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HypertensionLotensin May Increase Risk of Low White Blood Cell Count

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<p>A common drug used to treat high blood pressure may elevate the risk in some patients of a condition in which a person’s white blood cell count is severely diminished, leaving them more susceptible to infection.</p>
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<p>A recent case study discussed in the <a href="https://www.amjcaserep.com/abstract/index/idArt/898028" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">American Journal of Case Reports </a>described a 61-year-old man who went to the emergency room with severe throat pain and difficulty swallowing that lasted over a week. He said he was being treated for hypertension, and was taking Norvasc (amlodipine) and Lotensin (benazepril) for it.</p>
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<p>At the hospital, the patient was diagnosed with neutropenia, an abnormally low level of neutrophils, a type of white blood cell. He was admitted and given antibiotics for the pharyngitis he also had.</p>
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<p>Given that the patient started Lotensin 2 months before symptoms started, and neutropenia is rarely seen with Norvasc, doctors suspected Lotensin to be the cause of his drug-induced agranulocytosis (DIAG). After he was taken off Lotensin, the patient achieved a quick recovery in white blood cell count. And after 3 weeks, the patient’s white blood cell count remained in the normal range.</p>
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<p>Drugs to treat cancer and antibiotics are the most common causes of DIAG, and there have been prior instances of trial subjects taking Lotensin, which is considered an ACE inhibitor, a common class of high blood pressure drugs, who developed the condition.</p>
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<p>“Because [ACE inhibitors] are commonly employed drugs, we report this case to increase awareness among prescribers about this rare but potentially lethal side effect of benazepril,” the authors concluded.</p>
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