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DR IMRAN GAFOOR
               DR ASHOK ANAND
                DEPTT OF CCEM ,
SIR GANGARAM HOSPITAL,N.DELHI
DEFINITIONS
HYPERTENSIVE EMERGENCY
               BP elevation is associated with ongoing
 neurological, myocardial, hematological or renal
 TARGET ORGAN DISEASE (TOD)

HYPERTENSIVE URGENCY
  - potential for TOD is great & likely to occur if BP is not
 controlled.
  - occurs on chronic stable complication
                        . Stable angina
                        . Old MI
                        . CCF,CRF
                        . TIA,old CVA
DEFINITIONS
ACCELERATED HYPERTENSION
   - keith wagener barker retinopathy grade 3
   (constriction,sclerosis+hemorrhages,exudates)
   - may be urgency or emergency
   - presence of exudate more worrisome
DEFINITIONS
• MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION
        - KWB grade 4 retino + papilledema
             (neuroretinopathy)
        - Always an emergency
MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION….
MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION
  - Increased BP + neuroretinopathy
  - Fundus : flame shaped hemmorhags,
             cotton wool spots, papilledma
  - Assoc with : encephalopathy, LV failure,
                micro angio hemolytic anemia,
                renal fibrinoid necrosis with endarteritis.
 Risk factors : 30-50ys, male, smoking
MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION….
Renal failure is most common cause of
 death(fibrinoid necrosis+prolif endarteritis) espc
 if assoc with glomerulonephritis.
Recovery predicted if combined length of both
 kidneys >20.2cm & highly unlikely if <14.2 cm.
Presenting creatinine >4.5 - dialysis
Treatment-sod nitroprusside
 (0.3microg/kg/min)           also-labetolol,
 nicardipine,fenoldopam
BP CLASSIFICATION(Chobanian et al/JNC 7)
               sys(mm Hg)     dias(mm Hg)

NORMAL          <120           & <80

Pre Htn         120-139        or 80-89

Stage I Htn     140-159        or 90-99

Stage II Htn    ≥160           or ≥100

Iso sys Htn     ≥140           &<90
MANIFESTATIONS OF TARGET ORGAN DISEASE
 LARGE VESSELS     Aneurysmal dilations , Acc atheroscl.,
                    Aortic dissection

 CARDIAC           Acute      - pulm edema , MI
                    Chronic    - LVH , CAD

 CEREBROVASCULAR   Intracereb bleed, TIA, seizures, mental
                    status change, stroke

 RENAL             Hematuria, azotemia, Cr>1.5, proteinuria>1+

 RETINOPATHY       Papilledema, Hemorrhages,
                    Exudates, Arterial nicking
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
           Increased SVR

     Damage to endothelial lining

          Leakage of plasma

Fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles(histo hallmark)

        Local edema & sclerosis

     Ischemia of brain ,heart, kidneys
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Patients with antecedent Htn can tolerate higher

 fluctuations due to shift of autoreg threshold.
Patients with no antecedent Htn – organ specific

 changes occur with DBP>100.
Most sensitive vascular bed is CEREBRAL.
INITIAL EVALUATION
 Cardinal points in history-
              - TOD symptoms (most imp)
              - prior Htn
              - Medical Renal Disease
              - medicine with compliance
              - cocaine, amphetamine
-Htn from any cause may enter emergent phase.
-Usually occurs on background of essential hypertn.
- Imp secondary causes- renovascular(fibromuscular dys-
                         plasia/atheresclerosis)
                       - chronic GN
                       - reflux nephropathy
                       - analgesic nephropathy
SYMPTOMS OF HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS
 MC is - headache (usually worse in morning)
        - visual (scotoma, diplopia, hemianopia, blindness)
        - neuro (focal deficits, stroke, TIA, somnolence)
        - ischemic chest pain
        - renal (polyuria, nocturia, hematuria)
        - back pain (aortic aneurysm)
        - nausea ,vomiting
        - wt loss.

