| Literature DB >> 28552207 |
Alberto Morales Salinas1, Antonio Coca2, Michael H Olsen3, Ramiro A Sanchez4, Weimar K Sebba-Barroso5, Richard Kones6, Vicente Bertomeu-Martinez7, Javier Sobrino8, Luis Alcocer9, Daniel J Pineiro10, Fernando Lanas11, Carlos A Machado12, Fernando Aguirre-Palacios13, Jose Ortellado14, Gonzalo Perez15, Rodrigo Sabio16, Orlando Landrove17, Delfin Rodriguez-Leyva17, Alfredo Duenas-Herrera18, Ayelen Rodriguez Portelles19, Jose Z Parra-Carrillo20, Daniel L Piskorz21, Alfonso Bryce-Moncloa22, Gabriel Waisman23, Yuichiro Yano24, Hector Ventura25, Marcelo Orias26, Dorairaj Prabhakaran27, J Sundström28, Jiguang Wang29, Louise M Burrell30, Alta E Schutte31, Patricio Lopez-Jaramillo32, Eduardo Barbosa33, Josep Redon34, Michael A Weber35, Carl J Lavie25, Agustin Ramirez36, Pedro Ordunez37, Salim Yusuf38, Alberto Zanchetti39.
Abstract
Hypertension is a leading risk factor for disease burden globally. An unresolved question is whether grade 1 hypertension (140-159/90-99mmHg) with low (cardiovascular mortality <1% at 10 years) to moderate (cardiovascular mortality ≥1% and <5% at 10 years) absolute total cardiovascular risk (CVR) should be treated with antihypertensive agents. A virtual international consultation process was undertaken to summarize the opinions of select experts. After holistic analysis of all epidemiological, clinical, psychosocial, and public health elements, this consultation process reached the following consensus in hypertensive adults aged <80 years: (1) The question of whether drug treatment in grade 1 should be preceded by a period of some weeks or months during which only lifestyle measures are recommended cannot be evidence based, but the consensus opinion is to have a period of lifestyle alone reserved only to patients with grade 1 "isolated" hypertension (grade 1 uncomplicated hypertension with low absolute total CVR, and without other major CVR factors and risk modifiers). (2) The initiation of antihypertensive drug therapy in grade 1 hypertension with moderate absolute total CVR should not be delayed. (3) Men ≥55 years and women ≥60 years with uncomplicated grade 1 hypertension should automatically be classified within the moderate absolute total CVR category, even in the absence of other major CVR factors and risk modifiers. (4) Statins should be considered along with blood-pressure lowering therapy, irrespective of cholesterol levels, in patients with grade 1 hypertensive with moderate CVR.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28552207 DOI: 10.1016/j.cpcardiol.2017.03.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Probl Cardiol ISSN: 0146-2806 Impact factor: 5.200