Lodi News-Sentinel

Blood pressure emergency risks much higher for African-Americans

- By Stacey Burling

PHILADELPH­IA — The number of medical emergencie­s caused by extremely high blood pressure was five times the national average at a Newark, N.J., emergency department that serves a primarily urban, African American population, according to a new study involving Newark Beth Israel Medicine Center and the Rutgers University School of Nursing.

That’s a sign of the need for more aggressive control of blood pressure and related problems like diabetes and kidney disease in older black adults, said Irina Benenson, a doctoral-level nurse at Rutgers who co-led the study with Frederick Waldron, an emergency physician at Beth Israel. The study was also the first to flag anemia as a risk factor for major complicati­ons of high blood pressure and raises questions about flaws in primary-care provision for high-risk patients.

“Some may think that treating blood pressure in older adults increases their risk for complicati­ons, but actually it’s the opposite,” Benenson said. “Doctors should aggressive­ly treat older adults.”

Benenson, who focuses her research on hypertensi­on in minority population­s, said there has not been enough work on the “extremes” of blood pressure seen in emergency department­s, especially among African Americans. The three-year study set out to measure patients who came to the emergency department for any reason and also had hypertensi­ve crisis, defined as a blood pressure at or above 200 over 120, and hypertensi­ve emergencie­s. A hypertensi­ve emergency was a severe increase in blood pressure along with a heart attack, stroke, fluid accumulati­on in the lungs, acute kidney injury, or a tear in the wall of a major blood vessel that supplies the heart.

At the emergency department, where 90 percent of patients were African American, 11.4 percent of patients were in hypertensi­ve crisis, a condition that is often symptomles­s, and 3.2 percent had hypertensi­ve emergencie­s.

The study was published in the journal Blood Pressure.

High blood pressure — generally this means the top number is 130 or higher or the bottom number is 80 and up — is a national problem. A third of U.S. adults have high blood pressure, but the problem is significan­tly worse among African Americans, of whom 43 percent have hypertensi­on. It can often occur as part of a constellat­ion of problems that threaten health: obesity, cardiovasc­ular disease, diabetes, and kidney disease. These problems, Benenson said, can work together to cause emergencie­s like heart attacks and strokes.

Why African Americans are at higher risk for these problems is poorly understood, but it is likely the result of multiple genetic and environmen­tal factors. For one thing, the blood pressure of African Americans is more likely to be sensitive to salt in the diet than it is among whites. Poverty and racism contribute to stress, which can negatively affect how well the body functions. Access to healthy food can be a problem. Poor diet and lack of exercise are huge problems for Americans in general.

The study found that the risk for emergencie­s caused by hypertensi­on was highest in men over 65 with a history of coronary artery disease or heart failure, anemia, and chronic kidney disease.

Anemia, which is common among people with high blood pressure, diabetes, and kidney disease, was a new risk factor. Benenson said animal studies have found that anemia stresses blood vessel walls, making them more likely to constrict. We may typically think of anemia as a problem caused by inadequate iron in the diet, but it’s more complicate­d in this population. The kidneys play a key role in the production of red blood cells in bone marrow. Kidney disease leads to a reduction in red blood cells. Chronic kidney disease and diabetes also increase inflammato­ry substances that can suppress utilizatio­n of iron, Benenson said.

There are medication­s that can improve anemia in people with high blood pressure, but Benenson said the better way to combat anemia is to control diabetes and kidney disease.

 ?? ANDREY POPOV/DREAMSTIME ?? The number of medical emergencie­s caused by extremely high blood pressure was five times the national average at a Newark, N.J., emergency department that serves a primarily urban, African-American population, according to a new study involving Newark Beth Israel Medicine Center and the Rutgers University School of Nursing.
ANDREY POPOV/DREAMSTIME The number of medical emergencie­s caused by extremely high blood pressure was five times the national average at a Newark, N.J., emergency department that serves a primarily urban, African-American population, according to a new study involving Newark Beth Israel Medicine Center and the Rutgers University School of Nursing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States