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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was designed to evaluate whether myocardial risk factors other than those strictly related to human immunodeficiency virus infection contribute to histologic cardiomyopathic changes in
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
patients. We analyzed 91 consecutive adult human immunodeficiency virus-positive autopsy cases (85%
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
by Centers of Disease Control criteria) from 1987-1991 for histologic cardiomyopathic changes (e.g. myocyte hypertrophy and myocardial fibrosis). We correlated the presence of cardiomyopathy with the following common myocardial risk factors:
hypertension
, coronary artery disease, alcoholism, diabetes mellitus, and valve disease. Forty percent of all cases had cardiomyopathy.
Hypertension
and coronary artery disease were both more common in the cardiomyopathy group (P < 0.05), compared with those human immunodeficiency virus-positive cases without cardiomyopathy. The other myocardial risk factors did not differ significantly between the two groups when compared individually, but when these data were pooled, 67% of cardiomyopathic patients had one or more myocardial risk factors versus 45% in the noncardiomyopathic group (P < 0.05). Cardiomyopathic patients were also more likely to have multiple myocardial risk factors (P < 0.05). Nineteen percent of cardiomyopathic patients had myocarditis versus 11% in the noncardiomyopathic group (P = NS). Patient age, gender, risk factors for human immunodeficiency virus infection (71% intravenous drugs), and history or autopsy findings of viral infection (e.g. cytomegalovirus) did not differ significantly between the two groups. In our patient population, which is heavily weighted towards intravenous drug use, myocardial risk factors other than human immunodeficiency virus are common, and appear to be major contributors to histologic cardiomyopathic changes that might otherwise be attributed to human immunodeficiency virus infection alone.
...
PMID:Myocardial risk factors other than human immunodeficiency virus infection may contribute to histologic cardiomyopathic changes in acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 824 12
A health survey on 22 health topics was conducted among 300 patients, 77 doctors in primary health care centers in hospitals, and 31 journalists in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, during September 1990. The self-administered questionnaire had been pretested among 30 doctors and 100 patients. Male and female patients were equally balanced by gender and about 50% were students. Most doctors and journalists were male. Priority for health topics to be covered in the media was given more by doctors than journalists or patients. Group A topics were smoking, exercise, venereal disease and
AIDS
,
hypertension
and diabetes, heart and circulatory disease, contamination and environmental cleanliness, nutrition, first aid, compliance with traffic regulations, endemic diseases in Saudi Arabia, breast feeding, treatment of childhood diarrhea, and rational use of home drugs. Group B topics (acne and cancer) were considered more important by journalists, followed by patients; doctors considered group B topics least important. Group C topics (modern diagnostic techniques, new drugs, and new means of treatment) were given more importance by patients, followed by journalists. Menstrual problems were scored lowest by journalists and highest by doctors. The findings were considered tentative, pending a more representative sample. This sample of respondents was well-educated. Patients gave less priority to smoking (44%) than cancer (66%) and acne and hair loss (71.3%). Physicians gave greater emphasis to smoking (98.7%) than acne and hair loss (58.4%) and cancer (53.2%). 28.6% of doctors and 66.3% of patients gave emphasis to modern diagnostic techniques; new drugs followed a similar pattern with 69.0% of patients and 16.9% of doctors favoring this topic. New means of treatment were accorded similar priorities by doctors and patients. Quality of health services was given a priority of 72.7% among doctors, 65.3% among patients, and 58.9% among journalists.
...
PMID:The selection of appropriate health education topics for publication in the press. 827 46
We review data concerning site and regulation of erythropoietin (EPO) production, its effects on target tissue, routes of administration and clinical applications. In the anaemia of chronic renal failure (ACRF) treatment with recombinant human erythropoietin (r-Hu-EPO) has been shown to be effective in both improvement of the anaemia and increase in quality of life. In the anaemia of chronic disease (ACD), associated with various malignant, infectious and inflammatory disorders, many investigators have demonstrated an inappropriately low EPO response to anaemia. Therapeutic trials in patients with ACD mostly lacked sufficient numbers of patients for evaluation of the effects. The results obtained from some studies in
AIDS
and rheumatoid arthritis and the effect on the number of units of autologous blood obtained from patients planned for elective surgery are encouraging, however. Adverse reactions of r-Hu-EPO treatment are mainly confined to the ACRF population and include
hypertension
, shunt thrombosis and pain at the injection site. The exact mechanism of action of EPO is not yet fully understood. Large scale clinical trials are required to establish its effects on both the anaemia and quality of life in anaemias other than ACRF.
...
