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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We assessed the efficacy of long-acting nifedipine as monotherapy in 52 patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension in a randomized, controlled crossover study. Good blood pressure control was achieved in 34 of 40 patients (85%) receiving nifedipine (mean daily dose, 52 mg in 2 divided doses) compared with 23 of 40 patients (58%) receiving metoprolol (mean daily dose, 155 mg in 2 divided doses). After treatment for 4 weeks, the mean blood pressures with nifedipine (149.7 +/- 16.6/88.7 +/- 11.1 mm of
mercury
) and metoprolol administration (163.9 +/- 23.3/94.2 +/- 10.2 mm of
mercury
) were significantly lower than with placebo (176.7 +/- 17.3/100.9 +/- 7.1 mm of
mercury
) (P less than .05). The mean systolic pressure during nifedipine treatment was 14.2 mm of
mercury
lower (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.9 to 24.5 mm of
mercury
) and mean diastolic pressure 5.5 mm of
mercury
(95% CI, 0.3 to 10.7 mm of
mercury
) lower than with metoprolol therapy. Both drugs were reasonably well tolerated, and intolerance requiring withdrawal was encountered in 3 of 45 (7%) patients receiving nifedipine, compared with 1 of 45 (2%) of those taking metoprolol and placebo, respectively. Adverse effects of nifedipine, most of which were transient, included palpitations, headache, facial flushing, and ankle edema. Long-acting nifedipine is a promising agent when given alone for mild to moderate
hypertension
and can be safely administered in clinical practice.
...
PMID:Long-acting nifedipine versus metoprolol as monotherapy for essential hypertension. A randomized, controlled crossover study. 240 30
The effect of oral contraceptives (OCs) on changes in arterial pressure (AP) was studied in 160 healthy women, 22-35 years of age, with ovulatory menstrual cycles. They took Ovidan and Non-ovlon for 12 months to prevent unwanted pregnancy. These steroidal preparations contain equal doses (.05 mg) of ethinyl estradiol and different doses of gestagenic components: .25 mg of levonorgestrel in Ovidan and 1 mg of norethisterone acetate in Non-ovlon. Measurements of AP parameters were taken with a
mercury
sphygmomanometer, and complications caused by OCs were recorded. Results were processed by the usual methods of variational statistics. With Ovidan, a significant increase (p .05) in systolic and diastolic AP was recorded after 3 and 6 months. Systolic and diastolic APs exceeded the initial levels by 7 and 6 mm Hg, respectively. Non-ovlon caused a less pronounced effect; a significant increase (p .05) of systolic and diastolic AP was recorded during the 12th month of contraception only. Thus, the results indicate that OCs can cause an increase in AP, and the gestagenic component increases the risk of
hypertension
. Levonorgestrel causes a more marked effect than norethisterone. Periodic AP measurements (every 3 months) are recommended for women using OCs. In cases of a steady increase in AP, use of this contraceptive method should be terminated.
...
PMID:[Indicators of arterial blood pressure during hormonal contraception]. 241 29
One hundred and fifty-four patients from 70 to 85 years old (mean 74.5 +/- 4.5 years), including 105 men and 49 women, underwent a bicycle exercise test, in the upright position, with 3 minutes triangular levels (levels of 20 watts or more often 30 watts). Blood pressure (BP) was measured at rest and at the end of each level, using the auscultatory method and a
mercury
manometer. These 154 patients were divided in 59 "healthy" old people, 21 patients suffering from coronary insufficiency but with normal BP, 12 hypertensive patients and 62 patients receiving antihypertensive therapy. The results showed, as in younger people, a linear relation between BP and heart rate (HR). The slope of BP reported to HR determined the exercise BP of each subject. The mean value of "healthy" old people defined the normal exercise BP of people over 70 years old. Slope of systolic blood pressure (SBP) was higher in men than in women, but declined in both sexes in people over 80 years old. Slope of SBP was lower in the case of coronary insufficiency. In hypertensive patients, slope of SBP was the same as in normotensive patients, but was shifted upward. Finally mean exercise BP was lower in patients receiving antihypertensive therapy, compared to non-treaded patients with equal rest BP. The knowledge of exercise BP is useful for the right interpretation of exercise testing in old people suffering from coronary insufficiency or
hypertension
, as well as in presumed healthy old people.
