Objective. To assess the antihypertensive efficacy and safety of the combination of the direct renin inhibitor aliskiren and ramipril in patients with diabetes and hypertension. Methods. In this double-blind, multicentre trial, 837 patients with diabetes mellitus and hypertension (mean sitting diastolic blood pressure [BP] > 95 and < 110 mmHg) were randomised to once-daily aliskiren (150 mg titrated to 300 mg after four weeks; n=282), ramipril (5 mg titrated to 10 mg; n=278) or the combination (n=277) for eight weeks. Efficacy variables were cuff mean sitting diastolic BP (msDBP) and mean sitting systolic BP (msSBP); 24-hour ambulatory BP, plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma renin concentration (PRC) were also assessed.
These data show that the risk of hypertension associated with coffee intake varies according to CYP1A2 genotype. Carriers of slow *1F allele are at increased risk and should thus abstain from coffee, whereas individuals with *1A/*1A genotype can safely drink coffee.
To assess the reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure, we recorded 24-hour blood pressure twice 3 months apart in 508 hypertensive subjects participating in the HAR-VEST trial using a noninvasive technique. Blood pressure was measured every 10 minutes during the daytime and 30 minutes during the nighttime. Reproducibility was better for ambulatory than for office blood pressure. It was greater for 24-hour than for daytime blood pressure and lowest for nighttime blood pressure. The reproducibility of blood pressure variability (standard deviation) was poorer than that of the average values. A small but significant decrease in average daytime blood pressure (-0.8/-1.0 mm Hg) and virtually no change in nighttime blood pressure (+0.5/+0.1 mmHg) were observed at repeat recording. Reducing the sampling rate by 50% caused only a small impairment of the reproducibility indexes of both the average values and variability. Blood pressure reduction was greater during the first and last hours of the recordings, indicating an effect of the hospital environment on the between-monitoring difference. Changes in body weight (-0.7 kg, P=.006, at repeat recording) were related to those of 24-hour diastolic blood pressure (P<.05). In conclusion, patient reaction to medical environment and changes of body weight seem to account for most of the change in 24-hour blood pressure that occurs over a 3-month period. sponse to ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) occurs; some authors 13 observed no substantial changes between two or more consecutive ABPMs, whereas others 46 noted a certain decrease of blood pressure (BP) between the first and subsequent ABPMs. However, most of these results were obtained in small numbers of patients. 36 Moreover, limited information is available on what the best monitoring conditions are to avoid the adaptation response to ABPM and on the number of BP samples per hour that should be chosen to improve its reproducibility.The hospital environment is likely to elicit an alarm reaction in a patient, which might decrease with repeated recordings. As for the frequency of measurements, there is agreement only on the notion that a lower sampling frequency is needed during the nighttime than during the daytime.In the multicenter Hypertension and Ambulatory Recording Venetia Study (HARVEST) trial, 7 two baseline ABPMs were performed 3 months apart, and the analysis of recently obtained results from a large population of subjects may help clarify the reproducibility of office BP and ABPM and to establish whether it is affected by the hospital environment, the frequency of BP readings, and subjects' clinical characteristics. Methods SubjectsThe study was carried out in 508 consecutive white subjects (375 men and 133 women) who took part in the HARVEST study, 7 a trial on the predictive value of ABPM for the development of fixed hypertension in patients with borderline to mild hypertension. Subjects aged 18 to 45 years with diastolic BP from 90 to 100 mm Hg or isolated systolic hypertension are el...
Controversy remains on whether white coat hypertension is a benign clinical condition or carries an increased risk of target-organ damage. Nine hundred forty-two stage I hypertensive subjects enrolled in the HARVEST trial underwent 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and urine collection for albumin measurement. Reliable echocardiographic data were obtained in 722 subjects. White coat hypertensive subjects were defined on the basis of three different partition values: mean daytime blood pressure <130/90 mm Hg, <135/85 mm Hg, or <140/90 mm Hg. Ninety-five normotensive subjects with similar age and sex distribution were studied as controls. With all threshold levels, left ventricular mass index and wall thicknesses were greater in the sustained hypertensive subjects than in the white coat hypertensive subjects, also when these differences were adjusted for blood pressure readings taken in the office. Relative wall thickness was similar in the two hypertensive groups. All echocardiographic dimensional data were greater in the white coat hypertensive subjects than in the normotensive subjects. Urinary albumin and the prevalence of microalbuminuria were also greater in the sustained hypertensive subjects than in the white coat hypertensive subjects. No significant differences in urinary albumin were found between the white coat hypertensive and the normotensive subjects. These results show that within a population of subjects with stage I hypertension, subjects with white coat hypertension have a smaller degree of hypertensive complications than those with sustained hypertension, irrespective of their blood pressure levels taken in the office. However, in comparison with normotensive subjects, white coat hypertensive subjects seem to be at greater risk. Cardiac involvement seems to precede glomerular damage in the early stage of hypertension.
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