Background: Cardiac and cerebrovascular events in hypertensive patients are related to specific features of the 24-hour diurnal blood pressure (BP) profile (i.e., daytime and nighttime BP, nocturnal dip (ND), and morning surge (MS)).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objective: It is well recognized that many antihypertensive drugs exhibit large interindividual variability in effect and that this wide range of patient response to antihypertensive drugs is a major problem in achieving blood pressure (BP) control. Variability in both drug concentration and drug effect may cause the heterogeneity in antihypertensive drug response. However, for most antihypertensive drugs, no clear relationship between drug concentration and its effect on BP has been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The success of antihypertensive drugs may be improved by better prediction of their efficacy in individual patients. The objective of our study was to determine whether genetic variation predicts the individual systolic blood pressure (SBP) response to antihypertensive drugs and to assess to what extent the individual treatment response could be explained by the combined effects of known demographic, environmental, and genetic factors.
Methods: A population-based, crossover, open-label randomized treatment study stratified for ethnicity in 102 mildly hypertensive patients aged 35-60 years in an outpatient hypertension clinic (the ROTATE study).