The American journal of medicine
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Elevated blood pressure is common in patients who are hospitalized. There are no guidelines and few recommendations to help inpatient providers manage patients with elevated blood pressure. There are no normal reported values for blood pressure in the inpatient and recording circumstances often widely vary. ⋯ This review also found no evidence that asymptomatic elevated blood pressure progresses to lead to end-organ damage. However, there are clear instances of hypertensive emergency where treatment is indicated. Conscientious adjustment of an anti-hypertensive regimen should be undertaken during episode of elevated blood pressure associated with end-organ damage.
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Review
Propensity Score Matching: The 'Devil is in the Details' Where More May Be Hidden than You Know.
Propensity score matching has been used with increasing frequency in the analyses of non-prespecified subgroups of randomized clinical trials, and in retrospective analyses of clinical trial data sets, registries, observational studies, electronic medical record analyses, and more. The method attempts to adjust post hoc for recognized unbalanced factors at baseline such that the data once analyzed will hopefully approximate or indicate what a prospective randomized data set-the "gold standard" for comparing two or more therapies-would have shown. ⋯ Thus, propensity score matching analyses may omit, due to nonrecognition, the effects of several clinically important but not considered factors that can affect the outcomes of the analyses being reported, causing them to possibly be misleading, or hypothesis-generating at best. This review discusses this issue, using several specific examples, and is targeted at clinicians to make them aware of the limitations of such analyses when they apply their results to patients in their care.
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This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) compared with surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) in low surgical risk patients. ⋯ Among older low-risk patients with severe aortic stenosis, TAVR is associated with a lower rate of death or disabling stroke compared with SAVR. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is also associated with improved quality-of-life, reduced bleeding and atrial fibrillation, but higher paravalvular leak and pacemaker implantation rates.