High blood pressure emergencies
High blood pressure usually is an ongoing condition that slowly causes damage over years. But sometimes blood pressure rises so quickly and seriously that it becomes a medical emergency. When this happens, treatment is needed right away, often with hospital care.
In these situations, high blood pressure can cause:
- Blindness.
- Chest pain.
- Complications in pregnancy, such as the blood pressure-related conditions preeclampsia or eclampsia.
- Heart attack.
- Memory loss, personality changes, trouble concentrating, irritable mood or gradual loss of consciousness.
- Serious damage to the body's main artery, also called aortic dissection.
- Stroke.
- Sudden impaired pumping of the heart, leading to fluid backup in the lungs that results in shortness of breath, also called pulmonary edema.
- Sudden loss of kidney function.