An episode of malignant high blood pressure, which is also called
hypertensive crisis, occurs when your blood pressure
suddenly becomes much higher than normal. It may occur because the signals in
your body that control your blood pressure suddenly become unbalanced.
Sometimes the blood pressure may even double.
Although rare, malignant
high blood pressure poses a risk of immediate organ
damage and is a medical emergency that requires going to
the emergency room. Severe high blood pressure can cause bleeding in your
brain, heart attack, heart failure, kidney failure, damage to your
retina, and loss of vision. In some cases, you may not
be able to repair or reverse this damage.
The table below tells you how malignant high blood pressure can
affect your organs.
Complications of malignant high blood
pressureComplication | Cause | Symptoms and effects |
|---|
| Bleeding in your brain | Blood vessel rupture | Symptoms that resemble a stroke, including:
- Severe
headache
- Paralysis
- Numbness
- Tingling
- Loss
of consciousness
|
| Heart attack or angina | Insufficient blood flow to your heart muscle | - Pain/pressure in your
chest
- Pain/tingling in your left arm
- Shortness of
breath
|
| Heart failure | Heart cannot pump blood against very high arterial
pressure and becomes “congested” | - Acute shortness of breath after minor
exertion or even at rest
|
| Kidney failure | Damage to your kidneys’ filtering system because of
excessive pressure and debris from damaged blood cells | - Usually no noticeable
symptoms
- Maybe bloody urine
|
| Retinal damage | Bleeding into the eye, causing retinal detachment
and tissue death | |
| Aortic dissection | Excessive pressure separates the inner wall of your
aorta (your body’s largest artery, originating at the heart) from its outer
wall, potentially disrupting blood supply to various organs. | Severe pain, often in the back—between shoulder blades—or
chest - Collapse of the circulatory
system
- Heavy internal bleeding
- Effect depends on which
branches are affected
|
It is better to prevent episodes of malignant high blood pressure
than to treat an episode after you have already had one. One of the most common
causes of malignant high blood pressure is not taking your blood pressure
medicines properly. Sometimes this happens unintentionally. For example, your
prescription may run out or you may forget to take a dose. But try to stay on
your medicine schedule as best as you can. Another cause of malignant blood
pressure is illegal drug use, such as stimulants like cocaine.
An acute episode can occur if your essential hypertension gets worse
or if you develop a new cause of secondary high blood pressure, such as sudden
kidney failure. It is not always possible to keep your condition from getting
worse. But it helps if you and your doctor monitor your blood pressure
carefully.
Warning signs of mild malignant high blood pressure include headache,
blurry vision, and vomiting. Warning signs for severe malignant high blood
pressure include severe headache, blurry vision, chest pain, acute shortness of
breath, and blood in your urine. If you have high blood pressure and you start
to have these symptoms, call your doctor or go to the hospital
immediately.
To treat malignant high blood pressure, doctors and nurses will
carefully monitor your blood pressure and give you medicine intravenously
(through a needle inserted in one of your veins). The immediate goal is to
lower your blood pressure enough so that your organs are no longer in immediate
danger. But it must be lowered slowly so that your body has enough time to
adjust to the change in blood pressure. If blood pressure is lowered too
quickly, your body may have a hard time getting blood to your brain.
The other goal of treatment is to treat organ complications. For
example, your doctor may give you a diuretic if you have fluid buildup in your
lungs. Or your doctor may give a beta-blocker and nitrates if you have
myocardial ischemia (not enough blood is reaching your heart). After your
doctor has lowered your blood pressure to a safe level and treated your
complications, he or she will try to identify the cause of the acute episode.
Your doctor will then work with you to develop a treatment regimen that can
help prevent future attacks.