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Hypertension. 1979;1:537-542

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Hypertension, Vol 1, 537-542, Copyright © 1979 by American Heart Association


ARTICLES

Estimating compliance with diuretic therapy: urinary hydrochlorothiazide-creatinine ratios in normal subjects

RH Hodge Jr, SS Lynch, JP Davison, JG Knight, JA Sinn and RM Carey

We gave 21 healthy young men 100 mg of hydrochlorothiazide daily to determine whether or not urinary detection of the drug was feasible as a measure of compliance on a standard antihypertensive regimen. All subjects took the drug daily for 6 days, after which they were divided into four groups with differing patterns of medication administration. Urine hydrochlorothiazide and creatinine measurements were obtained to validate the urinary hydrochlorothiazide-creatinine ratio (UHCR) as an accurate quantitative index of compliance. The subjects achieved a constant level of UHCR of 13 +/- 3.0 within 48 hours of hydrochlorothiazide administration. The UHCR levels decreased to 5.0 +/- 0.8 48 hours after discontinuation of the drug (p less than 0.001). UHCR values in the range of 13 +/- 6 indicate that the subject has ingested hydrochlorothiazide 24 hours previously. The UHCR is a potentially useful means of assessing compliance in hypertensive patients taking hydrochlorothiazide.