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

A retrospective analysis of the medical records of 234 children with renal tumors managed over a 25-year period at the Children's Memorial Medical Center was undertaken to evaluate long-term morbidity and mortality. There was a significant increase in survival over the years of the study. The 5-year survival for patients treated during the period 1985 to 1989 was 94% versus 68% for the period 1965 to 1969. Thirty-three children have died, 15 with known disease progression. Long-term morbidity included scoliosis (39), cardiorespiratory insufficiency (13), hypertension (7), renal insufficiency (7), small bowel obstruction (10), chest wall deformity (3), amenorrhea (1), leg length discrepancy (1), and 1 patient with an esophageal stricture. One patient with cardiomyopathy secondary to adriamycin has recently undergone cardiac transplantation. Five patients with renal insufficiency have required dialysis. Of these five, one patient has had two renal transplants. The presence of distant metastases and positive hilar or regional lymph nodes were the only findings at operation that were associated with an increased mortality (P = .005). There was a significantly increased mortality in those children operated on by general surgeons or urologists at other hospitals (11/43) versus those operated upon at our hospital (22/191) (P = .033). There was no statistical difference in the staging or histology among these children. We feel that the careful and systematic approach of a radical nephrectomy assures accurate staging of the tumor removing gross and microscopic disease in the abdomen.
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PMID:A 25-year experience with renal tumors of childhood. 826

Cyclofem, a once-a-month injectable hormone contraceptive, contains medroxyprogesterone acetate, 25 mg and estradiol cypionate, 5 mg. Indonesia is one of the countries participating in an introductory trial in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO) under the Human Reproduction Program (HRP). The main purpose of the trial is to assess, through a limited cohort of users, both problems and user needs in the program situation with regard to safety, efficacy, acceptability, and causes of discontinuation in the Indonesian context. Data based on the trial (March 1990-February 1992) indicate that the Cyclofem women complained of dizziness, nausea, bleeding problems, migraine, vomiting, amenorrhea, allergies and hypertension during the use of Cyclofem. However, it was found that the complaint rates decreased with increased duration of use. The life table continuation rates indicate that about 80% and 66% continued use at the end of 6 months and 12 months, respectively. Personal reasons account for the highest proportion of discontinuation, followed by desire for pregnancy and lost-to-follow-up.
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PMID:Introductory trial of the once-a-month injectable contraceptive, Cyclofem, in Indonesia. 834 52

In order to know if abnormalities of calcium metabolism may be involved in the pathophysiology of pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), as it has been incriminated in essential hypertension, we measured plasma and urinary calcium and phosphate as well as plasma PTH and free calcitriol index (ratio of total calcitriol on the D binding protein) in normotensive pregnant women (n = 25), in women with PIH after the same duration of amenorrhea (> 28 wk, n = 21:preeclampsia and 20 transient hypertensions), and in age-matched nonpregnant women (n = 15). The severity of PIH was mild since blood uric acid was not increased and plasma volume, measured with the Evans blue technique, was found only moderately decreased (-10.5 +/- 3.1% of normal value). The results show that normotensive pregnant women showed the expected increase of the vitamin D parameters in comparison to nonpregnant controls. Hypertensive pregnant women were not different from the normotensive ones regarding plasma corrected calcium and phosphate and urinary excretion of calcium and phosphate, but had higher plasma PTH (13 +/- 1 v 8.8 +/- 1.6 pg/mL) and lower total and free calcitriol index (86 +/- 7 v 110 +/- 6 pg/mL and 1.72 +/- 0.10 v 2.25 +/- 0.13 x 10(-5)). Correlative studies showed PIH having a negative correlation between blood pressure and plasma corrected calcium (r = -0.43, P < .05), which is in agreement with epidemiological studies of essential hypertension. In conclusion, disturbances of calcium regulating hormones do exist in transient forms of pregnancy-induced hypertension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Calcium metabolism, plasma parathyroid hormone, and calcitriol in transient hypertension of pregnancy. 834 36

Over the last couple of decades a reduction of estrogen by at least 80% in combined oral contraceptives (OCs) and much research have resulted in effective and safe contraception. We still do not know longterm effects of OCs however. OCs may protect against endometrial and ovarian cancer. A link between current OC use and liver cancer exists in areas where liver cancer is rare. An association between OC use and cervical cancer disappears when researchers control for sexual activity and barrier method use. Some research shows OC use increases the risk of breast cancer, while other research does not. There does appear to be an increased risk of breast cancer developing in women younger than 46 years of age and who have used OCs for at least 10 years. Women who have a preexisting cardiovascular condition and/or smoke should not use OCs. OC progestogens may impair glucose metabolism in healthy women, but just for 6 months. Women with diabetes mellitus can use OCs, but may need to increase insulin intake. OCs can cause hypertension in 4-5% of healthy women and worsen hypertension in about 9-16% of hypertensive women. Progestogen-only OCs have fewer systemic side effects than combined OCs, but often cause menstrual changes. Their long term effects are not yet known. Injectables containing a progestogen cause few, if any, adverse effects. The subdermal implant, Norplant, tends to cause menstrual disturbances, but is safe and effective. Progestogen - only vaginal rings are as effective as progestogen-only OCs, but menstrual irregularities are common. Failure rates for combined vaginal rings match those of combined OCs. Long-term effects of vaginal rings are not known. Postcoital contraception does not cause serious side effects, but may cause vomiting and menstrual irregularities. A levonorgestrel-releasing IUD is effective and reduces menstrual blood loss, sometimes resulting in amenorrhea. Hormonal injections in men are unlikely in the near future.
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PMID:Hormonal contraception. 829 64

