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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
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A new system is proposed for treating the spectrum of patients with high blood pressure. It is based on studies of the renin axis using renin profiling, pharmacologic probes and our bipolar vasoconstriction-volume hypothesis. The new system does not require renin profiling, pharmacologic testing or a vasoconstriction-volume analysis for widespread application. But these procedures, whenever available, will make treatment more efficient and more certain, and at the same time provide better base line definition. In the new system, all patients, except the elderly and those with congestive heart failure, bradycardia or a history of asthma, are treated first with propranolol alone, a procedure which will diminish or normalize blood pressure in many patients with high and noraml renin levels. For nonresponders, diuretic therapy is then superimposed. Subsequently, a propranolol subtraction trial picks out the low-renin patients who will usually respond to a diuretic alone. This program is likely to be fully effective in possible up to 85 per cent of patients. For the residual smaller fraction, drugs such as hydralazine, methyl DOPA, clonidine, reserpine or guanethidine are then added in traditional trial and error fashion. The proposed system has the theoretic attraction for long-term commitment, implicit in antihypertensive therapy, of achieving blood pressure control in large fractions with one drug instead of two or with two drugs instead of three or more. Moreover, the large groups who respond to therapy with propranolol alone (most high-renin and normal-renin patients) or to diuretics alone (most low-renin patients) gain the advantage of simple, more specific, long-term (i.e., antirenin or antivolume) therapy. The use of propranolol alone has practical and theoretic advantages over diuretics. Control may be achieved with even fewer side effects and without hypokalemia and chronic dehydration with its possibly adverse consequences (hyperuricemia, azotemia, hyperlipidemia, hyperreninemia, increased blood viscosity). Also, propranolol provides more direct control of the increased peripheral resistance and of neurogenically-induced swings in blood pressure. At the same time, the new system efficiently exploits the long-term use of diuretic therapy alone in low-renin patients in whom volume excess seems a causal factor. And it tends to avoid the use of diuretics in high-renin patients and of beta-blockers in low-renin patients in whom these drug types may be contraindicated.
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PMID:Modern system for treating high blood pressure based on renin profiling and vasoconstriction-volume analysis: a primary role for beta blocking drugs such as propranolol. 1 Jul 30

We describe a 49 year old woman with impressive regression of renal artery stenosing atherosclerotic lesions in response to sustained excellent control of hyperlipidemia. Initially, she had high blood pressure necessitating combined drug therapy with chlorothiazide, methyldopa and propranolol, with only moderately satisfactory control. Renal arteriography revealed a 90 per cent stenosing lesion of the right renal artery and 75 per cent narrowing of the left renal artery. Peripheral vein plasma renin was markedly increased at 32 ng/ml. With a combination of cholestyramine and clofibrate, serum lipids were maintained at normal values for several years. Increased blood pressure diminished spontaneously, and the patient has maintained normal blood pressures after discontinuation of antihypertensive therapy. Repeat renal arteriograms showed almost complete regression of the right renal artery lesion and a possible decrease in left renal artery disease. Peripheral vein plasma renin became normal at 3 ng/ml. This case illustrates that sustained control of hyperlipidemia could lead to regression of atherosclerotic nodules and impressive clinical improvement in certain patients.
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PMID:Regression of atherosclerotic stenosing lesions of the renal arteries and spontaneous cure of systemic hypertension through control of hyperlipidemia. 96 6

Report of a 10-year-old boy with congenital hypoplasia of the intrahepatic bile ducts, the socalled MacMahon-Thannhauser-Syndrome. The patient had been suffering from a varying degree of jaundice since his 2nd day of life and from pruritus since his 21st month of life. Furthermore, he had hepatomegaly, a systolic cardiac murmur, hypogenitalism, retarded growth, and finally hypertension. Transitory xanthomas existed between 1 3/4 and 2 3/4 years of age. Signs of persistent intrahepatic cholestasis was manifested by increased levels of bilirubin and bile acids in serum as well as raised activities of leucine aminopeptidase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and alkaline phosphatase. Pathological values of serum glutamic dehydrogenase pointed to a persistent destruction of liver cells. Without treatment, the activities of vitamin K dependent clotting factors were decreased. Cholesterol, phosphatides and triglycerides in serum were increased and lipoprotein-X was detectable. Aortography revealed stenosis of both renal arteries. An exploratory laparotomy and 5 liver biopsies led to the diagnosis of hypoplasia of the intrahepatic bile ducts. Therapeutic trials with steroids and the anion exchange resin "cholestyramine" were ineffective. Phenobarbital relieved the pruritus. Parenteral administration of fat soluble vitamins restored the activity of vitamin K dependent clotting factors to normal. The high blood pressure fell significantly due to treatment with adelphan. The etiology of hypoplasia of the intrahepatic bile ducts is unknown. It may be a malformation or an obliteration secondary to inflammation. In our patient, narrowing of the renal arteries, increase of plasma-renin activity and hypertension were probably secondary to hyperlipidemia. It has been suggested that hyperlipemia secondary to cholestasis may be due to a disturbance of lipoprotein metabolism. A review of reports on 118 patients suffering from intrahepatic bile ducts hypoplasia is included.
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PMID:[Hypertension and bilateral stenosis of the renal artery associated with congenital hypoplasia of the intrahepatic bile ducts (author's transl)]. 124 84

