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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 28-year-old female, who suffered from thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) in the 14th week of her first pregnancy, recovered after a plasma exchange followed by an induced abortion. From six months after the abortion, she no longer required plasma infusions every 3-4 weeks to prevent a relapse of TTP manifested as thrombocytopenia, and complete remission continued until her next pregnancy. In her second pregnancy, she had an immediate relapse of TTP and responded to plasma infusion until the 24th week. However, the TTP gradually became resistant to plasma infusion, and developed into toxemia with edema, hypertension and proteinuria in the 27th week. Although the TTP was alleviated by the infusion of large amounts of plasma, the placenta failed as the result of numerous white infarcts. She delivered a 948 g live baby by cesarean section in the 33rd week. The baby had transient thrombocytopenia but did not suffer from TTP. The mother required plasma infusions every 3-4 weeks for about five months, and she has continued in remission.
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PMID:Successful delivery in a female with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. 369 21

The entity of cerebrovascular diseases associated with the use of oral contraceptives (OCs) is well-known but quite rare in Japan in contrast to the Western countries. The authors recently encountered a 38 year old female with cerebral venous thrombosis considered to be the result of OCs. This patient took OCs for 17 days following therapeutic abortion and was transferred to the study hospital because of disturbed consciousness. CT scans disclosed a right tempro-occipital subcortical hemorrhagic infarction and bilateral thalamic infarction. Cerebral angiograms showed nonfilling of cortical veins in the same area. The internal cerebral vein, vein of Galen, and right transverse sinus were not visualized either. The hematoma and necrotic tissue were removed to avoid further neurological deterioration. The brain was swollen and hyperemic and thrombosed cortical veins were clearly recognized at the time of operation. 12 such cases of OC-related cerebrovascular disease, in including this 1 have now been reported in Japan, and only 3 of them were diagnosed objectively as nous or sinus thrombosis. The average age for these 12 cases was 34 years old, and many of these women experienced abortion or therapeutic abortion. There was no relationship between the dosage of estrogen and the onset of cerebrovascular disease. The authors believe that the onset of this pathological state is the result of a gynecological hypercoagulable state and OCs may have served as a catalyst. OCs are contraindicated in patients with gynecological hypercoagulability, hypertension, or who smoke. (author's modified)
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PMID:[Cerebral venous thrombosis associated with the use of oral contraceptives]. 371 78

Renal transplantation is compatible with pregnancy in women under permanent dialysis, and leads to no problems for the mother or the transplant. The seven pregnancies observed in the authors' center over the past fifteen years progressed satisfactorily. There were no rejections, no cases of renal failure. In two cases, however, there was an aggravation of hypertension with acute gravidic toxemia and spontaneous abortion. The effects on the fetus of immunosuppressive drugs are difficult to evaluate; the main risk is prematurity.
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PMID:[Pregnancy in renal transplant patients]. 388 36

Early reports on SLE were too small in number to determine that pregnancy was contraindicated in patients with renal involvement. Later reports show that patients with lupus nephropathy can have successful pregnancies provided certain preconditions are established. Optimal preconditions include prepregnancy remission of at least 6 months, renal function with serum creatinine 1.5 mg/dl or less or creatinine clearance of 60 ml/min or more or proteinuria of 3 g/24 hr or less. Successful pregnancies have been recorded in some patients with more severe renal impairment. Renal function will remain unchanged in approximately 60% of pregnancies; and although deterioration may occur, it is only severe or permanent in less than 10%. In 26% of patients, mild to severe renal impairment was transient, with recovery to prepregnancy levels of renal function. Proteinuria with good creatinine clearance may not be dangerous. Hypertension or superimposed preeclampsia jeopardizes the outcome. Fetal outcome averaged approximately 70% (range, 41-77%) live births, 17.8% (range, 5.1-40%) spontaneous abortions, 19.7% (range, 3.0-38.5%) prematurity, and 8.2% SGA. Therapeutic abortion is not a modality of treatment of lupus nephropathy. Management of patients with lupus nephropathy is twofold and includes suppression of underlying lupus activity as well as the serial evaluation of chronic renal disease. In chronic lupus nephropathy with inactive SLE maternal and fetal outcome is the same as for pregnant patients with chronic renal disease of other causes. Strict fetal surveillance must be performed to decrease the stillbirth rate. The concomitant increase in prematurity demands the services of a tertiary care neonatal unit. Management necessitates the team approach of the obstetrician, nephrologist, rheumatologist, and neonatologist working in collaboration. The reports which contain large numbers of patients now allow better counseling of these patients who are contemplating pregnancy.
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PMID:Lupus nephropathy and pregnancy. 389 19

