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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
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The risks of treating allograft rejection are primarily related to high-dose steroid therapy. To determine when the possible benefit of anti-rejection therapy might not justify the risks, we analysed 20 severe rejection (SAR) episodes for indices of reversibility. Prior renal function was similar in all patients. Ccr fell to 10 ml/min or less, but degree of renal dysfunction was not predictive of reversibility, nor were time since transplant, oliguro/anuria, proteinuria, or hypertension. The only consistent finding was that function began to improve in reversible rejection 3.8 +/- 1 days after beginning therapy. Our rejection treatment, based on this finding, is to use gram doses of IV prednisolone, up to three times in five to seven days. Among 41 patients with 45 grafts so treated, there was no fatality or gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Other complications (fistulae and/or infections) were related to total dose and frequency, to intensive therapy during severe renal dysfunction or to urinary leaks. Limitation of the period of high-dose steroid therapy was associated with reduced morbidity and mortality in renal allograft recipients.
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PMID:Minimising the risks of treating acute allograft rejection. 110 56

8 patients suffering from acute renal failure (shock kidney) with anuria extending over 3 to 5 days, were treated with L-thyroxine for 5 to 9 days (5-6 mug per kg body weight per day orally). Diuresis was restored within 34 to 46 hrs. Plasma levels of urea and creatinine decreased earlier and much more rapidly to normal than was to be expected from the natural history of the disease, indicating the prompt and extensive increase of glomerular filtration rate. Polyuria seemed less pronounced and also shortened as compared with the ordinary course of that form of sudden renal insufficiency. Obviously, the well-known diuretic response in the normal individual to high doses of thyroid hormones in not a factor in the induction of diuresis in acute renal failure. The tendency with L-thyroxine treatment to dilate the preglomerular arterial vessel is considered a consequence of the stimulation of sodium reabsorption in the upper nephron. High values of RPF and GFR, regularly observed in hyperthyroidism or after L-thyroxine administration, do not depend on any augmentation of cardiac output or on arterial hypertension, since such symptoms were missed in our patients and, in our view, such an interpretation is excluded by the very existence of the so-called autoregulation of the kidney which leaves RPF (and therefore GFR) independent of systemic blood pressure. The same intrarenal feed-back mechanism, normally adapting the glomerular blood supply to the resorptive capacity of the proximal-tubular epithelium (mediation via the juxta-glomerular apparatus), is responsible for the GFR- and RPF-raising effect of exogenous L-thyroxine in the intact kidney as well as in acute renal failure: both sodium reabsorption and sodium filtration are accelerated.--The special conditions under which L-thyroxine interferes with the pathogenetic process of acute renal failure, the latter being characterised by the critical insufficiency of tubular sodium reabsorption and therefore by preglomerular arterial constriction, is discussed on the basis of a new hypothesis concerning the thyrogenic nephrotropic effects in general.
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PMID:[Thyroxine treatment in acute renal failure (author's transl)]. 119 15

A 42 year woman presented with malignant hypertension, anuria and hemolytic anemia with schistocytosis. The diagnosis of thrombotic microangiopathy was confirmed by early renal biopsy. Purely symptomatic treatment (peritoneal dialysis and hypotensive drugs) was supplemented by administration of heparin and Dipyridamole. Gastro-intestinal bleeding prevented early thrombolytic therapy. Microangiopathic anemia rapidly disappeared but anuria persisted. Three months later a second renal biopsy showed persistence of active lesions and absence of irreversible parenchymal damage. Streptokinase treatment was then instituted and followed by a rapid return of urinary output. Hemodialysis was stopped and renal function continued to improve over the following months. Two years later the patient remains well despite persistence of hypertension difficult to control. Creatinine clearance is stable at 20 ml/min. This observation suggests that late thrombolytic therapy may be effective in patients with thrombotic microangiopathy when histological findings do not indicate extensive irreversible lesions.
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PMID:Late streptokinase therapy in thrombotic microangiopathy: a case study. 123 14

Sixteen cases of unilateral and 5 cases of bilateral traumatic renal artery occlusion caused by avulsion or thrombosis are presented. The injury typically follows automobile-pedestrian accidents to young male subjects. Associated extrarenal injuries are usual but non-pedicle renal injury is infrequent. Suspicion of the unilateral injury depends upon recognition of absence of visible excretion at urography. The clue to bilateral occlusion is anuria. Diagnosis is confirmed by urgent arteriography. Hematuria was absent in 24 per cent and the injury was missed at laparotomy in 29 per cent of the initial explorations. Renal function was salvaged by arterial reconstruction in 2 cases, 12 hours and 5 months after injury respectively. Hypertension developed in 50 per cent of the cases and was generally mild.
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PMID:Traumatic renal artery occlusion: 21 cases. 125 80

A traumatic transection of the upper descending thoracic aorta, undiagnosed, was complicated on the tenth day by an acute obstruction of the descending thoracic aorta. The upper body hypertension resulted in generalised convulsions and cardiac failure with pulmonary oedema. The lower body ischemia resulted in paraplegia, acute ischemia of the lower limbs, liver failure and anuria. An emergency revascularisation of the lower body was achieved by axillary-bifemoral bypass. The improvement of the clinical status allowed complete repair of the aortic transection two days after the extra-anatomic revascularisation. This case emphasizes the severity of the cases with impaired blood flow to the lower body and the benefit of the extra-anatomic bypass in pathology of the upper descending thoracic aorta when complete repair of the aortic transection is associated with an extremely high risk.
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PMID:[Traumatic rupture of the aortic isthmus revealed by acute obstruction of the descending thoracic aorta]. 128 8

