Abstract
Controversial results were reported as to a possible blood pressure-lowering effect of statins. This may relate to methodological limitations (blood pressure measuring techniques) or to putative different effects of statins in different biologic conditions (cholesterol or blood pressure levels, age, etc). Patients with cholesterol>200 mg/dL and no previous statin treatment underwent 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) monitoring and were classified as normotensives or hypertensives according to their ABP. They were randomized to statin (n=51, simvastatin or pravastatin, 10-20 mg/d; atorvastatin, 5-10 mg/d) or control treatment (n=23, soy lecithin, 20 g/d) for 2 months, after which ABP assessment was repeated. No consistent treatment-related reduction in ABP was observed in lecithin-treated patients (either hypertensives or normotensives) or in statin-treated normotensive patients (-0.7+/-5.1/-1.0+/-4.6 mm Hg, both P=ns). In contrast, statin-treated hypertensive patients showed lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure (-5.7+/-5.8/-3.5+/-3.9 mm Hg, both P<0.001), the effect was entirely accounted for by reduced daytime values with no change in nighttime values, and it was unrelated to the concomitant statin-induced cholesterol reduction. Statins moderately but significantly lower blood pressure in patients with high (but not with normal) ABP; the effect is confined to the daytime period and is unrelated to the extent of the cholesterol lowering.
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