The Management of Elevated Blood Pressure in the Acute Care Setting: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association.

IF 6.9 1区 医学 Q1 PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE Hypertension Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-28 DOI:10.1161/HYP.0000000000000238
Adam P Bress, Timothy S Anderson, John M Flack, Lama Ghazi, Michael E Hall, Cheryl L Laffer, Carolyn H Still, Sandra J Taler, Kori S Zachrison, Tara I Chang
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Abstract

Over the past 3 decades, a substantial body of high-quality evidence has guided the diagnosis and management of elevated blood pressure (BP) in the outpatient setting. In contrast, there is a lack of comparable evidence for guiding the management of elevated BP in the acute care setting, resulting in significant practice variation. Throughout this scientific statement, we use the terms acute care and inpatient to refer to care received in the emergency department and after admission to the hospital. Elevated inpatient BP is common and can manifest either as asymptomatic or with signs of new or worsening target-organ damage, a condition referred to as hypertensive emergency. Hypertensive emergency involves acute target-organ damage and should be treated swiftly, usually with intravenous antihypertensive medications, in a closely monitored setting. However, the risk-benefit ratio of initiating or intensifying antihypertensive medications for asymptomatic elevated inpatient BP is less clear. Despite this ambiguity, clinicians prescribe oral or intravenous antihypertensive medications in approximately one-third of cases of asymptomatic elevated inpatient BP. Recent observational studies have suggested potential harms associated with treating asymptomatic elevated inpatient BP, which brings current practice into question. Despite the ubiquity of elevated inpatient BPs, few position papers, guidelines, or consensus statements have focused on improving BP management in the acute care setting. Therefore, this scientific statement aims to synthesize the available evidence, provide suggestions for best practice based on the available evidence, identify evidence-based gaps in managing elevated inpatient BP (asymptomatic and hypertensive emergency), and highlight areas requiring further research.

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急症护理环境中的血压升高管理:美国心脏协会的科学声明。
在过去 30 年中,大量高质量的证据为门诊环境中血压升高(BP)的诊断和管理提供了指导。与此相反,在急症护理环境中,缺乏指导血压升高管理的可比证据,导致实践中存在很大差异。在本科学报告中,我们使用 "急症护理 "和 "住院患者 "来指代急诊科和入院后接受的护理。住院患者血压升高很常见,可表现为无症状或伴有新的或恶化的靶器官损害迹象,这种情况被称为高血压急症。高血压急症涉及急性靶器官损伤,应在严密监测下迅速治疗,通常使用静脉降压药物。然而,对于无症状的住院患者血压升高,启动或加强降压药物治疗的风险效益比并不明确。尽管存在这种不明确性,临床医生仍在约三分之一的无症状住院患者血压升高病例中处方口服或静脉注射降压药物。最近的观察性研究表明,治疗无症状的住院病人血压升高可能会造成危害,这使目前的做法受到质疑。尽管住院病人血压升高无处不在,但很少有立场文件、指南或共识声明专注于改善急症护理环境中的血压管理。因此,本科学报告旨在综合现有证据,根据现有证据提供最佳实践建议,找出管理住院病人血压升高(无症状和高血压急诊)的循证差距,并强调需要进一步研究的领域。
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来源期刊
Hypertension
Hypertension 医学-外周血管病
CiteScore
15.90
自引率
4.80%
发文量
1006
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Hypertension presents top-tier articles on high blood pressure in each monthly release. These articles delve into basic science, clinical treatment, and prevention of hypertension and associated cardiovascular, metabolic, and renal conditions. Renowned for their lasting significance, these papers contribute to advancing our understanding and management of hypertension-related issues.
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