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How old were you when you were first Dxed with high blood pressure?

How was it diagnosed?

What problems were you having then?

What was used to treat it first?

What happened?

When did you first get a low K?

What was done?

For how long were you getting up at night to pee and how many times. This start slow and work up.

Any FH of low K or HTN

How was the DX of PA first suspected?

Detail all the drugs that were tired to get BP down.

When was Sprio started

This should be at least a few ribs.

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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Excellent,keep this stored.

It seems to me it is important to have your son checked for PA as you father also had HTN onset at age 25. The first family I saw with GRA was because 2 boys age 8 and 10 were rioud to have enlarged hearts and HTN. They K was alwasy normal.

The oldest son stopped his BP meds and had a bad stroke at 19 y/o.

Please have your son tested. If you are taking your own BP then take his as well and sent it to us.

Some more questions

1. Do you eat licorice every day?

2. Do you use any licorice flavored foods or gum or tobacco ecvery day.

3. Do you use any European meds for stomach problems.

4. Have you been botrhered with a "metallic taste" in your mouth.

5. How did they think you got the Hepatitis?

6. Has an Dr ever said you have eye damage from high blood pressure?

7. What happened when you were given diuretics?

8. Did anyone think you were abusing diuretics or vomiting on purpose to lose weight?

9. When you got cramps in your hands and legs exactly what would happen-describe in more detail. What would bring these on?

10. Was your BP high during all pregnancies?

11. Did you ever have migraines?

12. When you got weak from the low K what did you do to overcome it.

13. Did you ever crave salt or potassium?

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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Hi Pam, Dr. Grim and others;

I look forward to Pam's History (Her story) to be politically correct. I will be

watching how you format this and may do the same, actually I wish more of us

would do the same, I learn a lot that way. I know there are a lot of

interesting stories out there. I really enjoy this forum, you all really help

me.

My only advice is, don't be afraid to be long winded.

God Bless you all, I am and will be very thankful for you all, this Thanksgiving

Day.

><> May we all be DASHing <><

Randy

How old were you when you were first Dxed with high blood pressure?

How was it diagnosed?

What problems were you having then?

What was used to treat it first?

What happened?

When did you first get a low K?

What was done?

For how long were you getting up at night to pee and how many times. This start

slow and work up.

Any FH of low K or HTN

How was the DX of PA first suspected?

Detail all the drugs that were tired to get BP down.

When was Sprio started

This should be at least a few ribs.

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Hi, Dr. Grim

Here are a few of the blood pressure medications I

have taken, with the side effects. Many of them did

not cause adverse reactions, but simply did not help

with the blood pressure, so they were discontinued.

I think ACE inhibitors make me cough, but I can't

remember which ones I took.

Avapro--high blood pressure. Did not help, I guess.

Doctor changed to a different medication.

Nadolol--It brought my heart rate down to under 50

beats per minute. It also made me depressed. The

doctor cut my dose to 1/4 of the smallest tablet, but

I still felt it contributed to significant depression.

Labetalol--made me suicidal within two hours of taking

it. It brings down the blood pressure, but it's not

worth it. It won't extend my life.

Atenolol--This one made me sleep sixteen hours a day

and I soon became suicidally depressed from taking it.

I was started at 100 mg qd and had to taper off it

slowly. I felt like I was in a coma until it was out

of my system. I will never take it or other Beta

blockers again.

Nifedepine--I took this for two years and my gums

became badly swollen and sore. My legs also swelled

(pitting edema). I could not care for my teeth

properly; my gums were so sore I could only eat

liquids and was unable to sleep through the night.

I lost a tooth due to an infection and told my doctor

to take me off it. When I finally went off it, my

heart rate went back to normal after being in the

120-150 range for a year.

Verapamil--blood pressure. Did not help.

Verapamil SR--blood pressure. Did not help.

Hydrocortothyazide--edema. Which turned out to be

caused mostly by Nifedpine. Since going off

Nifedpine, I hardly ever have any edema.

