Daily aspirin reduces the incidence of heart attacks to a small degree, but increases the incidence of major bleeding events to a similar degree in patients treated for high blood pressure who have not had a prior stroke or heart attack. In patients with high blood pressure who have had a stroke or heart attack, the benefits of daily low-dose aspirin outweigh the harms. There is no evidence of benefit for antithrombotic therapy with warfarin alone or in combination with aspirin in patients with high blood pressure. The benefits and harms of the newer drugs glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors, clopidogrel, prasugrel, ticagrelor and oral antithrombotic agents such as dabigatran and rivaroxaban for patients with high blood pressure have not been studied in clinical trials.
Antiplatelet agents and anticoagulants for hypertension
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December 7, 2011
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