A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 3, 2016
Statin, blood pressure drug slash health risk in those with hypertension
A
woman has her blood pressure tested at the Care Harbor four-day free
clinic in Los Angeles, California, United States October 15, 2015.-REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON/FILES
Patients with high blood
pressure and moderate risk of heart disease slashed their long-term risk
of heart attack and stroke 40 percent by taking a blood pressure
medication as well as a statin cholesterol fighter, according to a large
global study that could change medical practice.
Results from the trial, called HOPE-3, could prod far more doctors to
add a statin to blood pressure therapy for such patients who have no
prior history of heart attack or stroke, researchers said.
The data was presented on Saturday at the annual scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology in Chicago.
To enroll in the trial, patients had to have at least one risk factor
for heart disease such as obesity or smoking, in addition to being over
60 for women and over 55 for men.
"Intermediate-risk people with hypertension had a clear benefit when
taking both a statin and an agent that lowers blood pressure," Dr. Salim
Yusuf, a professor of cardiology at McMaster University in Ontario,
Canada who headed the 12,000-patient global study, said in an interview.
Patients with systolic blood pressure of 140 and higher were deemed in
the study to have high blood pressure. They experienced a 40 percent
reduced risk of heart attack and stroke over a six-year period when
taking AstraZeneca Plc's Crestor statin as well as a combination tablet
containing blood pressure treatment candesartan and the diuretic
hydrochlorothiazide.
Patients with normal or low systolic pressure had the same approximate
25 percent reduction in cardiovascular events as seen among patients in
one arm of the study who took only statins.
Yusuf said the trial underscores that if a patient at moderate heart
risk has high blood pressure, defined as 140 or higher, "give them both a
statin and a blood pressure medication as a matter of course." He said
statins are not automatically given now to patients with hypertension
that are at only moderate risk of heart attack or stroke.
Yusuf's trial included research centers in China, India, Latin America,
Africa and Canada, but not the United States because of far greater
research costs there. The trial was funded by the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research and AstraZeneca.
A separate study published in November found that lowering blood
pressure to below 120 dramatically reduced heart failure and risk of
death in adults aged 50 and older. But the five-year U.S.
government-sponsored study of more than 9,300 patients showed a higher
rate of adverse side effects, including kidney damage, in the
aggressively treated patients.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Diane Craft)

