NURS 6501: Final Exam Question 41 / NURS-6501N Advanced Pathophysiology
NURS 6501: Final Exam: Please contact Assignment Samurai for help with NURS 6501: Final Exam or any other assignment. Email: assignmentsamurai@gmail.com   In the context of hypertensive urgency presenting as an acute headache, which of the following is a typical characteristic? Group of answer choices
  • Sharp, unilateral pain often mistaken for cluster headache
  • Throbbing headache, commonly associated with nausea and vomiting
  • A dull, bilateral ache with no focal deficit, possibly with a diminished level of consciousness
  • Severe headache with photophobia and stiff neck
The correct answer is: A dull, bilateral ache with no focal deficit, possibly with a diminished level of consciousness   Explanation: Hypertensive urgency (severely elevated BP without acute end-organ damage) often presents with:
  • Dull, bilateral headache (due to vascular stretching and autoregulatory dysfunction).
  • No focal neurologic deficits (distinguishing it from hypertensive encephalopathy or stroke).
  • Possible altered mental status (if BP is extremely high, e.g., >180/120 mmHg).
Why Not the Others?
  • Sharp, unilateral pain (cluster headache-like): Suggests trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias or migraine, not hypertension.
  • Throbbing headache with nausea/vomiting: Classic for migraine or malignant hypertension (if + papilledema/renal injury).
  • Severe headache + photophobia/stiff neck: Indicates meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage, not hypertensive urgency.
Key Insight: Hypertensive headache is nonspecific but should prompt urgent BP control to prevent progression to emergency (e.g., encephalopathy, hemorrhage). Thus, dull bilateral ache ± diminished consciousness is typical.