This article, aimed at general practitioners, nurses, health visitors, pharmacists and administrators in the UK, offers various examples of ethnic, religious and cultural differences within the patient population with the hope of improving communication in therapeutic encounters. Ethnic differences with regard to retinal pigmentation, pill hypertension, drug response and melanin function are briefly examined. Religious and cultural attitudes towards male doctors, abortion, pessaries, sterilization, psychiatry and domiciliary family planning are described. The differing attitudes of Asian and Muslim women toward vaginal examinations, and the most commonly used abortifacients in Europe, England, the US, and Manila are mentioned. Although generalizations are impossible, some rules of thumb for preferences in contraceptive method are offered. Typical acceptor preferences by ethnic group are given for the pill, IUD, rhythm method, injection, post-coital contraception, abortion, diaphragm/cap, and sheath. Needs for general practitioner service, family planning clinics, female doctors, interpreters and domiciliary family planning are touched upon, with practical suggestions. Many cultural conflicts can be avoided if health personnel keep an open mind toward the varying needs and attitudes of their culturally diverse client population.
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PMID:Family planning and culture. 391 79

The relation between pregnancy-induced hypertension and reproductive history was assessed in 29,484 women receiving obstetric care at Parkland Memorial Hospital. The incidence of pregnancy-induced hypertension was 25.4% in primigravid women, somewhat lower (22.3%) in women whose only previous pregnancy terminated in abortion, and much lower (10%) in women who carried two or more successive pregnancies to viability.
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PMID:The relationship between abortion in the first pregnancy and development of pregnancy-induced hypertension in the subsequent pregnancy. 394 88

Reductions in publicly funded prenatal care programs in 1981 to 1984 resulted in an increase in unregistered patient deliveries from 7.8% to 14.9% of births at University of California San Diego Medical Center. To assess the economic and perinatal impact of the increasing number of deliveries of women without prenatal care, 100 consecutive patients with fewer than three prenatal visits were studied. Each "no care" patient was matched by age, parity, and week of delivery with a control patient who received care in a state-funded perinatal project (Comprehensive Perinatal Program). Maternal antenatal risk factors were equally distributed between the two groups when maternal age, parity, history of substance abuse, prior preterm delivery, hypertension, and abortion were compared. Maternal obstetric outcomes were similar, including cesarean section rate and incidence of postpartum fever and hemorrhage. However, neonates delivered of women receiving no care experienced significantly greater morbidity than the neonates of women in the Comprehensive Perinatal Program, including an increased incidence of premature rupture of the membranes and preterm delivery (13% versus 2%, p less than 0.05), low birth weight (21% versus 6% less than 2500 gm, p less than 0.002), and intensive care unit admissions (24% versus 10%, p less than 0.005). When the total inpatient hospital charges were tabulated for each mother-baby pair, the cost of perinatal care for the group receiving no care ($5168 per pair) was significantly higher than the cost for patients in the Comprehensive Perinatal Program ($2974 per pair, p less than 0.001) including an antenatal charge of $600 in the Comprehensive Perinatal Program. The excess cost for delivery of 400 women receiving no care per year in the study hospital was $877,600. These results suggest that extension of prenatal care programs to medically indigent women is likely to result in a net reduction in perinatal morbidity and health care expenditures.
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PMID:The perinatal and economic impact of prenatal care in a low-socioeconomic population. 394