This review on hypertension in pregnancy focuses mainly on the pathophysiology and prevention of pregnancy induced hypertension which, when associated with proteinuria, is usually called preeclampsia. Rather than a genuine hypertensive disease, preeclampsia is mainly a systemic endothelial disease causing activation of platelets and diffuse ischemic disorders whose most obvious clinical manifestations involve the kidney (hence the proteinuria, edema and hyperuricemia), the liver (hence the hemolytic elevated liver enzymes and low platelets, or HELLP syndrome), and the brain (hence eclamptic convulsions). Hypertension is explained by increased vascular reactivity rather than by an imbalance between vasoconstrictive and vasodilating circulating hormones. This increased reactivity is due to endothelial dysfunction with imbalance between prostacyclin and thromboxane A2 and possibly dysfunction of NO and endothelin synthesis. The aggressive substances for endothelium are thought to be of placentar origin and the cause of their release is explained by placentar ischemia related to a defect of trophoblastic invasion of the spiral arteries. The etiology of this latter defect is unknown but involves immunologic mechanisms with genetic predisposition. The only effective treatment for PIH is extraction of the baby with the whole placenta. The decision for extraction is often a very delicate obstetric problem. Antihypertensive drugs are mainly indicated in severe hypertension (> 160-100 mm Hg), with the aim of preventing cerebral hemorrhage in the mother, but have not been shown to improve fetal morbidity or mortality. Eclamptic seizures can be prevented and treated more effectively with magnesium sulfate than with diazepam or phenytoin. Prevention of preeclampsia remains the main challenge. Whereas antihypertensive drugs are ineffective, calcium supplementation and low dose aspirin have proven effective but mainly in selected populations with a relatively high incidence of preeclampsia (> 8-10%). In multiparas the selection of such a high risk population is relatively easy when at least 2 (or 1?) previous pregnancies were complicated with early preeclampsia and/or intrauterine growth retardation. In nulliparas the selection of the high-risk population is still a subject of research. The 2 most promising criteria are abnormal Doppler velocimetry of the uterine arteries at around 20 weeks of amenorrhea, and abnormally high plasma levels of beta HCG at 17 weeks of amenorrhea.
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PMID:[Hypertension and pregnancy. Diagnosis, physiopathology and treatment]. 853 76

The aim of this study was to compare contraceptive reliability, cycle control and tolerance of an oral contraceptive containing 20 micrograms ethinylestradiol and 75 micrograms gestodene, with a reference preparation containing the same dose of estrogen combined with 150 micrograms desogestrel. This article presents interim data from centers in France and Austria, involving a total of 479 women and 4,991 cycles. Contraceptive reliability was good with both preparations. Two pregnancies occurred in the gestodene group, but neither were due to method failure. In the desogestrel group there were also two pregnancies, of which one was due to method failure. With respect to cycle control, there is a trend towards a lower incidence of intermenstrual bleeding in the gestodene group. The incidence of spotting (scanty bleeding) during the important first three cycles was 3.5% lower in the gestodene group, and over the first six cycles, it was 7.6% lower. Amenorrhea was similar in both groups, but the incidence of dysmenorrhea was significantly lower in the gestodene group (p=0.001). Adverse events were similar in both groups, with headache, breast tension and nausea the most frequently reported symptoms. Body weight remained relatively constant during treatment in both groups, and no hypertension was reported for any woman during the course of the study. In each treatment group, 19 women discontinued because of adverse events. It is concluded that both preparation are reliable and well tolerated oral contraceptives are reliable and well tolerated oral contraceptives; however, there is a more favourable effect on dysmenorrhea by the gestodene formulation.
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PMID:A twelve-month comparative clinical investigation of two low-dose oral contraceptives containing 20 micrograms ethinylestradiol/75 micrograms gestodene and 20 micrograms ethinylestradiol/150 micrograms desogestrel, with respect to efficacy, cycle control and tolerance. 860 81

