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Title: Comparative effects of doxazosin and hydrochlorothiazide on serum lipids and blood pressure in essential hypertension. Author: Trost BN, Weidmann P, Riesen W, Claessens J, Streulens Y, Nelemans F. Journal: Am J Cardiol; 1987 May 29; 59(14):99G-104G. PubMed ID: 2884861. Abstract: The efficacy and safety of doxazosin (mean dosage 6.9 mg, range 1 to 16) in the treatment of essential hypertension were compared in a double-blind study with those of hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) (mean dosage, 84.6 mg, range 25 to 100) in 104 hypertensive patients treated once daily for 6 months. Thirty-five patients were also assessed for comparative effects of the 2 agents on serum lipid parameters. Doxazosin produced potentially favorable changes from baseline in the concentrations of serum lipid fractions (total triglycerides, total cholesterol, high density lipoprotein [HDL] cholesterol and the derived HDL/total cholesterol ratio) compared with HCTZ. The decreases in total triglyceride and total cholesterol concentrations and an increase in the HDL/total cholesterol ratio were significantly different (p less than 0.006) from the opposite changes observed with HCTZ. Clinically relevant decreases from baseline in supine and standing blood pressures at 24 hours after administration did not significantly differ between the 2 agents. The incidence and severity of side effects were similar for both drugs. Three patients receiving doxazosin and 6 receiving HCTZ were withdrawn due to drug-related clinical side effects including 2 patients receiving HCTZ who were withdrawn because of laboratory test abnormalities. Eight HCTZ- and 1 doxazosin-treated patients developed hypokalemia and 6 HCTZ-treated patients developed hyperuricemia. These findings indicate that doxazosin and HCTZ provide comparable antihypertensive efficacy after 6 months of treatment using a once-daily regimen, but doxazosin produces a beneficial effect on the serum lipid profile as well as fewer biochemical aberrations.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]