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Dynamic resistant hypertension patterns as predictors of cardiovascular morbidity: a 4-year prospective study.

TitleDynamic resistant hypertension patterns as predictors of cardiovascular morbidity: a 4-year prospective study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsTsioufis, C., Kasiakogias A., Kordalis A., Dimitriadis K., Thomopoulos C., Tsiachris D., Vasileiou P., Doumas M., Makris T., Papademetriou V., Kallikazaros I., Bakris G., & Stefanadis C.
JournalJ Hypertens
Volume32
Issue2
Pagination415-22
Date Published2014 Feb
ISSN1473-5598
KeywordsAged, Antihypertensive Agents, Blood Pressure, Cardiovascular Diseases, Coronary Disease, Drug Resistance, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Humans, Hypertension, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Morbidity, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Stroke
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Little is known regarding the clinical course and prognosis of resistant hypertension (RHT). We evaluated predictors of persistent RHT and the associated cardiovascular risk.METHODS: We studied 1911 treated hypertensive patients (aged 59±11 years, 49% men) for a mean period of 3.9 years. At baseline, clinical data were collected and patients underwent echocardiographic measurements, routine blood testing and additional workup for exclusion of secondary causes of RHT (office-based uncontrolled hypertension under at least three drugs including a diuretic or controlled hypertension under four or more drugs). Endpoint of interest was the composite of coronary artery disease and stroke.MAIN RESULTS: Four groups were identified depending on presence or absence of RHT at baseline and follow-up: 1153 patients (60%) never having RHT, 189 (10%) with resolved RHT, 204 (11%) with incident RHT and 365 (19%) with persistent RHT. Two-thirds of the patients with RHT at baseline remained resistant at the end of the study. Independent variables associated with both incident and persistent RHT were diabetes mellitus, history of cardiovascular disease, hypertension duration, SBP, left ventricular hypertrophy and glomerular filtration rate. Persistent RHT compared with never-having RHT was associated with a 2.2-fold increased risk for cardiovascular morbidity (95% CI: 1.21-4.05, P = 0.01) after adjustment for risk factors.CONCLUSION: In treated hypertensive patients, among prospective RHT dynamic patterns, persistent RHT is frequent and independently associated with adverse cardiovascular prognosis.

DOI10.1097/HJH.0000000000000023
Alternate JournalJ. Hypertens.
PubMed ID24241057

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