| Literature DB >> 32260482 |
Lucía Ramírez Martínez-Acitores1, Fernando Hernández Ruiz de Azcárate1, Elisabeth Casañas1, Julia Serrano1, Gonzalo Hernández1, Rosa María López-Pintor1.
Abstract
The aims of this systematic review are (1) to compare the prevalence of xerostomia and hyposalivation between patients taking antihypertensive drugs with a control group (CG), (2) to compare salivary flow rate between patients treated with a CG, and (3) to identify which antihypertensives produce xerostomia. This systematic review was carried out according to the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. To evaluate methodological quality of the eligible studies Cochrane Collaboration tool for assessing the risk of bias for clinical trials and the modified Newcastle-Ottawa scale case-control studies were used. The databases were searched for studies up to November 19th 2019. The search strategy yielded 6201 results and 13 publications were finally included (five clinical trials and eight case-control studies). The results of the included studies did not provide evidence to state that patients taking antihypertensives suffer more xerostomia or hyposalivation than patients not taking them. With regard to salivary flow, only two clinical studies showed a significant decrease in salivary flow and even one showed a significant increase after treatment. The case-control studies showed great variability in salivary flow, but in this case most studies showed how salivary flow is lower in patients medicated with antihypertensive drugs. The great variability of antihypertensive drugs included, the types of studies and the outcomes collected made it impossible to study which antihypertensive drug produces more salivary alterations. The quality assessment showed how each of the studies was of low methodological quality. Therefore, future studies about this topic are necessary to confirm whether antihypertensive drugs produce salivary alterations.Entities:
Keywords: antihypertensives; hypertension; hyposalivation; salivary flow; xerostomia
Year: 2020 PMID: 32260482 PMCID: PMC7177425 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17072478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart.
General characteristics of the studies.
| Author, Year and Country | Study Design | Duration | Sample | Age and Gender | Type of Salivary Flow Rate | Saliva Sampling | Hyposalivation | Xerostomia Assessment | Type of Antihypertensive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ben-Aryeh et al., 1981, Israel [ | Clinical trial | 6 weeks | 10 CG | 12 female/8 male | UWS | 8–9 am | - | - | β-Adrenergic blocker (Pindolol) |
| Van Hoof et al., 1983, The Netherlands [ | Clinical trial | 1 day | 23 CG | 42 Male | UWS | 15 min | - | - | β-Adrenergic blocker (Propanolol) |
| Streckfus et al., 1994, USA [ | Case-control study | - | 15 CG | NT: | SPS | 8–12 am Carlson–Crittenden cups: parotid | - | - | Diuretic (HCTZ) |
| Nederfors et al., 1995, Sweden [ | Double blind, cross-over randomized trial | 3 months | 24 Healthy patients: | 13 female/ 11 male | UWS | 7.30–8.30 am | - | - | ACE inhibitors (Captopril) |
| Nederfors et al., 2004, Sweden [ | Cross- over clinical trial | 3 months | 12 Healthy patients: | 12 female | UWS | UWS: Spitting method | - | VAS | Diuretic (Thiazide, furosemide) |
