Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://adhlui.com.ui.edu.ng/jspui/handle/123456789/1745
Title: Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors in cardiovascular and renal disease in Africans: a review
Authors: Ajayi, A.A
Keywords: Drugs
Pharmacology
Hypertension
Therapeutic
Issue Date: 1991
Publisher: Blackwell Scientific Publications
Citation: Afr. J Med. Med. Sci.(1991): 20. 123-134.
Abstract: The discovery and clinical availability of ACE inhibitor drugs is a triumph of rational drug development and a landmark in biochemical pharmacology and hypertension research. The clinical pharmacological properties and haemodynamics of the clinically available drugs, captopril and enalapril, are reviewed, as is their therapeutic efficacy in African patients with essential and renal hypertension and chronic congestive heart failure. ACE inhibitors act as balanced arteriolar vasodilators and venular dilators and do not excite a reflex tachycardia in contrast to other vasodilator drugs. Their efficacy is, at least in part, dependent on plasma renin activity, which is low in Blacks and in Africans. Consistent with this, is the poor response to ACE inhibitor monotherapy of essential hypertension in controlled studies in Africans. However, the compensatory neuroendocrine activation which occurs in malignant hypertension, renal failure and congestive heart failure and concurrent diuretic therapy appears to enhance the clinical response to ACE inhibitors in African patients.
URI: http://adhlui.com.ui.edu.ng/jspui/handle/123456789/1745
ISSN: 1116-4077
Appears in Collections:African Journal of Medicine and Medical Sciences

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