The American journal of medicine
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The 2016 U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) guidelines for primary prevention statin therapy are more restrictive than the 2013 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guidelines. There are important differences in how application of the risk thresholds from these guidelines would impact particular segments of the U.S. ⋯ In this sample of U.S. adults from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey database, full implementation of the higher USPSTF statin treatment threshold could lead to less overall statin use and disproportionately lower statin use among non-Hispanic blacks.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Diastolic Hypotension May Attenuate Benefits from Intensive Systolic Targets: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial.
The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) was a randomized controlled trial that studied 9361 adults ≥50 years of age with systolic blood pressure >130 mm Hg and ≥1 cardiovascular risk factors. Patients were randomized to intensive (≤120 mm Hg) or standard (≤140 mm Hg) systolic targets. In August 2016, a limited dataset was released for secondary analysis. We hypothesized that excessive lowering of diastolic blood pressure could cause harm. Using the data from SPRINT, we sought to determine whether the development of diastolic hypotension during treatment was associated with adverse outcomes. ⋯ We found an association between diastolic hypotension and the combined endpoint of cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality among SPRINT participants with normal to high diastolic blood pressure at entry. Attention to diastolic blood pressure may be important for optimizing outcomes when targeting systolic blood pressure reduction.
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The objective of this study was to determine individual and joint effects of pulse pressure and blood pressure treatment intensity on serious adverse events in the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial. ⋯ Wider pulse pressure and intensive blood pressure treatment were individually associated with the composite adverse event outcome. A modest effect modification of pulse pressure and treatment intensity led to additional adverse events when both were present. Clinicians should use caution when treating older patients with elevated pulse pressure to an intensive blood pressure treatment target.
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Distal esophageal spasm is a rare motility disorder presenting principally with nonobstructive dysphagia and noncardiac chest pain. In symptomatic patients, the manometric diagnosis is made when >10% of the wet swallows have simultaneous and/or premature contractions intermixed with normal peristalsis. We characterize manometry and barium as complementary diagnostic approaches, and given the intermittent nature of the disorder, one should be always aware that it is almost impossible to rule out spasm. Treatment is difficult; we propose an approach beginning with the least invasive intervention.