Prehypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pre-hYpertension tReament With A coMbinatIon of Dietary Supplements and Life-style Modifications
The primary objective of this study is to compare the efficacy and tolerability of a
life-style modifications protocol versus a protocol including life-style modifications along
with a novel combination of dietary supplement in the management of subjects diagnosed as
having pre-hypertension.
The novel formulation includes: Allium sativum (Dosage: 1,000 mg/day), Crataegus monogyna
(Dosage: 500 mg/day), Orthosiphon (Dosage: 300 mg/day), Hibiscus sabdariffa (Dosage: 250
mg/day)
Prehypertension. Prehypertension is an American classification for those subjects with a
normal-elevated blood pressure (BP) that does not reach the level considered to be
hypertension.
Because of the new data on lifetime risk of hypertension and the impressive increase in the
risk of cardiovascular complications associated with levels of BP previously considered to
be normal, the JNC 7 report has introduced a new classification that includes the term
"prehypertension" for those with BPs ranging from 120-139 mmHg systolic and/or 80-89 mmHg
diastolic.
This new designation is intended to identify those individuals in whom early intervention by
adoption of healthy lifestyles could reduce BP, decrease the rate of progression of BP to
hypertensive levels with age, or prevent hypertension entirely.
Data from the 1999 and 2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III)
estimated that the prevalence of prehypertension among adults in the United States was
approximately 31%. The prevalence is higher among men than women (39 and 23 percent,
respectively).] People with prehypertension are at a higher risk for developing hypertension
and target organ damages (i.e. left ventricular hypertrophy), as compared to people with
normal blood pressure. Furthermore, similar to hypertension, prehypertension can increase
the risk for heart attacks, strokes, congestive heart failure, and renal failure.
Researchers have found that a prehypertensive person is 3 times more likely to have a heart
attack and 1.7 times more likely to have heart disease than a person with normal blood
pressure.
Management of Prehypertension.
- Prehypertension is not a disease category. Rather, it identifies individuals at high
risk of developing hypertension, so that both patients and clinicians are alerted to
this risk and encouraged to intervene and prevent or delay the disease from developing.
- Individuals who are prehypertensive are not candidates for drug therapy based on their
level of BP and should be firmly and unambiguously advised to practice lifestyle
modification in order to reduce their risk of developing hypertension.
- Moreover, individuals with prehypertension, who also have diabetes or kidney disease,
should be considered candidates for appropriate drug therapy if a trial of lifestyle
modification fails to reduce their BP to 130/80 mmHg or less.
Lifestyle Modifications. The goal for individuals with prehypertension and no compelling
indications is to lower BP to normal levels with lifestyle changes, and prevent the
progressive rise in BP using the recommended lifestyle modifications.
Also, adoption of healthy lifestyles is an indispensable part of the management of those
with hypertension.
Lifestyle modifications include:
- Weight loss of as little as 10 lbs (4.5 kg) reduces BP and/or prevents hypertension
- Adoption of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) eating plan94 which is a
diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and low fat dairy products
- Dietary sodium should be reduced to no more than 100 mmol per day (2.4 g of sodium).
- Regular aerobic physical activity such as brisk walking at least 30 minutes per day
- Alcohol intake should be limited
Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension. The first-line approach to hypertension refractory
to lifestyle modification remains pharmacologic therapy in combination with the low-salt
DASH diet. However, a wide variety of alternative therapies are available for using to
improve BP control. Dietary supplements and modification, as well as herbal supplements, may
be useful under the right circumstances. Unfortunately, the efficacy of adding dietary,
herbal, or alternative therapies is not well established. While combinations of
antihypertensive drugs from different classes is a recommended approach that results in an
additive benefit, it is not clear whether combinations of herbal or dietary supplements will
also be additive.
Many of the studies evaluating the supplements referenced here are small and data are often
derived from pooled analysis. In particular, studies to date evaluating garlic as well as
many of the alternative approaches have significant limitations in study design. Should they
prove efficacious and safe their use as a first-line therapy may come into play Thus, it
remains unknown, however, whether the use of dietary supplements in association with life
style interventions has any additive effect in subjects with Pre-hypertension.
Purpose The primary objective of this study is to compare the efficacy and tolerability of a
life-style modifications protocol versus a protocol including life-style modifications along
with a novel combination of dietary supplement in the management of subjects diagnosed as
having pre-hypertension.
The novel formulation includes: Allium sativum (Dosage: 1,000 mg/day), Crataegus monogyna
(Dosage: 500 mg/day), Orthosiphon (Dosage: 300 mg/day), Hibiscus sabdariffa (Dosage: 250
mg/day)
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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