Abstract
In an 8-week randomized trial of patients with mild or moderate hypertension, the authors investigated the efficacy and tolerability of initial high (5.0mg/d) vs low (2.5mg/d) doses of S-(-)-amlodipine (equivalent to 5 and 10mg of racemic amlodipine, respectively). In the S-(-)-amlodipine 2.5-mg group (n=263), 24-hour ambulatory systolic/diastolic blood pressure (±standard deviation) decreased from 131.5±15.0/82.1±10.7mm Hg at baseline to 126.0±13.5/78.5±9.5mm Hg at 8weeks of follow-up by a least square mean (±standard error) change of 6.0±0.6/3.8±0.4mm Hg. In the S-(-)-amlodipine 5-mg group (n=260), the corresponding changes were from 133.6±13.7/83.1±9.9mm Hg to 125.0±12.0/78.2±8.9mm Hg by 8.1±0.6/4.7±0.4mm Hg, respectively. The between-group differences in changes in 24-hour systolic/diastolic blood pressure were 2.1/0.9 (P=.02/.17) mm Hg. Similar trends were observed for daytime and nighttime ambulatory and clinic blood pressure. The incidence rate was similar for all adverse events. An initial high dose of S-(-)-amlodipine improved ambulatory blood pressure control with similar tolerability as an initial low dose in hypertension.
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More From: Journal of clinical hypertension (Greenwich, Conn.)
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