| Literature DB >> 23806076 |
Diamantino Ribeiro Salgado1, Eliezer Silva, Jean-Louis Vincent.
Abstract
Severe acute arterial hypertension can be associated with significant morbidity and mortality. After excluding a reversible etiology, choice of therapeutic intervention should be based on evaluation of a number of factors, such as age, comorbidities, and other ongoing therapies. A rational pathophysiological approach should then be applied that integrates the effects of the drug on blood volume, vascular tone, and other determinants of cardiac output. Vasodilators, calcium channel blockers, and beta-blocking agents can all decrease arterial pressure but by totally different modes of action, which may be appropriate or contraindicated in individual patients. There is no preferred agent for all situations, although some drugs may have a more attractive profile than others, with rapid onset action, short half-life, and fewer adverse reactions. In this review, we focus on the main mechanisms underlying severe hypertension in the critically ill and how using a pathophysiological approach can help the intensivist decide on treatment options.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23806076 PMCID: PMC3704960 DOI: 10.1186/2110-5820-3-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Most frequent target organs damaged during acute hypertensive crises
| Cardiovascular | Acute coronary syndromes |
| Heart failure and pulmonary edema | |
| Aortic dissection | |
| Central nervous system | Stroke or transient ischemic attack |
| Acute encephalopathy/cerebral edema | |
| Retinal hemorrhage | |
| Renal | Acute renal failure |
Principal causes of acute systemic arterial hypertension in critically ill patients
| Discontinuation of antihypertensive drugs | |
| Central Nervous System | Pain |
| | Anxiety and stress |
| | Delirium |
| | Withdrawal syndromes |
| | Intracranial hypertension |
| Renal system | Urinary retention |
| | Renal failure |
| | Hypervolemia |
| Respiratory system | Respiratory distress – Hypoxemia, hypercapnia |
| Metabolic | Hypoglycemia |
| | Steroid administration |
| | Pheochromocytoma |
| | Cushing syndrome |
| Intoxication, substance abuse and overdose (cocaine, phencyclidine, amphetamines) |
Main cardiovascular effects of the different antihypertensive drugs
| | | | | |
| Nitroglycerin | + | 0 | _ _ | _ |
| Nitroprusside | + | 0 | _ _ | _ _ |
| +/++ | 0 | 0/+ | _ _ _ | |
| 0 | 0 | _ | _ _ _ | |
| | | | | |
| Amlodipine | _ | _ | 0 | ++ |
| Nifedipine | _ | _ | 0 | + + + |
| Nicardipine | 0 | _ | 0 | +++ |
| Diltiazem | _ _ | _ | 0 | + |
| _ _ _ | _ _ | 0 | + | |
| β-blockers with intrinsic | _ | _ | 0 | 0/_ |
| sympathomimetic activity | | | | |
| 0/ _ | _ | 0/+ | _ _ _ | |
| 0/+ | 0 | _ _ | _ _ _ | |
| 0/+ | 0 | _ _ _ | + + | |
| _ _ | 0 | 0 | _ _ | |
| 0/ _ | 0/ _ | 0/ + | _ _ |
0, no effect; - Slight negative effect; -- moderate negative effect; --- strong negative effect.
+ Slight positive effect; + + moderate positive effect; + + + strong positive effect.
ACE angiotensin-converting enzyme, AT1 angiotensin II subtype 1.
Doses, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of the intravenous antihypertensive agents most frequently used in intensive care units
| | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | |
| Propranolol (β1- and β2-receptor blocker) | 1-3 mg every 2–5 min (over 1–30 min) | Onset: 5 min | Half-life: 3–5 h | Metabolism: hepatic CYP450 | Hypotension, heart failure, heart block, dizziness, fatigue, confusion, depression, bronchospasm, Raynaud´s phenomenon, diarrhea, pruritus, rash | Cardiac ischemic syndromes with arterial hypertension and normal heart function. Avoid in pheochromocytoma crises |
| Max dose: 5 mg | | Duration: 6–12 h | Excretion: urine (96-99%) | |||
| Infusion: not recommended | | | | |||
| Metoprolol (selective β1-receptor blocker) | 5 mg every 3 min (over 1–30 min) | Onset: 5–10 min | Half-life: 3–7 h | Metabolism: hepatic CYP2D6 | Hypotension, heart failure, heart block, dizziness, fatigue, depression, bronchospasm, diarrhea, pruritus, rash | Cardiac ischemic syndromes with arterial hypertension and normal heart function |
| Max dose: 15 mg | | Duration: 5–8 h | Excretion: urine (5-10% unchanged) | |||
| Infusion: not recommended | | | | |||
