Is Chinese herbal medicine effective for elderly isolated systolic hypertension? A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author:
Yu CAO
1
;
Long-Tao LIU
2
;
Min WU
3
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: Chinese herbal medicine; isolated systolic hypertension; meta-analysis; randomized controlled trial; systematic review
- MeSH: Aged; Blood Pressure; Clinical Trials as Topic; Drugs, Chinese Herbal; adverse effects; therapeutic use; Humans; Hypertension; drug therapy; Publication Bias; Pulse; Systole; Treatment Outcome
- From: Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2017;23(4):298-305
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo study the efficacy of Chinese medicine (CM) on isolated systolic hypertension.
METHODSSeven electronic databases were searched for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published until August 2015. Subgroup analyses and meta-analysis were performed to assess the efficacy and safety of the included studies.
RESULTSA total of 24 studies, including 2,096 patients (1,058 patients in the intervention group and 1,038 in the control group), were evaluated in the final analysis. Compared with a conventional therapy used alone, CM as additional intervention was more effective on systolic blood pressure [mean difference (MD)=-0.66, 95% confidence interval (CI)=(-0.97,-0.36), P<0.00001] and significantly diminished the pulse pressure [MD=-7.49, CI=(-12.69,-2.29), P<0.00001]. However it showed no additional benefit on diastolic blood pressure [MD=1.16, CI=(0.02, 2.29), P=0.87]. Adverse events were not explicitly reported in most RCTs.
CONCLUSIONSCM might be a promising approach for the elderly with isolated systolic hypertension, while the evidence for CM employed alone was insufficient. Considering the inherent limitations of the included studies, larger high-quality RCTs with extensive follow-up should be performed to validate our findings in the future.