The objective of the present study was to investigate whether increased beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin (beta HCG) plasma concentrations in an unselected population of nulliparas could predict the occurrence of complicated pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH). The design was that of a prospective population study. It was conducted at the obstetric departments of Amiens University Hospital and Creil General Hospital on 434 consecutive nulliparas with singleton pregnancies after natural fertilization who accepted the systematic offer of trisomy 21 screening but for whom this disorder was finally estimated. Measurement of plasma concentration of beta HCG (ELISA method) was carried out between 14 and 20 weeks (mean: 17 weeks) of amenorrhea, and measurement of blood pressure and proteinuria (> 300 mg/24 h or Albustix +2) during the first, second and third term and 2-3 months after the delivery, as well as measurement of birth weight for determination of small for gestational age (SGA) babies, 37 women developed PIH, 10 without other complication, 16 with proteinuria (5 of which with SGA babies) and 11 with SGA babies. Furthermore 2 patients presented abruptio placentae without PIH. 395 women did not develop PIH including 389 normotensive women and 6 chronic hypertensive patients without superimposed toxemia. Only 1 was diabetic. None had chronic renal disease. Mean (+/- SD) levels of beta HCG were higher in PIH than in controls: 46,805 +/- 19,068 versus 23,479 +/- 13,463 IU. A pathologic threshold was chosen as the mean for the whole population + 1 SD: 25,613 + 15,479 = 41,082 IU. Elevated levels (above this value) were significantly associated with isolated PIH or PIH complicated with proteinuria and/or with SGA babies. The positive predictive value of this criterion was respectively 11, 15 and 12% for each of these complications. The relative risk (and 95% confidence limit) of women with elevated beta HCG for each of these complications was 20 (6-79), 11 (4-43) and 22 (7-93). Elevated plasma beta HCG found around 17 weeks of amenorrhea predicts PIH complicated with either proteinuria or SGA babies with a positive predictive value comparable to that of the best and earliest test proposed up to now to select nulliparas at high risk of preeclampsia, namely the abnormalities of the Doppler waveforms of the uterine arteries. Since this test is simpler to perform, it represents the most convenient method to screen a population of nulliparas for evaluation of the benefits of low-dose aspirin.
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PMID:Validity in nulliparas of increased beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin at mid-term for predicting pregnancy-induced hypertension complicated with proteinuria and intrauterine growth retardation. 873 Apr 21

The combination of hypertension, hypokaliemia, and male pseudohermaphroditism or amenorrhea must prompt a search for a rare adrenal enzymatic defect, 17 alpha-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase deficiency. This is a report of the observation of a male patient in whom this rare deficit was diagnosed in adulthood on the basis of lifelong ambiguous external genitalia, hypogonadism, severe hypertension, bilateral adrenal hyperplasia, and biological markers evoking an excess of mineralocorticoids without hyperaldosteronism.
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PMID:Case report: 17 alpha-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase deficiency: a rare cause of endocrine hypertension. 878 79

Benign endocranial hypertension (BEH) is defined as a syndrome the clinical symptomatology of which includes elevated intracranial pressure without signs of focal injury of the brain. There were 55 BEH patients (52 female and 3 male patients). Changes of endocrine status were found to prevail among etiological factors, viz. pregnancy, obesity, galactorrhea-amenorrhea, hypothyrosis, ingestion of oral contraceptives. All the patients showed signs of intracranial hypertension (headache, vomit, conjested optical disks). The spinal fluid pressure was elevated, with the cellular and protein composition being normal. The condition was marked by benign course and favourable outcome.
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PMID:[The causes and clinical course of benign intracranial hypertension]. 881 35

The aim of this study was to analyze efficacy, tolerance, and adverse events of reversible contraceptives in women with cardiac disease. The authors studied prospectively, during a period of 24-39 (mean = 29) months, 89 women with heart disease of mean age 25.6 (16-42) years. Rheumatic heart disease was present in 73 cases (82%), congenital heart disease in 11 (11%), coronary artery disease in 2 (2%), and cardiomyopathy in 3 (3%). The patients were divided into three groups: GCO--35 patients taking combined oral contraceptives (30 mcg ethinyl estradiol and 75 mg gestodene); GIT--27 patients using injectable progestagens (depot medroxyprogesterone acetate); and GUID--27 patients with IUDs. In the GCO group were found 4 cases (11.4%) of arterial hypertension, 1 (2.8%) of a transient cerebral ischemic attack, 3 (8.5%) of spotting, 1 (2.8%) of amenorrhea, and 1 (2.8%) of pregnancy. Interruption of this method occurred in 4 cases (11.4%): 2 due to hypertension, 1 due to pregnancy, and 1 due to amenorrhea. In the GIT group there were 2 cases (7.4%) of arterial hypertension, 18 (66.6%) of amenorrhea, and 3 (11.1%) of spotting. Interruption of use occurred in 5 cases (18.5%): 2 due to amenorrhea, 2 due to weight gain, and 1 due to headache. In the GUID group there was 1 case (3.7%) of infection, 1 (3.7%) of pregnancy, and 1 (3.7%) of spontaneous expulsion of the IUD. Interruption of use took place in 3 cases (11.1%): 1 due to infection, 1 due to pregnancy, and 1 due to expulsion. The comparison between the groups demonstrated a difference in the incidence of amenorrhea (p 0.005) and method discontinuation (p 0.025). Use of reversible contraceptives in women with heart disease was associated with an acceptable cardiovascular risk. Efficacy and side effects of the methods were comparable in the groups; however, intolerance was observed more in the GIT group. (author's modified)
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PMID:[Contraceptive use in women with heart disease]. 893 85


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