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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical spectrum of 100 consecutive cases of surgically proved primary hyperparathyroidism treated from 1974 through 1978 was analyzed. Their laboratory test results were compared with 64 cases of other form of hypercalcemia using multivariate discriminant analysis. The clinical spectrum has dramatically shifted during the past three decades from renal calculi and
bone disease
to the asymptomatic patient discovered by routine serum chemical analysis.
Hypertension
was twice as common among hyperparathyroid patients as in the general population but failed to improve in 92% after parathyroidectomy. The most useful discriminant laboratory test in descending order of value were the serum chloride, serum calcium, hematocrit, serum phosphorus, and parathormone. Multivariate discriminant analysis of the serum calcium, phosphorus, chloride, and Hct provided a 98% degree of accuracy in separating hyperparathyroidism from other forms of hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. Changing clinical spectrum, prevalence of hypertension, and discriminant analysis of laboratory tests. 731 24
Magnesium (Mg) deficiency occurs frequently in chronic alcoholism and may contribute to the increased incidence of osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease seen in this population. Mg deficiency is primarily due to renal Mg-wasting and is exacerbated by dietary Mg deprivation, gastrointestinal losses with diarrhea or vomiting, as well as concomitant use of drugs such as diuretics and aminoglycosides. Osteoporosis is prevalent in the alcoholic population. Mg deficiency may contribute to increased bone loss by its effects on mineral homeostasis. In Mg depletion, there is often hypocalcemia due to impaired parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion, as well as renal and skeletal resistance to PTH action. Serum concentrations of 1,25-vitamin D are also low. These changes are seen with even mild degrees of Mg deficiency and may contribute to the metabolic
bone disease
seen in chronic alcoholics. Hypomagnesemia in alcoholics may also contribute to increased cardiovascular disease by altering platelet function. Mg deficiency has been demonstrated to enhance platelet reactivity. In these studies, Mg was shown to inhibit platelet aggregation against various aggregation agents. Patients with Mg deficiency were shown to have increased platelet aggregation that was normalized with Mg therapy. The antiplatelet effect of Mg may be related to the finding that Mg inhibits the synthesis of thromboxane A2 and 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid, eicosanoids thought to be involved in platelet aggregation. Mg also inhibits the thrombin-induced Ca2+ influx in platelets, as well as stimulates synthesis of prostaglandin I2, the potent antiaggregatory eicosanoid. Therefore, Mg deficiency may increase platelet aggregation and cause increased
hypertension
and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in alcoholics.
...
PMID:Magnesium deficiency in alcoholism: possible contribution to osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease in alcoholics. 784 87
The patient referred for liver transplantation typically has complications from a progressive, irreversible liver injury. Less traditional complications of end-stage liver disease, such as
bone disease
and some hepatobiliary malignancies, may also prompt referral. However, there are contraindications to liver transplantation, such as metastatic malignancy and persistent substance abuse. Each patient should be referred as early as possible. The evaluation process includes a complete physical examination and social and psychologic evaluations. If transplantation is agreed upon, the patient is listed by clinical status and enters a waiting period for a donor liver. Following transplantation, the patient is maintained on a regimen of immunosuppressive drugs to prevent allograft rejection. Each patient is also maintained on prophylactic medications, to decrease the risk of opportunistic infection. Many of the postoperative problems in liver transplantation are a result of immunosuppression, either as side effects of the medications used to prevent and control rejection or from the intensity of the resulting immunosuppression. These problems include headaches,
systemic hypertension
, acute and chronic allograft rejection, renal dysfunction, opportunistic infection with cytomegalovirus or Pneumocystis carinii, disease recurrence, and neoplasia. Routine, long-term care includes systematic clinical follow-up and repetitive blood tests. Communication among the transplant center, the patient, and the referring physician are essential to a successful outcome over the long term.
...
