Diabetes News
Endocrinology
Become a Member Today!
Email
Password
Remember me
Forgot your Password?

Invite Code?


Article ID

Home
General Endocrinology
Messages
Conferences
Jobs
Newsletters
My Library
Topics in
Endocrinology
        Adrenal Glands
        Atherosclerosis/Lipids
        Basic Science/Genetics
        Bone Metabolism
        Diabetes
        Diagnostics
        Economics of Medicine
        Endocrine Oncology
        Fetal Development
        Hypertension
        Metabolism and Growth
        Neuroendocrinology
        Obesity
        Pediatric Endocrinology
        Pharmacology/kinetics
        Popular Press
        Reproductive
    Endocrinology
        Thyroid/Parathyroid
 
Help
Resource Center
RSS News Feeds
Send Newsletter
to a Friend
 
Sponsor
MDLinx Email Article

To email this article, enter your own "From Email" address,
the recipient's "To Email" address, and click the "Send Email" button.
You may send to up to 5 email addresses.
*From Email:  
*To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
Residual cardiovascular risk in treated hypertension and hyperlipidaemia: The PRIME Study
Blacher J et al. – Treatment with antihypertensive agents, but not with lipid-lowering agents, was associated with a sizeable residual cardiovascular risk, suggesting that more efficient risk reduction strategies in hypertension should be developed as a priority.

Methods

  • Study of the degree of cardiovascular risk remaining in hypertension and dyslipidaemia pts treated pharmacologically
  • Assessment of levels of risk factors achieved that is 'residual cardiovascular risk'
  • Use of data from the Prospective Epidemiological Study of Myocardial Infarction (PRIME)
  • PRIME subjects: 9649 men age 50–59 yrs, from France and Northern Ireland with 10-yr follow-up
  • PRIME tested presence of specific residual cardiovascular risks of coronary heart disease, stroke, total of fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events and cardiovascular mortality, in pts treated with antihypertensive agents or lipid-lowering agents

Results
  • In whole cohort, 796 pts developed fatal or non-fatal cardiovascular event
  • Antihypertensive drug use at baseline significantly associated with total cardiovascular event risk, but not lipid-lowering drug use, after adjusting for classic risk factors
  • Adjusted classic risk factors: age, smoking, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, systolic blood pressure and diabetes
  • Similar results for coronary heart disease, stroke, and cardiovascular death, but neither for total death nor for non-cardiovascular death
  • For any cardiovascular endpoint, residual risks did not globally differ by antihypertensive drug class prescribed at baseline
[more...]
Sponsor

Read a Different Specialty

Diabetes & Endocrinology Articles
Allergy/Immunology
Anesthesiology
Cardiology
Dermatology
Drugs
Emergency Medicine
Endocrinology
ENT
Family Medicine
Gastroenterology
Hematology-Oncology
Infectious Disease
Internal Medicine
Nephrology
Neurology
OB/Gyn
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics
Pain
Pediatrics
Practice Management
Psychiatry
Pulmonology
Radiology
Rheumatology
Surgery
Urology

Profession Index

Diabetes & Endocrinology Articles
Dentist
Hospital Administrator
Nurse
    Medical Students
Nurse Practitioner
Pharma/Drug Marketer
    Pharmacist
Physician Assistants
Article Search
Keyword:
Search:
Published within:
Sort By:
Date Relevance
    
Sponsor
About MDLinx  |  Contact  |  Advertise with MDLinx  |  Site Map  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use  |  Sign Up For Newsletters  |  Recommend this Site

English |  Español |  Français |  Deutsch |  中文 |  Руccкий |  Norsk |  Nederlands |  Português |  Italiano

©1999-2009 MDLinx, Inc.