Artigo Revisado por pares

The effects of nonpharmacologic interventions on blood pressure of persons with high normal levels. Results of the Trials of Hypertension Prevention, Phase I

1992; American Medical Association; Volume: 267; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1001/jama.267.9.1213

ISSN

1538-3598

Autores

Paul K. Whelton, Lawrence J. Appel, Jeanne Charleston, Arlene Dalcin, Craig K. Ewart, Linda P. Fried, Delores Kaidy, Michael J. Klag, Shiriki Kumanyika, Lyn M. Steffen, W. Gordon Walker, Albert Oberman, Karen Counts, Heidi Hataway, James M. Raczynski, Neil B. Rappaport, Roland L. Weinsier, Nemat O. Borhani, E. M. Bernauer, Patricia Borhani, Carlos Solís, Andrew C. Ertl, Doug Heustis, Marshall Lee, Wade Lovelace, Ellen O’Connor, L. M. Peel, Carolyn Sugars, James O. Taylor, Beth Walker Corkery, Denis A. Evans, Mary Ellen Keough, Martha Clare Morris, Eleanor Pistorino, Frank M. Sacks, Mary Cameron, Sheila A. Corrigan, Nancy King Wright, William B. Applegate, Amy Brewer, Laretha Goodwin, Stephen T. Miller, Joe Murphy, Judy Randle, Jay M. Sullivan, Norman L. Lasser, David M. Batey, Lee Dolan, Sheila J. Hamill, Pat Kennedy, Vera I. Lasser, Lewis H. Kuller, Arlene W. Caggiula, N. Carole Milas, Monica E. Yamamoto, Thomas Vogt, Merwyn R. Greenlick, Jack F. Hollis, Victor J. Stevens, Jerome D. Cohen, M. Mattfeldt-Beman, Connie Brinkmann, Katherine Roth, Lana Shepek, Charles H. Hennekens, Julie E. Buring, Nancy R. Cook, Ellie Danielson, Kim Eberlein, David Gordon, Patricia R. Hebert, Jean MacFadyen, Sherry L. Mayrent, Bernard Rosner, Suzanne Satterfield, Heather Tosteson, Martin Van Denburgh, Jeffrey A. Cutler, Erica Brittain, M Farrand, Peter Kaufmann, Ed Lakatos, Eva Obarzanek, John Belcher, Andrea Dommeyer, I. H. Mills, Peggy Neibling, Margo N. Woods, Beth Goldman, Elaine Blethen,

Tópico(s)

Nutritional Studies and Diet

Resumo

Objective. —To test the short-term feasibility and efficacy of seven nonpharmacologic interventions in persons with high normal diastolic blood pressure. Design. —Randomized control multicenter trials. Setting. —Volunteers recruited from the community, treated and followed up at special clinics. Participants. —Of 16821 screenees, 2182 men and women, aged 30 through 54 years, with diastolic blood pressure from 80 through 89 mm Hg were selected. Of these, 50 did not return for follow-up blood pressure measurements. Interventions. —Three life-style change groups (weight reduction, sodium reduction, and stress management) were each compared with unmasked nonintervention controls over 18 months. Four nutritional supplement groups (calcium, magnesium, potassium, and fish oil) were each compared singly, in double-blind fashion, with placebo controls over 6 months. Main Outcome Measures. —Primary: change in diastolic blood pressure from baseline to final follow-up, measured by blinded observers. Secondary: changes in systolic blood pressure and intervention compliance measures. Results. —Weight reduction intervention produced weight loss of 3.9 kg ( P <.01), diastolic blood pressure change of -2.3 mm Hg ( P <.01), and systolic blood pressure change of -2.9 mm Hg ( P <.01). Sodium reduction interventions lowered urinary sodium excretion by 44 mmol/24 h ( P <.01), diastolic blood pressure by 0.9 mm Hg ( P <.05), and systolic blood pressure by 1.7mm Hg ( P <.01). Despite good compliance, neither stress management nor nutritional supplements reduced diastolic blood pressure or systolic blood pressure significantly ( P >.05). Conclusions. —Weight reduction is the most effective of the strategies tested for reducing blood pressure in normotensive persons. Sodium reduction is also effective. The long-term effects of weight reduction and sodium reduction, alone and in combination, require further evaluation. ( JAMA . 1992;267:1213-1220)

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