| Tahrir et al., 2006, Irak [ | Clinical trial | 4 weeks | 48 HT treated with atenolol | 20 male /28 female | UWS | 8–9 am | - | - | β-Adrenergic blockers: Atenolol |
| Nonzee et al., 2012, Thailand [ | Case-control study | - | 200 HT | CG: | SWS | 8–12 am | Fontana et al. Hyposalivation SWS was diagnosed if the color of Schirmer text moved 25 mm at 3 min | Xerostomia questionnaire Fox et al. + VAS | β-Adrenergic blockers (Propanolol, atenolol) |
| Muñoz et al., 2012, Chile, [ | Case-control study | - | 14 HT | Gender not available | UWS | Not available | - | - | Diuretics |
| De la luz et al., 2013, Mexico [ | Case-control study | - | 440 Patients: | 268 female/ 172 male | UWS | Morning | UWS < 0.15 mL/min | Modified Sreebney and Fox questionnaire | Not available |
| Kagawa et al., 2013, Japan [ | Case-control study | - | 96 CG | 92 female/73 male | UWS | 10 am-3 pm | - | - | Not available |
| Prasanthi et al., 2014, India [ | Case-control study | - | 50 CG | CG | UWS | 9–10 am | UWS<0.3 mL/min | - | Diuretics |
| Ivanovski et al., 2015, Republic of Macedonia [ | Case-control study | - | 30 CG | Gender not available | UWS | Navazesh method | USW<0.2 mL/min | - | Diuretic |
| Nimma et al. 2016, India [ | Case-control study | - | 20 CG | Gender not available | UWS | Moment no available UWS: Spitting method 5 min | - | - | Not available |
UWS (unstimulated whole saliva), SWS (stimulated whole saliva), SPS (stimulated parotid saliva), USS (unstimulated submandibular/sublingual saliva), SSS (stimulated submandibular/sublingual saliva), HT (hypertension treated with antihypertensives), GC (control group), DM (diabetes mellitus), HCTZ (hydrochlorothiazide), BD (blood pressure).
The Cochrane risk of bias of the included clinical trials.
| Random Sequence Generation | Allocation Concealment | Blinding of Participants and Personnel | Blinding of Outcome Assessment | Incomplete Outcome Data | Selective Reporting | Other Bias | Quality | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| High | High | High | High | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Poor quality |
|
| Unclear | Unclear | High | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Poor quality |
|
| Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | Poor quality |
|
| Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | Poor quality |
|
| High | High | High | High | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Poor quality |
The modified Newcastle–Ottawa scale for case-control studies.
| Selection | Selection | Selection | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | Outcome | Score | Quality | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Streckfus et al. 1994b [ | * | - | - | * | * | ** | * | 6/10 | Fair |
| Nonzee et al. 2012 [ | * | - | - | - | * | ** | * | 5/10 | Poor |
| Muñoz et al. 2012 [ | * | - | - | - | * | * | * | 4/10 | Poor |
| De la luz et al. 2013 [ | - | - | - | - | * | ** | * | 4/10 | Poor |
| Kagawa et al. 2013 [ | * | - | - | * | * | ** | * | 6/10 | Fair |
| Prasanthi et al. 2014 [ | * | - | - | - | * | * | * | 4/10 | Poor |
| Ivanovski et al 2015 [ | * | - | - | * | * | ** | * | 6/10 | Fair |
| Nimma et al. 2016 [ | - | - | - | * | * | * | * | 4/10 | Poor |
* p < 0.001; ** p ≤ 0.05.
Clinical trials results.