This discussion identifies the risks and benefits of each of the hormonal methods of contraception -- combined estrogen-progesterone oral contraceptive (OCs), progestogen-only pills, and depot progestogen injections. It also explains the use of a profile of risk factors in considering the appropriate prescription for each individual in relation to her contraceptive needs. Information regarding medical risks has come from the consideration of mortality rates in large cohort studies. Looking at categories of the causes of 249 deaths in ever-users of the pill and controls, Layde and colleagues were able to show that there was an excess mortality in the pill group of 40% and that the extra risk was concentrated in cardiovascular causes: myocardial infarctions, cerebral thrombosis, and cerebral hemorrhage constituted the largest proportions. A small proportion of combined OC users may develop clinical hypertension but more suffer a reduction in the high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol fraction of the blood lipids. Both of these effects tend to increase the risk of cardiovascular complications and both are positively related to the dose of the progestogen components. In prescribing combined OCs, attention needs to be paid to further moves away from the norm towards the extremes: the presence of cardiovascular risk factors and the use of certain longterm medications or the presumptive designation as a "rapid metabolizer." An analysis of progestogen only pill (POP) users in the Oxford-Family Planning Association study confirmed the reasonably low rates of accidental pregnancy in POP users. There is a marked reduction with increasing age, and it is significant that many prescribers are now giving POP to older women for whom combined OCs are contraindicated because of cardiovascular risks. It also seems reasonable to use them in women with some medical disorders, for example, recurrent pulmonary embolism, hypertension, and diabetes. Initially, depot injections of progesterone were developed to provide a long-acting or sustained-release type of drug administration to assist users of the progestogen-only method which, unlike combined OCs, does not make use of regular drug-free intervals. In practice it has been found that the effectiveness against pregnancy is enhanced and the side-effects are increased in giving progestogen by depot injection. The 2 preparations currently licensed in Britain are Depo-Provera (medroxyprogesterone acetate) and Noristerat (norethisterone enanthate). In some cases proper and clear information may not have been given to the patient and proper consent not obtained before giving the drug. This problem is magnified because of the occurrence in some women of disturbed bleeding patterns, especially if given immediately after childbirth or an abortion. Also, in a small proportion of users anovulatory amenorrhea may supervene for some months or even as long as 2 years following depot injection.
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PMID:Hormonal contraceptive methods. 401 68

Forty-six hydropic infants with homozygous alpha-thalassaemia born during a period of 10 years have been reviewed. The incidence was 1:1550 total births, and accounted for 81% of all non-immune hydrops. The male to female ratio was 1:1.4. There was increased incidence of anaemia, pregnancy induced hypertension, antepartum haemorrhage, malpresentation, prematurity, fetal distress, difficult vaginal delivery, caesarean section, retained placenta, postpartum haemorrhage and congenital abnormalities. Antenatal diagnosis by DNA hybridization with subsequent abortion of the affected fetuses is the best method to decrease maternal morbidity and to reduce the incidence of hydrops fetalis in couples at risk. For those with no previous history, but with early onset hypertension and/or polyhydramnios, sonography is useful in making an earlier diagnosis, and in reducing avoidable morbidity, because DNA analysis can be done before caesarean section and aggressive neonatal management is instituted.
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PMID:Homozygous alpha-thalassaemia: clinical presentation, diagnosis and management. A review of 46 cases. 401 25

The mortality rate from ischaemic heart disease (I.H.D.) has increased in young women by about 50% in 12 years, and it is now possible to report the findings in 150 women who developed symptoms and signs of I.H.D. under the age of 45. Data obtained from 145 of these women form the basis of this report: 81 presented with myocardial infarction and 64 with angina. In the remaining five there was a definite nonatherosclerotic cause for the premature onset of I.H.D.Hypercholesterolaemia, hypertension, or excessive cigarette smoking each occurred in a large minority, and more than one of these major risk factors was present in most patients. Hypercholesterolaemia was the commonest factor. In women in whom lipoprotein typing was undertaken the type II pattern was more frequent than type IV. The prevalence of hypercholesterolaemia and hypertension was the same in those with myocardial infarction and in those with angina.Excessive cigarette smoking was more common in women with myocardial infarction than in those with angina. The latter did not differ in their cigarette smoking habits from the normal population.A premature menopause had occurred in 20% of these women, but there was no relation between the early onset of I.H.D. with age at menarche, parity, or the incidence of abortion. Oral contraceptives did not increase the risk of myocardial infarction unless one of the major risk factors was also present.Altogether 75% of patients with angina or myocardial infarction survived 12 years. Coexisting hypertension worsened the prognosis. The prognosis after myocardial infarction was similar in these women to that previously described for men under the age of 40.
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PMID:Ischaemic heart disease in young women. 442 52


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