Sequential Changes Evoked by Chlorothiazide in Hypertensive Patients
- 1 September 1960
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 106 (3) , 316-320
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1960.03820030004002
Abstract
Enhanced responsiveness to ganglioplegic drugs occurring during short-term treatment with chlorothiazide has been attributed to increased vasomotor tone evoked by oligemia.1 Diuretic-induced oligemia also seems responsible for increased depressor responses to trimethapan (Arfonad) and decreased pressor responses to norepinephrine.2 Chlorothiazide alone can lower arterial pressure in some hypertensive patients,1-3 and this effect may result from a decrease of plasma volume. This report describes the oligemic and antihypertensive effects of the diuretic in hypertensive patients receiving the drug for varying periods. The results support the suggestion 1 that decreases of arterial pressure observed during short-term diuretic therapy result from decreases of plasma volume and not from a specific antihypertensive effect. Methods Studies were performed in 17 hypertensive patients hospitalized in the Research Ward of the Cleveland Clinic Hospital. Fifteen received a 100 mEq. sodium diet, and two—who had previously suffered from congestive cardiac failure—continued to take a 55Keywords
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