Clinical Analysis of Hypertension in Children Admitted to the Emergency Department
Article Outline
Background
Hypertension in children is a relatively rare disease and has a high risk of further severe damage. The current study aimed to survey the clinical spectrum of hypertension in children admitted to an emergency department (ED).
Methods
We reviewed the medical records of all children aged 18 years and younger in whom a diagnosis of hypertension was made at the ED in Changhua Christian Hospital between 1998 and 2008. The patients were divided into four age groups (infants, preschool-age, school-age and adolescents) and three severity levels (transient hypertension, hypertension and hypertensive crisis). Case distribution analysis of hypertension based on different months and years was performed. Body mass index, blood pressure, etiologies and presenting symptoms were also analyzed according to age groups and severity levels.
Results
A total of 99 children met the inclusion criteria and were included in the current study. Diagnoses included 15 transient hypertension (15.1%), 28 hypertension (28.3%) and 56 hypertensive crises (56.6%). Almost all of the hypertensive crisis patients presented with stage 2 hypertension (n = 55, 98.2%). Dizziness and headache were the most common presenting symptom in patients in school-age and adolescent groups. Of the symptoms described, altered mental status and coma were most common in preschool-age and school-age groups. Neurologic disorder (26.3%) was the most common etiology in children younger than 6 years of age, followed by renal disorders (21.0%). In children older than 6 years of age, the major etiologies of hypertension and hypertensive crisis included untreated primary hypertension, renal disorders and endocrine disorders.
Conclusion
Hypertension in children may be easily underestimated but is potentially life-threatening in the pediatric ED. Primary care clinicians should promptly identify patients with stage 2 hypertension and treat them immediately and appropriately to prevent damage to cardiovascular organs.
Key Words: blood pressure , hypertension in children , hypertensive crisis , transient hypertension
No full text is available. To read the body of this article, please view the PDF online.
References
- . Relationship between the levels of blood pressure and the age, body mass in school children . Acta Cardiol Sin . 1986;2:95–101
- Genetic epidemiology study of young-onset hypertension in Taiwan . Hum Genet . 2000;107:210–215
- . The fourth report on the diagnosis, evaluation, and treatment of high blood pressure in children and adolescents . Pediatrics . 2004;114:555–576
- . Carotid artery intimal-medial thickness and left ventricular hyper-trophy in children with elevated blood pressure . Pediatrics . 2003;111:61–66
- . Obesity and blood pressure: results from the examination of 2365 schoolchildren in Germany . Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord . 2003;27:1459–1464
- . Evaluation and management of hypertension in childhood . Prog Pediatri Cardiol . 2001;12:177–188
- Ambulatory blood pressure correlates with renal volume and number o f renal cysts in children with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease . Blood Press Monit . 2003;8:107–110
- . Blood pressure in the first year of life in healthy infants born at term . Pediatr Nephrol . 2007;22:1743–1749
- . Hypertensive crisis profile: prevalence and clinical presentation . Arq Bras Cardiol . 2004;83:131–136 [In Portuguese]
- . Advances in the pathogenesis and management of hypertensive crisis . Curr Opin Pediatr . 2005;17:210–214
- . Hypertension . Pediatr Rev . 2002;23:197–208
- . Hypertensive encephalopathy, reversible occipitoparietal encephalopathy, or reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy: three names for an old syndrome . J Child Neurol . 1999;14:277–281
- . Pediatric hypertension in the emergency department . Ann Emerg Med . 2008;51:S21–S23
- . The value of routine blood pressure measurement in children presenting to the emergency department with non-urgent problems . J Pediatr . 2008;153:478–483
- . Clinical review: the management of hypertensive crisis . Crit Care . 2003;7:374–384
PII: S1875-9572(10)60009-5
doi:10.1016/S1875-9572(10)60009-5
© 2010 Taiwan Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
