| Literature DB >> 28449828 |
Alexander A Leung1, Stella S Daskalopoulou2, Kaberi Dasgupta2, Kerry McBrien3, Sonia Butalia4, Kelly B Zarnke5, Kara Nerenberg6, Kevin C Harris7, Meranda Nakhla8, Lyne Cloutier9, Mark Gelfer10, Maxime Lamarre-Cliche11, Alain Milot12, Peter Bolli13, Guy Tremblay14, Donna McLean15, Karen C Tran, Sheldon W Tobe16, Marcel Ruzicka17, Kevin D Burns17, Michel Vallée18, G V Ramesh Prasad16, Steven E Gryn19, Ross D Feldman20, Peter Selby21, Andrew Pipe22, Ernesto L Schiffrin23, Philip A McFarlane24, Paul Oh25, Robert A Hegele26, Milan Khara27, Thomas W Wilson28, S Brian Penner29, Ellen Burgess30, Praveena Sivapalan28, Robert J Herman5, Simon L Bacon31, Simon W Rabkin32, Richard E Gilbert33, Tavis S Campbell34, Steven Grover35, George Honos36, Patrice Lindsay37, Michael D Hill38, Shelagh B Coutts39, Gord Gubitz40, Norman R C Campbell41, Gordon W Moe42, Jonathan G Howlett43, Jean-Martin Boulanger44, Ally Prebtani13, Gregory Kline30, Lawrence A Leiter45, Charlotte Jones46, Anne-Marie Côté47, Vincent Woo48, Janusz Kaczorowski49, Luc Trudeau50, Ross T Tsuyuki51, Swapnil Hiremath52, Denis Drouin53, Kim L Lavoie54, Pavel Hamet55, Jean C Grégoire56, Richard Lewanczuk15, George K Dresser57, Mukul Sharma58, Debra Reid59, Scott A Lear60, Gregory Moullec61, Milan Gupta62, Laura A Magee63, Alexander G Logan16, Janis Dionne7, Anne Fournier64, Geneviève Benoit65, Janusz Feber66, Luc Poirier67, Raj S Padwal68, Doreen M Rabi69.
Abstract
Hypertension Canada provides annually updated, evidence-based guidelines for the diagnosis, assessment, prevention, and treatment of hypertension. This year, we introduce 10 new guidelines. Three previous guidelines have been revised and 5 have been removed. Previous age and frailty distinctions have been removed as considerations for when to initiate antihypertensive therapy. In the presence of macrovascular target organ damage, or in those with independent cardiovascular risk factors, antihypertensive therapy should be considered for all individuals with elevated average systolic nonautomated office blood pressure (non-AOBP) readings ≥ 140 mm Hg. For individuals with diastolic hypertension (with or without systolic hypertension), fixed-dose single-pill combinations are now recommended as an initial treatment option. Preference is given to pills containing an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker in combination with either a calcium channel blocker or diuretic. Whenever a diuretic is selected as monotherapy, longer-acting agents are preferred. In patients with established ischemic heart disease, caution should be exercised in lowering diastolic non-AOBP to ≤ 60 mm Hg, especially in the presence of left ventricular hypertrophy. After a hemorrhagic stroke, in the first 24 hours, systolic non-AOBP lowering to < 140 mm Hg is not recommended. Finally, guidance is now provided for screening, initial diagnosis, assessment, and treatment of renovascular hypertension arising from fibromuscular dysplasia. The specific evidence and rationale underlying each of these guidelines are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28449828 DOI: 10.1016/j.cjca.2017.03.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Cardiol ISSN: 0828-282X Impact factor: 5.223