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Hypertension, Vol 5, 591-596, Copyright © 1983 by American Heart Association
MG Myers and J de Champlain
The antihypertensive effects of atenolol and hydrochlorothiazide were
compared with placebo in a randomized, double-blind crossover study, with
the blood pressure responses related to sympathetic nervous system
activity. Twelve patients with essential hypertension were given atenolol
(100 mg), hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg), and placebo as single daily doses,
each for 6 weeks. Mean supine, standing, and post-exercise blood pressures
(mm Hg) on atenolol (155/94, 152/95, 177/93, respectively) and
hydrochlorothiazide (154/99, 150/103, 172/96) were lower (p less than 0.01)
than corresponding placebo values (172/109, 166/113, 204/111) at 6 weeks.
The role of the sympathetic nervous system in the antihypertensive actions
of atenolol and hydrochlorothiazide was examined. The supine plasma
norepinephrine on placebo was used as an index of sympathetic activity to
categorize each patient's "adrenergic status." The six "hyperadrenergic"
patients with high resting norepinephrine values (mean, 302 pg/ml)
exhibited a greater (p = 0.05) decrease in BP (-30/-20 mm Hg) on atenolol
compared with the BP fall of -9/-11 mm Hg observed in the lower
norepinephrine group (mean, 211 pg/ml). Resting plasma norepinephrine
values did not predict the BP fall on hydrochlorothiazide. The "adrenergic
status" of each patient as measured by the plasma norepinephrine
concentration tended to be relatively constant regardless of therapy or the
state of activity. In this study, atenolol was an effective
antihypertensive agent comparable to hydrochlorothiazide in potency.
Adrenergic status tended to predict the BP response to atenolol and was a
relatively constant feature of the patients in all treatment phases.
ARTICLES
Effects of atenolol and hydrochlorothiazide on blood pressure and plasma catecholamines in essential hypertension
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