Publication | Closed Access
Renin Profiling in Hypertension and Its Use in Treatment with Propranolol and Chlorthalidone
111
Citations
11
References
1976
Year
Blood Pressure MonitoringHypertensionPlasma Renin ActivityRenal FunctionCardiovascular DiseaseMedicineAntihypertensive TherapyCardiovascular PharmacologyDouble-blind Crossover StudyBlood Pressure ControlHypertensive EmergenciesPharmacotherapyPharmacologyRenin ProfilingNephrologyBlood PressureAnesthesiologyEndocrine Hypertension
We compared methods of classifying hypertension according to plasma renin activity in 54 patients with essential hypertension and examined the validity of using these classifications to choose between two hypotensive drugs. A prospective, double-blind crossover study was used. Normal values for plasma renin activity were established from 111 control subjects. Plasma renin activity was related to race and inversely to age in hypertensive patients (P less than 0.05) but not in normal subjects. Three methods of classification correlated well but did not identify exactly the same renin-suppressed patients. Chlorthalidone produced a greater reduction in blood pressure and restored blood pressure to normal in a larger percentage of patients in both low-renin (59 per cent) and normal-renin (32 per cent) subgroups than propranolol (12 and 16 per cent). Renin determinations are of limited benefit in the choice of therapy for most patients with essential hypertension.
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