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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Drug treatment of hypertension reduces morbidity and mortality most effectively in moderate to severe cases. However, most patients have only mild hypertension, for which traditional drug treatment is not consistently successful. Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors provide superior control of mild hypertension. They have a haemodynamically favourable mechanism of action, are well tolerated and can produce a predictable response within a narrow and convenient dose range. Further, ACE inhibitors are lipidneutral, and they positively affect some of the mechanisms conducive to the development of atherosclerosis. Further research in this area is warranted. The ACE inhibitors may also help prevent end-organ damage in hypertensive patients who also have diabetes, kidney disease, left ventricular hypertrophy or a combination of these disorders. The case for renoprotection in diabetic hypertensives is strong enough to recommend preferential use of ACE inhibitors for these patients. The positive effects shown in left ventricular hypertrophy may also be produced by other modern antihypertensive agents, while the advantages of ACE inhibitors in essential hypertension with renal damage remain largely conjectural. There have been encouraging clinical results, but ongoing larger trials may provide a more definitive answer.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and the progress of antihypertensive therapy. 268 2

We performed a retrospective study in 72 autopsies of diabetic patients (DMP) selected out of 2,239 adult autopsies, comprehending the period between 1966 to 1982. In order to analyse the possible Diabetic Cardiomyopathy, the DMP were divided into 8 groups according to the presence or the absence of Myocardial Fibrosis (MF) and Congestive Heart Failure (CHF). The Diabetes Mellitus (DM) incidence according to the race, sex, age and the presence of Kimmestiel-Wilson (KW) were in agreement with the literature data. The majority of the deaths occurred after the sixth-decade and we did not find any DMP with Malignant Hypertension. Hypertension and Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) increased the frequency of anatomical cardiac alterations, as follows: 1. MF was more associated with CAD, 2. Hypertension was more frequent in DMP with KW in the nodular form; 3. Hypertension increased the frequency of left ventricular hypertrophy; 4. Myocardial Infarction occurred in the absence of occlusive vascular phenomena. The Myocardial Fibrosis (MF) observed in DMP without ACD and without hypertension may be final anatomic demonstration of a gradual metabolic-functional process, and not the basic mechanism of the CHF in the possible Diabetic Cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:[The heart and diabetes. An anatomo-clinical study]. 269 52

We have prospectively followed over a 5-year period 434 volunteers who were at intake ambulatory, functional, presumably nondemented, and between 75 and 85 years of age. Fifty-six (an incidence of 3.53 per 100 person-years at risk) developed a progressive dementia: 32 met diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer's disease (AD) (an incidence of 2.0 per 100 person-years at risk), 15 had vascular or mixed dementia, and 9 had other disorders or remain undiagnosed. New cases of dementia were as common as myocardial infarction and twice as common as stroke. Risk factors for both dementia and AD were age (over 80) and gender (female); other reported risk factors such as family history, prior head injury, thyroid disease, maternal age, and smoking were not risk factors for AD in this elderly cohort. Prior stroke was the major risk factor for vascular or mixed dementia; diabetes and left ventricular hypertrophy but not a history of hypertension per se were also risk factors for vascular dementia. The major predictor of the development of AD was the mental status score on entry. The 58.5% of the cohort who made zero to two errors on a 33-item mental status test had a less than 0.6% per year chance of developing AD, whereas the 16% of the cohort with five to eight errors on this test developed AD at a rate of over 12% per year. Thus, it is possible to identify a large cohort of 80-year-olds who are at low risk for AD and a smaller cohort at very high risk.
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PMID:Development of dementing illnesses in an 80-year-old volunteer cohort. 271 31

Echocardiographic data are reported for 84 diabetes mellitus patients with reference to their age, severity and clinical pattern of diabetes and its treatment. There was left-ventricular hypertrophy, reduced end-diastolic volume and reduced stroke volume, particularly so in moderate and severe diabetes mellitus. In young insulin-treated patients (11%) with labile glycemia, an obvious mitral prolapse and, perhaps, also aortic valve prolapse were detected. This category of patients would frequently exhibit heart rate and conductivity disorders, such as second-degree sino-auricular block and frequent supraventricular extrasystoles.
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PMID:[Study of the functional status of the heart in diabetes mellitus based on echocardiographic data]. 273 17

High blood pressure is unquestionably a risk factor for premature morbidity and mortality, especially from coronary artery disease and stroke. Risk of clinical manifestations of coronary artery disease increases dramatically if other risk factors, such as a history of cigarette smoking, hypercholesterolemia, left ventricular hypertrophy, and diabetes, are present in addition to hypertension. Therefore, management must include measures to control these risk factors as well as reduce blood pressure. In patients with hypercholesterolemia or diabetes, some antihypertensive drugs must be used with extreme caution or avoided altogether because of possible side effects. Although systolic pressure is an important prognostic factor, there is currently no evidence that treatment of isolated systolic hypertension is beneficial.
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PMID:How to manage other risk factors in patients with hypertension. 281 10

