High Blood Pressure Treatment For The Over 80s Too Aggressive, Warns Expert
Main Category: HypertensionAlso Included In: Seniors / Aging
Article Date: 25 Dec 2009 - 0:00 PDT
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People over 80 years are being treated too aggressively for high blood pressure, warns an expert in an editorial in BMJ Clinical Evidence this week.
According to Dr James Wright, the latest evidence suggests that less aggressive drug therapy may be more effective at reducing mortality in this age group. Based on this evidence, he suggests clinicians change what they are presently doing and move towards a more conservative approach for people aged over 80.
Despite limited evidence about high blood pressure (hypertension) treatment in the over 80s, UK and US guidelines recommend that people over 80 should receive the same treatment as people of any other age. This means using combinations of drugs to reach a target blood pressure of 140/90 mmHg.
But could this be doing more harm than good, asks Wright?
He points to the results of a recently updated Cochrane review which suggest that our present approach may be "excessively aggressive."
This review includes data from two new trials which looked specifically at the effect of antihypertensive drugs in people over the age of 80. Interestingly, the only trial that found a significant reduction in mortality was the most conservative in terms of number of drugs and dose of drugs allowed. The treatment regime involved three easy steps, with a target blood pressure of 150/80 mmHg.
Using this approach would require little adjustment of drug doses and would markedly simplify and reduce the cost of managing these patients, says Wright.
However, he points out that only half of the people on this regimen would achieve a target blood pressure of 150/80 mmHg. This is below recommendations set out for UK GPs in the Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF), which suggest that 70% of all patients should meet treatment targets.
Trials are now needed to compare this conservative approach with the more aggressive treatment strategies in common use today, he writes. In the meantime, clinicians should change what they are presently doing and move towards a more conservative approach for people aged over 80.
Source
British Medical Journal
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Blood Pressure Over 80
posted by Jack on 6 Jan 2010 at 12:25 pmI am 85 and have what the Doctor calls high blood pressure. I have had Doctors treating this for over 25 years that I can remember. Some want to get very aggressive, I tell them slow down. I have had several other problems, had a triple by pass, Prostate Cancer, and colon resection. There are time when my BP goes down, but most of the time it is up there. I have asked no one will answer me where do they come up with this number that we should be at?
The other problem is the way they take in in the Doctor office is enough to give anyone high BP. After waiting half hour or more, they rush you in a room, the nurse grab you are, put on the cuff and take a BP write it down and leaves. They will not take a second one, just one reading that is all.
No wonder a lot of senior have high BP and the drug compayies love it they sell more pills
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