Separation of essential hypertensive patients based on blood pressure responses after the withdrawal of antihypertensive agents by step-wise discriminant analysis
- PMID: 6354605
- DOI: 10.1185/03007998309109790
Separation of essential hypertensive patients based on blood pressure responses after the withdrawal of antihypertensive agents by step-wise discriminant analysis
Abstract
Thirty-five patients with uncomplicated hypertension were observed for blood pressure behaviour after prolonged antihypertensive medication withdrawal. Twenty-three patients (Group 1) remained normotensive (systolic less than 140 mmHg, diastolic less than 95 mmHg) for over 60 weeks compared to 12 patients (Group 2) who became hypertensive again during a 4-week placebo period. Discriminant analysis was performed on 31 clinical and laboratory variables measured before therapy to separate any discriminating factors for the two groups. Four variables maximized the separation of Group 1 from Group 2 patients. In descending order, these were serum sodium (p less than 0.001), mean corpuscular volume (p less than 0.01), serum albumin (p less than 0.01), and body weight (p less than 0.05). Using these four variables 73.9% of patients in Group 1 and 75% of patients in Group 2 were classified correctly into their respective groups. It is suggested that this observation may be useful in the development of new therapeutic regimens for patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension, for example by predicting those patients who may respond favourably to intermittent therapy or even to its withdrawal.
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