Optimal blood pressure on antihypertensive medication

被引:2
作者
Flack J.M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Internal Medicine and Community Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Hypertension, Wayne State University, 2E, Detroit, MI 48201
关键词
Mean Arterial Pressure; Blood Pressure Level; Systolic Hypertension; Goal Blood Pressure; Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial;
D O I
10.1007/s11906-999-0052-3
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The optimal blood pressure (BP) level for a patient on antihypertensive medication should maximize the patient's well-being and simultaneously lower the risk for pressurerelated cardiovascular-renal complications. The clinical expression of pressure-related complications such as stroke, heart failure, renal insufficiency, peripheral arterial disease, and cognitive decline takes many years to decades to manifest. Accordingly, the attainment of the ultimate target BP is rarely necessary, or even desirable, over short time periods (eg, weeks) because the absolute clinical risk within these time periods is quite low. However, overmedication or aggressive BP lowering over the short term increases the likelihood of treatment-related side effects. Thus, attainment of goal BP should be accomplished gradually over many weeks to months in order to maximize BP lowering at a given dose of medication(s). Recent target BP goals promulgated by the Sixth Report from the Joint National Committee (JNC VI) [16] are based on the premise that the intensity of treatment directly corresponds to the magnitude of pretreatment risk. Thus, hypertensive persons with diabetes, renal disease, or heart failure have goal BP levels lower than 130/85 mm Hg. All other hypertensive individuals should attain BP levels minimally to lower than 140/90 mm Hg. Finally, there is now appropriate recognition of the pivotal role of BP reduction in forestalling pressure-related cardiovascular complications, even among high-risk persons with diabetes mellitus and renal insufficiency. Copyright © 1999 by Current Science, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:381 / 386
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Intraoperative blood pressure management [J].
Vives, M. .
REVISTA ESPANOLA DE ANESTESIOLOGIA Y REANIMACION, 2020, 67 :25-32
[32]   Vascular compliance in blood pressure [J].
Raij, Leopoldo ;
Gonzalez-Ochoa, Alba M. .
CURRENT OPINION IN NEPHROLOGY AND HYPERTENSION, 2011, 20 (05) :457-464
[33]   Cerebral Blood Flow and Blood Pressure: Dependent or Codependent? [J].
DeWitt, Douglas S. ;
Prough, Donald S. .
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2019, 47 (07) :1007-1009
[34]   Sex differences in correlates of steady state and pulsatile component of blood pressure [J].
Scuteri, A ;
Cacciafesta, AM ;
DiBernardo, MG ;
DePropris, AM ;
Recchi, D ;
Celli, V ;
Idone, G ;
Nocco, ML ;
Marigliano, V .
CLINICAL SCIENCE, 1996, 91 (04) :385-389
[35]   Are low target blood pressure goals justified in persons with diabetes mellitus? [J].
Errol D. Crook ;
Latha Velusamy .
Current Hypertension Reports, 2003, 5 :231-238
[36]   Home blood pressure measurement in elderly patients with cognitive impairment: comparison of agreement between relative-measured blood pressure and automated blood pressure measurement [J].
Plichart, Matthieu ;
Seux, Marie-Laure ;
Caillard, Laure ;
Chaussade, Edouard ;
Vidal, Jean-Sebastien ;
Boully, Clemence ;
Hanon, Olivier .
BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING, 2013, 18 (04) :208-214
[37]   Optimal target blood pressure in critically ill adult patients with vasodilatory shock: a protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis [J].
Fukui, Satoshi ;
Higashio, Koki ;
Murao, Shuhei ;
Endo, Akira ;
Akira, Takasu ;
Yamakawa, Kazuma .
BMJ OPEN, 2021, 11 (03)
[38]   Systolic versus diastolic blood pressure versus pulse pressure [J].
White W.B. .
Current Cardiology Reports, 2002, 4 (6) :463-467
[39]   Treatment of high blood pressure in elderly and octogenarians: European Society of Hypertension statement on blood pressure targets [J].
Kjeldsen, Sverre E. ;
Stenehjem, Aud ;
Os, Ingrid ;
Van de Borne, Philippe ;
Burnier, Michel ;
Narkiewicz, Krzysztof ;
Redon, Josep ;
Rosei, Enrico Agabiti ;
Mancia, Giuseppe .
BLOOD PRESSURE, 2016, 25 (06) :333-336
[40]   Long-term reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure is superior to office blood pressure in the very elderly [J].
Campbell, P. ;
Ghuman, N. ;
Wakefield, D. ;
Wolfson, L. ;
White, W. B. .
JOURNAL OF HUMAN HYPERTENSION, 2010, 24 (11) :749-754