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    CHICAGO — Among older veterans with hypertension, there was no difference in the incidence of major adverse CV events after treatment with hydrochlorothiazide compared with chlorthalidone, according to new research.In the Diuretic Comparison Project, “chlorthalidone did not reduce the incidence of major cardiovascular outcomes or noncancer death compared to hydrochlorothiazide at

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • ICYMI: “We undertook this study as the first large randomized controlled trial comparing chlorthalidone to hydrochlorothiazide,” Ishani said. @Areefishani @VAMinneapolis @American_Heart #ACC22 #CardioTwitter https://t.co/7rODFJZv6M

  • Mashup Score: 0

    CHICAGO — Among older veterans with hypertension, there was no difference in the incidence of major adverse CV events after treatment with hydrochlorothiazide compared with chlorthalidone, according to new research.In the Diuretic Comparison Project, “chlorthalidone did not reduce the incidence of major cardiovascular outcomes or noncancer death compared to hydrochlorothiazide at

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • ICYMI: “We undertook this study as the first large randomized controlled trial comparing chlorthalidone to hydrochlorothiazide,” Ishani said. @Areefishani @VAMinneapolis @American_Heart #ACC22 #CardioTwitter https://t.co/7rODFJZv6M

  • Mashup Score: 0

    CHICAGO — Among older veterans with hypertension, there was no difference in the incidence of major adverse CV events after treatment with hydrochlorothiazide compared with chlorthalidone, according to new research.In the Diuretic Comparison Project, “chlorthalidone did not reduce the incidence of major cardiovascular outcomes or noncancer death compared to hydrochlorothiazide at

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • Among older veterans with hypertension, there was no difference in the incidence of major adverse CV events after treatment with hydrochlorothiazide compared with chlorthalidone @Areefishani @VAMinneapolis @American_Heart #ACC22 #CardioTwitter https://t.co/7rODFJZv6M

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    THURSDAY, Oct. 27, 2022 (HealthDay News) — When someone collapses in front of witnesses, the chances of receiving potentially lifesaving CPR may partly depend on the color of their skin, a new study suggests.Researchers found that when Black and Hispanic Americans suffer cardiac arrest, they are up…

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • A study presented at #ACC22 & published in @NEJM found that Black & Hispanic Americans suffering #SuddenCardiacArrest are less likely to receive bystander #CPR. Dr. @KBerlacher discusses these findings with @HealthDayTweets: https://t.co/ZFJkiuBewL #HealthEquity