Wenzel René R
Clinic of Internal Medicine, Cardiology, Nephrology and Hypertension, General Hospital Zell am See, Zell am See, Austria.
Drugs. 2005;65 Suppl 2:29-39. doi: 10.2165/00003495-200565002-00005.
Hypertension is common in chronic renal disease and is a risk factor for the faster progression of renal damage, and reduction of blood pressure (BP) is an efficient way of preventing or slowing the progression of this damage. International guidelines recommend lowering BP to 140/90 mm Hg or less in patients with uncomplicated hypertension, and to 130/80 mm Hg or less for patients with diabetic or chronic renal disease. The attainment of these goals needs to be aggressively pursued with multidrug antihypertensive regimens, if needed. The pathogenesis of hypertensive renal damage involves mediators from various extracellular systems, including the renin-angiotensin system (RAS). Proteinuria, which occurs as a consequence of elevated intraglomerular pressure, is also directly nephrotoxic. As well as protecting the kidneys by reducing BP, antihypertensive drugs can also have direct effects on intrarenal mechanisms of damage, such as increased glomerular pressure and proteinuria. Antihypertensive drugs that have direct effects on intrarenal mechanisms may, therefore, have nephroprotective effects additional to those resulting from reductions in arterial BP. Whereas BP-lowering effects are common to all antihypertensive drugs, intrarenal effects differ between classes and between individual drugs within certain classes. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) have beneficial effects on proteinuria and declining renal function that appear to be mediated by factors additional to their effects on BP. These RAS inhibitors are recommended as a first-line antihypertensive approach in patients with chronic kidney disease. The addition of diuretics and calcium channel antagonists to RAS inhibitor therapy is also considered to be a rational strategy to reduce BP and preserve renal function. Calcium channel antagonists are a highly heterogeneous class of compounds, and it appears that some agents are more suitable for use in patients with chronic renal disease than others. Manidipine is a third-generation dihydropyridine (DHP) calcium channel antagonist that blocks both L and T-type calcium channels. Unlike older-generation DHPs, which preferentially act on L-type channels, manidipine has been shown to have beneficial effects on intrarenal haemodynamics, proteinuria and other measures of renal functional decline in the first clinical trials involving hypertensive patients with chronic renal failure. Preliminary results from a trial in diabetic patients who had uncontrolled hypertension and microalbuminuria despite optimal therapy with an ACE inhibitor or an ARB suggest that manidipine may be an excellent antihypertensive drug in combination with RAS inhibitor treatment in order to normalise BP and albumin excretion in patients with diabetes.
高血压在慢性肾病中很常见,是肾脏损害进展加速的危险因素,而降低血压是预防或减缓这种损害进展的有效方法。国际指南建议,无并发症的高血压患者应将血压降至140/90 mmHg或更低,糖尿病或慢性肾病患者应降至130/80 mmHg或更低。如有必要,需积极采用多种药物联合的抗高血压方案来实现这些目标。高血压肾损害的发病机制涉及多种细胞外系统的介质,包括肾素-血管紧张素系统(RAS)。由于肾小球内压力升高而出现的蛋白尿也具有直接肾毒性。除了通过降低血压来保护肾脏外,抗高血压药物还可对肾脏内的损伤机制产生直接影响,如肾小球压力升高和蛋白尿。因此,对肾脏内机制有直接影响的抗高血压药物可能除了降低动脉血压外还具有肾脏保护作用。虽然所有抗高血压药物都有降低血压的作用,但不同类别以及某些类别内的个别药物的肾脏内作用有所不同。血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)抑制剂和血管紧张素受体阻滞剂(ARB)对蛋白尿和肾功能下降具有有益作用,这些作用似乎是由其对血压的影响之外的因素介导的。这些RAS抑制剂被推荐作为慢性肾病患者的一线抗高血压治疗方法。在RAS抑制剂治疗中加用利尿剂和钙通道拮抗剂也被认为是降低血压和保护肾功能的合理策略。钙通道拮抗剂是一类高度异质的化合物,似乎有些药物比其他药物更适合用于慢性肾病患者。马尼地平是第三代二氢吡啶(DHP)钙通道拮抗剂,可阻断L型和T型钙通道。与优先作用于L型通道的 older-generation DHPs不同, 在涉及慢性肾衰竭高血压患者的首批临床试验中,马尼地平已被证明对肾脏内血流动力学、蛋白尿和其他肾功能下降指标具有有益作用。一项针对尽管使用ACE抑制剂或ARB进行了最佳治疗但仍患有未控制高血压和微量白蛋白尿的糖尿病患者的试验初步结果表明,马尼地平与RAS抑制剂联合治疗可能是一种很好的抗高血压药物,可使糖尿病患者的血压和白蛋白排泄恢复正常。