PATIENTS OFTEN HAVE INTRAVASCULAR VOLUME DEPLETION.
EXAMINATION
• Verify BP recordings in diffn position(if possible)

• Fundus exam – arterio thickng, Incr light reflex, vascular
                   tortuosity, AV nicking

       retinal hemmorhages, lipid leakage (hard exudates)


                nerve ischemia, papilledema
                        (cotton wool spots)
• ABDOMEN
  masses(PCKD),bruits(aneuyrsm)
ANCILLARY TESTS
Sr Na, K, bicarb, BUN, Cr, CBC (with P/S for
 schitocytes)

PT/aPTT, tox screen, pregnancy test, ECG, urinanalysis


USUALLY     - hypoNa and matabolic alkalosis
            - incr BUN, Cr
            - proteinuria, hematuria
            - marked proteinuria suggets GN
PSUDOHYPERTENSION
Overestimation of true BP due to stiff artery


OSLERS MANOEUVRE. : inflate BP cuff to greater
 than brachial systolic, a palpable radial artery but
 pulseless.

Seen in - atherosclerosis,
          - monckebergs medial calcification,
          - metastatic calcification(ESRD)
TREATMENT
Initial therapy should terminate ongoing TOD, not return of
 BP to normal.
Generalized goal : decrease MAP by 20-25% within one hour
                    f/b decr to ~160/100 by 2-6 hrs
                    and towards normal over 1-2 days
EXCPTNS : . ischemic stroke
            . aortic dissection
            . active unstable angina or CCF

• More gradual reduction in elderly with carotid stenosis
        .
SPECIFIC HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS
 1 . PULMONARY EDEMA
 a) with preserved systolic function(LVH)-
   - abrupt increase in afterload with poor diastolic
    relaxation leads to pulmn HTN and edema.
   - Treatment is with Na-nitropru (it prefrnn dilates

           resistance vessels)
   - less emergnt condn – ACEI/CCB
PULMONARY EDEMA…
B) with poor systolic function
MYOCARDIAL ISCHAEMIA
     -nitroglycerine is preferred(dilates collaterals)

MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
       - sedn/pain control
       - DBP>100 - nitroglycr
       - early β-blockade
SPECIFIC HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS
2) AORTIC DISSECTION

BP lowered rapidly to lowest clinically acceptable
 level

Agents used lobet or esmolol, later on nitropru added


Alternative agent-trimetaphan
SPECIFIC HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS
3) HYPERTENSIVE ENCEPHALOPATHY
When high perfusion pressure overwhelms cerebral
  autoregulation.
Can lead to blindness, seizures, coma, gradually
  worsening headache.
Pathologically-cerebral edema, petechial hemorrhg,
               microinfarcts.
Immed Neuroimagng - to rule out ischemic
  stroke/hemorrhage
Hallmark is improvement in 12-24 hrs of BP redn.
HTN ENCEPH…
Treatment
     short acting parenteral agents used.
MAP should decrease by 15-20% over 2-3 hrs.
D/d : cerebral infarct,
       ICH/SAH,
       subdural hematoma,
       brain tumor, seizures,
       vasculitis/meningoenceph.
HTN ENCEPH…
DIFFN POINTS :
 1) Focal neurological deficit is unusual without
 cerebral bleed
2) Papilledema is almost always assoc with Htn enceph
3) Mental staus improves by 24-48hrs-delayed in CNS
 bleed
4) Brain dysfunction develops by 12-24 hrs in Htn but
 more acutely with ischemic stroke/bleed.
HTN ENCEPHAL..
Posterior leukencephalopathy syn.-
  reversible vasogenic subcortical edema without
 infarct

