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BP med can make gums red and puffy

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: I have a question connected to high blood pressure, which I’ve had for 20 years. I am 75, in fairly good health and have gingivitis. For high blood pressure, my doctor took me off amlodipine 5 mg and prescribed a different calcium channel blocker, nifedipine. After four months, my gums became very puffy and were extremely red in some areas. A dental specialist diagnosed the gum problem as being caused by the nifedipine. I was advised to go off it ASAP.

I changed doctors, and I am now on three medication­s for high blood pressure. One is amlodipine, along with metoprolol and valsartan. Will amlodipine eventually cause the same problem? Also, I take the highest possible dose of valsartan. Is this hard on the kidneys?

S.F.

Answer: Nifedipine is a major cause of drug-induced growth of the gums. Amlodipine and nifedipine both work the same way and are chemically related, but amlodipine rarely causes drug-induced gingival enlargemen­t. The two other medicines you take, metoprolol and valsartan have never been associated with gums growth. Some people really do need three blood pressure medicines, so I wouldn’t recommend discontinu­ing the medicine unless your doctor tells you to. Moreover, you didn’t have that problem when taking amlodipine before, so it is very unlikely to start causing it now. If so, a diuretic would be an alternativ­e. It does not cause gums to enlarge.

Valsartan is an effective protector of kidney function in most people. Paradoxica­lly, starting an angiotensi­n receptor blocker (whose generic names all end in “-sartan”) or its cousin, an angiotensi­n converting enzyme inhibitor (whose generic names all end in “-pril”) may cause the blood creatinine level to rise a bit. This might make you think they are harming the kidneys. In fact, they are highly protective against damage from some kinds of kidney disease, especially those that cause excess protein in the urine. People with kidney damage due to blockages of the arteries to the kidneys on both sides should not take an ARB or ACE inhibitor.

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