Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A hypertensive diabetic woman, who was resistant to any pharmacological therapy, underwent to check for secondary hypertension. The treatment with the particularly active ACE inhibitor quinapril failed but it suggested a procedure for a fast differential diagnosis of disease.
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PMID:[Pheochromocytoma diagnosed during quinapril therapy]. 207 38

The unique ability of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors to inhibit the generation of angiotensin II has made them very useful agents for treating patients with renovascular hypertension. Their efficacy in lowering blood pressure in this type of secondary hypertension is now well established. However, episodes of acute renal failure may occur during ACE inhibition, particularly when renal perfusion is compromised. This is often the case in patients with renal artery stenosis and a single kidney or with bilateral renal artery stenosis. In recent years, investigators have shown concern at the long-term fate of the stenotic kidney in patients with unilateral renal artery stenosis who are treated with ACE inhibitors. Although overall renal function remained stable, a decrease in glomerular filtration was demonstrated in the stenotic kidney under ACE inhibition. The long-term implications of this observation merit further investigations.
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PMID:Effect of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition in renovascular hypertension. 269 54

Patients with mild to moderate hypertension require only a simple schedule of investigations, especially if there is a history of stroke or hypertension in first degree relatives. Tests are necessary to profile other cardiovascular risk factors and to detect target organ damage with only limited screening for secondary hypertension. Careful history, physical examination, repeated blood pressure measurements over months and measurements of body mass index, random cholesterol, routine blood chemistry and urinalysis using impregnated paper strips are all that are required. More detailed investigations can be reserved for special groups such as those with peripheral vascular disease or abnormal renal function before or after treatment with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or significant proteinuria or hypokalaemia. Patients with essential hypertension who are smokers with lipid abnormalities may go on to develop superimposed renovascular disease. Severe hypertension at any age and especially if there is a reliable negative family history also merits special consideration. Resistance to antihypertensive treatment is more often due to non-compliance or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug use or alcohol abuse than to underlying secondary causes.
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PMID:Hypertension: investigation, assessment and diagnosis. 820 68

A retrospective analysis of 5,088 hypertensives treated by our Outpatient Clinic, Department of Medicine, University Hospital Split from 1988 through 1990 is presented. Male sex was predominant (about 65%) and almost all the patients (over 95%) were overweight and the majority (over 50%) have had mild hypertension. Essential form was by far the most prevalent type of hypertension (over 95%), while curable forms of secondary hypertension were rare indeed (less than 0.2%). Diuretics and beta blockers, the traditional first-line antihypertensives were the most prescribed drugs (over 60%), while the share of ACE inhibitors, calcium antagonists and alpha blockers was steadily increasing. General measures, such as body weight reduction, salt restriction or cessation of smoking, although obligatory part of the treatment and suggested to each hypertensive, are rarely carried out.
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PMID:[Outpatient approach to arterial hypertension: analysis of ambulatory care of hypertonic patients at the Clinical Hospital Center in Split 1988-1990]. 837 72

The objectives of this study were to assess relations between ACE gene I/D polymorphism, essential hypertension, plasma renin activity and aldosterone in white (European descent) and black (Afro-Caribbean descent) peoples. Measurements were carried out on a total of 320 subjects (210 white: 116 men, 94 women; 110 black: 65 men, 45 women); all were on their usual sodium intake; none was on anti-hypertensive therapy and none had secondary hypertension. Genomic DNA was isolated from blood cells and ACE I/D genotype was established using polymerase chain reaction. Plasma hormones were measured by radioimmunoassay and blood pressure (BP) with an ultrasound sphygmomanometer. All subjects were grouped into normotensive, borderline and hypertensive according to WHO guidelines. The distribution of the I/D genotype in the white people was approximately 1:2:1; by contrast, in the Afro-Caribbean people there was a significantly higher frequency of the D allele (chi 2P = 0.04). Within the white people there was no significant association between ACE genotype and high BP; however, within the black people there was a positive association between the frequency of the D allele and increasing BP ( chi 2 for trend P = 0.03). In either group, there were no associations between ACE I/D genotype and plasma renin activity and aldosterone suggesting that ACE genotype does not contribute to the expression of the circulating renin-angiotensin system. This study highlights differences in ACE I/D polymorphism between white and black peoples and suggests the possibility of racial differences in the association between ACE genotype and BP.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme gene I/D polymorphism, blood pressure and the renin-angiotensin system in Caucasian and Afro-Caribbean peoples. 864 88

