MANY PEOPLE STOP TAKING ANTI-HYPERTENSIVE DRUGS BECAUSE
THE DOSE IS TOO HIGH
By Maryann Napoli
(August 2003)
At least half
of all people stop taking their blood pressure medications
because of the side effects that typically include fatigue,
lethargy, dizziness, and sexual dysfunction. Jay S. Cohen,
MD, knows the reason why--the dose is set too high. He takes
issue with the prevailing belief among doctors and drug
manufacturers that side effects are inevitable and unavoidable.
In his book Over Dose: The Case Against Drug Companies (New
York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, 2001), Dr. Cohen says that
the drug companies set the dosage for all prescription drugs
at a high level because it is more convenient for doctors.
The source of information that most doctors turn to for
dose recommendations is the Physicians' Desk Reference,
which is published by the pharmaceutical industry.
Dr. Cohen, a research physician at the University of California,
San Diego, has published numerous medical journal articles
on the subject of drug dosage. He has found that most side
effects never occur when people are started at a low dose
that is slowly increased if needed. Nowhere is that more
apparent than in the treatment of hypertension.
Every five years, the Joint National Committee on the Detection,
Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC) is
convened to reassess the standard therapies for hypertension.
The JNC usually gets a lot of media attention with its pronouncements,
but Dr. Cohen observes that the guidelines have little effect
on physician prescribing habits where it concerns dosage.
When the JNC last published guidelines, Dr. Cohen did his
own survey comparing the doses recommended by the JNC with
the doses recommended by the drug companies. The JNC experts
recommended substantially lower initial doses for 23 out
of 40 anti-hypertensive drugs. Asked about the latest JNC
guidelines in a telephone interview, Dr. Cohen said that
most of the guidelines are exactly the same, though a few
new drugs have been added. "A lot of the [recommendations]
come out again with the same standard ‘one size fits
all’ dosing. Young and old, big and small, healthy
and unhealthy, and people who take ten medicines and those
who take one medicine," he answered. "Whenever
I'm talking about this on a radio show, veterinarians and
farmers usually call in to say they always adjust medicine
doses for animals." Dr. Cohen emphasized that he is
not suggesting everyone needs low doses. Only about 20-40%
of all people do. "It's usually the small, female,
[and/or] elderly," he said, "People who are sensitive
to medicine--they know who they are."
After many years of treating high blood pressure, doctors
have become more amenable to lowering the dosage once they
prescribe drugs in combinations of two or three, explained
Dr. Cohen. To illustrate how long it takes to identify the
safest and most effective dose, Dr. Cohen used diuretics
as an example. "Those drugs can have major side effects
that usually aren’t obvious," he explained. "They
were first marketed at doses of 50-100 mg a day, and now
the standard dose is 12.5 mg. It took them decades to figure
that out. 12.5 mg is fine for most people, but for those
who are sensitive, there is no harm in starting lower."
Dr. Cohen has advice for people who want to avoid high blood
pressure or lower mild hypertension without drugs. "Lose
weight, eat a good diet that emphasizes vegetables, fruits,
whole grains, fish, poultry, and low-fat dairy products.
This has been proven to lower blood pressure as much as
a mild blood pressure pill." Those who follow this
type of diet, however, will still need magnesium supplementation,
according to Dr. Cohen, who estimates that 80% of the population
is magnesium deficient. To help people understand why, Dr.
Cohen wrote a booklet called Magnesium for High Blood Pressure,
which he said is available at many health food stores. "Magnesium
does exactly the same thing as these expensive calcium channel
blockers doctors prescribe for hypertension," he explained.
"It calms the nervous system, and relaxes the musculature,
and stabilizes blood vessel function."
For More
Information:
Visit Dr. Cohen’s Web site (www.medicationsense.com)
to sign up for a free electronic newsletter and learn more
about his work.