Atacand--blood pressure. I guess it didn't work. The

doctor put me on something else.

Maxzide--edema. Apparently caused by Nifedepine, but

anyway it's better now.

Hydralazine; gives me joint and muscle aches and

pains, fever, chills, headache, dark urine

Clonidine--makes me so sleepy I can't function.

Prazosin--lowered my blood pressure for about half the

day while I took the aldosterone:renin test, but not

below 135/95.

Imdur--this one did not bother me, but it did not

control my blood pressure once I went off

spironolactone as a test. Once the spironolactone

kicked in, my blood pressure dropped too low for me to

benefit from it.

Cozaar--no benefit

Norvasc--no benefit

There were so many others I tried and forgot. I think

Dr. Kant has a more complete list than I do.

Warmly,

Pam

> Excellent,keep this stored.

>

> It seems to me it is important to have your son

> checked for PA as you father

> also had HTN onset at age 25. The first family I

> saw with GRA was because 2

> boys age 8 and 10 were rioud to have enlarged hearts

> and HTN. They K was

> alwasy normal.

>

> The oldest son stopped his BP meds and had a bad

> stroke at 19 y/o.

>

> Please have your son tested. If you are taking

> your own BP then take his as

> well and sent it to us.

>

> Some more questions

>

> 1. Do you eat licorice every day?

> 2. Do you use any licorice flavored foods or gum

> or tobacco ecvery day.

> 3. Do you use any European meds for stomach

> problems.

> 4. Have you been botrhered with a " metallic taste "

> in your mouth.

> 5. How did they think you got the Hepatitis?

>

> 6. Has an Dr ever said you have eye damage from

> high blood pressure?

>

> 7. What happened when you were given diuretics?

>

> 8. Did anyone think you were abusing diuretics or

> vomiting on purpose to

> lose weight?

>

> 9. When you got cramps in your hands and legs

> exactly what would

> happen-describe in more detail. What would bring

> these on?

>

> 10. Was your BP high during all pregnancies?

>

> 11. Did you ever have migraines?

>

> 12. When you got weak from the low K what did you

> do to overcome it.

>

> 13. Did you ever crave salt or potassium?

>

>

>

> Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD,

> FACP, FACC, FAHS

> Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

> Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment

> Center

> Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and

> Hypertension

>

> Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters

> and 220 abstracts in the

> area of high blood pressure epidemiology,

> physiology, endocrinology mea

> surement, treatment and how to detect curable

> causes.

> Listed in Best Doctors in America

> Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood

> Pressure and the History and

> Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African

> Diaspora

>

=====

" I'd rather learn from one bird how to sing, than to teach ten thousand stars

how not to dance. "

__________________________________________________

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Dr Kant is an MD, right? The name is famous in the history of Western

philosophy (Immanuel Kant), for starting the suspicion that there is

some information not ascertainable by human reason. Imagine the nerve!

Wow, Pam, I thought I had troubles with reactions. Less than half what

you have gone through. Have you heard about the upcoming test for what

meds will work and not have reactions for each individual? They should

have developed that first, then the meds. I'd like to see a study on

the percentages of mortality hastened by medicine

experimentation--longitudinal.

Thanks for sharing this,

Best Thanksgiving,

Dave

On Nov 24, 2004, at 6:37 AM, Pamela s wrote:

>

> Hi, Dr. Grim

>

> Here are a few of the blood pressure medications I

> have taken, with the side effects. Many of them did

> not cause adverse reactions, but simply did not help

> with the blood pressure, so they were discontinued.

>

> I think ACE inhibitors make me cough, but I can't

> remember which ones I took.

>

> Avapro--high blood pressure. Did not help, I guess.

> Doctor changed to a different medication.

>

> Nadolol--It brought my heart rate down to under 50

> beats per minute. It also made me depressed. The

> doctor cut my dose to 1/4 of the smallest tablet, but

> I still felt it contributed to significant depression.

>

> Labetalol--made me suicidal within two hours of taking

> it. It brings down the blood pressure, but it's not

> worth it. It won't extend my life.

