Usefulness of sublingual captopril in hypertensive emergencies. Preliminary results

1989 
: The aim of this study, whose preliminary findings are reported, is to evaluate the efficacy of captopril, administered by a sublingual route, in the treatment of hypertensive emergencies. Captopril has been given by this route to 20 hypertensive patients while these had an ongoing hypertensive crisis (defined as a systolic arterial pressure above 200 mmHg associated with a diastolic arterial pressure above 115 mmHg). Arterial pressure has been measured after 5, 20, 10, 15, 30, 45, 60 and 120 min. For 8 patients it has been measured until the eighth hour. Results were the following: a satisfactory control of hypertensive crisis in 85% of patients, as stated by a slight but significant drop of arterial pressure after 10 min (15/10 mmHg; p less than 0.05) and by a maximum antihypertensive effect after 30 min (57/39 mmHg; p less than 0.001); an antihypertensive effect was evident until 6 hours after the administration of the drug; a positive correlation between the antihypertensive effect and pretreatment levels of arterial pressure and plasma renin activity; drug was free from relevant side effects; sublingual captopril can be considered an efficacious, easy to use and valuable tool in the treatment of hypertensive emergencies.
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