Blood Pressure Components in Clinical Hypertension.
From: Hôpital Hotel Dieu, Paris, France.
Journal of clinical hypertension (Greenwich, Conn.)
- Publish Date: Sep 2006
- ISSN: 1524-6175
- Volume: 8
- Issue: 9
- Pages: 659-66
- Medium: Print
- Language: English
- Citation (JAMA): Safar Michel E, Smulyan Harold, et al. Blood Pressure Components in Clinical Hypertension.. Sep 2006;8:659-66
Abstract
This review offers a critical evaluation of the remarkable progress in antihypertensive therapy since its inception. Despite the introduction of newer, more sophisticated drugs, treatment results have remained stable. Problems impeding further improvement include limited patient compliance, clinical inertia, incomplete adherence to guidelines, and dependence on brachial artery cuff pressures for diagnosis, risk assessment, and treatment response. Brachial artery systolic and pulse pressures do not reliably represent aortic or carotid artery pressures, which are better risk predictors for the heart and brain. Mean pressure, which is the same throughout the arterial tree, is directly measurable by cuff oscillometry, and might become the best single risk predictor. Available drugs have limited ability to decrease the aortic stiffness that is responsible for the elevated systolic blood pressure of aging. Therefore, to improve risk assessment and therapeutic benefit, we might include mean blood pressure and pulse pressure into blood pressure measurements, pursue efforts to measure central blood pressure, and search for new drugs to reduce arterial stiffness.
Mesh Headings (Keywords): Antihypertensive Agents, Blood Pressure, Brachial Artery, Humans, Hypertension, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors
Check for Full Text / PubMed Unique Identifier (PMID): 16957428
This abstract is part of PubMed, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. PubMed includes more than 17 million citations from MEDLINE and other life science journals for biomedical articles. See Copyright and Disclaimers.
Linked medical terms appearing on this page are added by Healia to help readers find more information and are not part of the original PubMed document.
The data herein was last updated on July 8th, 2008 and may not reflect the most current and accurate data available from NLM.
