PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hypertension self-management program helps reduce blood pressure for high-risk patients

2014-08-26
(Press-News.org) Among patients with hypertension at high risk of cardiovascular disease, a program that consisted of patients measuring their blood pressure and adjusting their antihypertensive medication accordingly resulted in lower systolic blood pressure at 12 months compared to patients who received usual care, according to a study in the August 27 issue of JAMA.

Data from national and international surveys suggest that despite improvements over the last decade, significant proportions of patients have poor control of their elevated blood pressure. Self-monitoring of blood pressure with self-titration (adjusting) of antihypertensives results in lower blood pressure in patients with hypertension, but there are no data about patients in high-risk groups, according to background information in the article.

Richard J. McManus, F.R.C.G.P., of the University of Oxford, and colleagues randomly assigned 552 patients with hypertension and a history of stroke, coronary heart disease, diabetes, or chronic kidney disease to self-monitoring of blood pressure combined with an individualized self-titration algorithm or a control group (patients received usual care consisting of seeing their health care clinician for routine blood pressure measurement and adjustment of medication if necessary).

After 12 months, the average systolic blood pressure decreased in both groups, but was lower in the intervention group (128.2/73.8 mm Hg vs 137.8/76.3 mm Hg). Imputation for missing values showed a marginally lower average difference in systolic blood pressure of 8.8 mm Hg. The reduction in diastolic blood pressure was also greater in the self-monitoring group. The results were comparable in all subgroups, without excessive adverse events.

"This trial has shown for the first time, to our knowledge, that a group of high-risk individuals, with hypertension and significant cardiovascular comorbidity, are able to self-monitor and self-titrate antihypertensive treatment following a pre­specified algorithm developed with their family physician and that in doing so, they achieved a clinically significant reduction in systolic and diastolic blood pressure without an increase in adverse events," the authors write. "This is a population with the most to gain in terms of reducing future cardiovascular events from optimized blood pressure control." There is also an accompanying editorial, titled, 'Self-titration of Antihypertensive Therapy in High-Risk Patients Bring It Home.'

"Although the trial by McManus et al does not settle all questions regarding self-titration based on self-measurement, it is an important step toward adaptation of treatment for patients who want to actively take part in their own risk-factor control," write Peter M. Nilsson, M.D., Ph.D., of Skane University Hospital, Malmo, Sweden, and Fredrik H. Nystrom, M.D., Ph.D., of Linkoping University, Linkoping, Sweden.

"Future trials studying the effects of self-titration on cardiovascular events are needed. With the gain in knowledge from [this trial], it may be possible to make the recruitment of patients less restricted, to incorporate education about self-measurement as a standard procedure and focus on which scheme for titration to use, or to study the timing of the home blood pressure recordings. In many countries antihypertensive drugs are now available as inexpensive generic drugs. The time has come to fully use these noncostly medications and to design optimal individualized care of patients."

"Based on these findings, a 'bring it home' blood pressure-lowering strategy appears suitable for patients with hypertension and comorbidities." INFORMATION: END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Collaborative care intervention improves depression among teens

2014-08-26
Among adolescents with depression seen in primary care, a collaborative care intervention that included patient and parent engagement and education resulted in greater improvement in depressive symptoms at 12 months than usual care, according to a study in the August 27 issue of JAMA. Depressed youth are at greater risk of suicide, substance abuse, early pregnancy, low educational attainment, recurrent depression and poor long-term health. Fourteen percent of adolescents between the ages of 13-18 years have major depression yet few receive evidence-based treatments for ...

EPO may help reduce risk of brain abnormalities in preterm infants

2014-08-26
High-dose erythropoietin (EPO; a hormone) administered within 42 hours of birth to preterm infants was associated with a reduced risk of brain injury, as indicated by magnetic resonance imaging, according to a study in the August 27 issue of JAMA. Survival of premature infants has improved over the past decades, but at the expense of an increase in the number of infants affected by long-term developmental disabilities. Premature infants are at risk of developing encephalopathy of prematurity, which includes structural changes of brain white and gray matter and is associated ...

Study questions generalizability of findings of CV trials for heart attack patients

2014-08-26
An analysis of a cardiovascular registry finds that of clinical trials that included heart attack patients, participation among eligible patients was infrequent and has been declining, and trial participants had a lower risk profile and a more favorable prognosis compared with the broader population of patients who have had a heart attack, according to a study in the August 27 issue of JAMA. Jacob A. Udell, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Toronto, and colleagues evaluated whether participants in cardiovascular trials are representative of contemporary patients with ...

EPO: Protecting the brains of very preterm infants

2014-08-26
Premature babies are far more at risk than infants born at term of developing brain damage resulting in neurodevelopmental delay that may persist throughout their lives. A team of specialists in infant brain imaging from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Geneva (UNIGE) and the University Hospital of Geneva (HUG) has demonstrated the following: administering three doses of erythropoietin – a hormone that stimulates the formation of red blood cells – immediately after birth significantly reduces brain damage in babies. The results are available in more detail in ...