PMID:Erythropoietin: mechanisms of action and indications for treatment. 837 77
Cocaine abuse has produced a major epidemic health problem in North America in the 1980s. The abuse of cocaine is maintained by the drug's effects on brain reward systems, mediated at least in part by its dopaminergic action. The patterns and consequences of use are best understood by considering the pharmacokinetics (rapid absorption and delivery to the brain, relatively short half-life) and the pharmacodynamics (intense central and peripheral neural stimulation). Cocaine is used therapeutically as a topical and local anaesthetic. Toxicity occurs primarily in cocaine abusers, but also occasionally after therapeutic dosing. Medical complications reflect primarily excessive central nervous system stimulation and excessive vasoconstriction, the latter resulting in severe
hypertension
and/or organ ischaemia with associated organ injury. Most deaths that result from medical complications of cocaine intoxication are sudden and occur before medical intervention is possible. Other complications of cocaine abuse with severe personal and social consequences include traumatic deaths and injuries, and reproductive disturbances, as well as transmission of infectious diseases, especially
AIDS
. Cocaine addiction is clearly a problem, although the number of addicts is unknown. Pharmacologic treatment of cocaine addiction has as yet been unsuccessful. Psychosocial approaches remain the mainstay of therapy.
...
PMID:Clinical pharmacology and toxicology of cocaine. 844 38
Fifty patients in stage IV of HIV infection (including 41
AIDS
patients) were prospectively studied by echocardiography. Thirteen of them showed abnormalities: 4 had pericardial effusion, 1 endocarditis, 7 myocardial disorders and 1 primary pulmonary arterial
hypertension
. Pericardial effusion, also present in patients who had pleuropulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma, was not specific. Myocardial disorders concerned the diastolic function in 1 case, the segmental kinetics in 2 cases and the whole systolic function in 4 cases (3 had congestive myocardiopathy and 1 had transient systole alteration without left ventricular dilatation). The mechanism of global left ventricular disorders was multifactorial, and several hypotheses were discussed: infectious myocarditis, adrenergic or nutritional deficiency myocarditis, cardiotoxicity of antiviral drugs, common pathology with HIV encephalopathy. The prognosis of congestive myocardiopathy was poor in
AIDS
patients and undetermined in stage IV non-
AIDS
patients. Echocardiography is capable of detecting these lesions, and its use may contribute to a better care of these patients.
...
PMID:[Echocardiographic abnormalities in the stage IV of HIV infection]. 851 Nov 25
Many different infections with protozoan and helminthic parasites are common global health problems. Several protozoa are responsible for opportunistic infections in patients with
AIDS
. The newly developed drug, albendazole, has a strong activity against many nematode and cestode parasites. In the case of echinococcosis, it reduces the viability of protoscolices and cysts. Its hepatic metabolite, albendazole sulfoxide, is active against the larval cestodes. In the case of neurocysticercosis, administration of either the standard treatment, praziquantel, or the newly developed drug, albendazole, reduces or eliminates tapeworm cysts in 80-90% of patients. Patients with numerous cysts and those in whom neurologic symptoms or intracranial
hypertension
develops after therapy against cysticerci should receive adjunctive therapy with dexamethasone. Mass chemotherapy with single doses of albendazole or the older drug, mebendazole, is feasible for school-age children to treat the soil-transmitted helminthiases (ascariasis, hook-worm infection, and trichuriasis). The newly developed drug, ivermectin, is more effective against chronic strongyloidiasis than albendazole. It has been used most extensively against river blindness. It greatly reduces the number of microfilariae in the skin and eyes but has no effect on sclerosing keratitis or chorioretinitis. Both drugs are available in the US on a compassionate-use basis from their manufacturers. Field trials show that ivermectin is also effective against lymphatic filariasis and Mansonella ozzardi. Praziquantel is effective against many trematode and cestode infections. It is the drug of choice for schistosomiasis. Albendazole was effective against giardiasis in children in Bangladesh but ineffective in adult travelers returning from tropical areas. It appears to effect symptomatic improvement of intestinal microsporidial infections in patients with
AIDS
. The newly developed drug, fumagillin, can ameliorate ocular microsporidiosis. The newly developed drug, paromycin, treats cryptosporidiosis. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole treats cyclosporiasis and isosporiasis.
...
PMID:Antiparasitic drugs. 860 86
Cerebral infarction before the age of 45 years accounts for 4-6% of all strokes. The etiology remains unexplained in a significant proportion of patients even after extensive investigations. The reported risk factors of this age group are cardiopathies,
hypertension
, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, reduction of anticoagulant proteins, hypercoagulable states, antiphospholipid antibodies primary syndrome, antiphospholipid antibodies secondary syndrome, some hemoglobinopathies, hyperviscosity syndromes, vasculitis, collagen vascular diseases, fibromuscular dysplasia, arterial dissections, migraine, myopathy encephalopathy lactic acidosis stroke like episodes, homocystinuria, familial amyloid angiopathy, microangiopathy with retinopathy encephalopathy and deafness, systemic lupus erythematosus, use of cocaine, traumas or manipulations of neck,
AIDS
. From 1/1/94 to 04/30/95 we observed 19 patients with cerebral infarctions and 9 patients with transitory ischemic attacks in young people. The aim of our study was to apply a diagnostic protocol by sequential tests of first level and second level. According to this protocol we found that the more common risk factors were ischemic cardiopathy,
hypertension
, smoking and hypercholesterolemia. Moreover we observed other independent risk factors, although less frequent, like the antiphospholipid antibodies, neurolupus,
AIDS
, deficit of protein S.
