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Query: EC:3.4.23.15 (
renin
)
35,795
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A male aged 47 years with gross autonomic insufficiency as part of the
Shy-Drager syndrome
is described. He did not sweat normally when warmed, and his circulatory responses to mental arithmetic, the Valsalva manoeuvre, and head-up tilt were abnormal indicating severe sympathetic failure. During head-up tilt there was a rise in plasma
renin
activity and plasma aldosterone. It is argued that plasma
renin
activity is not dependent on sympathetic nervous activity and may be mediated by renal baroreceptors. These rises may help sustain the blood pressure in such patients during repeated head-up tilts. Infusions of L-noradrenaline and angiotension produced greater hypertension, and injections of isoprenaline greater hypotension than in controls. Although it is difficult to exclude the possibility that one factor in this may be hypersensitivity of receptors in blood vessel walls, the principal factor is likely to be the absence of those baroreflexes of which the efferent pathways are in the sympathetic nervous system.
...
PMID:Postural changes in plasma renin activity and responses to vasoactive drugs in a case of Shy-Drager syndrome. 86 77
We report a 52-year-old male patient with
Shy-Drager syndrome
(
SDS
) complicated by an occurrence of the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). The patient first developed impotence at the age of 48, accompanied by urinary incontinence, and episodes of dizziness while standing. The following year, the patient had developed a staggering gait and speech became monotonous. At age 52, the patient was admitted to the hospital after experiencing frequent episodes of syncope associated with complete loss of consciousness. Upon examination, blood pressure was 100/70 in a recumbent position, and 80/60 when standing. The pulse rate varied from 60 per minute to 62. The patient was alert. The alternating Horner sign was observed, and a paucity of facial movements was visible. His speech was slow and monotonous. Muscle tone was increased bilaterally. There was incoordination. A laboratory examination revealed reduced serum sodium levels of 127 mEq/L and increased sodium excretion with plasma hypoosmolality (262 mOsm/kg/H), urine hyperosmolality and low serum
renin
activity (0.2 ng/ml/h). Renal functions were normal and the levels of adrenocortical and thyroid hormones were normal. There were no abnormalities observed in the chest roentgenogram taken. The level of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) was unreasonably high (5.74 pg/ml). A water-load test demonstrated failure of both water diuresis and inhibition of ADH secretion. These data suggested that hyponatremia in this case was caused by SIADH. The correlation between plasma osmolality and the concentration of ADH suggested that osmolality that initiates ADH release appeared to have been reset to around 230 mOsm/kg lower than normal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Shy-Drager syndrome and the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone]. 161 76
The integrity of the autonomic nervous system was assessed in 11 Parkinsonian patients with symptoms suggestive of autonomic dysfunction. Three had the additional clinical features of the
Shy-Drager
variant of idiopathic orthostatic hypotension and were found to have a gross disturbance of vasomotor, sudomotor, pilomotor, and bladder function; assessment indicated that a lesion was present at sympathetic ganglionic level or beyond in two cases, though a more centrally placed lesion may well have been present also, as in the third case. In the remaining eight patients with paralysis agitans no unequivocal functional disturbance was found except in the bladder; nevertheless, the low resting blood pressure and the supersensitivity to intravenously infused L-noradrenaline in the three patients in whom it was tested is taken to imply defective regulation from higher centres, with a consequent reduction in impulse traffic at sympathetic nerve terminals. Such a concept is supported by experimental studies in animals and would account for the low
renin
and aldosterone secretion rates and reduced noradrenaline formation reported by others in patients with paralysis agitans.
...
PMID:Assessment of autonomic function in patients with a Parkinsonian syndrome. 509 25
Two patients with severe postural hypotension associated with upper motor neuron and cerebellar impairment (
Shy-Drager syndrome
) have been studied. Head-up tilt and lower body negative pressure application caused marked falls in arterial pressure; in one patient, paradoxical vasodilatation was observed. Ice application did not increase arterial pressure or calculated forearm vascular resistance. Intravenous atropine in one patient increased heart rate by 18 beats per min, a cardioacceleratory response similar to exhausting recumbent exercise in that patient. 24 hr urinary catecholamine excretion was low, but aldosterone secretory rate was normal in the more severely afflicted patient. A prolonged elevation of plasma
renin
activity was noted when post-tilt hypertension occurred. When head-up tilt was not followed by this hypertensive period, plasma
renin
activity response to tilting was normal. Intra-arterial norepinephrine and tyramine both elicited a vasoconstrictor response. Intra-arterial infusions of norepinephrine and tyramine were repeated after administration of the monoamine oxidase inhibitor tranylcypromine. Norepinephrine was potentiated 4.1- and 0.5-fold in the two patients; tyramine was potentiated 3.7-and 1.1-fold in the two patients, respectively. A therapeutic program of tranylcypromine and tyramine (in the form of cheddar cheese) resulted in substantial clinical improvement. It is concluded that in at least some patients with idiopathic postural hypotension, norepinephrine is present in postganglionic sympathetic fibers. A therapeutic program of tyramine and a monoamine oxidase inhibitor may be of value when more conventional modes of therapy fail.