It is generally acknowledged that hypertension is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and that lowering elevated blood pressure is effective in reducing that risk. However, hypertension is more likely to cause cardiovascular disease in those with additional risk factors, such as cigarette smoking, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, hypokalemia, loft ventricular hypertrophy, or electrocardiographic abnormalities. The evidence to date indicates that not all patients with mild hypertension need to be treated with drugs; not all of those receiving drug therapy should be treated with the same drugs; and the benefit of the same degree of reduction in blood pressure may not be equivalent for different drugs. The use of traditional step 1 diuretic therapy is not uniformly appropriate. As an alternative, the vasodilator prazosin can be effective as monotherapy in the treatment of mild hypertension, and its addition to diuretic or beta blocker therapy appears to blunt or prevent the adverse effects of those agents on lipid levels. Since prazosin therapy is least likely to worsen existing risk factors or precipitate their occurrence, it should enhance the benefit of blood pressure reduction in delaying or preventing cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Antihypertensive therapy and lipids. Paradoxical influences on cardiovascular disease risk. 286 58

The conventional "stepped-care" approach to the treatment of hypertension deserves revision. Rational therapy considers a variety of factors to obtain maximum efficacy, safety, tolerability, compliance, and neutralization of neural tone for the prevention of sudden death. The patient's age, gender, race, behavior profile, hemodynamic and neurohumoral status (plasma renin activity, norepinephrine/epinephrine ratio), and quality of life will help determine the choice of antihypertensive agent. Concomitant risk factors (smoking, obesity, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia), the presence of sequelae (left ventricular hypertrophy and/or failure, renal failure), and the existence of other disorders (mitral valve prolapse, depression, anxiety) must also be considered when initiating treatment. In addition, the cost of ancillary expenses (laboratory tests, hospitalizations, and emergency room visits) must be weighed against the potential benefits of therapy. Beta blockers are effective, well tolerated, and versatile for the treatment of concomitant cardiovascular disorders and as behavior modifiers. Calcium channel blockers and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors also show promise and merit consideration as therapy for specific groups of hypertensive patients.
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PMID:The 1980s: a patient-specific therapeutic approach in hypertension. 288 36

Although most of the centrally and peripherally-acting adrenergic inhibitors have been available for several years, they continue to contribute importantly to antihypertensive therapy. There are remarkably few contraindications to their use. They are useful in hypertension of all grades of severity, and are also valuable in complicated forms of hypertension, such as those associated with renal insufficiency, diabetes mellitus, and chronic obstructive lung disease. They can produce some fairly predictable side effects in patients, but generally do not cause significant metabolic changes. These drugs also seem to be tolerated well by physically active patients. They appear to have desirable effects on cardiac structure. In general, the adrenergic inhibitors cause regression of a left ventricular hypertrophy, which may well be a valuable property, especially in older hypertensive patients.
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PMID:The adrenergic inhibitors. 288 21

Effects of streptozotocin-induced diabetes (8 weeks) on the performance of perfused hearts from spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats were compared with effects on normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WK) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rat hearts. Diabetes markedly decreased systolic arterial pressure (SAP) of SH rats in vivo but did not affect SAP of either of the normotensive strains. Diabetes also reduced heart size of SH and normotensive rats and reversed absolute left ventricular hypertrophy (wall-to-lumen ratios and left-to-right ventricular weight ratios) of SH rats. Heart perfusion at the end of the 8-week period revealed that diabetes (i) reduced hydraulic work at high pressure loads and efficiency of contraction (work/mu LO2 consumed) of SH rat hearts but not of WK or SD hearts, and (ii) depressed left ventricular pulse pressure development (LVPP) and contractility (LV + dP/dt) of SH hearts more extensively than it reduced these variables in either of the normotensive control groups. Effects of diabetes which were similar in hypertensive and normotensive hearts were reductions in stroke work at high volume loads and depressions in LV-dP/dt. Attendant hypothyroidism probably contributed to the reductions in SAP, heart size, LVPP, LV+ and -dP/dt, and stroke work but not to the decreased efficiency or reversal of hypertrophy of SH rat hearts. Malnutrition of SH rats, like hypothyroidism, also decreased heart size without reversing hypertrophy but had no effect on SAP and only reduced LV-dP/dt. The results show that diabetes reversed hypertrophy and selectively reduced contraction efficiency, contractility, and LVPP of SH hearts, but otherwise the effects of diabetes in hypertensive and normotensive rat strains were similar to each other.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Depressor effect of diabetes in the spontaneously hypertensive rat: associated changes in heart performance. 294 85

To assess the potential effect of hypertension on the results of thallium-201 stress imaging in patients with chest pain, 272 thallium-201 stress tests performed in 133 hypertensive patients and 139 normotensive patients over a 1-year period were reviewed. Normotensive and hypertensive patients were similar in age, gender distribution, prevalence of cardiac risk factors (tobacco smoking, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes mellitus), medications, and clinical symptoms of coronary disease. Electrocardiographic criteria for left ventricular hypertrophy were present in 16 hypertensive patients. Stepwise probability analysis was used to determine the likelihood of coronary artery disease for each patient. In patients with mid to high likelihood of coronary disease (greater than 25% probability), abnormal thallium-201 stress images were present in 54 of 60 (90%) hypertensive patients compared with 51 of 64 (80%) normotensive patients. However, in 73 patients with a low likelihood of coronary disease (less than or equal to 25% probability), abnormal thallium-201 stress images were present in 21 patients (29%) of the hypertensive group compared with only 5 of 75 (7%) of the normotensive patients (p less than 0.001). These findings suggest that in patients with a mid to high likelihood of coronary artery disease, coexistent hypertension does not affect the results of thallium-201 exercise stress testing. However, in patients with a low likelihood of coronary artery disease, abnormal thallium-201 stress images are obtained more frequently in hypertensive patients than in normotensive patients.
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PMID:Thallium-201 stress imaging in hypertensive patients. 295 4


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