UK Health Radio – Medical News
Update on the Hour
An interesting report from the BBC has revealed that
a device the size of a paper clip inserted in the groin has shown promising
results in lowering blood pressure, scientists say.
In a
study of 83 patients, published in The Lancet, those who received the device
experienced an immediate reduction in blood pressure. But one-third also
developed swelling in their leg that needed treatment.
High
blood pressure affects one in three adults in the UK, with around 5% of this
group suffering from resistant hypertension, which does not respond to
medication. It is dangerous because it causes strain on the vessels carrying
blood around the body.
This
can cause vessels to become clogged up or to weaken, which can cause damage to
the heart or brain. High blood pressure also increases the risk of stroke,
heart attack, heart failure, kidney damage and eye problems.
The
device, called a coupler creates a chamber between the artery and vein in the
upper thigh which appears to help lower resistance and bring blood pressure
down.
Researchers
at Queen Mary University of London, which led the study, tested the device on
42 patients with high blood pressure that had not responded to at least three
types of drug treatment.
They
compared the effects with 35 patients who were given the standard medical
treatment for uncontrolled high blood pressure.
For
patients in this group, there were fewer hypertensive complications and fewer
hospital admissions for high blood pressure emergencies and those with the
coupler inserted were also able to reduce their medication.
However,
there were some side-effects. In around 29% of patients, swelling developed in
the leg in which the coupler was inserted that was simply treated with a stent
and was probably due to turbulence caused by the device in the thigh.
Lead author Dr Melvin Lobo acknowledged there was more to learn about the device. "We
need more research to explore the long-term effects of the coupler, better
understand its safety and understand more about how it works within the body. We must find better means of treating
high blood pressure as drugs do not work for everyone and the coupler is a big
step forward in our search for alternative treatment."
Prof
Tom MacDonald, president of the British Hypertension Society, and professor of
clinical pharmacology at the University of Dundee, said the device could be
"a fantastic thing for patients. It's another potentially great advance in
the treatment of hypertension. It's not without its problems, but the beauty of
it is you can reverse it, and it can be given to people on top of hypertension
medication. We now need more rigorously controlled studies and a definitive
trial before it can be funded for the NHS."
Amanda
Thomas
UK
Health Radio – Medical News Update on the Hour
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