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Evaluation and treatment of severe asymptomatic hypertension.
Am Fam Physician. 2010 Feb 15; 81(4):470-6.AF

Abstract

Poorly controlled hypertension is a common finding in the outpatient setting. When patients present with severely elevated blood pressure (i.e., systolic blood pressure of 180 mm Hg or greater, or diastolic blood pressure of 110 mm Hg or greater), physicians need to differentiate hypertensive emergency from severely elevated blood pressure without signs or symptoms of end-organ damage (severe asymptomatic hypertension). Most patients who are asymptomatic but have poorly controlled hypertension do not have acute end-organ damage and, therefore, do not require immediate workup or treatment (within 24 hours). However, physicians should confirm blood pressure readings and appropriately classify the hypertensive state. A cardiovascular risk profile is important in guiding the treatment of severe asymptomatic hypertension; higher risk patients may benefit from more urgent and aggressive evaluation and treatment. Oral agents may be initiated before discharge, but intravenous medications and fast-acting oral agents should be reserved for true hypertensive emergencies. High blood pressure should be treated gradually. Appropriate, repeated follow-up over weeks to months is needed to reach desired blood pressure goals.

Authors+Show Affiliations

University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. chad.kessler@va.govNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

20148501

Citation

Kessler, Chad S., and Yazen Joudeh. "Evaluation and Treatment of Severe Asymptomatic Hypertension." American Family Physician, vol. 81, no. 4, 2010, pp. 470-6.
Kessler CS, Joudeh Y. Evaluation and treatment of severe asymptomatic hypertension. Am Fam Physician. 2010;81(4):470-6.
Kessler, C. S., & Joudeh, Y. (2010). Evaluation and treatment of severe asymptomatic hypertension. American Family Physician, 81(4), 470-6.
Kessler CS, Joudeh Y. Evaluation and Treatment of Severe Asymptomatic Hypertension. Am Fam Physician. 2010 Feb 15;81(4):470-6. PubMed PMID: 20148501.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Evaluation and treatment of severe asymptomatic hypertension. AU - Kessler,Chad S, AU - Joudeh,Yazen, PY - 2010/2/13/entrez PY - 2010/2/13/pubmed PY - 2010/4/2/medline SP - 470 EP - 6 JF - American family physician JO - Am Fam Physician VL - 81 IS - 4 N2 - Poorly controlled hypertension is a common finding in the outpatient setting. When patients present with severely elevated blood pressure (i.e., systolic blood pressure of 180 mm Hg or greater, or diastolic blood pressure of 110 mm Hg or greater), physicians need to differentiate hypertensive emergency from severely elevated blood pressure without signs or symptoms of end-organ damage (severe asymptomatic hypertension). Most patients who are asymptomatic but have poorly controlled hypertension do not have acute end-organ damage and, therefore, do not require immediate workup or treatment (within 24 hours). However, physicians should confirm blood pressure readings and appropriately classify the hypertensive state. A cardiovascular risk profile is important in guiding the treatment of severe asymptomatic hypertension; higher risk patients may benefit from more urgent and aggressive evaluation and treatment. Oral agents may be initiated before discharge, but intravenous medications and fast-acting oral agents should be reserved for true hypertensive emergencies. High blood pressure should be treated gradually. Appropriate, repeated follow-up over weeks to months is needed to reach desired blood pressure goals. SN - 1532-0650 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/20148501/Evaluation_and_treatment_of_severe_asymptomatic_hypertension_ L2 - https://www.aafp.org/link_out?pmid=20148501 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -