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Answering the last question first, the concerns about combining SDs come about when you are using a study of a different design to estimate the SDs needed fo0r the sample-size calculation. In your case, the pilot study is just like the one you're planning, so already the different contributors to variation are present in the right balance.
I guess I understand that the SDs are small because both treatments do well in controlling diastolic blood pressure and that you apparently have a target value that you are trying to bring everybody to. In fact, there are elements of what you say that suggest that you can basically control the mean, and the question is how well you can do it. If that's the case, a statistical comparison of the means is kind of meaningless because you are basically choosing it. The bigger story might be in the variation - less variation means better control. But maybe the comparison of means is the right thing to do. And the picture leads me to ask how many times you are measuring each patient - and if more than once, then at what times and what do you do with the results (average them together?) I guess if the goal is to compare means, and you have one measurement, or one summary statistic, per patient, then you can just use the t methods with the SDs you've observed and a target effect size of 10, and you'll be in fairly good shape.
Russ