scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Joseph L. Izzo published in 2006"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ROADMAP study will answer the question whether an ARB can prevent or delay the onset of microalbuminuria and whether this translates into protection against cardiovascular events and renal disease.
Abstract: Diabetic nephropathy has developed into a worldwide epidemic and is responsible for the majority of end-stage renal disease in most countries. Antihypertensive treatment slows the progression of the disease. In addition, blockade of the renin-angiotensin system reduces the degree of albuminuria and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs) have been shown to delay the progression from microalbuminuria to overt proteinuria in patients with diabetes. However, few studies have examined whether the initial stage of diabetic nephropathy (i.e. the development of microalbuminuria) in patients with type 2 diabetes can be slowed or prevented by ARB treatment. The Randomised Olmesartan And Diabetes MicroAlbuminuria Prevention (ROADMAP) study is a placebo-controlled, multicentre, double-blind, parallel group study investigating the effect of the ARB, olmesartan medoxomil, on the incidence of microalbuminuria. A total of 4400 type 2 diabetes patients with normoalbuminuria will be randomized to treatment with 40 mg of olmesartan medoxomil once daily or placebo. Goal blood pressure will be 130/80 mmHg. The primary endpoint of the study is the occurrence of microalbuminuria. In ROADMAP, we will also assess as secondary endpoints the effects of olmesartan on fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events in patients with diabetes. In addition, within subgroups of the ROADMAP patients, the effects of olmesartan on retinopathy and other microvascular circulations will be analysed. The study is expected to last a median of 5 years. The ROADMAP study will answer the question whether an ARB can prevent or delay the onset of microalbuminuria and whether this translates into protection against cardiovascular events and renal disease.

100 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, a case study illustrates one such FDA-approved intervention, its performance over time, and the day-to-day home blood pressure (BP) variation in response to treatment.
Abstract: The belief that breathing exercises may provide health benefits has been shared by many cultures for centuries. A case study illustrates one such FDA-approved intervention, its performance over time, and the day-to-day home blood pressure (BP) variation in response to treatment. The device used by this patient (which interactively entrains slowed and deep breathing) has been studied in 7 clinical trials. Routine use of the device (RESPeRATE, InterCure Inc., Fort Lee, New Jersey; http://www.resperate.com/MD) significantly lowered home and office BPs without adverse effects, when used alone, with lifestyle modifications, or adjunctively to antihypertensive drugs. The proposed physiological mechanism(s), the technology that guides slowed breathing, pooled clinical research outcomes, and recommendations regarding this modality in clinical practice are also reviewed. Device-guided paced breathing may offer an effective, simple, and new nonpharmacologic option for treating high BP without additional side effects, but like all lifestyle modifications, must be practiced consistently to provide benefits.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nearly everything that modern practicing clinicians know about hypertension and its treatment is based on simple noninvasive measurement of brachial artery blood pressure, however, additional knowledge of pulse-wave characteristics may be important in the future to fully assess optimal cardiovascular drug therapy.
Abstract: Nearly everything that modern practicing clinicians know about hypertension and its treatment is based on simple noninvasive measurement of brachial artery blood pressure. As the study by Williams and colleagues1 illustrates, however, additional knowledge of pulse-wave characteristics may be important in the future to fully assess optimal cardiovascular drug therapy. The study of pulse-wave characteristics is far older than the study of absolute pressure values, dating back thousands of years to the Chinese masters who used their fingertips and their powers of observation to associate “hardening of the pulse” with adverse outcomes in people who ingested too much salt. These qualitative observations were less well developed in Western medicine, but as early as the 1870s, the sphygmocardiogram was developed as a reproduction of a peripheral pulse wave on a rotating drum via a tonometer attached to a levered stylus.1a Morrell and other early investigators were clearly able to differentiate the effects of nitrovasodilators from digitalis using this early equipment, but interpretations remained largely qualitative. Within a few decades, the development of sphygmomanometry by Korotkovand Riva-Rocci allowed quantitation of brachial cuff blood pressures, and the more descriptive methods largely disappeared. Article p 1213 Indeed, brachial cuff blood pressure has become an enduring clinical variable. Actuarial data from the life insurance industry and subsequent prospective observational data have clearly shown that hypertension, or elevated cuff blood pressure, is closely related to many forms of cardiovascular disease.2–4 Most recently, a very large meta-analysis by the Prospective Studies Collaborators that involved almost 1 million persons enrolled in 61 prospective observational studies demonstrated a log-linear relationship between cuff systolic or diastolic blood …

32 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: More residents than both attendings and nurses had positive opinions regarding the night float system, particularly in relation to patient care, while nurses had negative perceptions of resident performance in the setting of the nightFloat system.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Residency training programs use the night float system increasingly to meet the new resident work hour regulations. OBJECTIVE: To assess and compare residents’, attendings’, and nurses’ perceptions of the night float system. DESIGN: A survey study. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred and seven residents, 48 attendings, and 69 nurses in a university-based multicenter internal medicine residency program. MEASUREMENTS: Perceived impact on patient care, resident training, and resident performance. RESULTS: The overall response rate was 75%. In general, more residents than both attendings and nurses had positive opinions regarding the night float system, particularly in relation to patient care. Only a small proportion of residents and attendings thought positively about the night float’s impact on training quality (29.9%; 18.2%), daily feedback (23.0%; 9.1%), and end of rotation evaluation (21.8%; 6.1%). Less than half of the nurses had positive perceptions of the night residents’ performance in terms of promptness (40.9%), physical availability (38.6%), familiarity with the patients’ cases, and management plans (15.9%), communication of management plans to nurses (36.4%), professional respect and trust (43.2%), and teamwork (45.5%). CONCLUSIONS: Residents had more positive perceptions than attendings and nurses. Nurses, in particular, had negative perceptions of resident performance in the setting of the night float system.

27 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
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.
Abstract: 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. Is it a real entity? Does it pose a risk? Should it be treated entirely with lifestyle interventions or should some patients be placed on pharmacologic therapy? The panel was chaired by Dr Marvin Moser, Clinical Professor of Medicine at the Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, and Editor in Chief of The Journal of Clinical Hypertension. Panelists included Dr Thomas Giles, Professor of Medicine at Louisiana State University, New Orleans, LA; Dr Joseph Izzo, Jr, Professor of Medicine at SUNY Buffalo School of Medicine, Buffalo, NY; and Dr Henry Black, Roberts Professor of Preventive Medicine at the Rush University School of Medicine in Chicago, Chicago, IL.

4 citations