Blood pressure elevations in hospital

Arduino A. Mangoni, Elzbieta A. Jarmuzewska, Genevieve M. Gabb, Patrick Russell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
53 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Long-term hypertension control in the community significantly reduces cardiovascular risk. However, the benefit of controlling acute elevations of blood pressure in hospitalised patients is unclear. In-hospital elevations of blood pressure are relatively common and might not reflect poorly controlled blood pressure before admission. The measurement of blood pressure in hospital patients significantly differs from the best practice recommended for primary care and outpatients. Recent observational studies suggest that the pharmacological treatment of acute, asymptomatic, in-hospital elevations of blood pressure may have no benefit. However, it may increase the risk of in-hospital and post-discharge complications. Pending the development of robust inpatient measurement protocols, acute blood pressure elevations in hospitalised patients should not routinely require antihypertensive treatment in the absence of symptoms or acute end-organ damage. Rather, such elevations should facilitate follow-up of blood pressure and other cardiovascular risk factors after discharge.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)205-207
Number of pages3
JournalAustralian Prescriber
Volume45
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Keywords

  • blood pressure
  • cardiovascular risk
  • hypertension
  • in-hospital blood pressure elevations

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