...
PMID:[Pressure profile during exertion in subjects aged 70 years and older]. 251 Jun 35
A comparative study of clinical and ambulatory responses to antihypertensive treatment was conducted retrospectively in 69 patients with mild to moderate arterial
hypertension
. The patients received different drugs, but blood pressure (BP) was measured by the same methods in each of them. (a) Clinical BP was measured with a
mercury
manometer some time after taking the last dose of antihypertensive drug: 24 hours in patients who took one daily dose, 12 hours in those who took two daily doses. (b) Ambulatory BP was measured with a Spacelabs SPM 5200 instrument over a minimum of 24 hours. The parameters compared were: (1) BP figures recorded. Correlation was very poor as regards both SBP (r = 0.42 before treatment, r = 0.55 after treatment) and DBP (r = 0.40 and r = 0.46 respectively). The mean BP value was lower in the ambulatory group than in the clinical group (-20/-12 mmHg), the difference being slightly less marked after treatment (-12/-6 mmHg). (2) Degree of absolute reduction of BP induced by treatment. Correlation was very poor between the two methods as regards both SBP (r = 0.46) and DBP (r = 0.49). (3) Proportion of responders and non-responders to treatment, the clinical response being defined as normalization and/or more than 10 p. 100 reduction of DBP, and the ambulatory response as a significant decrease of mean diastolic value over 24 hours. Among the 69 patients studied, there were 51 concordant cases (36 responders, 15 non-responders with the two methods) and 18 discordant cases (10 clinical responders but ambulatory non-responders, 8 clinical non-responders but ambulatory responders).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Blood pressure response to antihypertension treatment. Comparison of data obtained at the doctor's office and by ambulatory blood pressure measurement]. 251 75
Arterial
hypertension
has the same definition in elderly people as in young adults. Epidemiologically, it has clearly been demonstrated that in the elderly it is a risk factor of morbidity and cardiovascular mortality. The international reference method for measuring blood pressure is by auscultation and
mercury
manometer. However, this indirect measurement is the source of many errors due to the material or the observer, or inherent in the method. A typical example of this is pseudohypertension in the elderly. Several solution are offered to improve the reliability of indirect blood pressure measurement, the most convincing one being the use of scientifically validated autonomous instruments relying on the oscillometry system. Ambulatory blood pressure measurement is interesting, being of diagnostic, therapeutic and probably prognostic value, but all this has to be confirmed in elderly subjects.
...
PMID:[False and true hypertension in the aged subject. Diagnostic errors and potential solutions]. 252 34
The study was designed to compare the efficacy of captopril and enalapril, both orally active inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme, in the treatment of primary hypertension when administered in a single daily dose. After placebo washout for two weeks, 20 hypertensive patients (I-II class, according to WHO), were admitted to active treatment, in a randomized sequence, with captopril (50 mg) and enalapril (20 mg) once a day in the morning (8 a.m.). Supine and erect blood pressure and heart rate were measured weekly, 24 hours after drug administration by using a
mercury
standard sphygmomanometer. In all patients ambulatory noninvasive blood pressure monitoring was performed after 4 weeks of treatment. The data confirmed the efficacy of both drugs in lowering blood pressure. However, while the antihypertensive effect of enalapril was prolonged throughout 24 hours, captopril was effective only for about 22 hours, a period longer than previously suggested on the basis of serum ACE inhibition, but not sufficient to cover the whole day. Therefore, if captopril therapy has to be used in a single daily dose an attempt should be made using an increased dosage or by employing the drug in some retarded pharmaceutical form. The need to prolong the antihypertensive effect of captopril to 24 hours is based on the clinical experience according to which the smaller the number of tablets to be taken the better the compliance. This is particularly true for cases of asymptomatic
hypertension
which nevertheless require lifelong therapy.
...
