Article
Differences in glucose tolerance between fixed-dose antihypertensive drug combinations in people with metabolic syndrome.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Rush University Hypertension Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Diabetes Care (impact factor:
8.09).
01/2007;
29(12):2592-7.
DOI:10.2337/dc06-1373
pp.2592-7
Source: PubMed
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Citations (0)
- Cited In (7)
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Article: American College Of Endocrinology Pre-Diabetes Consensus Conference: part one.
Diabetes care 11/2008; 31(10):2062-9. · 8.09 Impact Factor -
Article: Mechanistic insights into diuretic-induced insulin resistance.
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Article: A double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial comparing the effects of amiloride and hydrochlorothiazide on glucose tolerance in patients with essential hypertension.
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ABSTRACT: Hypertension guidelines advise limiting the dose of thiazide diuretics and avoiding combination with β-blockade, because of increased risk of diabetes mellitus. We tested whether changes in the 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test could be detected after 4 weeks of treatment with a thiazide and could be avoided by switching to amiloride. Two double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover studies were performed. In study 1 (41 patients), we found that changes in glucose during a 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test could be detected after 4 weeks of treatment with bendroflumethiazide. In study 2, 37 patients with essential hypertension received, in random order, 4 weeks of once-daily treatment with hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) 25 to 50 mg, nebivolol 5 to 10 mg, combination (HCTZ 25-50 mg+nebivolol 5-10 mg), amiloride (10-20 mg), and placebo. Each drug was force titrated at 2 weeks and separated by a 4-week placebo washout. At each visit, we recorded blood pressure and performed a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test. Primary outcome was the difference in glucose (over the 2 hours of the oral glucose tolerance test) between 0 and 4 weeks, when HCTZ and amiloride were compared by repeated-measures analysis. For similar blood pressure reductions, there were opposite changes in glucose between the 2 diuretics (P<0.0001). Nebivolol did not impair glucose tolerance, either alone or in combination. There was a negative correlation between Δpotassium and Δ2-hour glucose (r=-0.28; P<0.0001). In 2 crossover studies, 4 weeks of treatment with a thiazide diuretic impaired glucose tolerance. No impairment was seen with K(+)-sparing diuretic or β(1)-selective blockade. Substitution or addition of amiloride may be the solution to preventing thiazide-induced diabetes mellitus.Hypertension 04/2012; 59(5):934-42. · 6.21 Impact Factor
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Keywords
1 year
2-h glucose
2-h OGTT glucose
24-h ambulatory blood pressure
blinded-end points design
fixed-dose combination
glucose tolerance
hypertensive patients
inflammatory markers
insulin level
insulin sensitivity
losartan/hydrochlorothiazide
new-onset diabetes
normal kidney function
oral glucose tolerance test
Primary outcome
prospective
Secondary outcomes
study end
systolic blood pressure <130 mmHg