>

> Atenolol--This one made me sleep sixteen hours a day

> and I soon became suicidally depressed from taking it.

> I was started at 100 mg qd and had to taper off it

> slowly. I felt like I was in a coma until it was out

> of my system. I will never take it or other Beta

> blockers again.

>

> Nifedepine--I took this for two years and my gums

> became badly swollen and sore. My legs also swelled

> (pitting edema). I could not care for my teeth

> properly; my gums were so sore I could only eat

> liquids and was unable to sleep through the night.

> I lost a tooth due to an infection and told my doctor

> to take me off it. When I finally went off it, my

> heart rate went back to normal after being in the

> 120-150 range for a year.

>

> Verapamil--blood pressure. Did not help.

>

> Verapamil SR--blood pressure. Did not help.

>

> Hydrocortothyazide--edema. Which turned out to be

> caused mostly by Nifedpine. Since going off

> Nifedpine, I hardly ever have any edema.

>

> Atacand--blood pressure. I guess it didn't work. The

> doctor put me on something else.

>

> Maxzide--edema. Apparently caused by Nifedepine, but

> anyway it's better now.

>

> Hydralazine; gives me joint and muscle aches and

> pains, fever, chills, headache, dark urine

>

> Clonidine--makes me so sleepy I can't function.

>

> Prazosin--lowered my blood pressure for about half the

> day while I took the aldosterone:renin test, but not

> below 135/95.

>

> Imdur--this one did not bother me, but it did not

> control my blood pressure once I went off

> spironolactone as a test. Once the spironolactone

> kicked in, my blood pressure dropped too low for me to

> benefit from it.

>

> Cozaar--no benefit

>

> Norvasc--no benefit

>

> There were so many others I tried and forgot. I think

> Dr. Kant has a more complete list than I do.

>

> Warmly,

>

> Pam

>

>> Excellent,keep this stored.

>>

>> It seems to me it is important to have your son

>> checked for PA as you father

>> also had HTN onset at age 25. The first family I

>> saw with GRA was because 2

>> boys age 8 and 10 were rioud to have enlarged hearts

>> and HTN. They K was

>> alwasy normal.

>>

>> The oldest son stopped his BP meds and had a bad

>> stroke at 19 y/o.

>>

>> Please have your son tested. If you are taking

>> your own BP then take his as

>> well and sent it to us.

>>

>> Some more questions

>>

>> 1. Do you eat licorice every day?

>> 2. Do you use any licorice flavored foods or gum

>> or tobacco ecvery day.

>> 3. Do you use any European meds for stomach

>> problems.

>> 4. Have you been botrhered with a " metallic taste "

>> in your mouth.

>> 5. How did they think you got the Hepatitis?

>>

>> 6. Has an Dr ever said you have eye damage from

>> high blood pressure?

>>

>> 7. What happened when you were given diuretics?

>>

>> 8. Did anyone think you were abusing diuretics or

>> vomiting on purpose to

>> lose weight?

>>

>> 9. When you got cramps in your hands and legs

>> exactly what would

>> happen-describe in more detail. What would bring

>> these on?

>>

>> 10. Was your BP high during all pregnancies?

>>

>> 11. Did you ever have migraines?

>>

>> 12. When you got weak from the low K what did you

>> do to overcome it.

>>

>> 13. Did you ever crave salt or potassium?

>>

>>

>>

>> Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD,

>> FACP, FACC, FAHS

>> Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

>> Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment

>> Center

>> Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and

>> Hypertension

>>

>> Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters

>> and 220 abstracts in the

>> area of high blood pressure epidemiology,

>> physiology, endocrinology mea

>> surement, treatment and how to detect curable

>> causes.

