JOURNAL ARTICLE
OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
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ASSESSMENT OF ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS AS CARDIOVASCULAR RISK FACTORS.

UNLABELLED: A wide range of pharmaceutical substances can induce side-effects expressed as cardiovascular changes or events, adding to other risk factors or worsening preexisting cardiovascular diseases.

AIM: Continuous study focused on iatrogenic conditions representing cardiovascular risk factors.

METHODS: We developed a descriptive study of patients admitted to the Iasi Vth Internal Medicine and Geriatrics-Gerontology Clinic between 1998-2013, focusing on iatrogenic conditions representing cardiovascular risk factors.

RESULTS: We have diagnosed 81 cases of drug-induced hypertension, and 43 patients with hypertensive crises; 72 cases of iatrogenic hyperglycemia; 36 cases of drug-induced hyperuricemia; 50 cases of drug-induced dyslipidemias; and 17 cases of iatrogenic obesity. These iatrogenic diseases were more common in women and the elderly. Twenty-eight patients have developed simultaneous adverse drug reactions induced by the same drug and manifest as different cardiovascular risk factors.

CONCLUSIONS: Cardiovascular risk factors can be induced to a significant extent by chronic drug administration. Some medications (e.g., NSAIDs, corticoids, beta-blockers, diuretics, contraceptives) can act on the same patient by multiple pathogenic links. The adverse drug reactions can be cardiovascular risk factors that persist in time, or can be removed (by discontinuing the administration of the implicated drug). The highest importance of their acknowledgment relies on the possibility of their prevention through carefully balancing the benefits and the risk of each new medication.

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