Cardiology Topic

Inpatient hypertension.

Treat the patient, not the number. One question decides everything: new organ damage, or just a number? A 5-step bedside algorithm for asymptomatic inpatient BP, plus the IV dosing table for true hypertensive emergency.

Reviewed June 2026 · verify against current guidelines

Diagnosis & Workup

Step 1: Confirm the reading.

Measure correctly

Right cuff size, arm supported, patient seated and rested. Repeat before acting.

Measurement artifact to exclude

TechniqueWrong cuff size, arm unsupported, talking, legs crossed.
ContextWhite coat, no rest before reading, recent activity or caffeine.
A single high reading is not a diagnosis. Repeat before you treat.
Diagnosis & Workup

Step 2: Emergency or not?

Classification (AHA 2024)

ElevatedSBP >130 or DBP >80 mm Hg.
AsymptomaticSBP <180 and DBP <110. No organ damage.
Markedly ↑SBP >180 or DBP >110–120 (>120 per 2025 ACC/AHA), no damage. Now “severe HTN,” ex “urgency.”
EmergencyMarkedly ↑ BP plus new or worsening organ damage.

Organ damage = emergency (BARKH + heme)

BrainEncephalopathy, PRES, ischemic stroke, intracranial hemorrhage.
ArteriesAcute aortic syndrome: dissection, penetrating ulcer.
RetinaRetinal hemorrhage, papilledema.
KidneyAcute kidney injury.
HeartAcute coronary syndrome, acute decompensated heart failure / pulmonary edema.
HemeMicroangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA). Added per AHA 2024 statement.
Mild headache, anxiety, or epistaxis alone are NOT organ damage.
Confirm true injury: exam, ECG, troponin, creatinine, UA, fundoscopy.
SBP systolic BPDBP diastolic BPPRES posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome
Acute Management

Step 3: Asymptomatic path.

Less is more

Markedly elevated BP without organ damage still does not need acute treatment.

Identify and treat triggers

SymptomsPain, anxiety, agitation, urinary retention.
MedicationsHeld home meds, steroids, NSAIDs, stimulants.

Then

IV antihypertensives without an emergency cause stroke, myocardial ischemia, and acute kidney injury.
NSAID nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug
Acute Management

Step 4: Emergency targets.

Lower in stages (2025 ACC/AHA)

First hourReduce SBP by ≤25%. Do not normalize BP.
2–6 hoursThen to <160/100 mm Hg if stable.
24–48 hThen cautiously to 130–140 mm Hg.

Also

Compelling conditions need tighter targets: <140 first hour, <120 in dissection (β-blocker first).
Acute Management

IV agents & doses.

IV titratable agents (2025 ACC/AHA)

AgentDose &amp; titrationOnsetBestAvoid
Nicardipine5 mg/h;
↑ 2.5 q5–15 min (max 15)
5–15 minFirst-line; neuro, renalAdvanced aortic stenosis
Clevidipine1–2 mg/h; double q90 s
(max 21, ≤72 h)
2–4 minFirst-line; rapidSoy/egg allergy; aortic stenosis
Labetalol0.3–1 mg/kg bolus
(max 300/24 h)
5–10 minAortic syndromeAsthma, HF, brady, AV block
Esmolol500–1000 mcg/kg/min ×1 min,
then 50 (max 300)
1–2 minRate control; aorticBrady, AV block, HF
Nitroglycerin5 mcg/min;
↑ q3–5 min (max 200)
2–5 minACS, pulmonary edemaPDE5 use; RV infarct
Hydralazine10 mg IV; repeat q4–6 h
(max 220/24 h)
10–20 minPregnancy (alt)CAD, dissection (reflex tachy)
Enalaprilat1.25 mg over 5 min;
up to 5 mg q6 h
15–30 minHF adjunctPregnancy, bilateral RAS, ↑K, AKI
Nitroprusside0.3–0.5 mcg/kg/min;
↑ q5 min (max 10)
ImmediateReserve onlyRenal/hepatic failure; cyanide
Match the drug to the organ. Titrate to target, not to normal.
ACS acute coronary syndromeCAD coronary artery diseaseHF heart failureRAS renal artery stenosisPDE5 phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitorAKI acute kidney injury
Pitfalls & Disposition

Step 5: Transitions of care.

Held doses drive spikes

NPO status, transfers, and med-rec gaps stop home meds. Restart them.

Rebound risk on withdrawal

ClonidineAbrupt stop causes rebound surge. Taper or restart.
Beta-blockerWithdrawal causes tachycardia, ischemia. Do not stop abruptly.

At discharge

Chasing one high number with IV or new meds is the error, not the fix.
NPO nil per os / nothing by mouthmed-rec medication reconciliation

Sources

Verify against current guidelines and local protocol before acting.

  1. Bress AP et al. Management of Elevated Blood Pressure in the Acute Care Setting: AHA Scientific Statement. Hypertension 2024;81(8):e94–e106.
  2. 2025 ACC/AHA Guideline for the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation &amp; Management of High Blood Pressure in Adults.
  3. Rastogi R et al. Treatment and Outcomes of Inpatient Hypertension Among Adults With Noncardiac Admissions. JAMA Intern Med 2021;181(3):345–352.
  4. Anderson TS et al. Clinical Outcomes of Intensive Inpatient Blood Pressure Management in Hospitalized Older Adults. JAMA Intern Med 2023;183(7):715–723.

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Inpatient hypertension.
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