| Literature DB >> 22577545 |
Dinesh Singh1, Olugbenga Akingbola, Ihor Yosypiv, Samir El-Dahr.
Abstract
Systemic arterial hypertension in children has traditionally been thought to be secondary in origin. Increased incidence of risk factors like obesity, sedentary life-styles, and faulty dietary habits has led to increased prevalence of the primary arterial hypertension (PAH), particularly in adolescent age children. PAH has become a global epidemic worldwide imposing huge economic constraint on health care. Sudden acute increase in systolic and diastolic blood pressure can lead to hypertensive crisis. While it generally pertains to secondary hypertension, occurrence of hypertensive crisis in PAH is however rare in children. Hypertensive crisis has been further subclassified depending on presence or absence of end-organ damage into hypertensive emergency or urgency. Both hypertensive emergencies and urgencies are known to cause significant morbidity and mortality. Increasing awareness among the physicians, targeted at investigation of the pathophysiology of hypertension and its complications, better screening methods, generation, and implementation of novel treatment modalities will impact overall outcomes. In this paper, we discuss the etiology, pathogenesis, and management of hypertensive crisis in children. An extensive database search using keywords was done to obtain the information.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22577545 PMCID: PMC3345222 DOI: 10.1155/2012/420247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
Definitions of normal and elevated blood pressure in children.
| Normal blood pressure | Systolic and diastolic blood pressure below 90th centile |
| Prehypertension | Systolic or diastolic blood pressure above the 90th centile (or 120/80 mmHg), but below the 95th centile |
| Stage I hypertension | Systolic or diastolic blood pressure higher than or equal to the 95th centile, but lower than the 99th centile plus 5 mm Hg |
| Stage II hypertension | Systolic or diastolic BP higher than or equal to the 99th centile plus 5 mm Hg |
Causes of hypertension in children.
| Renal | Congenital dysplastic kidneys |
| Multicystic kidney disease | |
| Polycystic kidney disease | |
| Hydronephrosis | |
| Renal artery stenosis | |
| Renal vein thrombosis | |
| Glomerulonephritis | |
| Acute tubular necrosis | |
| Obstructive uropathy | |
| Wilms tumor | |
| Diabetic nephropathy | |
| Pyelonephritis | |
| Cardiovascular | Coarctation of aorta |
| Takayasu's arteritis | |
| Moyamoya disease | |
| Endocrine | Cushing's syndrome |
| Hyperthyroidism | |
| Hyperparathyroidism | |
| Congenital adrenal hyperplasia | |
| Pheochromocytoma | |
| Medications, drugs, and | Corticosteroids |
| Tacrolimus | |
| Cyclosporine | |
| Erythropoietin | |
| Amphetamines | |
| Oral contraceptives | |
| Anabolic steroids | |
| Phencyclidine | |
| Vitamin D intoxication | |
| Cocaine | |
| Alcohol | |
| Smoking | |
| Lead, thallium, mercury toxicity | |
| Central nervous system | Brain tumors |
| Intracranial hemorrhage | |
| Raised ICP | |
| Autonomic dysfunction | |
| Neuroblastoma | |
| Encephalitis | |
| Autoimmune | Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| Polyarteritis nodosa | |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | |
| Goodpasture's disease | |
| Wegener's Disease | |
| Mixed connective tissue disorders | |
| Miscellaneous | Obesity |
| Pregnancy | |
| IUGR | |
| Umbilical artery catheterization | |
| Hypercalcemia | |
| Hypervolemia | |
| Pain | |
| Drug withdrawal (opiates, clonidine, beta-blocker) | |
| Genetic | Gordon syndrome |
| Liddle's syndrome | |
| Turner's syndrome | |
| William's Syndrome | |
| Friedreich's ataxia | |
| Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome | |
| Tuberous sclerosis complex | |
| Neurofibromatosis | |
| Multiple endocrine neoplasia | |
Figure 1Factors that determine the arterial blood pressure (adapted with permission from [25]).
Figure 2Mechanism of hypertensive crisis.
Age-specific reference values of the LVMI in boys and girls Adapted from [56].
| Age | Sex | LVMI (50th percentile) | LVMI (95th percentile) |
|---|---|---|---|
| >9 years | Boys | 32.0 g/m2.7 | 45.0 g/m2.7 |
| Girls | 27.0 g/m2.7 | 40.0 g/m2.7 | |
| <8 years | Boys | 31.79 g/m2.7 | 44.6 g/m2.7 |
| Girls | 29.71 g/m2.7 | 43.5 g/m2.7 | |
| <6 months | Boys | 56.44 g/m2.7 | 80.1 g/m2.7 |
| Girls | 55.38 g/m2.7 | 85.6 g/m2.7 | |
Wong and Mitchell's classification (adapted from [80]).
| Grading | Retinal signs | Sytemic associations* |
|---|---|---|
| Mild retinopathy | Generalized arteriolar narrowing, focal arteriolar narrowing, arteriovenous nicking, opacity (copper wiring) of arteriolarwall, or a combination of these signs | Modest association with risk of clinical Stroke, subclinical stroke,coronary heart disease, and death |
| Moderate retinopathy | Hemorrhage (blot, dot, or flame shaped), microaneurysm cotton-wool spot, hard exudates or a combination of these signs | Strong association with risk of clinical stroke, subclinical stroke, cognitive decline, and cardiovascular mortality |
| Severe retinopathy | Moderate retinopathy plus optic disc swelling # | Strong association with mortality |
*A modest association is defined as an odds ratio of greater than 1 but less than 2. A strong association is defined as anodds ratio of 2 or greater.
#Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, characterized by unilateral swelling of the optic disk, visual loss, and sectorial visual field loss, should be ruled out.
Initial workup for hypertension.
| Complete blood count |
| Basic metabolic panel including magnesium and phosphate |
| Serum uric acid |
| Fasting lipid profile |
| Fasting blood glucose |
| Urine analysis/culture |
| Urine electrolytes, creatinine, protein |
| Chest X-ray |
| EKG and echocardiogram |
| Renal ultrasound with doppler |
Further workup if needed depending upon the etiology.
| TSH, Free T4. Free T3 |
| Serum cortisol |
| Serum aldosterone |
| Serum renin levels |
| HbA1C |
| 24 hr urinary catecholamine and metanephrine levels |
| (Pheochromocytoma) |
| Serum parathyroid hormone levels |
| Urine and serum toxicology screen |
| Urine pregnancy test |
| CT/MRI scan |
| DMSA/DTPA scan (renal scars) |
| MIBG scan (pheochromocytomas) |
| ANA/ESR/CRP/anti-dsDNA/anti-smith/rheumatoid |
| factor/pANCA/cANCA |
Figure 3Proposed algorithm for the management of hypertensive crisis in children.
Commonly used medications for hypertensive crisis.
| Medication | Dose and Route | Mechanism of action | Duration of action | Adverse effects | Contraindications and precautions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium nitroprusside | 0.5–10 | Acts by releasing nitric oxide | 1-2 minutes | hypotension, palpitations, headache, nausea, vomiting, raised intracranial pressure, thiocyanate and cyanide toxicity, thyroid suppression | Intracranial hypertension |
| Nicardipine | 1–3 | Calcium Channel Blocker | 15–30 minutes; may last for up to 3-4 hrs | flushing, hypotension, palpitations, angina, syncope, peripheral edema, headache, vomiting | requires large fluid volume |
| Esmolol | 125–500 | Beta-blocker | 10–20 minutes | bradycardia, hypotension, bronchoconstriction, skin necrosis after extravasation, Raynaud's phenomenon | Asthma, congestive cardiac failure, cocaine toxicity |
| Labetalol | 0.25–3 mg/kg/hr intravenously | Combined alpha and beta blocker | Up to 4 hrs | bradycardia, hypotension, atrioventricular conduction disturbances, headache, bronchospasm, nasal congestion | |
| Hydralazine | 0.1–0.6 mg/kg/dose every 4–6 hrs intravenously | Direct vasodilatation of arterioles | 1–4 hrs | palpitations, flushing, tachycardia, fever, rash, headache, arthralgia, SLE-like syndrome, positive ANA, peripheral neuropathy | |
| Fenoldopam | 0.8–1.2 | Dopamine D1 receptor agonist | 1 hr | tachycardia, hypotension, flushing, headache, hypokalemia, nasal congestion | |
| Phentolamine | 0.05–0.1 mg/kg/dose Intravenously (maximum of 5 mg per dose) | Alpha-adrenergic blocker | 15–30 minutes | tachycardia, palpitations, hypotension, flushing, headache, nasal congestion, exacerbation of peptic ulcer | |
| Enalaprilat | 5–10 mcg/kg/dose every 8–24 hrs intravenously | Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor | 4–6 hrs | hypotension, hyperkalemia, oliguria, rash, angioedema, agranulocytosis, neutropenia, cough, fatal hepatic necrosis (rare) | patients with supra-renal aortic stenosis and bilateral renal stenosis; most valuable in neonatal hypertension |
| Nifedipine | 0.1–0.25 mg/kg/dose every 4–6 hrs (maximum 10 mg/dose) oral | Calcium channel blocker | 4–8 hrs | Flushing, hypotension, tachycardia, palpitations, syncope, peripheral edema, headache, thrombocytopenia, rash, urticaria, elevated liver enzymes | |
| Clonidine | 0.05–0.1 mg/dose orally | Central alpha-agonist | 6–8 hrs | bradycardia, hypotension, rebound hypertension with abrupt withdrawal, sedation, dry mouth, | Avoid sudden discontinuation |
| Minoxidil | 0.1-0.2 mg/kg/day (maximum 5 mg/day) orally | Hyperpolarization of K+channels resulting in smooth muscle relaxation | Up to 24 hrs | tachycardia, fluid retention, rash, headache, weight gain, pulmonary edema, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, photosensitivity | Pericardial effusion |
| Losartan | dose for less than 6 years is not established; for children >6 years 0.7 mg/kg once daily (maximum dose 100 mg/day) orally | Angiotensin II receptor blocker | 24 hrs | hypotension, chest pain, hyperkalemia, elevation in BUN/Creatinine, headache, fever, syncope, diarrhea, flu-like illness | Patient with suprarenal aortic stenosis and bilateral renal stenosis. |
| Clevidipine | 0.5–3.5 mcg/kg/min intravenously | L-type calcium Channel blocker | up to 15 minutes | Headache, nausea, vomiting, hypotension | Patients with lipid disorders and egg and soy protein allergies |