 MRI – white matter edema in post cerebral
 hemispheres
ISCHEMIC STROKE
For every 10 mmHg incr in pressure >180 a 40% incr in
 worsening neurological status.
Area of stunned but viable tissue(ischemic
 penumbra)may need higher perfusion pressures, so
 ASA/AHA-recommends (after excluding pain, nausea, full
 bladder, hypoxia, incr ICP)
BP redn. If sys>220 or dias > 120
Also, for thrombolysis BP<185/110.
And post reperfusion use lobet or nicardipine for sys>180
 or dias>105 & Na nitro for sys >230
ISCHEMIC STROKE
Latest studies recommend modest reduction of BP

  (10-27mmHg) improved outcomes but effect waned
 with increasing age ,so,avoid >10% sudden drop
SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE
SAH incr ICP & decr cerebral perfusion causing global

  ischemia
Induces intense vasospasm in neighbouring vessels
    (4- 12 days) after initial bleed.
Goal-dec 20-25% of MAP over 6-12 hrs but not
 <160/100.
If vasospasm occurs later-inc BP with 3H(not proven)
Preffred - lobet
Avoid- nitrodilators
No data to support oral nimodip dec vasospasm.
INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE
Major risk factor is Htn.
Most rapid decline in BP occurs in first 24 hrs but may
 remain elavated for 7-10 days (while in ischemic stroke BP
 dec to normal in 24-48 hrs)
AHA/ASA recommends…decrease BP if-
      Sys>200 or MAP>150,
      ICP incr suspected –sys>180 or map>130
      ICP incr not suspec-target MAP~100 or BP~160/90

Preffred agent : lobet
HEAD TRAUMA
With trauma comes edema


With ICP monitoring –target MAP ≥90


Prefferd- lobet or nicardipine
POST OP PAIN
Early-(0-2hrs) : pain, hypoxemia, hypercabia,

 shivering.
Intermed(12-36hrs) : fluid overload, reaction to

                ET/FOLEYS.
Pheochromocytoma
Very rare cause of hypertension
Headache,palpitations,Htn,anxiety,abd pain
 diaphoresis
Orthostatic changes in BP
Paroxsysmal symptoms
T/t : i/v phentolamine f/b b-blockade
GESTATIONAL HYPERTENSION
After 20 wks in normotensive.
SBP>140 & DBP>90 on two separate occasions 6 hrs
 apart.
Pre-eclampsia – gestn htn + 300 mg in 24 hrs
 proteinuria
Eclampsia- +seizures
T/t – bed rest & parenteral Mg
Use (lobet,hydralazine) if SBP>160 or DBP>100
ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID Ab SYNDROME
Microvasculopathy & emboli to renal artery
T/t – Na nitropru/lobet & anticoagn.
GBS
Dysreflexia (bladder/bowel distension below level of
 lesion trigger massive sympatc discharge)

Symptoms – Htn,bradycardia, diaphoresis,headache.


T/t – Na nitroprus., phentolamine,lobet
RENAL TRANSPLANT RECEPIENT
Acute rejection
Obstructive uropathy
 Cyclosporine/steroid.
T/t oral CCB
NEW ONSET HYPERTENSION IN ICU
Pain
Anxiety
Hypoxemia
Hpercarbia
Shivering
Vol overload
Discontinuation syndrome
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
Sodium nitoprusside : nitric oxide compound
       -arterio-veno dilator
       -useful in most Htn crisis
        dose 0.25mic/kg/min(max 8)
C/I – high output cardiac failure, cong optic atrophy.
Cyanide toxicity – anemia & liver d/e
                  -acidosis, tachycardia, almond smell,
                    change in mental status.
Thiocyanate tox. – renal d/e
                     -psychosis, hypereflexia,seizure,tinnitus
                      -thiocyanate>10 should be avoided.
Avoiod infusion>48 hrs.
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
NITROGLYCERINE- predom. Veno dilator,

                     decreases preload.
Use : cardiac ischemia

Dose : 5mic/min(max 100)

C/I : incresed ICP, angle closure glaucoma

Most useful in cadiac compromise(MI,LV

 failure,pulm edema),,not recommnded > 48 hrs.
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
LABETOLOL : β > α (7 : 1) adrenergic blockade

Onset 2-5 min, durn 3-6 hrs

Bolus 20 mg (max 300 mg)

Infusion 0.5-2mg/min ,used in pregnancy along with

 hydralazine.
Avoid in bronchospasm, bradycardia, CCF, >first

 degree heart block,
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
ESMOLOL: cardioselective β1 blocker

Used in aortic dissection

Onset 60 seconds, duration 10-20 min.

