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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Beta Blockers for Hypertension, Heart Failure Prevention May Raise Stroke Risk: Presented at AHA |
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"Beta Blockers for Hypertension, Heart Failure Prevention May Raise Stroke Risk: Presented at AHA" By Carole Bullock ORLANDO, FL -- November 7, 2007 -- Beta blockers as first-line hypertensive therapy for heart failure prevention did not provide stroke protection in a meta-analysis, investigators reported here at the American Heart Association (AHA) 2007 Scientific Sessions. Beta blockers may not offer the same protection from stroke as other antihypertensive agents -- a key clinical goal that may help reduce heart failure risk, reported researcher Sripal Bangalore, MD, Cardiology Fellow, St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York, and colleagues. "Beta blockers are considered a cornerstone for treatment of established heart failure, but when used in hypertension, there was a 19% stroke risk increase, with no additional advantage over other antihypertensive agents for primary prevention of heart failure," he said. The aim of the study was to determine whether beta blockers would benefit hypertensive patients as a primary prevention strategy for heart failure. A MEDLINE search of randomized controlled trials which evaluated the drugs as primary prevention for hypertension included 112,177 hypertensive patients from 12 studies that tested the antihypertensive efficacy of beta blockers. Six of the 12 trials included patients older than 60 years. Relative risks for the four endpoints were: 1.03 ([P =.146) for death; 1.05 (P =.145) for cardiovascular death; 1.03 (P =.459) for myocardial infarction (MI); 1.19 (P <=.00001) for stroke. Beta blockers resulted in a trend (P =.055) towards 23% reduction in heart failure risk, but only when compared with placebo, and not when compared with other antihypertensives, according to the study. |
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