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@article{1394348, author = {Kocianova, E. and Vaclavik, J. and Tomkova, J. and Ondra, P. and Jarkovský, Jiří and Benešová, Klára and Vaclavik, T. and Kamasova, M. and Taborsky, M.}, article_location = {London}, article_number = {5}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08037051.2017.1346458}, keywords = {Adherence; beta blockers; compliance; resistant hypertension; drug level monitoring}, language = {eng}, issn = {0803-7051}, journal = {Blood Pressure}, title = {Heart rate is a useful marker of adherence to beta-blocker treatment in hypertension}, url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08037051.2017.1346458?scroll=top&needAccess=true}, volume = {26}, year = {2017} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1394348 AU - Kocianova, E. - Vaclavik, J. - Tomkova, J. - Ondra, P. - Jarkovský, Jiří - Benešová, Klára - Vaclavik, T. - Kamasova, M. - Taborsky, M. PY - 2017 TI - Heart rate is a useful marker of adherence to beta-blocker treatment in hypertension JF - Blood Pressure VL - 26 IS - 5 SP - 311-318 EP - 311-318 PB - INFORMA HEALTHCARE SN - 08037051 KW - Adherence KW - beta blockers KW - compliance KW - resistant hypertension KW - drug level monitoring UR - http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08037051.2017.1346458?scroll=top&needAccess=true N2 - Objectives: Suboptimal medication adherence is common among patients with hypertension. Measurements of plasma or urinary levels of antihypertensive drugs are useful, but not widely available. The aim of our study was to investigate the relation of patients' heart rates to their serum beta-blocker levels.Methods: We correlated 220 measurements of serum beta-blocker levels in 106 patients with apparently resistant hypertension to their corresponding office heart rate. A significant proportion, 44.6% of patients, were non-adherent to beta-blocker treatment according to serum level measurement. Non-adherent patients had significantly higher heart rates (80.9 vs. 66.6 bpm, p<.001), systolic (157.4 vs. 147.0mm Hg, p=.002) and diastolic blood pressure (91.1 vs. 87.2mm Hg, p=.041) in comparison to adherent patients.Results: Heart rate above 75.5 beats per minute predicted non-adherence to beta-blocker treatment with a sensitivity of 62.5%, specificity 86.8% and AUC ROC 0.802 (p<.001). Higher heart rate cutoff might be applicable for nebivolol but was not determined due to the low number of patients treated with nebivolol.Conclusions: We concluded that heart rate was shown to be a good predictor of non-adherence to beta-blocker treatment, and might become a quick and easy measure to determine patient adherence in hypertensive patients. ER -
KOCIANOVA, E., J. VACLAVIK, J. TOMKOVA, P. ONDRA, Jiří JARKOVSKÝ, Klára BENEŠOVÁ, T. VACLAVIK, M. KAMASOVA a M. TABORSKY. Heart rate is a useful marker of adherence to beta-blocker treatment in hypertension. \textit{Blood Pressure}. London: INFORMA HEALTHCARE, 2017, roč.~26, č.~5, s.~311-318. ISSN~0803-7051. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08037051.2017.1346458.
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