Abstract

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, 840 elderly hypertensive patients were randomly assigned to treatment with a combination of hydrochlorothiazide and triamterene or placebo; methyldopa or matching placebo was added to the treatment regimen if blood pressures remained high. After adjustment for age, gender, and body mass index, initial electrocardiographic (ECG) voltage measures of RaV L and SV 1 + RV 5 were significantly related to systolic blood pressure; RaV L was also related to diastolic blood pressure. After one year of treatment, the decreases in RaV L and SV 1 + RV 5 in the treated patients, adjusted for age and body mass index, were not correlated with the changes in systolic blood pressure, but the decreases in SV 1 + RV 5 were positively related to the decrease in diastolic blood pressure. After four years of treatment, the decreases in RaV L and SV 1 + RV 5 were significantly and positively related to the decrease in systolic blood pressure after adjustment for age and changes in body mass index. In a four-year cohort of 222 patients, most of the decreases in ECG voltages in the treated patients and the increases in the placebo patients were found to have occurred during the first year of treatment. The type of treatment (diuretics alone or diuretics plus methyldopa) did not affect ECG voltages during the first year of follow-up. Total and cardiovascular mortality were related to initial amplitude of RaV L, but the significant correlation disappeared after adjustment for age.

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