Abstract :
Safe and effective antihypertensive therapy became available in the 1950s with the introduction of thiazide diuretics. Prior to that time, we did have agents that lowered blood pressure but they often needed to be given parenterally and were too poorly tolerated to be used for the treatment of any but those with lifethreatening elevations of blood pressure. When thiazide diuretics—first chlorothiazide and then hydrochlorothiazide—became available, it was possible to lower blood pressure in most hypertensives and assess whether that reduction would lead to a reduction in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The results of 17 large trials have now made it clear that antihypertensive therapy with regimens based on diuretics and β blockers reduces cardiovascular events and saves lives. When first introduced, thiazide diuretics were prescribed at doses we now know are excessively high (100–200 mg of hydrochlorothiazide/day), and we have learned that much lower doses, even as little as 12.5 mg of hydrochlorothiazide, are effective. These lower doses will reduce blood pressure and do so with considerably less in the way of metabolic effects. This article will trace the development of antihypertensive therapy and review how data from clinical trials have influenced the recommendations of the Joint National Committees on the Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of Hypertension.