| Labetalol (α1, β1, and β2-receptor blocker) | Bolus: 20–80 mg every 10 min. Max dose: 300 mg | Onset: 5–10 min | Half-life: 6 h | Metabolism: hepatic glucuronide conjugation | Nausea, scalp tingling, bronchospasm, dizziness, heart block, orthostatic hypotension | Most hypertensive emergencies, good for hypertension in neurocritically ill patients and pregnancy; caution in heart failure |
| Infusion: 0.5-2.0 mg/min | Peak: 5–15 min | Duration: 3–18 h | Excretion: urine 50% (<5% unchanged), feces 50% | |||
| Esmolol (selective β1-receptor blocker) | Bolus: 500 | Onset: 1–2 min | Half-life: 9 min | Metabolism: plasma esterases | Arterial hypotension, bronchospasm, heart block, heart failure | Hypertensive emergencies with normal or high cardiac output, and aortic dissection in particular. Contraindicated in pheochromocytoma crisis |
| Max dose: 300 μg/Kg/min | Peak: 6–10 min | Duration: 10–30 min | Excretion: urine 70-90% (<1% unchanged) | |||
| Infusion: 50–300 μg/Kg/min | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Phentolamine (peripheral α-receptor antagonist) | Bolus: 5–20 mg | Onset: 1–2 min | Half-life: 19 min | Metabolism: hepatic | Tachycardia, flushing, headache, orthostatic hypotension, dizziness, nasal congestion, pulmonary hypertension | Hypertensive emergencies associated with excessive catecholamine levels |
| Max dose: 15 mg | Peak: 10–20 min | Duration: 15–30 min | Excretion: urine (10% unchanged) | |||
| Infusion: not recommended | | | | |||
| Urapidil (peripheral α1-receptor antagonist and central serotonin antagonist) | Bolus: 12.5-25 mg | Onset: 3–5 min | Half-life: 2–4.8 h | Metabolism: hepatic | Headache, hypotension, dizziness | Hypertensive emergencies in postoperative and pregnant patients |
| | Max dose: 50 mg | Peak: 0.5-6 h | Duration: 4–6 h | Excretion: urine (15-20% unchanged), feces 10% | | |
| Infusion: 5–40 mg/h | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Clonidine (central α2 receptor agonist) | Bolus: not recommended | Onset: 5–10 min | Half-life: 12 h | Metabolism: Hepatic CYP450 | Eye and mouth dryness, sedation, erectile dysfunction, orthostatic hypotension, bradycardia, drowsiness. | Hypertensive emergencies, particularly in the context of withdrawal syndrome and pain |
| Max dose: 7.2 μg/min (or 450 μg/2 h) | Peak: 2–4 h | Duration: 6–10 h | Excretion: Urine (50% unchanged), feces/bile 20% | |||
| Infusion: 1.2-7.2 μg/min | | | | |||
| Methyldopa (central α2 receptor agonist) | 250-1000 mg every 6-8h | Onset: >1 h | Half-life: 2 h | Metabolism: Hepatic CYP450 and central adrenergic neurons | Peripheral edema, fever, depression, sedation, dry mouth, bradycardia, hepatitis, hemolytic anemia, lupus-like syndrome | Hypertensive emergencies, particularly in pregnant patients. Use limited by adverse effects |
| Max dose: 1000 mg every 6h | Peak: 6–8 h | Duration: 12–24 h | Excretion: urine (85% metabolites), feces | |||
| Infusion: not recommended | | | | |||
| Dexmedetomidine (central α2 | Bolus: 1 μg/Kg/min over 10 min (not necessary in sedated patients) | Onset: 6–15 min | Half-life: 2–2.5 h | Metabolism: hepatic | Hypotension, bradycardia, fever, nausea, vomiting, hypoxia, anemia | Hypertensive urgencies associated with hyperactive delirium or withdrawal syndrome |
| Max dose: 1.5 μg/Kg/h | Peak: 1 h | Duration: 4 h | Excretion: urine (metabolites) | |||
| Infusion: 0.2-0.7 μg/Kg/h | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Nicardipine | Bolus: not recommended | Onset: 5–10 min | Half-life: 2–4 h | Metabolism: hepatic CYP3A4 | Tachycardia, headache, flushing, peripheral edema, angina, nausea, AV block, dizziness | Most hypertensive emergencies; caution in heart failure |
| Max dose: 30 mg/h | Peak: 30 min | Duration: 4–6 h | Excretion: urine 60% (<1% unchanged), feces 35% | |||
| Infusion: 5–15 mg/h | | | | |||
| Clevidipine | Bolus: not recommended | Onset: 1–2 min | Half-life: 1–15 min | Metabolism: plasma and tissue esterases | Atrial fibrillation, nausea, fever, insomnia, headache, acute renal failure | All hypertensive emergencies, particularly postoperative hypertension |
| Max dose: 32 mg/h | Peak: 3 min | Duration: 5–15 min | Excretion: urine 63-74%, feces 7-22% | |||
| Infusion: 1–2 mg/h | | | | |||
| Diltiazem | Bolus: 0.25 mg/Kg (over 2 min) | Onset: 2–7 min | Half-life: 3.4 h | Metabolism: hepatic CYP3A4 | Bradycardia, AV block, hypotension, cardiac failure, peripheral edema, headache, constipation, hepatic toxicity | Hypertensive emergencies associated with normal heart function and tachyarrhythmia |