...
PMID:Idiopathic postural hypotension: physiologic observations and report of a new mode of therapy. 543 69
The effects of prenalterol, a selective beta 1-adrenoreceptor agonist, were studied in a patient with the
Shy-Drager syndrome
, presenting with incapacitating orthostatic hypotension. The main haemodynamic defect was an impressive postural fall in stroke volume and cardiac output pointing to denervation of the capacitance vessels. Prenalterol 4 X 30 mg orally produced a marked increase in supine and standing blood pressure, along with substantial symptomatic improvement. Notable positive chronotropic and inotropic effects were observed. Association of fludrocortisone 0.5 mg/day resulted in further haemodynamic and symptomatic improvement, presumably due to plasma volume expansion. Haemodynamically, prenalterol and fludrocortisone resulted in a substantial increase in standing cardiac output, primarily due to the chronotropic effects of prenalterol. In addition to the haemodynamic effects, prenalterol stimulated the
renin
-aldosterone system and restored the normal diurnal pattern of water and sodium excretion, the latter may have contributed to the improvement of orthostatic tolerance. Prenalterol could be a valuable adjunct to the existing treatment schedules of neurogenic orthostatic hypotension.
...
PMID:Prenalterol in the treatment of orthostatic hypotension in Shy-Drager syndrome. 614 74
We examined the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system in seven patients with
Shy-Drager syndrome
by studying their response to the stimulation of 1 mg/kg furosemide injection followed by sitting for 1 hour. Six of the seven patients showed a low response of plasma
renin
activity to the stimulation. However, in five of the low responders, the plasma aldosterone levels after stimulation were observed to be similar to those of the control subjects; in addition, an increment in the plasma cortisol level appeared although no such increment was observed in normal subjects. Next, we studied the aldosterone response to angiotensin II. The five patients who showed a low plasma
renin
activity response and a normal aldosterone response to furosemide administration also showed low plasma aldosterone response to angiotensin II. Furthermore, in the patients who demonstrated a low plasma
renin
activity response and a normal aldosterone response to furosemide administration, the pretreatment with 2 mg dexamethasone for 2 days caused a marked inhibition of aldosterone response to the stimulation. These findings suggested that in most patients with
Shy-Drager syndrome
, the plasma aldosterone response to the stimulation of furosemide injection followed by sitting for 1 hour might be controlled by ACTH but not by plasma
renin
activity.
...
PMID:The mechanism of aldosterone response to furosemide test in patients with Shy-Drager syndrome. 636 44
6-oxo-prostaglandin E1 (6-oxo-PGE1), has recently been postulated as being a possible metabolite of PGI2 and/or 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha. This compound possesses a vasodilatory,
renin
secretion activity and platelet aggregation inhibiting activity in the dog and rat and is more stable than PGI2. But the systemic effects of 6-oxo-PGE1 on man is not known. The present study was designed, therefore, to determine the effects of 6-oxo-PGE1 on blood pressure (BP), the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system and platelet aggregability in man. 6 healthy male volunteers (mean age: 24.3 +/- 1.2 years) and one patient with
Shy-Drager syndrome
(a 57 year old female) were studied. 6-oxo-PGE1, dissolved in physiological saline, was infused intravenously at three different doses of 7.5, 15 and 30 ng/kg/min, for 15 min each. Blood samples were collected every 15 minutes for measurements of plasma
renin
activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone (PA), plasma cortisol (PC) and platelet aggregation inhibiting activity (Agg-inhibition). BP and pulse rate (PR) were recorded every 2 minutes. PRA, PA and PC did not change during or after the infusion. However, the platelet aggregation was significantly (p less than 0.05) inhibited in a dose-dependent manner, and this was still observed at 30 minutes after the termination of the infusion. Neither systolic or diastolic BP changed during the infusion but rose after the termination of the infusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Effects of 6-oxo-PGE1 on the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, blood pressure and platelet aggregability in man]. 668 60
1. In autonomic failure, supine exercise lowers blood pressure and worsens postural hypotension. The somatostatin analogue, octreotide, reduces post-prandial and postural hypotension, but its effects on exercise-induced hypotension and on postural hypotension post-exercise are unknown. 2. Eighteen subjects with chronic sympathetic denervation were studied; 12 had pure autonomic failure and six had additional neurological features of the
Shy-Drager syndrome
