Neuropediatrics 1976; 7(1): 92-100
DOI: 10.1055/s-0028-1091612
Original article

© 1976 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

Hypertensive Encephalopathy in Childhood – Diagnostic Problems

A. J. van Vught, J. Troost, J. Willemse
  • Department of Childneurology, State University, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Further Information

Publication History

1975

1975

Publication Date:
18 November 2008 (online)

Oppenheimer and Fischberg's vasoconstriction-hypothesis on the pathogenesis of hypertensive encephalopathy was subsequently supported by animal experiments. Later on the role of decompensation of the autoregulatory mechanism of the cerebral blood flow was revealed.

The transient symptomatology comprises headache, seizures, focal cerebral symptoms (hemiplegia etc.), visual disturbances, mental disorders, papiledema etc. The age-dependency of the influence of edema is probably expressed by the predominance of seizures in childhood and the long duration of the symptoms in our third and fourth patient.

The differentiation between hypertensive encephalopathy and a local complication of hypertension (hemorrhage) can be difficult, not at least because the first disturbance may be followed by the second (patient 3). Hypertension is not always present as initial symptom (patient 1 and 2). Hence a series of bloodpressure readings is required in acute cerebral incidents in childhood. Steroid-treatment may lead, especially in patients suffering from a hypocomplementemic form of membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, to a sudden rise of the bloodpressure and subsequently to hypertensive encephalopathy (patients 2 and 3).

Hypertensive encephalopathy is a neuropediatric emergency. The urgent treatment with dioxaside, fursemide and sodium nitroprusside is shortly reviewed.

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