Collaborative care improves depression in teens

Collaborative care improves depression in teens
2014-08-26
SEATTLE—How best to care for the many adolescents who have depression? In a collaborative care intervention, a care manager continually reached out to teens—delivering and following up on treatment in a primary-care setting (the office of a pediatrician or family doctor, not a psychiatrist or psychologist) at Group Health Cooperative. Depression outcomes after a year were significantly better with this approach than with usual care, according to a randomized controlled trial published in JAMA. Depression is common in adolescents: Up to one in five have major depression ...

Attacking a rare disease at its source with gene therapy

2014-08-26
PHILADELPHIA — Treating the rare disease MPS I is a challenge. MPS I, caused by the deficiency of a key enzyme called IDUA, eventually leads to the abnormal accumulation of certain molecules and cell death. The two main treatments for MPS I are bone marrow transplantation and intravenous enzyme replacement therapy, but these are only marginally effective or clinically impractical, especially when the disease strikes the central nervous system (CNS). Using an animal model, a team from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania has proven the efficacy ...

Unprecedented detail of intact neuronal receptor offers blueprint for drug developers

2014-08-26
Argonne, Ill.– Scientists succeeded in obtaining an unprecedented view of a type of brain-cell receptor that is implicated in a range of neurological illnesses, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, depression, schizophrenia, autism, and ischemic injuries associated with stroke. The team of biologists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory used the U.S. Department of Energy's Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory to get an atomic-level picture of the intact NMDA (N-methyl, D-aspartate) receptor should serve as template and guide for the design ...

Yale journal explores advances in sustainable manufacturing

2014-08-26
In recent years, increasing pressure from policymakers, consumers, and suppliers has prompted manufacturers to set environmental targets that go beyond reducing the pollutants they emit from their smokestacks or discharge into rivers and lakes. Today companies must also assess environmental performance at every step in their process, from the mining of primary materials to the use and recycling of their products. This perspective has given rise to the discipline known as life cycle engineering, which connects the engineers who grapple with the efficiencies of production ...

Composition of Earth's mantle revisited

2014-08-26
Research published recently in Science suggested that the makeup of the Earth's lower mantle, which makes up the largest part of the Earth by volume, is significantly different than previously thought. Understanding the composition of the mantle is essential to seismology, the study of earthquakes and movement below the Earth's surface, and should shed light on unexplained seismic phenomena observed there. Though humans haven't yet managed to drill further than seven and a half miles into the Earth, we've built a comprehensive picture of what's beneath our feet through ...

What can 14th century Venice teach us about Ebola and other emerging threats?

2014-08-26
The way in which the Italian city of Venice dealt with the outbreak of the plague in the fourteenth century holds lessons on how to even mitigate the consequences of today's emerging threats, like climate change, terrorism, and highly infectious or drug-resistant diseases. So says Dr. Igor Linkov of the US Army Engineer Research and Development Center, and a visiting professor of the Ca Foscari University in Italy. Linkov led an article on resilience management appearing in Springer's journal Environment Systems and Decisions. Venice was the hub of many trade routes into ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Hepatic stellate cells control liver function and regeneration

The secret DNA circles fueling pancreatic cancer’s aggression

2D metals: Chinese scientists achieve breakthrough in atomic manufacturing

Cause of post-COVID inflammatory shock in children identified

QIA researchers create first Operating System for Quantum Networks

How the brain uses ‘building blocks’ to navigate social interactions

Want to preserve biodiversity? Go big, U-M researchers say

Ultra-broadband photonic chip boosts optical signals

Chinese scientists explain energy transfer mechanism in chloroplasts and its evolution

Exciting moments on the edge

MD Anderson Research Highlights for March 12, 2025

Lighting the way: how activated gold reveals drug movement in the body

SwRI-led PUNCH constellation launches

Cells “speed date” to find their neighbors when forming tissues

Food insecurity today, heart disease tomorrow?

Food insecurity and incident cardiovascular disease among Black and White US individuals

Association of diet and waist-to-hip ratio with brain connectivity and memory in aging

Evolution and current challenges of gastrointestinal endoscopy in Nigeria: insights from a nationwide survey

Transgender and gender diverse people less likely to receive follow-up after a mental health hospitalization

Long-lived families show lower risk for peripheral artery disease

Food systems, climate change, and air pollution: Unveiling the interactions and solutions

Tissue engineering offers new hope for spinal cord injury repair

Preclinical study finds earlier ACL reconstruction is associated with lower risk of knee osteoarthritis

Assessing pain, anxiety and other symptoms of nursing home residents unable to speak for themselves

Thirty-three centers join new Bronchiectasis and NTM Care Center Network

Effects of ethanol on the digestive system

KIER unveils blueprint for cost-effective production of eco-friendly green hydrogen

Blind to the burn: Misconceptions about skin cancer risk in the US

Young Australians demand action on mental health, cost of living and education reform: report

First national perception survey of Food is Medicine programs shows strong public support

[Press-News.org] Hypertension self-management program helps reduce blood pressure for high-risk patients