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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A man of 38 years of age was found to have a type I endocrine polyadenomatosis in 1969. He was operated upon for removal of tumor of the islets of Langerhans with lymph gland metastases, and the head of the pancreas was removed. This was followed at a later date by ablation of two parathyroid adenomas. A clinically silent
adenoma
of the left adrenal was not removed and a silent and enclosed pituitary tumore was discovered. There were no clinical or hormonal signs of progression of the pancreatic tumor ten years later, but
hypertension
and behavioural disorders had developed. Catecholamine levels were normal. Selective blood aldosterone levels were just within significant values. A massive increase in prolactin secretion (more than 100 times the normal) was noted. This could be reduced by bromocriptine, and the possible role of prolactin in the behavioural disorders present is discussed.
...
PMID:[Prolactin adenoma and Wermer's syndrome. A 10-year follow-up of a case with two parathyroid tumors, as adrenal adenoma, and a malignant pancreatic tumor (author's transl)]. 4 60
11 patients with primary aldosteronism have been encountered over 11 years and submitted to surgery in a provincial teaching hospital serving a population of 3 million. Contrary to classical teaching, the
hypertension
has usually been very severe. Precise identification of the site of the lesion preoperatively has been possible by the measurement of adrenal-vein aldosterone levels, and results of surgery have been excellent. The iodocholesterol adrenal scan also correctly identified the site of the
adenoma
in 5 out of 7 patients in which it was used. Adrenal venography was of little value except in siting catheters.
...
PMID:Severe hypertension in primary aldosteronism and good response to surgery. 8 65
In forty patients suspected clinically of having an endocrine cause for
hypertension
, an adrenal cortical
adenoma
was confirmed histologically in five. Hyperaldosteronism with enlarged or normal adrenals was demonstrated in three patients. The diagnosis in a further eight patients with an abnormal hormone pattern and/or an abnormal venogram has not yet been confirmed. Adrenal glands show considerable variation in their size, shape and localisation on venography.
...
PMID:[Supra-renal venography in patients with suspected endocrine hypertension (author's transl)]. 13 Oct 84
The relationship of plasma aldosterone concentration to its identified stimuli was examined in three patients with
hypertension
, hyperaldosteronism, and idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia. Four patients with hyperaldosteronism due to adrenal adenomas served as controls. Plasma aldosterone, cortisol, sodium, and potassium concentrations and renin activity were measured in blood samples taken at 20 minute intervals from 2 A.M. to 8 A.M. during recumbency and sleep. The tests were performed on all patients following a regular sodium diet both before and after short-term treatment with dexamethasone. Two of the three subjects with adrenal hyperplasia were re-examined after 2 weeks of dexamethasone therapy. All four control patients with adenomas had episodic increases of plasma aldosterone which were significantly correlated with those of plasma cortisol (r = +0.48 to +0.90). This confirms the previously reported relationship between aldosterone and ACTH in such patients. Two patients with idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia had a similar secretion pattern and a highly significant correlation of the two hormones (r = +0.76 and +0.77); one did not (r = 0.13). Short-term dexamethasone pretreatment attenuated the episodic release pattern and partially suppressed the mean plasma concentrations of aldosterone in the four patients with an
adenoma
and in the two patients with idiopathic hyperplasia whose plasma aldosterone and cortisol concentrations were positively correlated. There was no such effect in the third patient. The first two patients with idiopathic hyperplasia were subsequently retested following 2 weeks of dexamethasone treatment to determine if the episodic secretion pattern of plasma aldosterone would correlated with other stimuli following this period of ACTH suppression. One showed little change from the pattern observed after short-term glucocorticoid treatment. The second had a similarly blunted aldosterone response until ACTH secretion led to a resumption of episodic changes in plasma aldosteerone concentrations. These data indicate that ACTH frequently is the dominant stimulus of the episodic secretion of aldosterone in patients with either adrenal adenomas or hyperplasia. When ACTH is suppressed, the hypersecretion of aldosterone is presumably sustained by an intrinsic adrenal abnormality or by an as yet unidentified stimulus.
...
