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Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in the Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Management of Resistant Hypertension: Still a Matter of our Resistance?. [revisión]

Por: Ruilope Urioste, Luis Miguel [Nefrología].
Colaborador(es): Servicio de Nefrología.
Tipo de material: materialTypeLabelArtículoEditor: Current hypertension reports, 2015Descripción: 17(10):78.Recursos en línea: Solicitar documento Resumen: Resistant hypertension, commonly described as the failure to achieve goal blood pressure (BP) despite an appropriate regimen of three antihypertensive drugs at the maximal tolerated doses, one of which is diuretic, is increasingly recognized as an important problem of public health. Large population studies with office measurements suggest that the prevalence of resistance hypertension is approximately at 6-12 % of the general hypertensive population and 8-28 % of treated hypertensives. However, these estimations do not take into account factors of pseudo-resistance, most importantly, the white-coat effect that can be effectively ruled out with ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM). Recent studies have clearly shown that when ABPM is used, at least 30-35 % of patients labeled as "resistant hypertensives" turn out to have well-controlled BP on ambulatory basis, a finding changing entirely the estimates of prevalence of resistance hypertension and actual patient handling. Furthermore, current evidence suggests that ABPM is a much more accurate predictor of cardiovascular events in resistant hypertension compared to office BP and thus can offer a better risk stratification for these high-risk individuals. Finally, ABPM offers the potential of a better evaluation of the effect of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic therapeutic interventions. This review attempts to summarize recent evidence on the advantages of ABPM in the diagnosis, prognosis, and management of resistant hypertension.
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Tipo de ítem Ubicación actual Signatura Estado Fecha de vencimiento
Revisión Revisión PC16773 (Navegar estantería) Disponible

Formato Vancouver:
Lazaridis AA, Sarafidis PA, Ruilope LM. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in the Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Management of Resistant Hypertension: Still a Matter of our Resistance? Curr Hypertens Rep. 2015 Oct;17(10):78.

PMID: 26277726

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Resistant hypertension, commonly described as the failure to achieve goal blood pressure (BP) despite an appropriate regimen of three antihypertensive drugs at the maximal tolerated doses, one of which is diuretic, is increasingly recognized as an important problem of public health. Large population studies with office measurements suggest that the prevalence of resistance hypertension is approximately at 6-12 % of the general hypertensive population and 8-28 % of treated hypertensives. However, these estimations do not take into account factors of pseudo-resistance, most importantly, the white-coat effect that can be effectively ruled out with ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM). Recent studies have clearly shown that when ABPM is used, at least 30-35 % of patients labeled as "resistant hypertensives" turn out to have well-controlled BP on ambulatory basis, a finding changing entirely the estimates of prevalence of resistance hypertension and actual patient handling. Furthermore, current evidence suggests that ABPM is a much more accurate predictor of cardiovascular events in resistant hypertension compared to office BP and thus can offer a better risk stratification for these high-risk individuals. Finally, ABPM offers the potential of a better evaluation of the effect of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic therapeutic interventions. This review attempts to summarize recent evidence on the advantages of ABPM in the diagnosis, prognosis, and management of resistant hypertension.

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