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New Research Links Common Blood Pressure Drug to Increased Bleeding Risk

Posted on April 1, 2026 by Admin

Here’s a summary of new research linking a commonly prescribed blood pressure–related drug to a higher bleeding risk — especially important for people on certain cardiovascular therapies:


🩸 New Study Finds Increased Bleeding Risk with a Common Heart/Blood Pressure Medication

What the Research Shows

  • A major retrospective cohort study looked at older adults (65+) with atrial fibrillation (irregular heart rhythm) who were taking anticoagulant (blood‑thinning) drugs like apixaban (Eliquis) or rivaroxaban (Xarelto) to prevent stroke. (News Center)
  • The study compared patients also prescribed diltiazem (a calcium‑channel blocker used for blood pressure and heart rate control) with those taking metoprolol (a beta‑blocker). (News Center)

Key Findings

✔️ Diltiazem was associated with a significantly increased risk of serious bleeding — including hospitalizations or death related to bleeding — compared with metoprolol in this population. (News Center)
✔️ The risk was higher at doses above ~120 mg/day of diltiazem. (News Center)
✔️ The likely mechanism is diltiazem’s interaction with anticoagulants, which can raise anticoagulant levels in the blood and enhance bleeding risk. (Vanderbilt Health News)

Why This Matters

  • Physicians often use diltiazem to control heart rate and lower blood pressure in people with atrial fibrillation, especially those with hypertension and other heart conditions. (Vanderbilt Health News)
  • Many patients with AFib are also on anticoagulants to prevent stroke — so this drug combination may unintentionally increase the bleeding risk. (News Center)
  • Clinicians may reconsider drug choice or dose, or monitor these patients more closely for bleeding signs. (Vanderbilt Health News)

🧠 Takeaway

While blood pressure medications are essential for cardiovascular health, this research highlights an important safety consideration for people — especially older adults — taking diltiazem with anticoagulant therapy. If you or someone you know is on these medications, discussing bleeding risk and monitoring strategies with a doctor is a good idea.


If you want, I can explain the symptoms of serious bleeding to watch for and when to seek medical help — just let me know!

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