Clinical Outcomes in Hypertensive Emergency: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis

Author:

Siddiqi Tariq Jamal1ORCID,Usman Muhammad Shariq1,Rashid Ahmed Mustafa2ORCID,Javaid Syed Sarmad2,Ahmed Aymen3,Clark Donald1ORCID,Flack John M.4ORCID,Shimbo Daichi5ORCID,Choi Eunhee6ORCID,Jones Daniel W.1ORCID,Hall Michael E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson MS USA

2. Department of Medicine Jinnah Sindh Medical University Karachi Pakistan

3. Department of Medicine Dow University of Health Sciences Karachi Pakistan

4. Department of Internal Medicine Southern Illinois School of Medicine Springfield IL USA

5. Department of Medicine Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York NY USA

6. Department of Pathology and Cell Biology Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University New York NY USA

Abstract

Background To study the prevalence and types of hypertension‐mediated organ damage and the prognosis of patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with hypertensive emergencies. Methods and Results PubMed was queried from inception through November 30, 2021. Studies were included if they reported the prevalence or prognosis of hypertensive emergencies in patients presenting to the ED. Studies reporting data on hypertensive emergencies in other departments were excluded. The extracted data were arcsine transformed and pooled using a random‐effects model. Fifteen studies (n=4370 patients) were included. Pooled analysis demonstrates that the prevalence of hypertensive emergencies was 0.5% (95% CI, 0.40%–0.70%) in all patients presenting to ED and 35.9% (95% CI, 26.7%–45.5%) among patients presenting in ED with hypertensive crisis. Ischemic stroke (28.1% [95% CI, 18.7%–38.6%]) was the most prevalent hypertension‐mediated organ damage, followed by pulmonary edema/acute heart failure (24.1% [95% CI, 19.0%–29.7%]), hemorrhagic stroke (14.6% [95% CI, 9.9%–20.0%]), acute coronary syndrome (10.8% [95% CI, 7.3%–14.8%]), renal failure (8.0% [95% CI, 2.9%–15.5%]), subarachnoid hemorrhage (6.9% [95% CI, 3.9%–10.7%]), encephalopathy (6.1% [95% CI, 1.9%–12.4%]), and the least prevalent was aortic dissection (1.8% [95% CI, 1.1%–2.8%]). Prevalence of in‐hospital mortality among patients with hypertensive emergency was 9.9% (95% CI, 1.4%–24.6%). Conclusions Our findings demonstrate a pattern of hypertension‐mediated organ damage primarily affecting the brain and heart, substantial cardiovascular renal morbidity and mortality, as well as subsequent hospitalization in patients with hypertensive emergencies presenting to the ED.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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