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Research Article

Left ventricular hypertrophy in hypertensive patients in Indian primary care: prevalence and effect of treatment with sustained release indapamide

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Pages 639-644 | Accepted 13 Feb 2004, Published online: 11 Mar 2004
 

Abstract

Objective: Epidemiologic studies indicate an ethnic determinant of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), but its prevalence in hypertensive Asian Indians at diagnosis is not known. The observation that LVH regression reduces cardiovascular risk independent of blood pressure, suggests that initial antihypertensive treatment, which also regresses LVH is a desirable goal. This study investigates the prevalence of LVH and its regression with indapamide sustained release (Natrilix SR) in untreated Indian hypertensive patients managed in the primary care setting.

Design and methods: Randomly selected physicians serving a defined population recruited untreated hypertensive patients to determine prevalence of LVH. All patients then received indapamide SR treatment for 6months. LVH was assessed by echocardiography. All measurements were centralized and interpreted by a single blinded observer.

Main outcome measures: The primary treatment outcomes were the percentage of patients whose LVH regressed with treatment and the number of patients who achieved a blood pressure below 140/90 mmHg.

Results: Of the 86 patients recruited, 21 (24.4%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 15.3-33.8) had LVH. There were 11 cases (26.2%) in men, 10 (22.7%) in women, and 15 (32.6%) in those above 50years. Treatment regressed LVH in 16 (76.2%, 95%CI, 58.0-94.4) by a mean of 25.4 g/m2 (95%CI, 2.8-47.7, p < 0.05). Blood pressure was controlled in 71 (82.6%, 95%CI, 74.5–90.6) patients.

Conclusion: Prevalence of LVH in untreated Indian hypertensive patients is similar to that in white western populations. Initial indapamide SR treatment is effective in both controlling blood pressure and regressing LVH in the primary care setting.

Notes

* This study was presented in poster form at the 54th Annual Conference of the Cardiological Society of India (CSI), Cochin, December 2002 and at the 58th Joint Annual Conference of the Association of Physicians of India (APICON), Varanasi, January 2003

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