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

Atrial natriuretic hormone is involved in the control of blood pressure and water-electrolyte balance. In order to assess the relationship between atrial natriuretic hormone and hypertension in acromegaly, 34 subjects were studied, 18 with acromegaly (10 normotensive and 8 hypertensive) and 16 healthy controls. Plasma atrial natriuretic hormone levels, as well as plasma renin activity, aldosterone and growth hormone levels were measured in basal conditions in all subjects. Additionally, plasma renin activity and aldosterone levels were determined after standard stimulation. In hypertensive acromegalic patients, atrial natriuretic hormone plasma concentrations (39.8 +/- 3.5 ng/l) were significantly higher than in patients without hypertension (27.9 +/- 4.1 ng/l), and in controls (28.6 +/- 1.3 ng/l) (p less than 0.01 in both comparisons). Stimulated plasma renin activity values were decreased in hypertensive acromegalic patients when compared with those in normotensive patients (1.14 +/- 0.29 vs 4.03 +/- 0.66 micrograms.l-1.h-1, p less than 0.01). In acromegaly, atrial natriuretic hormone levels correlated with mean arterial pressure (r = 0.58, p = 0.01). These results suggest that atrial natriuretic hormone plasma levels are slightly increased in patients with acromegaly and hypertension.
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PMID:Plasma concentrations of atrial natriuretic hormone in acromegaly: relationship to hypertension. 183 35

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring can determine the average blood pressure level and the short- and long-term blood pressure variability (circadian rhythm). The circadian blood pressure rhythm appears to be mediated mainly by the circadian rhythm of the sympathetic tone which is linked to changes in physical and mental activity, e.g. the waking-sleeping cycle. A statistically significant circadian blood pressure rhythm was observed in approximately 80% of mild to moderate essential hypertensive patients as well as in normal subjects. However, in patients with Cushing's syndrome, under glucocorticoid treatment, or with hyperthyroidism, central and/or peripheral autonomic dysfunction (Shy-Drager syndrome, spinal cord injury, brainstem lesions, diabetic neuropathy, uremic neuropathy, etc), chronic renal failure, eclampsia, malignant hypertension, sleep apnea syndrome or systemic atherosclerosis, the normal circadian blood pressure rhythm appears to be eliminated or reversed, while in those with primary aldosteronism, renovascular hypertension, pheochromocytoma without paroxysmal hypertension, diabetes insipidus, acromegaly, hyperparathyroidism or hyperprolactinemia, the nocturnal blood pressure fall has been observed as in normal subjects. The alteration in the circadian blood pressure rhythm was observed with different pathophysiological conditions, although no specific pattern was observed for any condition. A disturbance in any part of the hierarchy of factors that regulate the circadian rhythm of sympathetic neural tone seems to disturb the circadian blood pressure rhythm. We conclude that ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is not critically important in the diagnosis of secondary hypertension although it does help in screening for secondary hypertension.
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PMID:Does ambulatory blood pressure monitoring improve the diagnosis of secondary hypertension? 208 1

The aim of our study is to detect morphological and functional aspects of left ventricle with noninvasive M-B-Mode echocardiography in acromegalic patients (pz) with and without high blood pressure. We studied 19 acromegalic pz (group A) and 19 normal pz (group N). All subjects were evaluated for the following parameters: left ventricular mass index (MI); end diastolic volume index (EDVI); end systolic volume index (ESVI); ejection fraction (EF); end systolic stress (ESS). Group A vs group N shows an increase of cardiac mass (p less than 0.01), of EDVI (p less than 0.05) and of ESS (p less than 0.05). We found the asymmetrical septal hypertrophy, considered from other Authors one of the more evident markers of acromegaly, in only one patient. In conclusion, the acromegalic pz show an increase of cardiac mass and preload and a reduced capacity of adaptation to afterload variation independently of blood pressure values and of the duration of disease, even if they have normal indexes of global systolic function.
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PMID:[Morphologic and functional evaluation of the left ventricle in patients with acromegaly. An echocardiographic study]. 214 Apr 34

