Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study

ABSTRACT With the increasing incidence of hypertension in children, the lack of high‐quality research data on antihypertensive drugs in pediatric patients restricts treatment options for clinicians and can lead to suboptimal outcomes. We conducted a retrospective analysis of clinical data from hospi...

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Main Authors: Chenhong Jia, Weijing Ding, Xiangyu Ding
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:The Journal of Clinical Hypertension
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.14923
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author Chenhong Jia
Weijing Ding
Xiangyu Ding
author_facet Chenhong Jia
Weijing Ding
Xiangyu Ding
author_sort Chenhong Jia
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT With the increasing incidence of hypertension in children, the lack of high‐quality research data on antihypertensive drugs in pediatric patients restricts treatment options for clinicians and can lead to suboptimal outcomes. We conducted a retrospective analysis of clinical data from hospitalized pediatric patients diagnosed with hypertension and treated with antihypertensive drugs in the past 3 years. The study included 203 pediatric patients (119 males and 84 females), with an average age of 8.9 ± 4.7 years (range: 0.1–17 years). Clinical symptoms of hypertension were observed in 132 participants (65.0%), and the conditions in all cases were classified as primary or secondary hypertension. Renal causes (71 patients, 35.0%) and drug‐induced factors (39 patients, 19.2%) were the main causes of secondary hypertension. Nifedipine (137 patients, 67.5%) was the most commonly prescribed medication, followed by captopril (84 patients, 41.4%). Multiple antihypertensive medications were prescribed to 99 participants (48.8%), and blood pressure returned to normal in 111 patients (54.7%). Hypertension‐related organ damage was observed in 47 patients (23.2%). Timely diagnosis and treatment of hypertension are critical to prevent organ damage in pediatric patients. Although nifedipine was widely used in this pediatric cohort, the appropriateness of this treatment remains unclear. Emphasis should be placed on monitoring target organs affected by pediatric hypertension, and post‐discharge antihypertensive treatment should include thorough follow‐ups and documentation.
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series The Journal of Clinical Hypertension
spelling doaj-art-e573b0446e9342bf824e4b6a549500b12025-01-31T05:38:37ZengWileyThe Journal of Clinical Hypertension1524-61751751-71762025-01-01271n/an/a10.1111/jch.14923Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective StudyChenhong Jia0Weijing Ding1Xiangyu Ding2Department of Pharmacy Hebei Children′s Hospital Shijiazhuang Hebei Province ChinaDepartment of Pharmacy Hebei Children′s Hospital Shijiazhuang Hebei Province ChinaDepartment of Pharmacy Hebei Children′s Hospital Shijiazhuang Hebei Province ChinaABSTRACT With the increasing incidence of hypertension in children, the lack of high‐quality research data on antihypertensive drugs in pediatric patients restricts treatment options for clinicians and can lead to suboptimal outcomes. We conducted a retrospective analysis of clinical data from hospitalized pediatric patients diagnosed with hypertension and treated with antihypertensive drugs in the past 3 years. The study included 203 pediatric patients (119 males and 84 females), with an average age of 8.9 ± 4.7 years (range: 0.1–17 years). Clinical symptoms of hypertension were observed in 132 participants (65.0%), and the conditions in all cases were classified as primary or secondary hypertension. Renal causes (71 patients, 35.0%) and drug‐induced factors (39 patients, 19.2%) were the main causes of secondary hypertension. Nifedipine (137 patients, 67.5%) was the most commonly prescribed medication, followed by captopril (84 patients, 41.4%). Multiple antihypertensive medications were prescribed to 99 participants (48.8%), and blood pressure returned to normal in 111 patients (54.7%). Hypertension‐related organ damage was observed in 47 patients (23.2%). Timely diagnosis and treatment of hypertension are critical to prevent organ damage in pediatric patients. Although nifedipine was widely used in this pediatric cohort, the appropriateness of this treatment remains unclear. Emphasis should be placed on monitoring target organs affected by pediatric hypertension, and post‐discharge antihypertensive treatment should include thorough follow‐ups and documentation.https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.14923antihypertensive treatmenthypertensionpediatric
spellingShingle Chenhong Jia
Weijing Ding
Xiangyu Ding
Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study
The Journal of Clinical Hypertension
antihypertensive treatment
hypertension
pediatric
title Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study
title_full Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study
title_fullStr Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study
title_full_unstemmed Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study
title_short Etiology and Medication of Hospitalized Children With Hypertension: A Retrospective Study
title_sort etiology and medication of hospitalized children with hypertension a retrospective study
topic antihypertensive treatment
hypertension
pediatric
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.14923
work_keys_str_mv AT chenhongjia etiologyandmedicationofhospitalizedchildrenwithhypertensionaretrospectivestudy
AT weijingding etiologyandmedicationofhospitalizedchildrenwithhypertensionaretrospectivestudy
AT xiangyuding etiologyandmedicationofhospitalizedchildrenwithhypertensionaretrospectivestudy