The antihypertensive actions of the beta-adrenergic blocking agent, prindolol, and of the diuretic, hydrochlorothiazide, were analysed in a double-blind randomized 2 X 2 factorial trial in 16 patients. There were four eight-week phases in which patients received prindolol alone, hydrochlorothiazide alone, prindolol plus hydrochlorothiazide in combination, and no treatment. Both drugs were given in fixed doses: prindolol, 10 mg three times per day; hydrochlorothiazide, 50 mg per day. Blood pressure was measured weekly, alternately at the outpatient clinic and at home. Supine mean arterial pressure (MAP) in resting patients fell from 127 mm Hg in the placebo phase to 117 mm Hg with hydrochlorothiazide alone, 116 mm Hg with prindolol alone, and 111 mm Hg with the combination of prindolol and hydrochlorothiazide. (The standard error of difference between treatments was +/-3-58). A mean factorial effect of -7 mm Hg for hydrochlorothiazide (P less than 0-01) and -8 mm Hg for prindolol (P less than 0-01) was obtained, and the two drugs acted in an additive manner. The effects on standing blood pressure in resting patients were similar. No serious side effects were noted.
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J Sep Sci
December 2006
Dipartimento di Scienza e Tecnologia del Farmaco, Università di Torino, Italy.
In official doping controls, about 300 drugs and metabolites have to be screened for each sample. Moreover, the number of determinations to be routinely processed increases continuously as the number of both samples and potential illicit drugs keeps growing. As a consequence, increasingly specific, sensitive, and, above all, fast methods for doping controls are needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Pharmacokinet
February 2005
Department of Paediatric Surgery, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, 6500 HB Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Drug therapy may become difficult when a significant amount of the small intestine is resected, as happens in patients with a short small bowel. Drug absorption from the gastrointestinal tract is altered in these patients; however, this effect is variable in patients and differs with each drug. Literature regarding clinical outcomes of normal or alternative administration routes in patients with a short small bowel is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlood Press
January 2005
Department of Community Medicine, Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden.
Objective: To perform a subgroup analysis on those patients in STOP-Hypertension-2 who had isolated systolic hypertension.
Design And Methods: The STOP-Hypertension-2 study evaluated cardiovascular mortality and morbidity in elderly hypertensives comparing treatment with conventional drugs (diuretics, beta-blockers) with that of newer ones [angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, calcium antagonists]. In all, 6614 elderly patients with hypertension (mean age 76.
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