Pregnancy-induced hypertension is a disorder of unknown etiology unique to pregnant women. Classic clinical manifestations include hypertension, proteinuria, and edema. Early recognition and proper management of this disease may serve to avoid serious maternal complications. Ultimate maternal treatment depends on delivery of the fetus and placenta. Advanced stages of this disease result in multi-organ system dysfunction that may be life-threatening to the mother and her fetus. Such maternal complications of PIH include severe hypertension, oliguria or anuria, HELLP syndrome, eclamptic seizures, liver rupture, pulmonary edema, cerebral edema, and abruptio placentae. A multidisciplinary approach of the critical care team often will effect a reduction in maternal morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Management of severe preeclampsia and eclampsia. 174 3

An analysis of 4 cases of the thrombotic thrombocytopenia in children of 4 to 10 years of age is performed. The disease was characterized by fever, purpura, headache and abdominal pains, arterial hypertension, microangiopathic haemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, increase of blood urea and serum creatinine, micro-haematuria and proteinuria. The duration of the disease was from 4 days to 7 months. Anuria, gangrene of the ears, scrotum, penis and soft tissues of legs and feet were registered in a 5-year-old patient with a fulminant disease. The cause of death of other patients was heart failure with acute lung oedema, brain haemorrhages and haemorrhagic pancreonecrosis. The diagnosis of the thrombotic thrombocytopenia was confirmed by the finding in the autopsy material of thrombotic microangiopathy of small arteries, veins, arterioles, venules and capillaries in kidneys and other organs and tissues. Kidney damage in fulminant disease is complicated by segmentary cortical necrosis, in a more prolonged disease--by glomerulosclerosis or mesangio-capillary glomerulonephritis.
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PMID:[Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura in children]. 180 69

We examined 61 patients an average of 9.6 years (range 5 to 18 years) after an episode of childhood hemolytic-uremic syndrome. Twenty-four (39%) had one or more abnormalities. Seven (11%) had proteinuria and six (10%) had low creatinine clearance as solitary abnormalities. Eight (13%) had both proteinuria and reduced creatinine clearance; three (5%) had a combination of hypertension, proteinuria, and low creatinine clearance. Abnormalities sometimes appeared after an interval of apparent recovery. Logistic regression analysis showed that duration of anuria was the best predictor of disease at follow-up. No patients who had anuria lasting longer than 8 days or oliguria exceeding 15 days escaped chronic disease. However, 45% of those with disease had no anuria, and a third had no oliguria. Physicians should therefore be cautious in assuming recovery from HUS on the basis of a single evaluation and should periodically evaluate patients for an extended period.
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PMID:Long-term outcome and prognostic indicators in the hemolytic-uremic syndrome. 194 99

We conducted a systematic search of the world literature up to January 1, 1990 on the use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors for treatment of hypertension during pregnancy. A total of 25 publications reported 85 pregnancies in 81 women, including three twin pregnancies. Captopril had been used in 49, enalapril in 35, and both drugs in one of these pregnancies. The number of unbiased data are too limited to permit firm conclusions on teratogenicity, if any, of these agents. Contrary to earlier suggestions, we found no evidence that the use of these agents increases the likelihood of low weight for gestational age, respiratory distress syndrome, and/or persistent ductus arteriosus. Use of these agents in pregnancy can cause severe disturbance of fetal and neonatal renal function, such as oligohydramnios, pulmonary hypoplasia, and long-lasting neonatal anuria. Although the true incidence of these perinatal problems cannot be derived from the type of data hitherto available, there are strong suggestions that renal dysfunction is more common with the use of enalapril than with captopril. The frequency of serious perinatal complications is high enough to warrant extreme reluctance in prescribing angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors during pregnancy.
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PMID:Fetal and neonatal effects of treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in pregnancy. 204 53

Anuria complicated the malignant phase of hypertension in twelve patients (ten males and two females). Five were black; five had primary hypertension; one had HBs virus angiitis; the six remaining cases suffered from previously documented renal disease, including two with Berger's disease. Renal angiography showed interruption of renal blood flow as far as the main branches of the renal artery and/or a false impression of 'cortical necrosis' and of 'renal infarcts'. In contrast, renal biopsy did not show irreversible vascular damage. Thus, anuria was mainly functional and due to active renal vasoconstriction. This was confirmed by the subsequent course; diuresis resumed after 1 week to 24 months of dialysis. Repeat angiography in six cases showed recovery of renal circulation and disappearance of 'cortical infarcts', even when plasma renin activity remained elevated and hypertension was not controlled. In one case captopril induced a new reversible episode of anuria. These observations suggest that active vasoconstriction with prolonged anuria might be due to some vasoconstrictive substance other than angiotensin II.
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PMID:Protracted anuria due to active vasoconstriction in primary or secondary malignant hypertension. 211 43


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