This article originally posted 23 May, 2006 and appeared in Issue 313
Some Blood Pressure Meds May Raise Diabetes Risk
Diuretics and beta-blockers, used to treat hypertension, are associated with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, new findings indicate.
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"The relation between the use of different classes of antihypertensive
medications and the risk of incident type 2 diabetes is unclear," Dr. Eric
N. Taylor, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues write in the medical
journal Diabetes Care. "Prior studies have reported conflicting results."
The researchers examined the issue using data from studies that followed three
large groups of women and men: the Nurses' Health Study (NHS) I and II and the
Health Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS).
The analysis included 41,193 older women from NHS I, 14,151 younger women
from NHS II, and 19,472 men from HPFS. All of the subjects had high blood pressure,
but not diabetes initially, and were followed for 8, 10, and 16 years, respectively.
A total of 3589 new cases of type 2 diabetes were recorded during follow-up.
The risk of developing diabetes in subjects taking thiazide-type diuretics
compared with those not taking a thiazide was increased by 20 percent in older
women, 45 percent in younger women, and 36 percent in men, after taking account
of age, weight, physical activity, and other risk factors.
Compared to patients not taking a beta-blocker, older women taking beta-blockers
had a 32 percent higher risk of diabetes, while for men the risk was 20 percent
higher.
"Increased surveillance for diabetes in patients treated with these medications
may be warranted," the authors conclude.
The use of other common types of blood pressure lowering drugs -- calcium
channel blockers and ACE inhibitors -- was not associated with the development
of type 2 diabetes, according to the report.
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