In normotensive NIDDM patients, treatment with metformin was associated with greater reductions in body weight, plasma total cholesterol concentration, and erect diastolic blood pressure, whereas the systemic vascular resistance index increased after treatment with glibenclamide. These findings merit long-term investigation.
Cardiovascular diseases are the major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and there is considerable interest in the role of dietary constituents and supplements in the prevention and treatment of these disorders. We reviewed the major publications related to potential effects on cardiovascular risk factors and outcomes of some common dietary constituents: carotenoids, flavonoid-rich cocoa, tea, red wine and grapes, coffee, omega-3 fatty acids, and garlic. Increased intake of some of these has been associated with reduced all-cause mortality or reduced incidence of myocardial infraction, stroke, and hypertension. However, although the evidence from observational studies is supportive of beneficial effects for most of these foodstuffs taken as part of the diet, potential benefits from the use of supplements derived from these natural products remain largely inconclusive.
1 Heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) changes supine, at 600 tilt and in response to increasing exercise loads, and HR responses to Valsalva's manoeuvre and to isoprenaline bolus injections were studied in 19 healthy volunteers to assess the response to abrupt withdrawal of atenolol n = 6, propranolol n = 6 and pindolol n = 7. 2 The dosage of each drug administered double-blind was gradually increased over a period of 2 weeks and the dose to produce maximum inhibition of exercise-induced tachycardia was continued for one further week. 3 Plasma renin activity, plasma noradrenaline and serum free thyroid hormones were measured during control periods, maximum dosage and withdrawal periods. 4 An increased sensitivity to isoprenaline injections was seen on Day 5 after withdrawal in the atenolol treated group whereas the pindolol treated group showed decreasing hyposensitivity to isoprenaline for the 13 days of observation after drug withdrawal and propranolol showed an intermediate effect.5 There was no overshoot in HR or BP measurements at rest or in response to tilting, Valsalva's manoeuvre or exercise with atenolol or propranolol and with pindolol the HR response to tilt only was significantly higher on the third day post-drug. 6 Plasma noradrenaline and serum free T3 were reduced on drug treatment and further reduced in the early withdrawal period but there were no consistent changes in plasma renin activity.
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