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Henry R. Black

Researcher at Rush University Medical Center

Publications -  207
Citations -  92296

Henry R. Black is an academic researcher from Rush University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Prehypertension. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 206 publications receiving 88350 citations. Previous affiliations of Henry R. Black include University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.

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Hypertension in Women: The Women Take Heart Project

TL;DR: Results from this study and national surveys indicate that hypertension detection and control remain major public health challenges in preventing cardiovascular disease in older women.
Journal Article

Hypertension in Older Persons.

TL;DR: In most older hypertensive patients, low dose diuretics or diuretic based therapy should be considered as initial treatment and Moderately long acting or long acting dihydropyridine calcium antagonists are appropriate in isolated systolic hypertension (ISH) for patients in whom a diureic is ineffective or poorly tolerated.
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Prehypertension--what is it and should it be treated?

TL;DR: In May 2006, a panel of experts was assembled during the meeting of the American Society of Hypertension, Inc to discuss the diagnosis and treatment of prehypertension.
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Microalbuminuria, Chronic Renal Disease, and the Effects of the Metabolic Syndrome on Cardiovascular Events

TL;DR: This expert panel discussion was supported by Novartis and each author received an honorarium fromNovartis for time and effort spent participating in the discussion and reviewing the transcript for important intellectual content prior to publication.
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Treatment of elderly hypertensive patients with a delayed-release verapamil formulation in a community-based trial.

TL;DR: It is notable that although 359 of the 628 patients reached control on treatment, 182 of the remaining 269 noncontrolled patients were not titrated to higher doses, indicating that even with a well tolerated drug there may be reluctance among clinicians to increase doses.