| Max dose: 15 mg/h | Peak: 7–10 min | Duration:30 min-10 h (median 7 h) | Excretion: bile, urine (2-4% unchanged) | |||
| Infusion: 5–15 mg/h (≤24 h) | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Enalaprilat | Bolus: 1.25-5 mg every 6 h | Onset: 15–30 min | Half-life: 11 h | Metabolism: hepatic biotransformation | Hypotension, headache, worsening of renal function, hyperkalemia, angioedema, cough, agranulocytosis | Hypertensive emergencies associated with left ventricular dysfunction; caution in hypovolemia |
| Max dose: 5 mg every 6 h | Peak: 3–4.5 h | Duration: 6–12 h | Excretion: urine (60-80%) | |||
| Infusion: not recommended | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Hydralazine (arteriolar vasodilator) | Bolus: 10–20 mg every 4–6 h | Onset: 5–20 min | Half-life: 2–8 h | Metabolism: Hepatic acetylation | Hypotension, tachycardia, headache, facial flushing, angina pectoris, vomiting, paradoxical hypertension, lupus-like syndrome | Hypertensive emergencies, especially severe hypertension in pregnancy |
| Max dose: 40 mg per dose | Peak: 30–60 min | Duration: 1–8 h | Excretion: urine 52-90% (14% unchanged), feces 10% | |||
| Infusion: not recommended | | | | |||
| Fenoldopam (selective dopamine type 1-receptor agonist) | Bolus: not recommended | Onset: 5–10 min | Half-life: 5 min | Metabolism: Hepatic methylation | Hypotension, tachycardia, headache, nausea, facial flushing, angina, ST-T wave changes, elevated intraocular pressure | Hypertensive emergencies, especially severe hypertension in patients with acute renal failure |
| Max dose: 1.6 μg/Kg/min | Peak: 15 min | Duration:30–60 min | Excretion: urine 90%, feces 10%. | |||
| Infusion: 0.05-1.6 μg/Kg/min | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Nitroprusside (nitric oxide donor) | Bolus: not recommended | Onset: 1–2 min | Half-life: <10 min (nitroprusside), 3 days (thiocyanate) | Metabolism: erythrocytes, hepatic methylation | Hypotension, tachycardia, headache, cyanide and thiocyanide intoxication, nausea, flushing, vomiting, muscle spasm, pulmonary shunt | Hypertensive emergencies, especially aortic dissection. Caution in renal and hepatic failure |
| Max dose: 10 μg/Kg/min (<1 h) | Peak: 15 min | | Excretion: urine | |||
| Infusion: 0.25-4 μg/Kg/min | | Duration: 1–10 min | | |||
| Nitroglycerin (nitric oxide donor with predominant venular action) | Bolus: not recommended | Onset: 2–5 min | Half-life: 1–3 min | Metabolism: erythrocytes, hepatic, vessel wall | Hypotension, headache, dizziness, vomiting, tachyphylaxis, methemoglobinemia | Hypertensive emergencies, especially those associated with acute coronary syndrome, volume overload, or pulmonary edema |
| Max dose: 300 μg/min | Peak: 5 min | Duration: 5–10 min | Excretion: urine | |||
| Infusion: 5–300 μg/min | | | | |||
| | | | | | | |
| Furosemide (inhibits reabsorption of Na/Cl in the ascending loop of Henle) | Bolus: 20–40 mg | Onset: 5 min | Half-life: 30–60 min | Metabolism: hepatic | Hypokalemia, hypovolemia, hypotension, metabolic alkalosis, ototoxicity, thrombocytopenia, pancreatitis, interstitial nephritis, hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia | Hypertensive emergencies, especially those associated hypervolemia and/or heart failure |
| Max dose: 200 mg/dose or 160 mg/h | Peak: 1–2 h | Duration: 2 h | Excretion: urine 88%, bile/feces 12%. | |||
| Infusion: 10–40 mg/h | | | | |||
| Bumetanide (inhibits reabsorption of Na/Cl in the ascending loop of Henle) | Bolus: 0.5-1 mg/dose up to 2 times/day | Onset: 2–3 min | Half-life: 1–1.5 h | Metabolism: hepatic | Hypokalemia, hypovolemia, hypotension, metabolic alkalosis, ototoxicity, thrombocytopenia, pancreatitis, interstitial nephritis, hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia | Hypertensive emergencies, especially those associated with hypervolemia and/or heart failure |
| Max dose: 10 mg/day | Peak: 1–4 h | Duration:4–6 h | Excretion: urine 81%, bile 2% | |||
| Infusion: 0.5-2 mg/h |
ACE angiotensin-converting enzyme.
Figure 1Pathophysiological approach to the treatment of acute systemic arterial hypertension in critically ill patients based on the main determinants of the mean arterial pressure (MAP). HR, heart rate; SVR, systemic vascular resistance; ALI, acute lung injury; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.