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hypertensive crisis

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crisis

 [kri´sis] (pl. cri´ses) (L.)
1. the turning point of a disease for better or worse; especially a sudden change, usually for the better, in the course of an acute disease.
2. a sudden paroxysmal intensification of symptoms in the course of a disease.
addisonian crisis (adrenal crisis) the symptoms accompanying an acute onset or worsening of addison's disease: anorexia, vomiting, abdominal pain, apathy, confusion, extreme weakness, and hypotension; if untreated these progress to shock and then death.
aplastic crisis a sickle cell crisis in which there is temporary bone marrow aplasia.
blast crisis a sudden, severe change in the course of chronic granulocytic leukemia, characterized by an increased number of blasts, i.e., myeloblasts or lymphoblasts.
catathymic crisis an isolated, nonrepetitive act of violence that develops as a result of intolerable tension.
celiac crisis an attack of severe watery diarrhea and vomiting producing dehydration and acidosis, sometimes occurring in infants with celiac disease.
developmental crisis maturational crisis.
hemolytic crisis an uncommon sickle cell crisis in which there is acute red blood cell destruction with jaundice.
hypertensive crisis dangerously high blood pressure of acute onset.
identity crisis a period in the psychosocial development of an individual, usually occurring during adolescence, manifested by a loss of the sense of the sameness and historical continuity of one's self, confusion over values, or an inability to accept the role the individual perceives as being expected by society.
life crisis a period of disorganization that occurs when a person meets an obstacle to an important life goal, such as the sudden death of a family member, a difficult family conflict, an incident of domestic violence (spouse or child abuse), a serious accident, loss of a limb, loss of a job, or rape or attempted rape.
maturational crisis a life crisis in which usual coping mechanisms are inadequate in dealing with a stress common to a particular stage in the life cycle or with stress caused by a transition from one stage to another. Called also developmental crisis.
myasthenic crisis the sudden development of dyspnea requiring respiratory support in myasthenia gravis; the crisis is usually transient, lasting several days, and accompanied by fever.
oculogyric crisis a symptom of an acute dystonic reaction in which the person demonstrates a fixed gaze, usually upward; also, the uncontrollable rolling upwards of the eye. It can be a result of encephalitis or a reaction to antipsychotic medications.
salt-losing crisis see salt-losing crisis.
sickle cell crisis see sickle cell crisis.
tabetic crisis a painful paroxysm occurring in tabes dorsalis.
thyroid crisis (thyrotoxic crisis) see thyroid crisis.
vaso-occlusive crisis a sickle cell crisis in which there is severe pain due to infarctions in the bones, joints, lungs, liver, spleen, kidney, eye, or central nervous system.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

hypertensive crisis

A rare clinical event characterized by a severe and/or acutely ↑ diastolic BP > 120-130 mm Hg; an HC is a medical emergency if accompanied by rapid or progressive CNS–encephalopathy, infarction or hemorrhage, cardiovascular–myocardial ischemia, infarction, aortic dissection, pulmonary edema, and renal deterioration, eclampsia or microangiopathic hemolytic anemia Etiologic factors Pre-existing chronic HTN; renovascular HTN; renal parenchymal disease; scleroderma and collagen vascular disease; drugs–sympathomimetics, tricyclic antidepressants, withdrawal from antihypertensives, recreational–eg, crack cocaine; spinal cord syndromes; pheochromocytoma Clinical Severe headache, transient blindness, vomiting, rapid deterioration of renal function Complications Acute end-organ damage–eg, myocardial ischemia/infarction, renal failure, aortic dissection, stage 3 or 4 hypertensive retinopathy Treatment Organ-targeted therapy with CCBs, Lobetalol, loop diuretics, nitroglycerin, nitroprusside Prognosis Untreated 5-yr mortality is 100%
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
'PIC advised sublingual meds fearing hypertensive emergency, better to be avoided in an unsupervised jail environment,' he stated, demanding a need for specialised care.
PIC advised sublingual medicines fearing hypertensive emergency, better to be avoided in unsupervised Jail environment.
He further said doctors from the Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC), who conducted former premier's health check up on Wednesday, advised sublingual medication to him fearing hypertensive emergency owing to unsupervised environment at Kot Lakhpat.
Following the meeting, Dr Adnan tweeted that Nawaz Sharif continues to suffer from uncontrolled high blood pressure which requires further work-up, labs and electrocardiogram (ECG) and added that doctors from the Punjab Institute of Cardiology (PIC), who conducted former premier's health check up on Wednesday, advised sublingual medication to him fearing hypertensive emergency owing to unsupervised environment at Kot Lakhpat.
[18] Severe HPT can be divided into hypertensive emergency and hypertensive urgency.
Extremely high blood pressure that leads to strokes, heart attacks and acute kidney damage, classified as hypertensive emergency, is five times higher in inner-city African-American patients than the national average, according to the results of a recent study co-lead by a Rutgers University researcher.
"Combined with the fact that diabetics with hypertensive emergency also had significantly higher levels of blood pressure, this suggests that the occurrence of severe damage to vital organs is not because of just diabetes but because of the accompanying severely elevated blood pressure."
Among the entries are abdominal aortic aneurysm, acetaminophen overdose, acute coronary syndrome, backboard clearance, carbon monoxide toxicity, cyclic vomiting syndrome, fever of unknown origin, heart failure, Herpes Zoster, hypertensive emergency, inflammatory bowel disease, laceration management, procedural conscious sedation, rabies: mammal bites, radial head subluxation, Rocky Mountain spotted fever/Lyme disease, superficial thrombophlebitis, upper respiratory infection, and urinary retention.
When clinical signs of acute organ damage findings, which are suggestive of hypertensive emergency are not apparent, and evaluation and follow-up of patients in the emergency department are not clear, these can mislead physicians in decisions (22).
They concluded by this trial, that oral nifedipine had lowered blood pressure more quickly than that of intravenous labetalol during hypertensive emergency in pregnancy which was different from our present study.
Increases also occurred in hypertension morbidity and mortality, hypertensive emergency department visits, death rates from liver cirrhosis, and alcohol-related emergency department visits tied to falls, Dr.
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