CLINICAL TRIAL
COMPARATIVE STUDY
JOURNAL ARTICLE
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
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Comparative effects of chronic ACE inhibition and AT1 receptor blocked losartan on cardiac hypertrophy and renal function in hypertensive patients.

The present study describes the effects of losartan and the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor enalapril on blood pressure, echocardiographically calculated left ventricular mass, renal function evaluated by glomerular filtration rate and quality of life. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system is of importance for cardiovascular growth. There is substantial experimental documentation in animals that the angiotensin II antagonist, losartan, decreases the cardiac hypertrophy response caused by elevated arterial pressure as well as intravascular volume overload. However, data in humans is scarce. This is a 3-year, randomised, double-blind study with parallel group design in 50 patients with essential hypertension. The results show that both drugs reduced blood pressure equally effectively, and also left ventricular mass (P < 0.001). After 3 years of treatment glomerular filtration rate significantly increased with losartan (P < 0.005). Serum uric acid fell modestly although significantly, dose-dependent in losartan patients compared with an increase in enalapril patients. A fall in serum potassium from the pre-study period was observed in all patients. There was no difference between treatments in terms of patient satisfaction on quality of life. Both drugs have relatively similar hormonal and haemodynamic effect, with an excellent tolerability profile; they appear to induce comparable blood pressure falls in hypertensive patients in particular, therapy based on specific Ang II blockade may offer advantages in high risk hypertensives if left ventricular hypertrophy is present. Both enalapril and losartan, in improving the renal function attenuating the intrarenal effects of angiotensin II, might be able to reverse the pathophysiology of essential hypertensive kidney disease, and should be first-choice drugs in the treatment of essential hypertension.

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