Combination therapy in hypertension: an update
Tools
Print-
Email
Thursday, Jun 24 2010
Meticulous control of blood pressure is required in patients with hypertension to produce the maximum reduction in clinical cardiovascular end points, especially in patients with comorbidities like diabetes mellitus where more aggressive blood pressure lowering might be benecial. Recent clinical trials suggest that the approach of using monotherapy for the control of hypertension is not likely to be successful in most patients.
Combination therapy may be theoretically favored by the fact that multiple factors contribute to hypertension, and achieving control of blood pressure with single agent acting through one particular mechanism may not be possible. Regimens can either be fixed dose combinations or drugs added sequentially one after other.
Combining the drugs makes them available in a convenient dosing format, lower the dose of individual component, thus, reducing the side effects and improving compliance.
Classes of antihypertensive agents which have been commonly used are angiotensin receptor blockers,thiazide diuretics, beta and alpha blockers, calcium antagonists and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors.
Thiazide diuretics and calcium channel blockers are effective, as well as combinations that include renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system blockers, in reducing BP. The majority of currently available fixed-dose combinations are diuretic-based.
Combinations may be individualized according to the presence of comorbidities like diabetes mellitus, chronic renal failure, heart failure, thyroid disorders and for special population groups like elderly and pregnant females.
Author: Sanjay KalraBharti KalraNavneet Agrawal
Credits/Source: Diabetology &Metabolic Syndrome 2010, 2:44
Provided by Armina Hypertension Association
Also in this section
- 2-arm blood pressure check indicator for risk from heart disease or death
- Swimming lowers older adults’ blood pressure
- Hypertension in Pregnant Women
- Pre-Hypertension Still Raises Heart Risk in Men
- Canada’s first renal denervation procedure to reduce high blood pressure performed today
- Expectant mothers on antidepressants risk newborns with high blood pressure
- Blood pressure control: Now or later?
- Young women may reduce heart disease risk eating fish with omega 3 fatty acids
- New Formula Developed to Reassure Patients About Low Heart Attack Risk
- Blood pressure and stroke risk gets more complicated
- When blood pressure refuses to go down
- Breakthrough in understanding the genetics of high blood pressure
Post a comment
[ + Comment here + ]
There are no comments for this entry yet. [ + Comment here + ]
Comments are moderated by our editors, so there may be a delay between submission and publication of your comment. Offensive or abusive comments will not be published.