Cardiac disease is common in acromegaly. Several mechanisms have been implicated: hypertension, coronary artery disease, valvular heart disease, endocrinopathies including "acromegalic cardiomyopathy". Fifteen consecutive patients with acromegaly, aged 48 +/- 13 years and treated for 4 +/- 5 years, underwent Doppler echocardiography. The patients had no cardiovascular symptoms: 6 had hypertension for 10 +/- 7 years and were compared with a group of 10 control subjects of the same age (48 +/- 17 years). The myocardial mass index (MMI) was higher in acromegaly (110 +/- 32 vs 82 +/- 12 g/m2, p = 0.02), left ventricular enddiastolic dimensions where comparable (48 +/- 7 vs 48 +/- 5 mm, NS) fractional shortening was slightly greater (0.37 +/- 0.04 vs 0.34 +/- 0.04, p = 0.07) as was velocity of shortening (NS) and the ratio of systolic time intervals (NS). The mitral EF slope was decreased (80 +/- 21 vs 101 +/- 30 ms; p less than 0.02); the ratio of the amplitudes of the E and A waves was a little decreased and the isovolumic relaxation phase was increased (92 +/- 13 vs 69 +/- 16 ms; p less than 0.01). Hypertensives (N = 6) had higher MMI (133 +/- 27 vs 94 +/- 24 g/m2, p = 0.02). Normotensive patients had larger isovolumic relaxation periods than control subjects (90 +/- 11 vs 69 +/- 16 ms, p less than 0.05). These results show that in the infraclinical phase, the heart in acromegaly is hypertrophied, not dilated. Hypertension plays a significant role in the development of this hypertrophy. Left ventricular systolic function is normal but diastolic function is impaired.
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PMID:[Role of arterial hypertension in the cardiac involvement of acromegaly]. 214 35

The prevalence of arterial hypertension was evaluated in a retrospective study of 158 patients with acromegaly, and results were compared to control populations, namely, the Munich Blood Pressure Study (MBPS) and the Framingham Study. The prevalence of hypertension (defined according to WHO criteria) was significantly increased in female patients but not in men; hypertensive acromegalics were older and tended to have higher body weight compared to normotensive patients. Hypertension was not related to serum concentrations of growth hormone. After successful treatment of acromegaly, growth hormone levels and systolic and diastolic blood pressure fell only in female hypertensive acromegalics; this did not occur in normotensives. The rise in plasma renin activity in response to upright posture was diminished in 57.9% of acromegalic patients. The prevalence of low-renin hypertension in our group of patients was 31.6%, which is similar to figures reported for unselected non-acromegalic subjects with essential hypertension. Orthostatic renin activity was weakly and inversely related (r = -0.3) to blood pressure. No relationship between plasma aldosterone concentration and blood pressure could be detected; however, in acromegalic women, aldosterone rose higher after ambulation than in men. In conclusion, hypertension is a common problem in acromegaly and at least in part related to similar risk factors in control populations. The association with abnormalities of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system is difficult to interpret and does not offer an explanation for the slight increase in the prevalence of hypertension.
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PMID:Acromegaly and hypertension: prevalence and relationship to the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. 219 80

Measurement of exchangeable sodium by isotope dilution is a relatively simple, reliable method for the determination of body sodium contents, which can be used in the clinical practice without significant health hazard to the patient. When computed to body surface area, the values for exchangeable sodium can be compared in patients of different body build. Exchangeable sodium may be variably increased in different clinical conditions associated with hypertension, thus increased sodium contents of the body is of major importance in the pathogenesis of hypertension caused by all forms of mineralocorticoid excess, and in the majority of patients with chronic renal insufficiency. In several endocrine disorders, e. g., acromegaly, hypothyroidism, increased sodium space does not play any significant part in the pathogenesis of hypertension. In diabetes mellitus, exchangeable sodium may be increased already prior to the development of hypertension, however it is still a matter of debate whether this abnormality is involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension in these patients. It seems now beyond any doubt that body sodium is normal in patients with essential hypertension, including those with the low renin form of the disease; nevertheless, some data indicate that blood pressure may be volume dependent in elderly patients with essential hypertension.
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PMID:[The role of exchangeable sodium content of the body in cases of hypertension of various etiology]. 219 11

