| Literature DB >> 36005440 |
Mohammed A Talle1,2, Ellen Ngarande1, Anton F Doubell1, Philip G Herbst1.
Abstract
While mortality in patients with hypertensive emergency has significantly improved over the past decades, the incidence and complications associated with acute hypertension-mediated organ damage have not followed a similar trend. Hypertensive emergency is characterized by an abrupt surge in blood pressure, mostly occurring in people with pre-existing hypertension to result in acute hypertension-mediated organ damage. Acute hypertension-mediated organ damage commonly affects the cardiovascular system, and present as acute heart failure, myocardial infarction, and less commonly, acute aortic syndrome. Elevated cardiac troponin with or without myocardial infarction is one of the major determinants of outcome in hypertensive emergency. Despite being an established entity distinct from myocardial infarction, myocardial injury has not been systematically studied in hypertensive emergency. The current guidelines on the evaluation and management of hypertensive emergencies limit the cardiac troponin assay to patients presenting with features of myocardial ischemia and acute coronary syndrome, resulting in underdiagnosis, especially of atypical myocardial infarction. In this narrative review, we aimed to give an overview of the epidemiology and pathophysiology of hypertensive emergencies, highlight challenges in the evaluation, classification, and treatment of hypertensive emergency, and propose an algorithm for the evaluation and classification of cardiac acute hypertension-mediated organ damage.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac acute hypertension-mediated organ damage; classifications; diagnosis; epidemiology; hypertensive emergency; myocardial injury; pathophysiology
Year: 2022 PMID: 36005440 PMCID: PMC9409837 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd9080276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Prevalence of cardiac acute hypertension-mediated organ damage in hypertensive emergencies.
| Author, Year, Country | Design | AHF | AMI (%) | AAS (%) | Cumulative (%) | NIMI (%) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fragoulis [ | Prospective | 58 | 22.6 | 2 | 82.6 | NR | National cardiac referral centre registry data. Potential for bias towards cardiac complications. |
| Rubin [ | Prospective | 31 | NR | NR | 31% | 63 | Excluded myocardial infarction from their cohorts and 63% had elevated troponin while 83% had left ventricular hypertrophy. |
| Zampaglione [ | Prospective | 36.8 | 12 | 2 | 50.8 | NR | Cerebral infarction was the most common acute hypertension-mediated organ damage. However, composite of cardiac complications occurred in 50.8%. |
| Kim [ | CS | NR | 40.5 | NR | 40.5 | 60.4 | Focused on prognostic role of cardiac troponin in acute severe hypertension. Elevated (occurred in 41.6%) and detectable (occurred in 36.5%) cardiac troponin associated with higher mortality at 3 years. |
| Guiga [ | CS | 37.4 | 13.8 | 1.8 | 53 | NR | Reported higher mortality in hypertensive emergency than hypertensive urgency (12.5 vs. 1.8%). |
| Salvetti [ | Prospective | 34 | 25 | 1 | 60 | NR | Excluded resuscitated cardiac arrest and patients requiring urgent cardiac catheterization. |
| Pacheco [ | Prospective | 25.2 | 59.5 | 6.3 | 91 | NR | Their cohorts composed of a high-risk group admitted into coronary care unit. Reported high rate of acute coronary syndrome and acute aortic syndrome. |
| Martin [ | Retrospective | 25 | 13 | 0 | 33 | NR | Reported unstable angina (5%) separately from myocardial infarction (8%). |
| Vilela-Martin [ | CS | 30.7 | 25.1 | 3.5 | 47.2 | NR | Reported unstable angina (12.1%) separately from myocardial infarction (13%). |
| Nkoke [ | CS | 44.6 | 3.6 | 0 | 48.2 | NR | Myocardial infarction occurred in 3.6% of their cohorts. Low rate of detection of myocardial infarction may be related to lack of facilities including low rates of ECG and cardiac troponin assay. |
| Acosta [ | Retrospective | NR | 1 | 0 | 1 | 15 | Assessed acute myocardial injury using serial cardiac troponin assay. Excluded acute coronary syndrome from their cohorts. |
| Pattanshetty [ | Retrospective | 20.5 | 11.7 | 2.3 | 34.5 | NR | Obstructive coronary artery disease present in 76.5% of their cohorts with elevated cardiac troponin that had angiogram. |
AAS, acute aortic syndrome; AHF, acute heart failure; AMI, acute myocardial infarction; CS, cross-sectional; NIMI, non-ischemic myocardial injury; NR, not reported; USA, United State of America.
Figure 1Summary of the pathophysiologic processes in acute hypertension-mediated organ injury. ACS; acute coronary syndrome; AKI, acute kidney injury; aHMOD, acute hypertension-mediated organ damage; BP, blood pressure; HELLP, hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PRES, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome; RAAS, renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system; TMA, thrombotic microangiopathy; VSMC, vascular smooth muscle cell; * Not listed as acute hypertensive target organ damage in guidelines; † presence of retinal exudates, hemorrhage ± papilledema.
Cardiac complications of hypertensive emergency.
|
|
| Acute heart failure/acute pulmonary edema * |
| Acute coronary syndrome * |
| ST-elevation myocardial infarction |
| Non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction |
| Unstable angina |
| Acute aortic syndrome |
| Acute aortic dissection * |
| Intramural hemorrhage/hematoma |
| Penetrating atherosclerotic aortic ulcer |
| Aortic aneurysm |
| Aortic rupture |
|
|
| Acute myocardial injury |
* Commonly reported cardiac complications; § Not included as a complication in guidelines.
Comparison of myocardial injury with Type 2 myocardial infarction (modified from [60]).
| Myocardial Injury | Type 2 Myocardial Infarction | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| At least 1 cardiac troponin concentration above the 99th percentile URL without features of myocardial ischemia/infarction | Rise and/or fall in cardiac troponin level with at least 1 value above the 99th percentile URL with at least one of the following: | • Signs and/or symptoms of myocardial ischemia/myocardial infarction may be atypical. |
|
| Myocardial strain, inflammation, apoptosis, and cell injury. | Myocardial infarction due to mismatch in myocardial oxygen supply–demand in the absence of atherothrombotic event. | Pathophysiologic mechanisms in hypertensive emergency involve inflammation and demand-supply mismatch [ |
|
| Undefined | Undefined | |
|
| Not systematically studied | CAD in 68% (obstructive in 30%), LVSD in 34% [ | Both predict the presence of coronary artery disease and MACE. |
|
| The similarities in outcome measures reflects shared pathophysiologic mechanisms. | ||
| In-hospital all-cause [ | ~11% | ~9% | |
| Post-discharge 30-day [ | ~7% | ~4% | |
| 5-year all-cause [ | ~72% | ~63% | |
| 5-year MACE [ | ~31% | ~30% | |
| 30-day readmission [ | ~21% | ~21% | |
CAD, coronary artery disease; ECG, electrocardiogram; LVH, left ventricular hypertrophy; LVSD, left ventricular systolic dysfunction; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular event; RWMA, regional wall motion abnormality; URL, upper reference limit.
Figure 2Algorithm for evaluation and classification of hypertensive emergencies. † Not listed as target organ damage in guidelines. ACS, acute coronary syndrome; AKI, acute kidney injury; aHMOD, acute hypertension-mediated organ damage; HELLP, hemolysis elevated liver enzymes or low platelets; PRES, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome; TMA, thrombotic microangiopathy. * Others—hemoglobin, platelet, lactic dehydrogenase, haptoglobin, creatinine, sodium, potassium, quantitative urinalysis for protein, urine sediments, ECG, chest X-ray, fundoscopy. Modified from van den Born et al. [5].