...
PMID:[The application of a new diagnostic protocol for stroke in the young]. 876 46
Our purpose in conducting this descriptive study was to assess the health-related concerns and experiences of a sample of employed perimenopausal women in Alexandria, Egypt. In addition, we explored their help-seeking behavior and their perception of symptoms. We interviewed two hundred working women ages 40-60 years, 42% of whom were nurses, using a semistructured interview form as well as Koos's list of symptoms. The commonly mentioned concerns, in order of frequency, were chronic headaches, chronic fatigue, transportation and phone communication problems, financial problems, job dissatisfaction, backaches,
hypertension
, kidney disease and gall bladder disease, gastritis/indigestion, menstrual disturbances, arthritis,
AIDS
, and hepatitis B. With respect to the problems experienced by the women in the past 6 months, there was a high self-reported prevalence of headaches, fatigue, transportation and communication problems, backaches, job dissatisfaction, dissatisfaction with health insurance, financial problems, menstrual disturbances, gastritis/indigestion, gall bladder disease, anxiety, disturbed sleep, and
hypertension
. Women attempted to manage their problems mainly by taking over-the-counter drugs and self-prescribing (75.5%), doing nothing or using traditional remedies (56.5%), and going to a doctor or health insurance office (40%). Symptoms perceived by the majority of the women as not needing medical attention included loss of appetite, persistent backache, bleeding gums, chronic fatigue, persistent headaches, and loss of weight. The influence of education and occupation on women's perceptions and practices is discussed.
...
PMID:Health-related concerns and experiences of employed perimenopausal women in Alexandria, Egypt. 885 19
We assessed the clinical characteristics of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients presenting to the Mulago Hospital Diabetic Clinic for the first time between 1 January 1993 and 10 August 1994. There were 252 patients: 117 men and 135 women. Mean age at onset of diabetes was 45 years (range 2-87 years) and peak incidence was at 40-49 years. Body mass index (BMI) was available in only 71 patients, of whom 53.5% (33.8% female, 19.7% male) were overweight (BMI > 25 in women, in > 27 men) and 11.3% (8.5% men, 2.8% women) were underweight (BMI < 20). Obesity was more marked in young women. Almost all patients presented with the classical symptoms of diabetes, and the majority were severely hyperglycaemic. A family history of diabetes was identified in 16%. Concurrent illnesses at diagnosis of diabetes were unusual. Sepsis was commonest (11.9%), followed by malaria (7.8%), tuberculosis (1.2%),
AIDS
(1.2%) and pancreatitis (0.8%). Peripheral neuropathy was present in 46.4% of patients,
hypertension
(BP > 150/100) in 27.3%, impotence in 22.2% of the men, proteinuria in 17.1%, ischaemic heart disease in 4.8%, foot ulcers in 4.0% and cataracts in 3.2%. Insulin was the most commonly prescribed treatment (52.8%); 31% of patients received oral hypoglycaemic agents, only 15.1% were managed on diet only, and 1.2% opted for herbal medicine.
...
PMID:The presentation of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients in Uganda. 891 47
In China, health care delivery follows a three-tiered structure set up in the 1950s for rural and urban areas. In 1990, China set baseline criteria for primary health care in rural areas which is largely funded by a reestablished rural cooperative medical care financing system. Financing reform efforts in urban areas are using a model through which contributions are collected from salaries and from local governments and other public organizations. The overall incidence of infectious diseases is more than 500/100,000 people, but associated mortality has declined. Diseases covered by the Expanded Programme of Immunology have been controlled, but China is at high risk for viral hepatitis (epidemics of hepatitis A infections occurred in 1988), and incidence of tuberculosis has increased. In addition, the HIV/
AIDS
epidemic is spreading rapidly with an estimated 50,000-100,000 infected. Parasitic diseases are also widespread, and causes of death seen in developed countries (
hypertension
, stroke, coronary health disease, cancer, and diabetes) are increasing. With 510 million people living in iodine-deficient areas, iodine deficiency diseases have disabled an estimated 8 million people. China has promised to eradicate iodine-deficiency by the year 2000. The disabling Kaschin-Beck disease is also endemic in China. Occupational diseases threaten nearly 20 million Chinese people, and the prevalence of smoking and alcohol abuse is increasing, especially among young people. By the year 2000, 10% of the population will be older than 60, and 30% of this group will have health problems requiring care. The health care system is, thus, undergoing rapid change to meet its new challenges.
...
PMID:Health care delivery system and major health issues in China. 898 46
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