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Antihypertensive efficacy of zofenopril and hydrochlorothiazide combination on ambulatory blood pressure
22
Citations
29
References
2006
Year
Blood Pressure MonitoringHypertensionCardiovascular DiseaseAmbulatory Blood PressureMedicineHydrochlorothiazide CombinationAntihypertensive TherapyCardiovascular PharmacologyAntihypertensive EfficacyBlood Pressure ControlOffice DbpPharmacotherapyPharmacologyBlood PressureAnesthesiologySmoothness Index
Objective. The effects of a 12‐week double‐blind randomized treatment with zofenopril (Z) 15, 30 or 60 mg or hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) 12.5 or 25 mg, on trough office (n = 353) and 24‐h blood pressure (BP, n = 245) were compared with that of their combinations in essential hypertensive patients (95⩽diastolic or DBP⩽110 mmHg, 18–75 years). Design and methods. Rate of normalized (office DBP<90 mmHg) or responder (reduction⩾10 mmHg if office DBP⩾90 mmHg) patients, 24‐h BP changes vs baseline and the smoothness index were calculated at the end of treatment. Results. Efficacy of Z+HCTZ was greater than that of individual treatments, with best results achieved under Z30+HCTZ12.5 mg (normalized: 57%; normalized+responder: 80%; 24‐h BP changes: 9±1/11±2 mmHg; smoothness index: 1.6±0.3/1.8±0.4) or Z60+HCTZ12.5 mg (normalized: 79%; normalized+responder: 93%; 24‐h BP changes: 9±2/13±2 mmHg; smoothness index: 1.9±0.4/2.5±0.7). Conclusions. Z+HCTZ combination is more effective than monotherapy in yielding a homogeneous BP control over the 24 h.
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