Acromegalic patients suffer from a number of cardiovascular, metabolic, and rheumatologic problems, and they may also have an increased incidence of malignancy. We reviewed the literature concerning the reversibility of acromegalic complications. Hypertension, myocardial hypertrophy, left ventricular dysfunction and some rheumatologic abnormalities often continue despite successful treatment of the acromegaly. In contrast, glucose intolerance, soft tissue changes, and carpal tunnel syndrome usually resolve when the acromegaly is cured. Studies of the incidence and mortality of cancer in acromegaly are conflicting, but several suggest an increased incidence of colorectal cancer.
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PMID:Sequelae to acromegaly: reversibility with treatment of the primary disease. 219 62

The pathogenesis of the hypertension associated with Cushing's syndrome and with acromegaly is poorly understood. We have investigated the possible roles of sodium retention, activation of the renin-angiotensin system and increased sympathetic nervous system activity in untreated patients. In 11 patients with Cushing's disease, seven of whom were hypertensive, total exchangeable sodium was normal despite increased levels of the mineralocorticoid hormones, 11-deoxy-corticosterone and corticosterone. The renin-angiotensin system was also normal. Cardiac sensitivity to the beta-receptor agonist isoprenaline was increased, but this was not due to an increase in beta-adrenoceptor density. Hypertension in Cushing's disease is neither sodium-dependent nor angiotensin II-mediated, but increased cardiac sensitivity to catecholamines, by increasing cardiac output, may contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension. In nine patients with acromegaly (three of whom were hypertensive) total exchangeable sodium was elevated. Although no correlation between blood pressure and exchangeable sodium was found, hypertension in acromegaly is probably sodium dependent. No evidence was found for a pathogenetic role for either the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone or the sympathetic nervous system.
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PMID:Studies on the pathogenesis of hypertension in Cushing's disease and acromegaly. 221 88

Endogenous factors cross-reacting with antidigoxin antibodies have been found in several tissues and body fluids of animals and humans, using commercially available digoxin radioimmunoassay or enzyme immunoassay methods. The chemical characteristics of these endogenous factors are, at present, unknown, although it has been suggested that they could be substances with low molecular weight. Experimental studies and theoretical considerations indicate that endogenous digitalis-like factors (DDLFs), in addition to the ability to react with antibodies, might also bind to the specific cellular receptor of the cardiac glycosides and thus inhibit the membrane Na+/K(+)-ATPase (sodium pump). Therefore, EDLF can be an endogenous modulator of the membrane sodium-potassium pump and several authors have suggested that EDLF could play a role in the regulation of fluids and electrolytes, muscular tone of myocardial and also in the pathogenesis of arterial hypertension. In this review, the authors discuss the hypothesis that, in metabolic diseases such as diabetes mellitus, obesity and acromegaly, the sodium retention and volume expansion, possibly due to exaggerated sodium intake, and/or exogenously induced peripheral hyperinsulinemia and high levels of growth hormone, could trigger a sustained release of EDLF, which in turn increases the blood pressure.
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PMID:Is the endogenous digitalis-like factor the link between hypertension and metabolic disorders as diabetes mellitus, obesity and acromegaly? 222 23

Modern, views are presented on the pathogenesis of arterial hypertension in certain diseases of endocrine glands. In patients with phaeochromocytoma, virilizing tumours, acromegaly, in Cushing's disease, and in Conn's syndrome at the present state of knowledge it is not possible to formulate unequivocal conclusions concerning the effects of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system on the mechanism of arterial hypertension development in these endocrinopathies.
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PMID:[The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (RAA) system in endocrine diseases]. 225 31


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