O
Otelio S. Randall
Researcher at Howard University
Publications - 63
Citations - 4525
Otelio S. Randall is an academic researcher from Howard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Amlodipine. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 62 publications receiving 4308 citations. Previous affiliations of Otelio S. Randall include Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science & University of Michigan.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of ramipril vs amlodipine on renal outcomes in hypertensive nephrosclerosis: a randomized controlled trial.
L. Y. Agodoa,Lawrence J. Appel,George L. Bakris,Glenn Beck,J. Bourgoignie,Josephine P. Briggs,Jeanne Charleston,C. DeAnna,W. Cleveland,Janice G. Douglas,Margaret Douglas,D. Dowie,M. Faulkner,A. Gabriel,J. Gassman,Tom Greene,Y. Hall,Lee Hebert,L. Hiremath,Kenneth Jamerson,C. J. Johnson,Joel D. Kopple,J. Kusek,J. Lash,J. Lea,Julia B. Lewis,M. Lipkowitz,S. Massry,John P. Middleton,Edgar R. Miller,Keith C. Norris,Daniel T. O'Connor,A. Ojo,Robert A. Phillips,V. Pogue,Mahboob Rahman,Otelio S. Randall,Stephen G. Rostand,Gerald Schulman,William Jay Smith,Denyse Thornley-Brown,C. C. Tisher,Robert D. Toto,J T Jr Wright,S. Xu +44 more
TL;DR: Ramipril, compared with amlodipine, retards renal disease progression in patients with hypertensive renal disease and proteinuria and may offer benefit to patients without proteinuria.
Journal ArticleDOI
Intensive blood-pressure control in hypertensive chronic kidney disease.
Lawrence J. Appel,Jackson T. Wright,Tom Greene,Lawrence Y. Agodoa,Brad C. Astor,George L. Bakris,William H. Cleveland,Jeanne Charleston,Gabriel Contreras,Marquetta Faulkner,Francis B. Gabbai,Jennifer J. Gassman,Lee A. Hebert,Kenneth Jamerson,Joel D. Kopple,John W. Kusek,James P. Lash,Janice P. Lea,Julia B. Lewis,Michael S. Lipkowitz,Shaul G. Massry,Edgar R. Miller,Keith C. Norris,Robert A. Phillips,Velvie A. Pogue,Otelio S. Randall,Stephen G. Rostand,Miroslaw Smogorzewski,Robert D. Toto,Xuelei Wang +29 more
TL;DR: Overall analyses, intensive blood-pressure control had no effect on kidney disease progression, however, there may be differential effects of intensiveBlood pressure control in patients with and those without baseline proteinuria, as well as according to the baseline level of proteinuria.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mild high-renin essential hypertension. Neurogenic human hypertension?
Murray D. Esler,Stevo Julius,Andrew J. Zweifler,Otelio S. Randall,Ernest Harburg,Hermsworth Gardiner,Vincent DeQuattro +6 more
TL;DR: Patients with high-renin hypertension, but not those with normal plasma renin activity, exhibited suppressed hostility, a behavioral pattern linked to increased sympathetic activity, which is neurogenic and possibly psychosomatic in origin.
Journal ArticleDOI
Successful blood pressure control in the African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension.
Jackson T. Wright,Lawrence Y. Agodoa,Gabriel Contreras,Tom Greene,Janice G. Douglas,James P. Lash,Otelio S. Randall,Nancy Rogers,Michael C. Smith,Shaul G. Massry +9 more
TL;DR: The blood pressure goals set and achieved in AASK participants clearly demonstrate that adequate blood pressure control can be achieved even in hypertensive populations whose blood pressure is the most difficult to control.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiovascular outcomes in the African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension (AASK) Trial.
Keith C. Norris,Jacque Bourgoigne,J. Gassman,Lee Hebert,John P. Middleton,Robert A. Phillips,Otelio S. Randall,Stephen G. Rostand,Susan Sherer,Robert D. Toto,Jackson T. Wright,Xuelei Wang,Tom Greene,Lawrence J. Appel,Julia A. Lewis +14 more
TL;DR: This analysis identifies unique and potentially modifiable CV risk factors in this high-risk cohort and determined baseline factors that predict CV outcomes.