Obesity is known to be associated with diabetes, hypertension and hyperlipidemia in the majority of the patients. There could be inaccuracy in measuring the blood pressure in obesity, therefore a cuff of sufficient size is important in blood pressure measurement. All parameters of obesity have been found to have a correlation with hypertension and it has been suggested that change in weight would cause a change in blood pressure. A weight reduction of 12 kg results in a blood pressure fall of 21/13 mm Hg. Such changes in blood pressures have been noted in untreated hypertensives. A few studies have negated the role of change in weight to have any influence on hypertension. Obesity causes a higher cardiac output and higher blood volume leading to hypertension. There may be increased intracellular sodium and reduced sodium-potassium-ATPase activity in obesity which causes increased sodium loading in hypertension. Abnormalities related to the insulin-carbohydrate metabolism and the renin-angiotensin aldosteron system have also been demonstrated in obese patients. Weight reduction also causes reduced dietary salt intake and diminished sympathetic activity. The benefits of weight reduction appear to be directly related to the amount of weight lost.
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PMID:Effect of obesity and weight reduction in hypertension. 218 Feb 41

The pathophysiology of the nephrotic syndrome (NS), characterized by protenuria, edema, sodium retention and hyperlipidemia, is not clear. We studied the role of some systemic factors on sodium retention in an experimental model of NS. NS was induced in rats by a single subcutaneous injection of puromycin aminonucleoside (PA) (15 mg/100 g); control animals received vehicle. All rats were kept in metabolic cages for 24 days (3 days before and 21 days after PA-injection). Urine was collected daily. Blood samples were obtained every day until day 10, and then every other day up to the end of the study. The rats showed the following alterations after PA injection: a) a rise in serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity (ACEA) and plasma aldosterone (PAldo) at day 1; b) a rise in urinary aldosterone (UAaldoV), azotemia and sodium retention at day 2; c) massive proteinuria (UProt) and decrease in plasma angiotensinogen concentration (PAC) at day 4; d) increases in plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma renin concentration (PRC) and serum creatinine as well as hypoproteinemia, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, ascitis and edema at day 5; e) increase in urine volume at day 6. PAldo became normal at day 7; urine sodium (UNaV), PRA and PRC at day 8; UAldoV at day 9; serum urea and ACEA at day 10; urinary volume at day 11; PAC, serum total protein and creatinine at day 12. The edema disappeared at day 11. UProt, hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia persisted, though they decreased substantially by the end of the study (day 21). Light microscopy studies revealed normal glomerular morphology, but electron microscopy showed fusion of podocytes before proteinuria. These data suggest that: a) sodium retention was not a consequence of proteinuria or hypoproteinemia; b) sodium retention seems non-related to renin secretion, but may be partially mediated by a fall in glomerular filtration rate or by an increased tubular resabsorption secondary to other factors; c) the increase in PAldo, UAldoV and ACEA are non-related to renin secretion: all occurred before PRA rose; d) water retention, increase in PRA and PRC, hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia are secondary to the hypoproteinemia.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of experimental nephrotic syndrome induced by puromycin aminonucleoside in rats. I. The role of proteinuria, hypoproteinemia, and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system on sodium retention. 223 72