. Haemodynamic, hormonal and biochemical changes were measured before, during and after incremental supine leg exercise on two occasions: on no treatment and after subcutaneous octreotide. Exercise was performed 120 min after octreotide in eight subjects and 60 min after octreotide in ten subjects. 3. Octreotide did not improve exercise-induced hypotension; the blood pressure fall was greater during exercise, but the blood pressure level was no different than without treatment. Heart rate, stroke distance, cardiac index and systemic vascular resistance were similar at rest and changed to the same degree with exercise on and off octreotide. After octreotide, resting levels of serum growth hormone, plasma noradrenaline, adrenaline and
renin
were unchanged, but glucose was higher and insulin was lower. There was no change in biochemical and hormone levels during exercise either off or on octreotide. 4. After octreotide, although the rate of blood pressure recovery was similar post-exercise, the levels of blood pressure were higher than in the non-treatment phase and postural hypotension was improved before and after exercise. 5. In conclusion, in primary autonomic failure, octreotide did not improve exercise-induced hypotension in the supine position, suggesting that octreotide-sensitive vasodilatory peptides do not contribute to the blood pressure fall.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of the somatostatin analogue, octreotide, on exercise-induced hypotension in human subjects with chronic sympathetic failure. 749 36
The neurohumoral, peptidergic and biochemical responses to supine leg exercise were studied in two groups with primary autonomic failure:
Shy-Drager syndrome
(SDS, n = 15) and pure autonomic failure (
PAF
, n = 15), to determine if these accounted for exercise-induced hypotension and the greater blood pressure (BP) fall in
PAF
. Responses were compared to normal subjects (controls, n = 15), in whom BP rose with exercise. Resting plasma noradrenaline (NA) was higher in controls than SDS, and was lowest in
PAF
. With exercise, NA increased in controls, with a small rise in SDS, but no change in
PAF
. Resting plasma adrenaline (A) was higher in controls and SDS than
PAF
, with no change during exercise. Plasma dopamine was unrecordable at all stages in all groups. Resting plasma
renin
activity (PRA) was higher in controls than SDS and
PAF
, and was unchanged with exercise in all groups. Plasma insulin, C-peptide and serum growth hormone (GH) were similar at rest and with exercise in the three groups. Plasma glucose was higher at rest in SDS and
PAF
, and increased with exercise in all three groups. In conclusion, neither exercise-induced hypotension, nor the differences between SDS and
PAF
could be related to abnormalities in the release of A, PRA, insulin, glucose or GH. The abnormal NA response to exercise was consistent with the BP fall being due to inadequate compensatory sympathetic activity. In SDS, the small NA increase, in the presence of supersensitivity, may have reduced their BP fall as compared to
PAF
. These results suggest that impaired sympathetic neural activity is a key factor in exercise-induced hypotension.
...
PMID:Neurohumoral, peptidergic and biochemical responses to supine exercise in two groups with primary autonomic failure: Shy-Drager syndrome/multiple system atrophy and pure autonomic failure. 889 51
In health, the vascular endothelium forms a multifunctional interface between the circulating blood and various tissues and organs of the body. It constitutes a selectively permeable barrier for macromolecules, as well as a nonthrombogenic and nonadhesive container that actively maintains the fluidity of blood. It is a metabolically active endocrine organ, serving as the source of multiple factors and mediators that are critical for normal homeostasis. These include vasodilators (nitric oxide, prostacyclin, endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor), vasoconstrictors (endothelin-1, thromboxane A2, prostaglandin H2 and components of the
renin
angiotensin system), various pro- and antithrombotic factors (e.g. tissue factor, platelet activating factor--
PAF
, von Willebrand factor), fibrinolytic activators and inhibitors (e.g. tissue plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1), potent arachidonate metabolites (prostanoids), leukocyte adhesion molecules (e.g. E-selectin, P-selectin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1--ICAM-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1--VCAM-1), and multiple cytokines with activities of growth stimulators and inhibitors, transforming growth factors, proinflammatory and antiinflammatory mediators, tumour necrosis factors and chemotactic factors (chemokines). Besides these essential activities controlling the cardiovascular system, the endothelial cells represent an important part of the immune system as well. They have a pivotal role in the initiation and development of defensive and damaging inflammatory responses. Therefore endothelium can be considered as being the central equipment for the mutual exchange of life important information between the cardiovascular and immune systems. This in turn is leading to rapid advances in understanding the pathogenesis of some of the most serious and most common diseases, including inflammation, atherosclerosis and hypertension. (Tab. 7, Ref. 89.)
...
PMID:[Vascular endothelium as a factor in information transfer between the cardiovascular and immune systems]. 958 73
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