Researchers examined data on 43,986 patients with diabetes who
started treatment for high blood pressure between 2002 and 2007.
People who waited until blood pressure was more elevated to start
treatment were 10% more likely to have events like fatal heart
attacks and strokes, the study found.
"Hypertension (high blood pressure) is a risk factor for
atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, which includes coronary
artery disease, myocardial infarction (heart attack), and stroke.
Diabetes is also a risk factor for the same clinical endpoints,"
said Dr. Sridharan Raghavan, a researcher at the University of
Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and the Rocky Mountain Regional VA
Medical Center.
"Lowering blood pressure in diabetes patients with hypertension can
mitigate some of the risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular
disease," Raghavan said by email.
As they do with other groups at high risk for cardiovascular
disease, doctors recommend that diabetics consider treating blood
pressure at a lower threshold than low-risk individuals would start
at.
The American Heart Association and the American College of
Cardiology recommend that people with diabetes start treatment for
hypertension when the "top number" - the systolic blood pressure -
is above 130 mmHg (millimeters of mercury). The goal is to bring
systolic blood pressure below 130 mmHg.
The American Diabetes Association recommends that people with
diabetes start treatment when systolic blood pressure exceeds 140
mmHg, with the goal of getting it below that number.
Results from the current study suggest that individuals with
diabetes and hypertension who begin blood pressure lowering therapy
when their systolic blood pressure exceeds 130 mmHg may have fewer
deaths from heart attacks and strokes than diabetics who wait until
blood pressure is higher to initiate treatment.
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After an average follow-up period of more than nine years, many
people in the study who achieved systolic blood pressure below 130
mmHg after two years of treatment also fared better than individuals
whose blood pressure didn't get that low.
But among people whose systolic blood pressure exceeded 140 mmHg
when they started treatment, even if they got that number below 130
they still fared worse than patients who started out with systolic
pressure below 130.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how the timing of blood pressure treatment directly impacts the
risk of having or dying from events like heart attacks and strokes.
The results still underscore that even among diabetics, blood
pressure management may not be one size fits all, said Dr.
Costantino Iadecola, director and chair of the Feil Family Brain and
Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City.
"In patients with diabetes, hypertension should be treated as
quickly as possible if blood pressure starts to inch up above 130
mmHg," Iadecola, who wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
"In patients with starting blood pressure greater than 140 mmHg,
blood pressure should still be treated but not aggressively, so as
not to reduce blood pressure excessively."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2nOC9J8 Diabetes Care, online September 12,
2019.
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