Vascular risk, mainly thromboembolitic risk, attributed to oral contraceptives (OCs) since 1962, has been primarily linked to ethinyl estradiol (EE). OCs which combine estrogen and have been associated with cerebral vascular accidents. A 1977 study showed a 40% increase of mortality due to cardiovascular complications in women taking OCs. There were of both an arterial and a venous character. The risk of myocardial infarction was 3 times more frequent among OC users. Deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism were more numerous. Some other risk factors include smoking, hypertension, diabetes, and age 35. The risk of heart attack vanishes a few years after stopping OC use. The reduction of EE (and similarly progesterone) dosage from 100-50 mcg also lower the risk of hypertension, cerebral vascular accidents, and venous thrombosis. Prolonged use of OCs causes disorders of hemostasis affecting the walls of blood vessels, modifying the viscosity of blood flow (increase of hematocrits, reduction of venous tonus), modifying plasmatic coagulation (increase of platelets, increase of factors VII and X and plasma fibrinogen, and decrease of antithrombin III activity), and increased fibrinolysis. These anomalies are exclusively associated with high doses of estrogens. 5% of women using OCs develop moderate hypertension of 5-10 mm Hg of systolic pressure 5 years later, but after cessation it is reversed. OCs stimulate the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system causing accelerated production of angiotensin II with the resultant forceful vasotension. 3 months after quitting OC use, high blood pressure returns to normal. EE can provoke diabetes; it increases very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) production, but total cholesterol is hardly affected. The androgenic property of progestogens reduces HDL. Combined OCs are contraindicated for women with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, and a family history of vascular accidents.
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PMID:[Oral contraception and the vascular risk]. 251 20

Various endocrine and metabolic disturbances associated with long standing uremia persist after kidney transplantation or arise from the use of immunosuppressive drugs. Hyperlipidemia for long time being implicated as the cause of corticosteroids is also observed in renal transplant recipients treated with cyclosporin A monotherapy. After conversion from cyclosporin to azathioprine serum cholesterol and triglyceride concentration fall, and elevation of LDL-cholesterol may also be reversed. There is a tendency for higher HDL-cholesterol in azathioprine and prednisolone treated transplant patients. Those patients who are at risk for clinically significant cholesterol elevations can be predicted by their pretransplant lipid levels, specifically the LDL-fraction. Risk-benefit ratio of conversion and of treatment with lipid-lowering drugs, especially with lovastatin, should be carefully examined, also in view of glucose intolerance. Higher incidence of diabetes mellitus requiring insulin therapy in cyclosporin treated transplant recipients has been reported. Cyclosporin may cause toxic effects on pancreatic beta-cells resulting in inhibition of insulin secretion. High doses of cyclosporin induce inhibition of glycogen synthesis in rat liver. Glucose intolerance is reversible after reduction of cyclosporin dose or conversion to azathioprine. Therefore glucose metabolism in kidney transplant recipients treated with cyclosporin should be carefully followed. Immunosuppressive therapy may affect reproductive function, arachidonate metabolism and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system as well as posttransplant calcium and phosphate metabolism. Endocrine and metabolic abnormalities are associated with long standing uremia. After successful kidney transplantation several observations are normalized but further complications arise from the use of immunosuppressive drugs. The present paper reviews various endocrine and metabolic disturbances described following renal transplantation.
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PMID:Endocrine and metabolic abnormalities following kidney transplantation. 268 69

The multisystem involvement in acute pancreatitis (AP) is a reflection of the pancreatic gland's capacity to produce a number of potent vasoactive peptides, hormones, and enzymes. The various prognostic criteria are early evaluations of these metabolic derangements. The pathogenesis of hypocalcemia, long recognized as an indicator of severity of AP, is multifactorial. Imbalances of parathyroid hormone (PTH)-calcitonin, the interactions of glucagon, gastrin and other pancreatic hormones with PTH-calcitonin, the role of free fatty acids in binding serum calcium with albumin, and the translocation of calcium ion in muscles and liver, have been recently described but remain conflicting theories. Yet, the time-honored theory of calcium-soap formation enjoys wide acceptance. Hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, and occasional ketoacidosis in acute pancreatitis have been studied thoroughly. The complex cause-and-effect relationship between hyperlipidemia with acute pancreatitis needs further study. The coagulation abnormalities seem to be initiated by activated trypsin, and their role in microvascular coagulation appears to form a unifying hypothesis for major organ dysfunction, but this requires further investigation. Adult respiratory distress syndrome may be the result of active enzymes that digest pulmonary surfactant and/or microvascular thrombosis. The depression of cardiac function and shock are suspected to be secondary to vasoactive peptides such as bradykinin, or myocardial depressant factor, whose structure has yet to be elucidated. The renin-angiotensin alterations and renal complications in acute pancreatitis have received scant attention in the literature. The onset of moderate visual disturbances, or even blindness, in a patient with acute pancreatitis as a result of retinal vessel thrombosis is fortunately uncommon. Rare but interesting are the manifestations such as subcutaneous fat necrosis, arthralgia, and pancreatic encephalopathy. Despite the extensive literature on the complexities of the pathogenesis of complications of acute pancreatitis, there have been very few advances in the prevention and management of specific complications. It is hoped that further work on modification of enzymatic disturbances induced in acute pancreatitis will result in its effective treatment and prevention of serious complications.
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PMID:Systemic complications of acute pancreatitis. 328

