Influence of Moxonidine and Bisoprolol on Morphofunctional Condition of Arterial Wall and Telomerase Activity in Postmenopausal Women with Arterial Hypertension and Osteopenia. The Results from a Moscow Randomized Study.

2021 
To compare the effect of 12 months of treatment with moxonidine or bisoprolol on telomerase activity (TA) and parameters characterizing the arterial wall state in postmenopausal women with arterial hypertension (AH) and osteopenia. An open-label randomized study with 114 postmenopausal women with hypertension and osteopenia; pulse wave velocity (PWV), intima-media thickness (IMT), and TA were analyzed initially and after 12 months of therapy with moxonidine (n = 57) or bisoprolol (n = 57). Both medications effectively lowered blood pressure (BP) in both groups. After 12 months, the moxonidine group showed a significant increase in TA by 45.5% (from 0.87 to 1.15; p < 0.001), in contrast to the bisoprolol group, where TA decreased by 14.1% (from 0.89 to 0.74; p = 0.001). Within 12 months, in the moxonidine group, PWV decreased by 1.9% (from 10.35 ± 2.56 to 10.05 ± 2.29 m/s; p = 0.039), and in the bisoprolol group it increased by 5.8% (from 10.36 ± 2.47 to 11.26 ± 2.60 m/s; p < 0.001). In the moxonidine group, IMT increased by 3.5% on the right and 1.4% on the left, in the bisoprolol group – by 5.7% on the right and 4.2% on the left. A 12-month treatment with moxonidine but not with bisoprolol in postmenopausal women with AH and osteoporosis was associated with a decrease of arterial stiffness seen as statistically significantly reduced PVW and with increased TA.
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