Abstract

It is amply recognized that the presence of metabolic syndrome is associated with subclinical cardiac, vascular and kidney damage, with an increased risk for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease and type 2 diabetes, and, as a consequence, with higher rates of cardiovascular mortality. Metabolic syndrome can be considered as a prediabetic state very frequently associated with arterial hypertension, requiring pharmacological therapy. All antihypertensive therapies have been shown to reduce the risk of total major cardiovascular events. Recently, the relevance of the type of hypertensive therapy used to treat hypertensive patients in facilitating the development of diabetes has been demonstrated in different trials. The recognition of the risk present in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome for developing diabetes reinforces the need to consider the ideal antihypertensive therapy, either mono or combination, in these patients. This brief review contains the available evidence showing that an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or an angiotensin receptor blocker is the most suitable therapy to be started in these patients, alone or in combination, due to their capacity to prevent or retard the development of diabetes, and the strong relationship between metabolic syndrome and arterial hypertension, focusing on the advantages and disadvantages of different antihypertensive drugs.

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