Rates of Acute Brain Injury Among Severely Hypertensive Patients Seen in the Emergency Department

Author:

Ishak Amgad1,Kamel Hooman1ORCID,Kaiser Jed H.1,Liao Vanessa1,Rotblat Jenny1,Pawar Anokhi1,Lappin Richard2,Razzak Junaid2,White Halina1,Ng Catherine3,Liberman Ava L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinical and Translational Neuroscience Unit, Department of Neurology, Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA

3. Information Technologies & Services Department, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Background Identifying patients with acute brain injury among patients who present to the Emergency Department (ED) with severe hypertension can be challenging. We explored rates of brain injury in a cohort of ED patients with severe hypertension in whom acute target-organ damage was or was not initially suspected. Methods We conducted a retrospective chart-review study at two different hospitals within the same urban health system. Consecutive adult patients seen from 10/1/2020 to 5/1/2022 with a systolic blood pressure ≥180 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure ≥120 mmHg were included. Results A total of 972 patients met our eligibility criteria. The average age was 59 years (SD: 16.5), 454 (46.7%) were women, and 582 (59.9%) were non-White. A total of 186/972 (19.1%) patients were initially thought to have acute target-organ damage in the ED with 97/186 (52.2%) diagnosed with stroke or TIA. The remaining 786/972 (80.9%) patients were not initially diagnosed with target-organ damage (hypertensive urgency [HU]). Of the 786 patients with HU, a head CT was obtained in 216/786 (27.7%) and brain MRI in 74/786 (9.4%). Of the HU patients with a brain MRI, 23/74 (31.1%) had acute abnormalities; most abnormalities on brain MRI (17/23 [73.9%]) were not seen on preceding head CT. Conclusions In a multicenter study of ED patients, nearly 1 in 5 patients though to have HU who eventually underwent brain MRI had unexpected acute neurological findings, though brain MR was obtained in only 9%.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

NIH/NINDS

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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