Hypertensive crises consist of hypertensive emergencies and urgencies. With hypertensive emergencies, there is evidence of acute end-organ damage in the setting of an elevated blood pressure. With ...
Following discharge from the emergency department after treatment for hypertensive urgency, there is increased short-term risk for MACE. Increased short-term risk for major adverse cardiovascular ...
Ambulatory patients with hypertensive urgency fare equally well in home and hospital, study suggests
New research in JAMA Internal Medicine suggests sending certain hypertensive ambulatory patients to the hospital, rather than home, may be the wrong call. In a study of one Cleveland Clinic office ...
Cardiovascular outcomes are not significantly better for patients admitted to the hospital with asymptomatic hypertensive urgency (systolic blood pressure, 180 mm Hg or greater; diastolic blood ...
Do ambulatory patients who present in office settings with hypertensive urgency -- systolic blood pressure (BP) at least 180mm HG and diastolic BP at least 110 mm Hg -- do better when they are ...
MONDAY, June 13, 2016 -- If your blood pressure reading at a routine doctor's office visit is alarmingly high, in most cases that doesn't mean a trip to the emergency room, a new study suggests. In ...
Patients with a very high blood pressure (BP) reading in the absence of other symptoms are highly unlikely to have a major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE) within the next 6 months, researchers ...
High blood pressure often lurks without symptoms, earning its reputation as the “silent killer.” With nearly half of American adults affected by this condition, understanding the different stages of ...
Do ambulatory patients who present in office settings with hypertensive urgency - systolic blood pressure (BP) at least 180mm HG and diastolic BP at least 110 mm Hg - do better when they are referred ...
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