>> Listed in Best Doctors in America

>> Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood

>> Pressure and the History and

>> Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African

>> Diaspora

>>

>

>

> =====

> " I'd rather learn from one bird how to sing, than to teach ten

> thousand stars how not to dance. "

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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Hi, Dave

Yes, I am aware of the philosopher you are referring

to. I guess we are a few years too late for him, and

we probably wouldn't see him about aldosteronism

anyway. . . smile. I assure you this is a different

Dr. Kant! Dr. Shashi Kant is an excellent

nephrologist, though. My case file was about four

inces thick when he first got me as a patient, and

when I sat down to speak to him, he had obviously read

every last word. In several instances, he could quote

my test results by date, without looking. It's

reassuring to be treated by someone who cares.

I would like to know more about those tests. . . boy,

I want to be first in line! One of my gripes about

modern medicine is that the approach to treatment is

so heavily guinea-pig inspired.

When I was wandering from one cardiologist to another

for second opinions about the malignant hypertension,

I was always so discouraged when I explained all the

medications I had tried and the doctors would say,

" Oh, you just haven't found the right combination

yet " . I felt like screaming.

My pharmacists have a record of most of my severe

reactions and they know when a new presceription comes

in for the same family of drugs that it's not going to

work for me. They do me the service of warning me

when this happens. But it sounds like the tests are

superior.

I hope things are going better for you now. Hang in

there!

Warmly,

Pam

--- Mr Pearson <dp@...> wrote:

>

> Dr Kant is an MD, right? The name is famous in the

> history of Western

> philosophy (Immanuel Kant), for starting the

> suspicion that there is

> some information not ascertainable by human reason.

> Imagine the nerve!

>

> Wow, Pam, I thought I had troubles with reactions.

> Less than half what

> you have gone through. Have you heard about the

> upcoming test for what

> meds will work and not have reactions for each

> individual? They should

> have developed that first, then the meds. I'd like

> to see a study on

> the percentages of mortality hastened by medicine

> experimentation--longitudinal.

>

> Thanks for sharing this,

>

> Best Thanksgiving,

>

> Dave

>

>

>

=====

" I'd rather learn from one bird how to sing, than to teach ten thousand stars

how not to dance. "

__________________________________________________

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A very good list of the side effects of each drug:

As I just wrote in my review article the following popular drugs that work in

many with HTN done work in PA or other causes of the lower renin don't work in

PA as renin is already so low.

ACES

ARBS

BB

Also CCBS dont work as well.

Diruetics worsen low K.

Soooooo...

Many who are " resistant " to todays leading drugs are not resisitant they are

just the wrond meds for those with low renin levels.

Here is where the aldo blockers excell and indeed are specific treatments for

the cause of the HTN-too much aldo.

Please keep all these (your and mine)notes and we will assemble them into the

report.

Did many folks try to use combinations of drugs. Most of my difficult pts

(before they got to me) require small doses of up to 5 or 6 different drugs.

--

May your pressure be low!

CE Grim MD

Clinical Professor of Internal Medicine

Professor of Epidemiology

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

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>

> Diruetics worsen low K.

>

> CE Grim MD

> Clinical Professor of Internal Medicine

Dear Dr. Grim:

One small bone to pick with your list. Potassium sparing

diuetics might be considered. Amiloride in particular.

This is one of the questions my interist has struggled with.

Inspra gets me down to 135/90, but I seem to need a little extra

help. He considered amiloride, but went with 20 mg. accupril. There

is some other benefit to accupril that he thought might make it a

better choice. I have to say, based on past experience with HTN that

a diuretic does the most with the least side effects (assuming low

potassium is not a problem.) Wayne

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Hi, Wayne

Amerliorde is one my doctors never tried (I don't know

why not!). I didn't have much success with the usual

diuretics, however. If they had any effect, it was

temporary and slight. They kept switching diuretics

on me because they said I became resistant to them.

Dr. Grim, perhaps you can offer an explanation of why

one person with PA is able to benefit from diuretics,

and another may not? Clearly, those with potassium

loss are worse off with the standard diuretics, but

would the K loss factor prevent the diuretic's

effective action in controlling hypertension with PA?