Infusion 50-300 mic/kg/min.

Not dependant on hepatic/renal function
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
FENOLDOPAM : post synaptic dopamine agonist.

                     -primarily arterial dilator,rapid

                      onset/offset of effect.
Advantageous in kidney d/e, increases renal blood

 flow,natriuresis.
Dose : 0.1 mic/kg/min.

C/I : glaucoma,hypotension,,check K+ every 6 hrs
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
HYDRALAZINE : direct arteriolar dilator.

Used in pregnancy/eclampsia

Dose 10 mg every 60 min (max 20 mg)

Duration of action 2-4 hrs

Reflex tachycardia, exacerbates angina,BP lowering

 response is less predictable(depends on
 renin&volume status)
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
PHENTOLAMINE: α – blockade

Used primarily in pheochromocytoma

Dose 5-15 mg

Always f/b β-blockade
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
NICARDIPINE : dihydropyridine CCB
Onset 10-20 min,duration 1-4 hr
Dose 5 mg/hr (max 15 mg/hr)
Avoid in CCF,cardiac ischemia.


CLEVIDIPINE : short acting dihydropyridine CCB.
Reduces BP without affecting cardiac filling pressures
 or reflex tachycardia
INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS
ENALAPRILAT : only parenteral ACE-I.
Dose 1.25-5 mg every 6 hr.
Response not predictable, hyperkalemia in reduced
 GFR.

TRIMETHAPHAN : nondepolarizer ganglionic
                       blocker.
Dose : 0.5-5mg/min
Used in aortic dissection
Disadvntges : paralytic ileus, bladder atony,
 tachyphyl.
Thank you

