Seniors who take drugs to lower their blood pressure
may be more likely to fall and end up with a broken hip or head injury,
Yale University researchers report.
Side effects of blood pressure
medications include dizziness and problems with balance, the study
authors noted. Older adults taking these drugs were 30 percent to 40
percent more likely to suffer a serious injury following a fall than
those who did not take these drugs. The risk was more than double among
those who had suffered a similar injury previously, the researchers
added.
Given the higher risks for
illness and death after serious falls, “the potential harms versus
benefits of blood pressure medications should be weighed in deciding how
aggressively to treat high blood pressure in older adults,” said lead
researcher Dr. Mary Tinetti, a professor of medicine and public health
at Yale.
Death and loss of function
associated with serious falls are akin to strokes and heart attacks —
the very events blood pressure medications are designed to prevent, she
added.
The report was published online Feb. 24 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.
Dr. Sarah Berry, an instructor
in medicine at Harvard Medical School and co-author of an accompanying
journal editorial, pointed out that “there does not appear to be one
class of blood pressure drugs that are safer than others.”
So, Berry added, “When treating
an elderly patient with high blood pressure, it makes sense to use the
lowest dose possible to achieve the target blood pressure.”
However, another expert wasn’t convinced by the findings.
“With respect to the
association between blood pressure medication use and falls, I believe
at this point it is inconclusive,” said Dr. Adam Skolnick, an assistant
professor at the Leon H. Charney Division of Cardiology at NYU Langone
Medical Center in New York City. “The authors cannot entirely exclude
the possibility that high blood pressure itself, and not necessarily its
treatment, is associated with falls.”
For the study, Tinetti and her
colleagues collected data on almost 5,000 people older than 70 with high
blood pressure. In all, 14 percent didn’t take drugs to control their
blood pressure, nearly 55 percent took some medications and 31 percent
took several blood pressure-lowering drugs.
During three years of
follow-up, 446 patients (9 percent) suffered serious injuries from
falls. The risk for these injuries was higher among people taking blood
pressure medication than people not taking any such drugs. Moreover, the
risk was higher among those who had a serious injury from a fall
before, the researchers found.
While the study found an
association between using blood pressure medications and serious falls
among seniors, it did not prove a cause-and-effect link.
Another expert thinks the risk
of high blood pressure and the risk of injury from falls need to be
considered in context of overall health.
“High blood pressure is a
leading risk factor for heart attack, stroke, heart failure and kidney
disease in older adults, and use of blood pressure medications has been
shown to substantially lower the risk of cardiovascular and stroke
events as well as [all causes of death],” said Dr. Gregg Fonarow,
associate chief of the division of cardiology at the University of
California, Los Angeles, David Geffen School of Medicine.
However, use of blood pressure medications has been associated with increased risk of falls in a number of studies, he noted.
“While patients and clinicians
should be aware of the increased risk of falls with use of blood
pressure medications, if they closely monitor blood pressure sitting and
standing, and take precautions to avoid falls, the proven
cardiovascular benefits of these drugs substantially outweigh the
potential risk of falls,” Fonarow saidmore on this story: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/highbloodpressure.html
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