Warmly,

Pam

--- wbongianni <wbongianni@...> wrote:

>

>

> >

> > Diruetics worsen low K.

> >

> > CE Grim MD

> > Clinical Professor of Internal Medicine

>

> Dear Dr. Grim:

> One small bone to pick with your list.

> Potassium sparing

> diuetics might be considered. Amiloride in

> particular.

> This is one of the questions my interist has

> struggled with.

> Inspra gets me down to 135/90, but I seem to need a

> little extra

> help. He considered amiloride, but went with 20 mg.

> accupril. There

> is some other benefit to accupril that he thought

> might make it a

> better choice. I have to say, based on past

> experience with HTN that

> a diuretic does the most with the least side effects

> (assuming low

> potassium is not a problem.) Wayne

>

>

>

>

>

>

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In a message dated 11/26/04 4:46:37 PM, spirlhelix@... writes:

Dr. Grim, perhaps you can offer an explanation of why

one person with PA is able to benefit from diuretics,

and another may not?  Clearly, those with potassium

loss are worse off with the standard diuretics, but

would the K loss factor prevent the diuretic's

effective action in controlling hypertension with PA?

it likely depends on how much aldo they are making-if a lot them the K will drop very low and they will get low K problems.

CE Grim MD

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In a message dated 11/26/04 13:56:22, spirlhelix@... writes:

I was starting to get much lower readings at home with

the spionolactone, so I had requested the increased

dose.  The lower readings did not show up in the

doctors' offices for a few more months.

AGain assuming they were doing the BP right in the office and not just writing down the previous one. Be on the watch for hits.

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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Classic story! Thanks. Are you keeping all this together to weave it into a timeline with symptoms etc. Please do that. You might even want tho make it into chapters.

Chap 1 before Hepatitis

Chap 2 hep and GN

Chap 3 the struggle with HTN and Low K.

Etc.

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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In a message dated 11/26/04 13:56:22, spirlhelix@... writes:

Blood pressure:  182/118

* * * * * * * * * *

10/10/03

Diovan 160 bid

Blood pressure:  182/118

Please note the two blood pressure readings above are

identical, despite the combination of medications used

for the earlier visit.  Evidently all those

medications were not doing much.

Or they are faking the BP and just writing donw the last one. Would be VERY unusual to have two BP exaclty the same on tw visits.

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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In a message dated 12/10/04 19:49:12, spirlhelix@... writes:

Hi, Dr. Grim

These visits were more than a year apart and from

different doctors.  I found it interesting that the

BPs were identical, but that is exactly what they read

as recorded in the doctors' notes.

Perhaps having two identical readings reflects the

frequency of doctor visits more than anything else,

but I still think it also demonstrates that all that

medicine was not doing very much.

Warmly,

Pam

If they were different Drs and diff people taking the BP and they did not ask you what your old BP was or had old records it could be that they were both exactly the same. But the changes are very low but no zero they wrer the same. Anyway I am just suspcicious I guess.

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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In a message dated 12/11/04 22:11:18, spirlhelix@... writes:

Hi, Dr. Grim

I'm sure you have reason to be suspicous; you probably

see blood pressures taken incorrectly or assumed from

previous readings quite often.

There were many intervening visits to various doctors

between these readings, with different blood pressures

read by different individuals at each visit.  The two

doctors consulted when these readings were made did

not have access to one another's records; and I would

not have remembered the precise numbers of each

reading, even if I were asked what my previous blood

pressure(s) had been.

Warmly,

Pam

rare things happen rarely

Clarence E. Grim, BS (Chem/Math), MS (Biochem), MD, FACP, FACC, FAHS

Clinical Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology

Director, Hypertension Diagnosis and Treatment Center

Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Hypertension

Published over 220 scientific papers, book chapters and 220 abstracts in the area of high blood pressure epidemiology, physiology, endocrinology measurement, treatment and how to detect curable causes.

Listed in Best Doctors in America

Specializing in Difficult to Control High Blood Pressure and the History and Physiology of High Blood pressure in the African Diaspora

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