PMID:The role of ACTH in the episodic release of aldosterone in patients with idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia, hypertension, and hyperaldosteronism. 18 90
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system has been evaluated in 19 patients with Cushing's syndrome due to bilateral adrenal hyperplasia and in 2 patients with unilateral
adenoma
. In the first group urinary aldosterone was within the normal limits with a mean of 8.3 +/- 1.86 microgram/24 h. Aldosterone excretion did not change significantly after furosemide administration, ACTH infusion or dexamethasone. Upright PRA was suppressed in 9/16 patients with a mean of 4.9 +/- 1.85 ng/ml/3 h and showed only a slight response to furosemide. Dexamethasone alone did not produce any change. Both aldosterone and PRA were to some extent stimulated by an association of dexamethasone and furosemide. In the 2 patients with
adenoma
, aldosterone excretion was also normal, but PRA was very elevated. From our data it is concluded that in Cushing's syndrome due to bilateral hyperplasia, PRA and aldosterone excretion are partially suppressed. From our results on plasma deoxycorticosterone and corticosterone concentration it seems unlikely that these mineralocorticoids are the major cause of this phenomenon. However, it may not be excluded that other yet unidentified hormones could play some role in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
and renin suppression in Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Plasma renin activity and urinary aldosterone in Cushing's syndrome. 20 67
Primary hyperaldosteronism usually causes moderate
hypertension
. It is rare to note as in our two patients intermittent attacks of paroxysmal
hypertension
. The diagnosis of aldosteronism will be suspected on the finding of persistent hypokalemia with acidosis. It will be confirmed by laboratory examinations severe fall in plasma renin activity and rise in aldosterone in the adrenal veins. To determine the affected side, one may carry out adrenal phlebography which is a difficult technic, and/or a scan using iodine cholesterol which is benign and precise. Surgery with removal of the adenomatous hyperplasia in one case and of an
adenoma
in the other, gave one very good result.
...
PMID:[Primary hyperaldosteronism with paroxysmal arterial hypertension. Apropos of 2 operated cases]. 20 43
A case of adrenal cortical
adenoma
and arterial
hypertension
is reported. We emphasize interest of scintillation scanning with 131 I 19 iodo cholesterol, worth of routine examination when seeking for these tumors.
...
PMID:[Adrenal cortical adenoma and arterial hypertension. Adrenal vizualisation by scintillation with 131 I 19 iodo cholesterol (author's transl)]. 23 50
Fifty patients with
hypertension
, aldosterone excess, and low plasma renin concentration underwent adrenal surgery. There was a highly significant fall in mean systolic and diastolic pressures after the operation. The mean postoperative diastolic pressure fell to strictly normal levels, however, in only 19 out of 38 patients from whom an adrenocortical
adenoma
was removed and in only two out of 10 non-tumour patients. There was a significant correlation between the fall in blood pressure during spironolactone treatment and after adrenal surgery though levels were generally slightly lower during the former therapy. It is suggested that removal of an aldosterone-producing
adenoma
is the treatment of choice provided a good preoperative hypotensive response to spironolactone occurs, while the treatment of choice for non-tumour patients is often long-term spironolactone.
...
PMID:Results of adrenal surgery in patients with hypertension, aldosterone excess, and low plasma renin concentration. 23 68
A retrospective review of 500 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism seen from 1951 to 1975 was conducted; the effect of routine screening of calcium and phosphate levels (initiated in 1968) on the incidence and spectrum of the disease was analyzed. The majority of the patients (77%) were diagnosed in the eight-year period after routine biochemical screening was instituted. Comparing the group of patients diagnosed before the advent of biochemical screening and those diagnosed since screening was instituted, we found: (1) a small but significant increase in the number of asymptomatic patients diagnosed (from 2% to 12%); (2) no change in the incidence of related medical disorders, i.e., nephrocalcinosis and
hypertension
; (3) no change in the incidence of primary hyperplasia and
adenoma
; and (4) no change in the mean serum calcium level, the mean age at diagnosis, or the number or location of the involved parathyroid glands. Although routine calcium screening has identified significantly more cases of primary hyperparathyroidism, screening apparently does not enable diagnosis at an earlier stage.
...
PMID:Twenty-five year experience with primary hyperparathyroidism at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. 26 10
1. Noradrenaline and adrenaline in the adrenal vein of essential hypertensive patients are almost exclusively (99%) unconjugated or free. However only 17% of dopamine is free, the rest is conjugated. The further the site of sampling from the adrenal vein the closer come the free catecholamines to their normal peripheral venous proportion (noradrenaline + adrenaline 20%, dopamine less than 1% of total catecholamines). Deviations from these patterns help to detect the site and type of secretion of phaeochromocytoma. 2. Essential hypertensive patients have, compared with control subjects, higher conjugated plasma dopamine, less urinary free and conjugated dopamine with blunted urinary free dopamine and sodium responsiveness to frusemide. Conjugated noradrenaline + adrenaline, mean arterial pressure and age are positively interrelated. 3. Patients with primary aldosteronism have elevated plasma and urinary total dopamine. After removal of the
adenoma
urinary dopamine excretion decreases to normal. 4. Elevated conjugated dopamine appears to reflect a compensatory activation of the dopaminergic vasodilator pathway in
hypertension
, the total urinary dopamine excretion an intrinsic deficiency or compensatory increase of a dopamine-modulated natriuretic mechanism.
...
PMID:Free and conjugated catecholamines in human hypertension. 28 3
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