Among cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, angina pectoris, acute myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke present a circadian pattern with a greater incidence of unfavourable events between awakening and noon. Chronotherapy aims to use drugs that release their active principles at different times during the day, according to biological needs. In chronotherapy of cardiovascular diseases, a particular attention has been paid to slow-release drugs that assure a 24 hours therapeutic effect with once a day administration. In primary hypertension well controlled by monotherapy (dipper hypertensives), the morning administration of long-acting beta-blockers and calcium antagonists has shown to control blood pressure over 24 hours, whereas ACE-inhibitors have proved more effective when administered at evening. In secondary hypertension (non dipper hypertensives) the administration of calcium antagonists is more effective at evening. Patients with severe hypertension need polytherapy. In that case, at least one of the antihypertensive drugs should be given at evening to lower night blood pressure values, which are particularly elevated also during sleep, and so to prevent an excessive blood pressure rise on awakening. In chronic monotherapy of ischemic heart disease, long-acting beta-blockers and calcium antagonists have shown to be equally effective when they are administered at morning, whereas slow-release nitrates, which need a nitrate-free interval, are to be administered either at morning or at evening, according to the expected time of onset of anginal pain. ASA seems to reduce the morning incidence of acute myocardial infarction, while tissue-type plasminogen activator presents a circadian variation of its thrombolytic activity with a higher efficacy between noon and midnight.
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PMID:[Application of chronotherapy to cardiovascular diseases]. 979 79

Over the last decade, a great body of evidence has pointed towards the role of kidneys in the genesis and maintenance of a hypertensive state. There exists a relationship between a rise in the blood pressure and a proportionate increase in the urinary excretion of sodium and water called the pressure-natriuresis curve. Chronic renal diseases are the most common causes of secondary hypertension accounting for 2-5% of all cases of secondary hypertension. The prevalence rate of renovascular hypertension based upon referral patterns range from 0.2% to 10% of hypertensive population. The data provided by the International Registries on end-stage renal disease have suggested that essential hypertension is an important cause of progressive renal damage. The pathological lesion observed in malignant hypertension is fibrinoid necrosis of the small arteries and arterioles. Amongst the armamentarium of antihypertensive drugs calcium channel antagonists and the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors have a role in limiting glomerular hypertension. The best modality to prevent and treat renal dysfunction in the presence of hypertension is an adequate and effective control of high blood pressure.
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PMID:Hypertension and the kidneys--inter-relationship and therapeutic approach. 1065 8

More women than men eventually develop hypertension in the United States due to their higher numbers and longer longevity. The white coat hypertension is also more common in women. Alcohol, obesity and oral contraceptives are important causes of rise in blood pressure among women. On the other hand, hormone replacement therapy may decrease cardiovascular mortality in the postmenopausal woman. Women with left ventricular hypertrophy are at a greater risk of death than men. Fibromuscular hyperplasia and primary aldosteronism are more common as causes of secondary hypertension in women. Nonpharmacologic therapy, such as weight reduction, exercise, salt and alcohol reduction, should always be tried prior to medical treatment of hypertension and are very useful adjunctive measures in controlling hypertension. ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers are contraindicated in pregnancy and should be avoided in women with childbearing potential. Hypertension remains a major public health problem among black women. Although the antihypertensive drug therapy seems to benefit white women the least, proportionately more of them comply with their antihypertensive therapy. Hypertension is the most common chronic medical condition requiring visits to the physicians, as well as prescription medications, in the United States. The epidemiology, clinical course, response to treatment and ultimate outcome of essential hypertension may vary with gender. More women than men eventually develop hypertension in the US due to their higher numbers and longer longevity.
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PMID:Hypertension in women. 1092 86

Normal blood pressure and hypertension were defined according to age and sex based on the data on Japanese children. When high blood pressure is found, both white-coat and secondary hypertension should be excluded. Subsequently lifestyle modifications should be initiated in children and adolescents with essential hypertension. These modifications include: weight reduction, reduction of dietary salt intake, high dietary potassium intake and increased physical activity. When nonpharmacologic treatment is not effective after 3 to 6 months, or when there is an evidence of target organ injury, antihypertensive drugs such as ACE inhibitors and Ca antagonists will be started to control blood pressure. Lifestyle modifications are also important for primary prevention of hypertension in normotensive children.
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PMID:[Hypertension in children and adolescents]. 1139 93

Resistant hypertension, secondary hypertension, and hypertensive crises are uncommon but potentially dangerous forms of hypertension that are associated with an increased risk of complications such as myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke, and renal failure. Appropriate diagnostic screening and selective drug or surgical management can reduce the risk of these complications dramatically. In compliant patients, resistant hypertension occurs most often in obese patients receiving inadequate diuretic therapy. In patients with clinical clues to the diagnosis, the best current screening test for renovascular hypertension is probably the ACE-inhibitor renal scintiscan. Angioplasty is considerably more successful in younger patients with fibrous dysplasia than in older patients with the atherosclerotic variety. Hypertensive crises are divided into BP urgencies and emergencies. In both settings, the reduction in BP should generally be gradual rather than abrupt, with no intent to acutely normalize the BP.
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PMID:Resistant hypertension, secondary hypertension, and hypertensive crises. 1211 1


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