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Hypertension in icu ppt

  • 1. DR IMRAN GAFOOR DR ASHOK ANAND DEPTT OF CCEM , SIR GANGARAM HOSPITAL,N.DELHI
  • 2. DEFINITIONS HYPERTENSIVE EMERGENCY BP elevation is associated with ongoing neurological, myocardial, hematological or renal TARGET ORGAN DISEASE (TOD) HYPERTENSIVE URGENCY - potential for TOD is great & likely to occur if BP is not controlled. - occurs on chronic stable complication . Stable angina . Old MI . CCF,CRF . TIA,old CVA
  • 3. DEFINITIONS ACCELERATED HYPERTENSION - keith wagener barker retinopathy grade 3 (constriction,sclerosis+hemorrhages,exudates) - may be urgency or emergency - presence of exudate more worrisome
  • 4. DEFINITIONS • MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION - KWB grade 4 retino + papilledema (neuroretinopathy) - Always an emergency
  • 5. MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION…. MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION - Increased BP + neuroretinopathy - Fundus : flame shaped hemmorhags, cotton wool spots, papilledma - Assoc with : encephalopathy, LV failure, micro angio hemolytic anemia, renal fibrinoid necrosis with endarteritis. Risk factors : 30-50ys, male, smoking
  • 6. MALIGNANT HYPERTENSION…. Renal failure is most common cause of death(fibrinoid necrosis+prolif endarteritis) espc if assoc with glomerulonephritis. Recovery predicted if combined length of both kidneys >20.2cm & highly unlikely if <14.2 cm. Presenting creatinine >4.5 - dialysis Treatment-sod nitroprusside (0.3microg/kg/min) also-labetolol, nicardipine,fenoldopam
  • 7. BP CLASSIFICATION(Chobanian et al/JNC 7) sys(mm Hg) dias(mm Hg) NORMAL <120 & <80 Pre Htn 120-139 or 80-89 Stage I Htn 140-159 or 90-99 Stage II Htn ≥160 or ≥100 Iso sys Htn ≥140 &<90
  • 8. MANIFESTATIONS OF TARGET ORGAN DISEASE  LARGE VESSELS Aneurysmal dilations , Acc atheroscl., Aortic dissection  CARDIAC Acute - pulm edema , MI Chronic - LVH , CAD  CEREBROVASCULAR Intracereb bleed, TIA, seizures, mental status change, stroke  RENAL Hematuria, azotemia, Cr>1.5, proteinuria>1+  RETINOPATHY Papilledema, Hemorrhages, Exudates, Arterial nicking
  • 9. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY Increased SVR Damage to endothelial lining Leakage of plasma Fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles(histo hallmark) Local edema & sclerosis Ischemia of brain ,heart, kidneys
  • 10. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY Patients with antecedent Htn can tolerate higher fluctuations due to shift of autoreg threshold. Patients with no antecedent Htn – organ specific changes occur with DBP>100. Most sensitive vascular bed is CEREBRAL.
  • 11. INITIAL EVALUATION  Cardinal points in history- - TOD symptoms (most imp) - prior Htn - Medical Renal Disease - medicine with compliance - cocaine, amphetamine -Htn from any cause may enter emergent phase. -Usually occurs on background of essential hypertn. - Imp secondary causes- renovascular(fibromuscular dys- plasia/atheresclerosis) - chronic GN - reflux nephropathy - analgesic nephropathy
  • 12. SYMPTOMS OF HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS  MC is - headache (usually worse in morning) - visual (scotoma, diplopia, hemianopia, blindness) - neuro (focal deficits, stroke, TIA, somnolence) - ischemic chest pain - renal (polyuria, nocturia, hematuria) - back pain (aortic aneurysm) - nausea ,vomiting - wt loss. PATIENTS OFTEN HAVE INTRAVASCULAR VOLUME DEPLETION.
  • 13. EXAMINATION • Verify BP recordings in diffn position(if possible) • Fundus exam – arterio thickng, Incr light reflex, vascular tortuosity, AV nicking retinal hemmorhages, lipid leakage (hard exudates) nerve ischemia, papilledema (cotton wool spots) • ABDOMEN masses(PCKD),bruits(aneuyrsm)
  • 14. ANCILLARY TESTS Sr Na, K, bicarb, BUN, Cr, CBC (with P/S for schitocytes) PT/aPTT, tox screen, pregnancy test, ECG, urinanalysis USUALLY - hypoNa and matabolic alkalosis - incr BUN, Cr - proteinuria, hematuria - marked proteinuria suggets GN
