
pmid: 31060074
Recent guidelines on diagnosis and management of high blood pressure (BP) include substantial changes and several new concepts compared with previous guidelines. These are reviewed and their clinical implications are discussed in this article. The goal is to provide a practical reference to assist clinicians with up-to-date management of patients with high BP. Important issues include new diagnostic thresholds, out-of-office BP monitoring, intensified treatment goals, and a different approach to resistant hypertension. Finally, differences among guidelines, the persistent controversies that have led to them, and their implications for clinical practice are discussed.
Patient Care Team, Potassium, Dietary, Blood Pressure Determination, Sodium, Dietary, American Heart Association, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Community-Institutional Relations, Telemedicine, United States, Medication Adherence, Drug Combinations, Prehypertension, Hypertension, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Mass Screening, Medical History Taking, Life Style, Antihypertensive Agents
Patient Care Team, Potassium, Dietary, Blood Pressure Determination, Sodium, Dietary, American Heart Association, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Community-Institutional Relations, Telemedicine, United States, Medication Adherence, Drug Combinations, Prehypertension, Hypertension, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Mass Screening, Medical History Taking, Life Style, Antihypertensive Agents
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| impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network. | Top 10% |
