Serum lipoproteins during treatment with antihypertensive drugs
- PMID: 7508069
Serum lipoproteins during treatment with antihypertensive drugs
Abstract
Several drugs used for antihypertensive therapy may modify the lipoprotein metabolism. Thiazides in high dosage and loop diuretics can increase serum low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and/or very-LDL cholesterol and the total cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol ratio, while HDL cholesterol is largely unchanged; triglycerides (Tg) are also often elevated. Premenopausal women may be protected from this side effect. Whether diuretic-induced dyslipidemia is dose-dependent and low thiazide doses (i.e., hydrochlorothiazide < or = 12.5 mg daily) are interacting less, awaits clarification. beta-Blockers without intrinsic sympathomimetic activity increase serum triglycerides and tend to lower the potentially antiatherogenic HDL cholesterol. The diuretic-antihypertensive agent indapamide, given at a dose of 2.5 mg/day, is neutral with regard to serum lipoprotein and glucose metabolism. The potassium-sparing diuretic spironolactone, conventional sympatholytic agents, calcium-channel blockers, and probably the serotonin2-receptor antagonist ketanserin, exert no relevant effects on the lipoprotein profile. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors may slightly decrease serum triglycerides. alpha 1-Receptor blockers slightly decrease LDL cholesterol and Tg and increase HDL cholesterol. Drug-induced development or aggravation of dyslipidemia represents a potentially adverse influence. In the hypertensive population, effective blood pressure control with traditional drug therapy based on thiazide-type diuretics in high dosage led to a distinct decrease in cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality, but failed to satisfactorily reduce coronary complications. The prognostic relevance of drug-induced changes in serum lipoproteins, carbohydrate metabolism and other risk factors or correlates awaits further clarification.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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