Clinical meaning
A hypertensive emergency is defined as systolic blood pressure >180 mmHg and/or diastolic >120 mmHg with evidence of acute end-organ damage. At the cellular level, extreme intraluminal pressure overwhelms the myogenic autoregulatory response of arteriolar smooth muscle. Normally, increased transmural pressure triggers vascular smooth muscle contraction (Bayliss effect) via stretch-activated calcium channels, maintaining constant organ perfusion across a range of MAP 60-150 mmHg.
When MAP exceeds the upper autoregulatory limit, the smooth muscle can no longer sustain contraction against the excessive pressure. The arterioles are forced open, exposing the delicate downstream capillary beds to high-pressure pulsatile flow. This causes endothelial shear stress injury, activating the coagulation cascade and triggering fibrinoid necrosis of the vessel wall. Plasma proteins infiltrate the damaged arteriolar wall, causing onion-skin hypertrophy and obliterative endarteritis.
In the brain, loss of autoregulation leads to cerebral edema and hypertensive encephalopathy. In the kidneys, afferent arteriolar damage causes thrombotic microangiopathy, acute tubular necrosis, and rapidly progressive renal failure. In the heart, acute afterload excess causes left ventricular strain, subendocardial ischemia, and flash pulmonary edema. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system becomes paradoxically activated as renal perfusion pressure is sensed as inadequate by damaged juxtaglomerular cells, creating a vicious cycle of vasoconstriction and sodium retention that further escalates blood pressure.