| Author/Year/Country | Antihypertensive Medications | Salivary Flow Rate (mL/min) (g/min) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental | No Treatment | Placebo | Results | ||||||||
| Before | After | Before | After | ||||||||
| Ben-Aryeh et al., 1981, Israel [ | β-Adrenergic blocker (Pindolol) | UWS: 0.24 ± 0.14 | 3 h | 24 h | 6 weeks | UWS: 0.39 ± 0.18 | The UWS flow rate increased, no significantly, in HT patients treated with pinilol. However CG salivary flow were higher than experimental group. | ||||
| 0.31 ± 0.11 | 0.27 ± 0.2 | 0.36 ± 0.15 | |||||||||
| Van Hoof et al. 1983 | Intravenous injection of propranolol | 1 mg |
| NT: | UWS flow rate significantly decreased in NT patients treatment with propranolol and phentolamine. | ||||||
| NT: UWS: 0.88 ± 0.15 | 0.72 ± 0.12** | ||||||||||
| BHT: UWS: 0.34 ± 0.04 | 0.32 ± 0.05 | ||||||||||
| Intravenous injection of phentolamine | 1 mg | 5 mg | |||||||||
| NT: UWS: 0.88 ± 0.15 | 0.74 ± 0.14** | 0.77 ± 0.11 | |||||||||
| BHT: UWS: 0.54 ± 0.14 | 0.47 ± 0.10 | 0.53 ± 0.10 | |||||||||
| Nederfors et al. 1995 | ACE inhibitors (Captopril) | UWS:0.59 ± 0.24 |
|
| - | UWS: |
|
| SPS is significantly higher in patients treated with captopril | ||
| UWS: 0.65 ± 0.27 | UWS: 0.69 ± 0.69 | UWS: | UWS: | ||||||||
| Nederfors et al. 2004 | Diuretic (Thiazide, furosemide) | Day 7 | Day 7 | SSS was significantly affected, statistically (P < 0.05) decreased in the morning during chronic treatment with both drugs. | |||||||
| Furosemide | Bendroflumethiazide UWS: | Furosemide | Bendroflumethiazide | UWS: | UWS: | ||||||
| Tahrir et al. 2006 | β-Adrenergic blockers: Atenolol | UWS 0.24 ± 0.14 | 24 h | 1 week | 4 weeks | UWS: 0.38 ± 0.18 | The UWS flow rate increased, not significantly, in HT patients treated with atenolol | ||||
| 0.26 ± 0.11 | 0.28 ± 0.2 | 0.33 ± 0.15 | |||||||||
* p < 0.001; **p ≤ 0.05; UWS (unstimulated whole saliva), SWS (stimulated whole saliva), SPS (stimulated parotid saliva), USS (unstimulated submandibular/sublingual saliva), SSS (stimulated submandibular/sublingual saliva), NT (normotensive), BHT (borderline hypertensive).
Case-control studies results.
| Author/Year | Antihypertensive Medications | UWS (mL/min) | SWS (mL/min) | SPS (mL/min) | Hyposalivation Salivary Flow Rate | Hyposalivation (%) | Xerostomia (%) | Level of Xerostomia (cm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Streckfus et al., 1994b, USA [ | Diuretic (HCTZ) | - | - | CG: 0.695 ± 0.44 | Not available | - | - | - | 0.02 |
| Nonzee et al., 2012, Thailand [ | β-Adrenergic blockers (Propanolol, atenolol) | - | CG: 1.31 ± 0.34 | - | SWS hyposalivation was diagnosed if the color moved 25 mm at 3 min according to Fontana et al. | CG: 5% | CG: 25.5% | CG: 1.53 ± 1.89 | 0.05 |
| Muñoz et al., 2012, Chile [ | Diuretics | CG: 1.92 ± 0.40 | - | - | Not available | - | - | - | 0.13 |
| De la luz et al., 2013, Mexico [ | Not available | CG: 0.31 ± 0.17 | CG: 1.33 ± 0.70 | - | UWS < 0.15 mL/min | - | CG: 12.7% | UWS: 0.023 | |
| Kagawa et al., 2013, Japan [ | Not available | CG: 0.32 (0.19–0.51) HT: 0.35 (0.23–0.57) | CG: 1.66 (1.18–2.39) | - | Not available | - | - | - | UWS: 0.85 |
| Prasanthi et al., 2014 India [ | Diuretics | CG: 2.16 ± 0.72 | CG: 7.90 ± 1.87 | - | UWS < 0.3 mL/min | - | - | - | 0.001 |
| Ivanovski et al., 2015, Republic of Macedonia, [ | Diuretics | CG: 0.6 ± 0.1 | - | - | USW < 0.2 mL/min | - | - | - | 0.000 |
| Nimma et al., 2016, India [ | Not available | CG: 2.73 ± 0.68 | CG: 3.30 ± 0.70 | - | - | - | - | UWS: 0.13 |
HT: hypertensive patients; CG: normotensive patients; METRO: metropolol; ENA: enalapril; HCTZ: hydrochlorothiazide.