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Clinical Trial

Arterial Stiffness as a Tool to Investigate Adherence in Resistant Hypertension

NCT: NCT07207226 · ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING

NCT IDNCT07207226
StatusACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Start Date2024-11-27
Completion2026-07-27

Brief Summary

According to WHO estimates, worldwide, 1.28 billion adults between the age of 30-79 years have hypertension. Furthermore, only 1 in 5 people with hypertension have it under control. In approximately 15% of the patients treated for hypertension, optimum blood pressure levels are not achieved even after the addition of 3-4 conventional anti-hypertensive drugs. These patients are diagnosed as resistant hypertensives. Resistant hypertension is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke. Hypertension is a chronic condition where arterial pressures are persistently elevated, leading to an increase in the pulsatile load on the arteries. This can result in structural and functional alterations in the arterial wall leading to an increase in 'arterial stiffness'. Arterial stiffness is dependent on the mechanical load (blood pressure) and the material properties of the vessel wall. There is a vicious loop between hypertension and arterial stiffness, where hypertension may lead to alteration in the vascular structure and cause degradation of the elastic components of the vessel wall, and an increase in arterial stiffness can lead to higher blood pressure. An increase in arterial stiffness is associated with higher cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, and patients with resistant hypertension are at a significantly higher risk of developing CVD. Measurement of carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV) is considered the gold standard for assessing arterial stiffness and has been recommended as a method to evaluate arterial stiffness as a part of routine care in patients with hypertension. The European Society of Hypertension (ESH) and the working group of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) recommend its use for the evaluation of cardiovascular risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Arterial Stiffness as a Tool to Investigate Adherence in Resistant Hypertension?

Arterial Stiffness as a Tool to Investigate Adherence in Resistant Hypertension is a clinical trial registered under NCT07207226. Current status: ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING.

What is the status of NCT07207226?

The current status of NCT07207226 (Arterial Stiffness as a Tool to Investigate Adherence in Resistant Hypertension) is: ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING.

When did Arterial Stiffness as a Tool to Investigate Adherence in Resistant Hypertension start?

Arterial Stiffness as a Tool to Investigate Adherence in Resistant Hypertension started on 2024-11-27.

Official Source

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Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov API. For the most current status, refer to the official record.