The effects of nicardipine and propranolol on patients' quality of life were compared during a double-blind, multicentre, parallel, randomised study of hypertension therapy. After a placebo run-in period, the doses for each patient were successfully titrated to reduce supine diastolic blood pressure to less than 90 mmHg with either nicardipine 60 or 90 mg/day (123 patients) or with propranolol 90-240 mg/day (120 patients). Both drugs demonstrated similar efficacy in reducing systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe daily administration of 240 to 360 mg of diltiazem lowered blood pressure in a dose-related pattern similar to that seen in patients taking a daily dosage of 50 to 100 mg of atenolol. Sustained-release diltiazem was administered twice daily and atenolol once. Goal blood pressure was defined as less than 90 mm Hg or a reduction of greater than or equal to 10 mm Hg for patients with baseline pressures of 95 to 99 mm Hg in the supine position and was achieved in 60% of diltiazem-treated and 63% of atenolol-treated patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred one patients established on chronic hemodialysis on January 1, 1978, were retrospectively evaluated over the ensuing 8-year period to determine the effect of hepatitis B surface antigenemia on morbidity and mortality. Sixty-four patients remained HBsAg-negative after reaching end-stage renal disease; 30 were transiently or persistently HBsAg-positive; seven patients were excluded from study because of insufficient data. The HBsAg-positive and HBsAg-negative patients did not differ with respect to age, sex, race, or etiology of renal disease.
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