Abstract-Single dose administration of dietary inorganic nitrate acutely reduces blood pressure (BP) in normotensive healthy volunteers, via bioconversion to the vasodilator nitric oxide. We assessed whether dietary nitrate might provide sustained BP lowering in patients with hypertension. We randomly assigned 68 patients with hypertension in a doubleblind, placebo-controlled clinical trial to receive daily dietary supplementation for 4 weeks with either dietary nitrate (250 mL daily, as beetroot juice) or a placebo (250 mL daily, as nitrate-free beetroot juice) after a 2-week run-in period and followed by a 2-week washout. We performed stratified randomization of drug-naive (n=34) and treated (n=34)
The effect of two conventional high-osmolality and two new low-osmolality contrast media on plasma histamine levels has been examined. The study population included 25 patients undergoing intravenous urography with Urovison 58% (sodium and meglumine diatrizoate), 24 patients receiving intravenous Hexabrix 320 (sodium and meglumine ioxaglate) for urography, 16 patients receiving intravenous Iopamiro 370 (iopamidol) for urography and 12 patients receiving Urografin 76% (sodium and meglumine diatrizoate) for coronary angiography. Seventy-four percent of the 77 patients studied suffered adverse reactions ranging from a feeling of warmth and nausea to laryngeal oedema and bronchospasm. Hexabrix 320 and Iopamiro 370 were associated with the least patient discomfort. All contrast agents usually produced a rise in plasma histamine following injection (Iopamiro 370 causing the least change) and the histamine levels then fell towards preinjection values over a space of about 10 minutes. No relationship was observed between the magnitude of the increase in histamine and the severity of the reaction that occurred. However, a relationship was suggested between the mean peak plasma histamine level achieved and the occurrence of a Grade II reaction (i.e., dry retching/vomiting, mild urticaria or rash). These findings raise the probability that histamine contributes to the more severe grades of reaction to radiographic contrast media.
The effects of four different radiographic contrast media (Urovison 58%, Hexabrix 320, Iopamiro 370 and Omnipaque 300) have been examined with respect to histamine release, cardiovascular changes and adverse drug reaction (ADR) in a group of 200 patients undergoing intravenous urography. Each patient received only one of the four agents, which were allocated on a random basis. Urovison produced the greatest number of ADRs. Iopamiro caused the least. No significant correlation between the magnitude of the change in plasma histamine following injection of radiographic contrast medium and the production of a particular ADR could be demonstrated. Heart rate increased significantly following the administration of Urovison, Hexabrix and Iopamiro in the absence of any appreciable change in blood pressure. These results and our earlier findings would favour the use of the low-osmolality contrast media in intravenous urography to minimize ADRs, histamine release and patient discomfort.
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