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(Hypertension. 2009;54:951.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.
Editorial |
From the Hypertension Division, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Dallas, Tex.
Correspondence to Norman M. Kaplan, 5323 Harry Hines Blvd, Dallas, TX 75390-8586. E-mail Norman.kaplan@utsouthwestern.edu
An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract. |
| Introduction |
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50 mg of HCTZ per day.2 For reasons unknown to me, chlorthalidone was chosen to be the diuretic in the first large controlled trial of the treatment of hypertension, the Hypertension Detection and Follow-Up Program.3 In the Hypertension Detection and Follow-Up Program, all 10 940 patients were started on chlorthalidone from 25 to 100 mg/d. Other drugs were added to achieve control of the blood pressure. In addition, half were assigned to "referred" care and the other half to more closely monitored and intensively treated "stepped" care. The stepped care–treated half achieved a 4.4% further reduction in diastolic blood pressure and a 17.0% reduction in mortality.
In other large, placebo controlled trials published in the early 1980s, other diuretics were used: chlorothiazide in the Australian trial,4 HCTZ in the Oslo
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