MethodsWe analyzed data from 70 children with hypertensive crisis between January, 2000, and January, 2022. The patients were divided into two groups: those diagnosed with a hypertensive emergency (n = 46) and those diagnosed with hypertensive urgency (n = 24). Baseline etiologies and risk factors were compared between the two groups. The following data were collected and analyzed: age, sex, weight, height, family history of hypertension, blood pressure, clinical manifestations of hypertensive crisis, underlying causes, biochemical indicators, and antihypertensive drugs.
ResultsThe major symptoms of hypertensive crisis were headache (n = 31, 44.29%), followed by visual symptoms (n = 15, 21.43%), and dizziness (n = 13, 18.57%). Further analysis showed that the incidence of convulsions was significantly higher in patients with hypertensive emergency than those with hypertensive urgency (χ2 = 5.38, p = 0.02). The leading underlying causes were renal disease (n = 34, 48.57%), followed by vascular disease (n = 11, 15.71%), essential hypertension (n = 9, 12.86%), oncological disease (n = 9, 12.86%), central nervous system disease (n = 3, 4.29%), endocrine and metabolic diseases (n = 2, 2.86%), and other (one case with lead poisoning, one case with histiocytosis). End-organ damage occurred in 46 patients with hypertensive crisis, including retinal damage (n = 20, 43.48%), brain damage (n = 19, 41.30%), heart damage (n = 15, 32.61%), and renal damage (n = 3, 6.52%). Hypertensive crisis was most common among children aged 7–12 years. Among children aged 13–18 years, hypertensive urgency was more common than hypertensive emergency. The incidence of dyslipidemia, elevated serum creatinine, and elevated uric acid did not differ significantly between the two groups. Most patients with hypertensive crisis need combined antihypertensive therapy (n = 60, 85.71%). There were no cases of mortality.