Modern views of the pathogenesis and natural history of nephrotic syndrome have changed substantially since the early studies by Cotugno and Bright. Contrary to beliefs held 20 years ago, we do not possess a unique satisfying explanation for the induction, maintenance, and resolution of nephrotic edema, and many concepts firmly established as "classic" are now being revised or reconsidered. These include the relationship between urinary protein losses and hypoalbuminemia, which is complicated by several factors such as daily protein intake, albumin catabolism, and the possible role of albumin loss at extrarenal sites. The influence of lowered plasma albumin on the decrease in plasma volume is also quite complex, due to technical difficulties in measuring plasma volume and turnover of radio-labeled albumin. The most contentious areas are how sodium and water retention are initiated and maintained and the relationship between hypoalbuminemia, plasma oncotic pressure, and edema. While aldosterone excretion and plasma concentrations are elevated in nephrotic patients, data on the renin-angiotensin system are controversial and the renal handling of sodium is related to a host of factors including glomerular filtration rate, altered proximal tubular reabsorption, and the role of vasodilators or vasoconstrictors. The complications of nephrotic syndrome are protean and relatively common. Among those are acute renal failure, thrombosis, infections, and hyperlipidemia. Since the introduction of percutaneous biopsy, the spectrum of lesions underlying nephrotic syndrome has widened considerably, the most common being minimal change, especially in children. There are very few prognostic indicators by which response to treatment may be predicted and these include persistent microscopic hematuria.
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PMID:The nephrotic syndrome and its complications. 330 94

Oral contrceptives (OCs), usd by over 30% of reproductive aged women in Belgium, are by far the most widely used contraceptive in that country. The various types of OCs include monophasic, biphasic, and triphasic combinations of an estrogen and a progestin, sequentials containing estrogen only for 7-14 days followed by a progestin through the 21st day; macrodose or microdose progestin only formulations, 3-month injectable progestins, and the morning after pill. Side effects of OCs are mainly due to metabolic effects on coagulation factors, the renin-angiotensin system, glucose tolerance, or the lipid profile. Users of OCs face increased risks of cholelithiases, thrombophlebitis, thromboembolism, cerebrovascular accidents, myocardial infarcts (among smokers over 35 years of age), and hepatic adenomas. The most troubling secondary effect is the excess cardiovascular morbidity and mortality show by contraceptive users, not just those who are obese, hypertensive, or who have histories of vascular pathology, but also those over 40 years of age and smokers. Lenght of use of OCs does not increase vascular risks. Epidemiologic studies demonstrate that vascular risks are reduced in lower dose formulations. Absolute contraindications to OC use include serious cardiovascular problems, severe hepatic pathology, estrogen-dependent tumors, pregnancy and undiagnosed gynecologic problems, and significant hyperlipidemia. Relative contraindications include severe headaches, cholelithiase, previous cholestasis of pregnancy, severe renal disease, fibromyomas, benign breast disease, age over 40 years, smoking, surgery anticipated within 4 weeks, infectious mononucleosis, falciform anemia, and immediate postpartum and lactation. Epilepsy, diabetes, depression, and varicose veins are not strictly speaking contraindications but require additonal surveillance. Lower dose formulations should be prescribed if possible. OC users should be followed up every 6-12 months. Among other steroidal contraceptive methods, sequential OCs and high dose progestin-only formulations are used for short-term treatment of specific conditions. Progestin-only minipills are used when an OC is desired but estrogens are contraindicated. Injectable progestins should be reserved for patients who for cultural or medical reasons can use no other type of contraceptive. Morning-after pills should not be considered a regular form of contraception. If OCs are used in adolescents, a low dose pill is indicated. Low dose OCs may be indicated for diabetics because of the danger of infection with IUDs and the lesser efficacy of barrier methods. If OCs are used in epileptics, they should be regular dosed because of the danger of drug interactions. Only low-dose formulations and progestin-only minipills should be used by women over 40.
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PMID:[The choice of oral contraception in 1984: general indications and specific cases]. 672 93


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