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One pill may be better than two for treating patients with high blood pressure
05-11-2007 · EurekAlert!Adults with high blood pressure and additional risk factors for heart disease may benefit more from taking one tablet rather than two, if their current treatment combines the lipid-lowering medication atorvastatin with the blood pressure-lowering medication amlodipine.
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- Gene variations associated with effectiveness of blood pressure medications
01-22-2008 · EurekAlert!
Patients with hypertension and certain gene variations experienced varying results with some blood pressure medications, suggesting matching a patient's genotype with certain hypertension medications could result in more favorable outcomes, according to a study in the Jan. 23 issue of JAMA.
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- Prescribing information for kidney disease far too vague
12-06-2006 · EurekAlert!
Prescribing information for healthcare professionals treating patients with kidney disease is too vague, concludes the latest issue of Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin (DTB). Many of the 4-5 percent of the UK population with serious chronic kidney disease are elderly people, who are often taking several different drugs. Other risk factors for the disease include diabetes and high blood pressure.
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- News briefs from the December issue of Chest
12-10-2007 · EurekAlert!
In three separate studies researchers have found the following: A new study suggests that patients who suffer from obstructive sleep apnea and hypertension could benefit from good continuous positive airway pressure treatment compliance; New research from the Netherlands suggests that oral prednisolone is just as effective in treating COPD exacerbations as its intravenous counterpart; A Japanese study looks at prevalence and predictors of excessive carbon dioxide in the blood during the day.
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- Quality of treatment guidelines
08-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
Practicing physicians are nowadays presented with official guidelines on the treatments they should give their patients. In an article published in PLoS Medicine, researchers have attempted to grade the quality of evidence used in drawing up the recommendations contained in guidelines for the treatment of patients with diabetes, high blood pressure and dyslipidemia, or abnormal levels of fats in the blood.
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- High blood pressure pill cuts risk of Parkinson's disease
02-06-2008 · EurekAlert!
People taking a widely used group of drugs known as calcium channel blockers to treat high blood pressure also appear to be cutting their risk of Parkinson's disease, according to a study published in the Feb. 6, 2008, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
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- Study finds limited options for backup HIV treatment in some developing countries
01-08-2007 · EurekAlert!
Thai researchers have discovered that patients who fail treatment with a commonly used, inexpensive, first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) are also usually resistant to other, similar drugs, leaving progressively fewer options for replacement therapies. Since catching treatment failure early is key to preventing further resistance, this research, published in the February 1 issue of Clinical Infectious Diseases also argues for greater access in the developing world to tests that detect when the amount of virus in a patient's blood is increasing.
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- First step in developing heart hormone-based pill to control high blood pressure
03-27-2007 · EurekAlert!
In an era of increasing death and illness from heart and blood vessel disease -- which also can impair kidney function -- Mayo Clinic researchers have designed two promising new cardiovascular treatment approaches.
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- Longer treatment benefits sleep apnea patients
06-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
Adults with obstructive sleep apnea benefit significantly from longer nightly use of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), a device to improve breathing during sleep, according to a new study supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health. This is the first study to identify the nightly duration of CPAP use needed to gain maximum benefit for daytime alertness and functioning.
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- Genes and drugs team up to lower blood pressure
09-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
Patients with high blood pressure respond very differently to anti-hypertensive medication, making treatment selection tricky for physicians. But new research published in the online open access journal, BMC Medical Genetics, pinpoints a number of gene-drug interactions that could allow medication to be tailored to individual patients based on their genetics.
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- Hepatitis B drug can compromise HIV treatment
06-20-2007 · EurekAlert!
Treating hepatitis B patients with the drug entecavir can cause those who are also infected with HIV to become resistant to two of the most important drugs in the anti-HIV arsenal. In findings published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers reported that a patient infected with both hepatitis B and HIV who was treated with entecavir developed a mutant strain of HIV that is resistant to the antiviral drugs lamivudine and emtricitabine.
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