  • 15. PSUDOHYPERTENSION Overestimation of true BP due to stiff artery OSLERS MANOEUVRE. : inflate BP cuff to greater than brachial systolic, a palpable radial artery but pulseless. Seen in - atherosclerosis, - monckebergs medial calcification, - metastatic calcification(ESRD)
  • 16. TREATMENT Initial therapy should terminate ongoing TOD, not return of BP to normal. Generalized goal : decrease MAP by 20-25% within one hour f/b decr to ~160/100 by 2-6 hrs and towards normal over 1-2 days EXCPTNS : . ischemic stroke . aortic dissection . active unstable angina or CCF • More gradual reduction in elderly with carotid stenosis .
  • 17. SPECIFIC HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS  1 . PULMONARY EDEMA a) with preserved systolic function(LVH)- - abrupt increase in afterload with poor diastolic relaxation leads to pulmn HTN and edema. - Treatment is with Na-nitropru (it prefrnn dilates resistance vessels) - less emergnt condn – ACEI/CCB
  • 18. PULMONARY EDEMA… B) with poor systolic function MYOCARDIAL ISCHAEMIA -nitroglycerine is preferred(dilates collaterals) MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION - sedn/pain control - DBP>100 - nitroglycr - early β-blockade
  • 19. SPECIFIC HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS 2) AORTIC DISSECTION BP lowered rapidly to lowest clinically acceptable level Agents used lobet or esmolol, later on nitropru added Alternative agent-trimetaphan
  • 20. SPECIFIC HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS 3) HYPERTENSIVE ENCEPHALOPATHY When high perfusion pressure overwhelms cerebral autoregulation. Can lead to blindness, seizures, coma, gradually worsening headache. Pathologically-cerebral edema, petechial hemorrhg, microinfarcts. Immed Neuroimagng - to rule out ischemic stroke/hemorrhage Hallmark is improvement in 12-24 hrs of BP redn.
  • 21. HTN ENCEPH… Treatment short acting parenteral agents used. MAP should decrease by 15-20% over 2-3 hrs. D/d : cerebral infarct, ICH/SAH, subdural hematoma, brain tumor, seizures, vasculitis/meningoenceph.
  • 22. HTN ENCEPH… DIFFN POINTS : 1) Focal neurological deficit is unusual without cerebral bleed 2) Papilledema is almost always assoc with Htn enceph 3) Mental staus improves by 24-48hrs-delayed in CNS bleed 4) Brain dysfunction develops by 12-24 hrs in Htn but more acutely with ischemic stroke/bleed.
  • 23. HTN ENCEPHAL.. Posterior leukencephalopathy syn.- reversible vasogenic subcortical edema without infarct  MRI – white matter edema in post cerebral hemispheres
  • 24. ISCHEMIC STROKE For every 10 mmHg incr in pressure >180 a 40% incr in worsening neurological status. Area of stunned but viable tissue(ischemic penumbra)may need higher perfusion pressures, so  ASA/AHA-recommends (after excluding pain, nausea, full bladder, hypoxia, incr ICP) BP redn. If sys>220 or dias > 120 Also, for thrombolysis BP<185/110. And post reperfusion use lobet or nicardipine for sys>180 or dias>105 & Na nitro for sys >230
  • 25. ISCHEMIC STROKE Latest studies recommend modest reduction of BP (10-27mmHg) improved outcomes but effect waned with increasing age ,so,avoid >10% sudden drop
  • 26. SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE SAH incr ICP & decr cerebral perfusion causing global ischemia Induces intense vasospasm in neighbouring vessels (4- 12 days) after initial bleed. Goal-dec 20-25% of MAP over 6-12 hrs but not <160/100. If vasospasm occurs later-inc BP with 3H(not proven) Preffred - lobet Avoid- nitrodilators No data to support oral nimodip dec vasospasm.
  • 27. INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGE Major risk factor is Htn. Most rapid decline in BP occurs in first 24 hrs but may remain elavated for 7-10 days (while in ischemic stroke BP dec to normal in 24-48 hrs) AHA/ASA recommends…decrease BP if- Sys>200 or MAP>150, ICP incr suspected –sys>180 or map>130 ICP incr not suspec-target MAP~100 or BP~160/90 Preffred agent : lobet
