Hypertensive emergencies are those situations where very high blood pressure (BP) values are associated with acute organ damage, and therefore, require immediate, but careful, BP reduction. The type of acute organ damage is the principal determinant of: (i) the drug of choice, (ii) the target BP, and (iii) the timeframe in which BP should be lowered. Key target organs are the heart, retina, brain, kidneys, and large arteries. Patients who lack acute hypertension-mediated end organ damage do not have a hypertensive emergency and can usually be treated with oral BP-lowering agents and usually discharged after a brief period of observation.
Bryan Williams, Giuseppe Mancia, Wilko Spiering, Enrico G. Caiani, Michel Azizi, Michel Burnier, D Clément, António Coca, Giovanni de Simone, Anna F. Dominiczak, Thomas Kahan, Felix Mahfoud, Josep Redón, Luís M. Ruilope, Alberto Zanchetti, Mary Kerins, Sverre E. Kjeldsen, Reinhold Kreutz, Stéphane Laurent, Professor Gregory Lip, Richard McManus, Krzysztof Narkiewicz,
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