PMID:[Comparison of the efficacy of captopril and enalapril in single doses in the treatment of arterial hypertension. Evaluation by means of non-invasive ambulatory monitoring]. 255 65
Pharmacotherapy of
hypertension
in the aged does not differ qualitatively but only quantitatively from that in use for younger patients. Adjusted, usually lower doses of diuretics, beta-blocking agents, ACE-inhibitors and calcium-channel blockers are the basic drugs. Individual aging processes and concomitant diseases determine the choice of drugs in the elderly (individualized therapy). All substances are initially prescribed at very low dose. The increasing infirmity of the aged often associated with tiredness, dyspnea and dizziness even without treatment requires careful instruction of the patient about effects and side effects of the prescribed medication. The old WHO-guidelines (systolic BP greater than or equal to 160, diastolic BP greater than or equal to 95 mm
mercury
) should be maintained for diagnosis and treatment of
hypertension
. However antihypertensive therapy in patients over 80 years of age and in those with marginally elevated diastolic or solely elevated systolic pressure is controversial today.
...
PMID:[Hypertension and old age]. 268 25
Blood pressure measurements made in the physician's office with a
mercury
-column sphygmomanometer traditionally have been the standard for diagnosis of
hypertension
and determination of the efficacy of antihypertensive agents. The utility of this measurement is limited, however, by the characteristic variability of blood pressure; office blood pressure readings are not always reliable indicators of pressures occurring throughout the course of the day. Therefore, blood pressure measurements performed by patients or family members at home and automatic ambulatory blood pressure monitoring are two supplementary methods used in the clinical management of
hypertension
. In this article, the role of these methods in the diagnosis of
hypertension
and other cardiovascular disorders as well as in the evaluation of the efficacy of antihypertensive therapy is addressed.
...
PMID:Clinical use of home and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. 268 99
Ambulatory blood pressure measurements are better at predicting the outcome of
hypertension
than single measurements. Since cardiovascular morbidity and mortality are mainly related to large artery damage in hypertensive patients, non-invasive indices of arterial distensibility, such as pulse wave velocity, have been proposed for the evaluation of cardiovascular risk. Indeed, pulse wave velocity is positively correlated with blood pressure (BP) when measured by ambulatory recordings, while there is no correlation with clinical
mercury
sphygmomanometer readings. Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors such as perindopril not only reduce
high blood pressure
, but also increase arterial compliance and distensibility. This latter effect could lead to a more marked decrease in systolic blood pressure than diastolic blood pressure following long-term treatment with ACE inhibitors. This has been demonstrated using ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in hypertensive patients treated with perindopril for three months. The correlation coefficient between ambulatory systolic and diastolic blood pressure before (r = 0.82) and after (r = 0.76) perindopril was significant. Comparison of the corresponding slopes indicated that, for any given value of diastolic blood pressure, systolic blood pressure was significantly lower after perindopril than before perindopril. The action of the drug on the arterial wall may therefore explain the more marked effect on systolic blood pressure than on diastolic blood pressure.
...
PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition, pulse wave velocity and ambulatory blood pressure measurements in essential hypertension. 269 Nov 27
The two prior hypotheses of the study were that, among a high risk population of patients who were hypertensive, who had diabetes and who underwent elective general surgical treatment, the duration of intraoperative hypotension and
hypertension
(greater than 20 millimeters of
mercury
above or below the preoperative base line) and intraoperative administration of less than 300 milliliters per hour of saline solution containing fluids would identify patients at higher risk for postoperative renal dysfunction. Among those who had an intraoperative mean arterial pressure (MAP) that fell more than 20 millimeters of
mercury
below the base line, 15 per cent of those with fall of MAP lasting for greater than or equal to 60 minutes had postoperative renal dysfunction, whereas those with drops in pressure lasting for less than 60 minutes did not sustain increased postoperative renal dysfunction. Patients who had intraoperative MAP rise to greater than 20 millimeters of
mercury
above the preoperative base line value for greater than 30 minutes also had twice the rate of postoperative renal dysfunction. Fifteen per cent of the patients who received less than 300 milliliters per hour of isotonic saline-like fluids had postoperative renal dysfunction, significantly more than the 8 per cent of those who received greater than or equal to 300 milliliters per hour. Two intraoperative events also significantly increased postoperative renal dysfunction rates: cardiac arrest and the drainage of massive ascites. Patients with decompensated congestive heart failure at admission to the hospital had significantly increased postoperative renal dysfunction; these patients and probably should not undergo an operation unless it is an emergency. All of the patients, regardless of the magnitude of the operation and of its projected length or type of anesthesia, should be given greater than 300 milliliters per hour of isotonic saline-like solutions.
...
PMID:Postoperative renal dysfunction can be predicted. 278 48
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