  • 28. HEAD TRAUMA With trauma comes edema With ICP monitoring –target MAP ≥90 Prefferd- lobet or nicardipine
  • 29. POST OP PAIN Early-(0-2hrs) : pain, hypoxemia, hypercabia, shivering. Intermed(12-36hrs) : fluid overload, reaction to ET/FOLEYS.
  • 30. Pheochromocytoma Very rare cause of hypertension Headache,palpitations,Htn,anxiety,abd pain diaphoresis Orthostatic changes in BP Paroxsysmal symptoms T/t : i/v phentolamine f/b b-blockade
  • 31. GESTATIONAL HYPERTENSION After 20 wks in normotensive. SBP>140 & DBP>90 on two separate occasions 6 hrs apart. Pre-eclampsia – gestn htn + 300 mg in 24 hrs proteinuria Eclampsia- +seizures T/t – bed rest & parenteral Mg Use (lobet,hydralazine) if SBP>160 or DBP>100
  • 32. ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID Ab SYNDROME Microvasculopathy & emboli to renal artery T/t – Na nitropru/lobet & anticoagn.
  • 33. GBS Dysreflexia (bladder/bowel distension below level of lesion trigger massive sympatc discharge) Symptoms – Htn,bradycardia, diaphoresis,headache. T/t – Na nitroprus., phentolamine,lobet
  • 34. RENAL TRANSPLANT RECEPIENT Acute rejection Obstructive uropathy  Cyclosporine/steroid. T/t oral CCB
  • 35. NEW ONSET HYPERTENSION IN ICU Pain Anxiety Hypoxemia Hpercarbia Shivering Vol overload Discontinuation syndrome
  • 36. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS Sodium nitoprusside : nitric oxide compound -arterio-veno dilator -useful in most Htn crisis dose 0.25mic/kg/min(max 8) C/I – high output cardiac failure, cong optic atrophy. Cyanide toxicity – anemia & liver d/e -acidosis, tachycardia, almond smell, change in mental status. Thiocyanate tox. – renal d/e -psychosis, hypereflexia,seizure,tinnitus -thiocyanate>10 should be avoided. Avoiod infusion>48 hrs.
  • 37. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS NITROGLYCERINE- predom. Veno dilator, decreases preload. Use : cardiac ischemia Dose : 5mic/min(max 100) C/I : incresed ICP, angle closure glaucoma Most useful in cadiac compromise(MI,LV failure,pulm edema),,not recommnded > 48 hrs.
  • 38. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS LABETOLOL : β > α (7 : 1) adrenergic blockade Onset 2-5 min, durn 3-6 hrs Bolus 20 mg (max 300 mg) Infusion 0.5-2mg/min ,used in pregnancy along with hydralazine. Avoid in bronchospasm, bradycardia, CCF, >first degree heart block,
  • 39. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS ESMOLOL: cardioselective β1 blocker Used in aortic dissection Onset 60 seconds, duration 10-20 min. Infusion 50-300 mic/kg/min. Not dependant on hepatic/renal function
  • 40. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS FENOLDOPAM : post synaptic dopamine agonist. -primarily arterial dilator,rapid onset/offset of effect. Advantageous in kidney d/e, increases renal blood flow,natriuresis. Dose : 0.1 mic/kg/min. C/I : glaucoma,hypotension,,check K+ every 6 hrs
  • 41. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS HYDRALAZINE : direct arteriolar dilator. Used in pregnancy/eclampsia Dose 10 mg every 60 min (max 20 mg) Duration of action 2-4 hrs Reflex tachycardia, exacerbates angina,BP lowering response is less predictable(depends on renin&volume status)
  • 42. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS PHENTOLAMINE: α – blockade Used primarily in pheochromocytoma Dose 5-15 mg Always f/b β-blockade
  • 43. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS NICARDIPINE : dihydropyridine CCB Onset 10-20 min,duration 1-4 hr Dose 5 mg/hr (max 15 mg/hr) Avoid in CCF,cardiac ischemia. CLEVIDIPINE : short acting dihydropyridine CCB. Reduces BP without affecting cardiac filling pressures or reflex tachycardia
  • 44. INTRAVENOUS MEDICATIONS ENALAPRILAT : only parenteral ACE-I. Dose 1.25-5 mg every 6 hr. Response not predictable, hyperkalemia in reduced GFR. TRIMETHAPHAN : nondepolarizer ganglionic blocker. Dose : 0.5-5mg/min Used in aortic dissection Disadvntges : paralytic ileus, bladder atony, tachyphyl.