Blood Pressure Variability as a Risk Factor for Cardiovascular Disease: Which Antihypertensive Agents Are More Effective?
Alejandro de la SierraPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2023)
Blood pressure oscillations during different time scales, known as blood pressure variability (BPV), have become a focus of growing scientific interest. BPV can be measured at long-term (seasonal variability or visit-to-visit), at mid-term (differences in consecutive days or weeks) or at short-term (day-night differences or changes induced by other daily activities and conditions). An increased BPV, either at long, mid or short-term is associated with a poor cardiovascular prognosis independently of the amount of blood pressure elevation. There is scarce evidence on the effect of different antihypertensive treatments on BPV, but some observational and interventional studies suggest that calcium channel blockers in general, and particularly amlodipine, either in monotherapy or combined with renin-angiotensin system blockers, can reduce BPV more efficiently than other antihypertensive drugs or combinations. Nevertheless, there are several aspects of the relationship between BPV, antihypertensive treatment, and clinical outcomes that are still unknown, and more work should be performed before considering BPV as a therapeutical target in clinical practice.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- hypertensive patients
- heart rate
- cardiovascular disease
- clinical practice
- blood glucose
- combination therapy
- type diabetes
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- adipose tissue
- working memory
- open label
- depressive symptoms
- drug induced
- study protocol
- cardiovascular risk factors
- smoking cessation
- case control
- double blind