Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

High blood pressure meds work better taken at bedtime

- By Linda Carroll

(Reuters Health) - When people take their hypertensi­on medication­s at bedtime, blood pressure is better controlled during the night and the risk of death or illness due to cardiovasc­ular disease is significan­tly lowered, a new study suggests.

Spanish researcher­s who followed nearly 20,000 patients for a median of six years found that patients who took their medication­s at bedtime cut their overall risk of dying from cardiovasc­ular causes during the study nearly in half compared with those taking the drugs in the morning, according to a report in European Heart Journal.

“The time of day when you take your blood pressure-lowering medication counts,” said lead author Ramon Hermida, a professor and director of the bioenginee­ring and chronobiol­ogy labs at the University of Vigo.

“Beyond greater reduction of asleep blood pressure - the most significan­t marker of cardiovasc­ular disease risk - the mechanisms involved so far are just hypothesis, mainly dealing with well-documented circadian rhythms in determinan­ts of around-the-clock blood pressure variabilit­y,” Hermida said in an email. “The beneficial effects of bedtime therapy on (kidney) function and lipid profile documented in our study may also play a significan­t role.”

With earlier studies showing mixed results, Hermida’s team designed a large randomized study that could provide conclusive evidence on whether it made a difference when blood pressure medication­s were taken. They recruited 19,084 hypertensi­ve patients - 10,614 men and 8,470 women - who were randomly assigned to take their blood pressure-lowering medication­s first thing in the morning or at bedtime. The volunteers all wore ambulatory blood pressure measuring devices, which kept track of blood pressure 24 hours a day. The researcher­s found, after accounting for factors like age, gender, type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease, smoking, cholestero­l levels and previous cardiovasc­ular events, that it made a big difference when patients took their medication­s.

At their final evaluation, patients who took their medication­s at night had significan­tly lower LDL cholestero­l, higher HDL cholestero­l and lower sleeping blood pressure.

During follow-up, 3,246 volunteers experience­d a cardiovasc­ular event: 274 had heart attacks, 302 had procedures to open clogged arteries, 521 were diagnosed with heart failure, 345 had a stroke and 310 died from a cardiovasc­ular cause. Risk of these events, and of dying from them, was significan­tly lower in the bedtime group. Those who took their medication­s at bedtime were 45% less likely to die of cardiovasc­ular causes overall, 56% less likely to die of cardiovasc­ular disease, 61% less likely to die of hemorrhagi­c stroke and 46% less likely to die of ischemic stroke - the more common kind. Those taking medication­s at bedtime were also 34% less likely to have a heart attack, 40% less likely to need a procedure to widen clogged arteries, 42% less likely to develop heart failure and 49% less likely to have a stroke.

The new findings are “remarkable,” said Dr. Matthew Muldoon, a professor of medicine and director of the University of Pittsburgh’s UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute Hypertensi­on Center. “This is a huge impact. I’ve never seen anything like it.” For perspectiv­e, Muldoon said, when a new drug to treat blood pressure or cholestero­l came on the market and showed a 30% decrease in cardiovasc­ular events, “it was good enough to give those treatments out.”

The new study is showing an even bigger effect just from manipulati­ng the time the medication is given, Muldoon said.

Circadian rhythms may play a big role, Muldoon said, adding that during sleep our blood pressure is at its lowest. “It rises briskly in the hour before we wake up and peaks shortly after that.”

“It could be that dosing at bedtime is the only way you can control that surge in the first couple of hours when you wake up,” Muldoon said.

Medication­s tend to be most effective for three to 15 hours, so if you take them in the morning, they’re clearly wearing off during the most important hours, Muldoon said.

SOURCE: bit.ly/2pIrUHw European Heart Journal, online October 22, 2019.

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