 Rapid fire questions 03:45 Triage of patient with severe HTN 05:05 Case example HTN in office 07:05 Does HTN cause a headache? 08:30 Workup of severe HTN in the office 10:20 Stuart discusses HTN and headaches 11:30 In office treatment of blood pressure 14:28 Recap 15:50 Stuart discuss HTN emergency at normal BP 17:00 Acute treatment of HTN in ER 18:10 Approach to the inpatient with HTN 20:50 Choice of agent for inpatient HTN 23:23 Italian study of HTN crisis in the ER 24:20 Outcomes in asymptomatic patients with severe HTN 26:15 Sleep apnea and HTN 27:10 Natural history of untreated severe HTN 29:10 Take home points 30:50 Outro Links from the show: Blood Meridian by Cormack McCarthy Horton Hears a Who by Dr. Seuss ASCVD risk calculator http://tools.acc.org/ASCVD-Risk-Estimator/ Epocrates. Download it here Dr. Johnson’s excellent review article on hypertensive crisis https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23102030 Another great review with tables on oral drug therapy and dosing for hypertensive crisis https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18710665 Fascinating article from 1928 on The Syndrome of Malignant Hypertension* http://archinte.
Released:
Dec 5, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Supercharge your learning and enhance your practice with this Internal Medicine Podcast featuring board certified Internists as they interview the experts to bring you clinical pearls, practice changing knowledge and a healthy dose of humor. Doctors Matthew Watto, Stuart Brigham, Paul Williams and friends (a national network of students, residents and clinician educators) deliver a little knowledge food for your brain hole. Yummy! No boring lectures here, just high value content and bad puns. Fantastic podcast for Internal Medicine, Family Medicine, Primary Care, and Hospital Medicine. Topics include: heart disease, obesity, diabetes, syncope, migraines, fibromyalgia, hypertension, cholesterol, osteoporosis, insomnia, dementia, HFpEF, DVT, pulmonary embolism and more!