PMID:Primary care management of the liver transplant patient. 810 82
Magnesium (Mg) is critical for the function of numerous enzyme systems. Mg deficiency thereby may result in many and varied clinical manifestations. Mg deficiency is common as approximately 10% of patients admitted to city hospitals are hypomagnesemic. Mg deficiency is usually due to losses from the gastrointestinal tract or from the kidney. A serum Mg concentration of < 1.5 mEq/l usually indicates Mg deficiency, however, intracellular Mg deletion may be present despite a normal serum Mg concentration. Acute clinical manifestations of Mg deficiency include neuromuscular hyperexcitability, cardiac arrhythmias, and biochemical abnormalities of hypokalemia and hypocalcemia. Chronic Mg depletion may contribute to
hypertension
, atherosclerotic vascular disease, altered glucose homeostasis, and metabolic
bone disease
. Therapy of the acute manifestations usually requires parenteral Mg administration of 24-48 mEq Mg/day for 3-5 days. Long-term Mg repletion may be accomplished by the administration of 300-600 mg of Mg orally/day.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of magnesium deficiency. 826 19
Careful investigation of the clinical conditions of patients on maintenance hemodialysis for about 20 years in a single dialysis unit was of great interest for evaluation of the pathological consequences in long-term survivors of insufficient correction of uremia and of the dialysis treatment "per se". We analyzed the outcomes for a cohort of 116 patients who started RDT before 1976 and the clinical conditions of the 24 patients still on RDT in our unit at the end of 1991 (average duration of treatment = 222 +/- 23 months). Actuarial survival was 72% at 10 years and 43% at 20 years. Rehabilitation of the 24 survivors was rather good: 13 were able to work, 8 were retired or unable to work, but able to care for most personal needs. Actual body weight, anthropometric parameters and biochemical parameters revealed a well-preserved nutritional status. Anemia improved from 23 +/- 7 at the start of RDT to 31 +/- 8 in the 21 patients never treated with erythropoietin. Blood pressure was normal without therapy in 18 patients and elevated in 6. Mild-to-moderate left ventricular hypertrophy was present in all the 6 patients with arterial
hypertension
and in only 6 of the 18 normotensive patients. The ratio of early diastolic filling to filling during atrial contraction (E/A ratio) was < 1 in 16 patients: it was 1.05 +/- 0.43 in 9 patients with stable intradialysis blood pressure and significantly lower (0.73 +/- 0.15) in 12 patients with recurrent intradialysis hypotension. Supraventricular arrhythmias were detected by Holter monitoring in 41% and ventricular arrhythmias in 35% of patients. Extensive vascular calcifications were present (in 100% of patients in the abdominal aorta), but only 4 patients showed clinical signs of peripheral vascular disease. Subperiosteal resorption was detected radiologically in the hands of 59% of patients. Bone histology, interpretable for only 20 patients, revealed no bone lesions in 1 case (5%), mild mixed osteodystrophy in 3 cases (15%), advanced mixed osteodystrophy in 5 cases (25%), osteodystrophy with predominant hyperparathyroidism in 2 cases (10%), osteodystrophy with predominant osteomalacia in 6 cases (30%), and aplastic
bone disease
in 3 cases (15%). Moderate aluminum staining was found in only 4 patients and was more marked in earlier biopsies taken before withdrawal of the aluminium-containing phosphate-binding drugs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical features of 24 patients on regular hemodialysis treatment (RDT) for 16-23 years in a single unit. 852 16
Studies in rats with renal ablation indicate that anemia lessens, whereas its vigorous correction with recombinant human erythropoietin (r-HuEPO) worsens systemic and glomerular
hypertension
, factors known to promote progression of chronic renal failure (CRF). However, in human studies, use of r-HuEPO in predialysis patients has not been associated with worsening renal function, provided blood pressure control is achieved. Histological evidence of
bone disease
is common in early renal failure, and deficits in calcitriol synthesis seem to be an important factor in the pathogenesis of secondary hyperparathyroidism (HPTH) in early CRF. Reports to data, on the use of low dose active vitamin D metabolites in predialysis patients, indicate either a reversible decline or no decline in renal function. Adynamic bone disease, however, may ensure during such therapy if excessive reductions in serum intact parathyroid hormone concentrations occur. Recent data suggest that chronic metabolic acidosis decreases albumin synthesis, increases muscle proteolysis, and induces negative nitrogen balance in patients with CRF. Despite these experimental data, the clinical relevance of correction of metabolic acidosis in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is still not defined. Even though therapy of metabolic acidosis in the adult patient with CRF remains conjectural at this time, reports indicate that its correction might lead to healing of osteomalacia and osteopenia, and possibly may decrease protein degradation and improve growth in children with CRF.
...
PMID:Use of erythropoietin, active vitamin D3 metabolites, and alkali agents in predialysis patients. 924 13
Long-term treatment with corticosteroids after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) may cause adverse effects, particularly
hypertension
, diabetes, and
bone disease
. The results of steroid withdrawal from long-term immunosuppression in 114 patients after OLT was reviewed. Initial treatment was with corticosteroids, azathioprine, and cyclosporine A in 76.3% and with antithymocyte globulin in 17.5%. Corticosteroids were stopped in 96 patients (84.2%) during mean follow-up of 6.7 +/- 3.9 months, and acute rejection subsequently developed in 8. By comparison 7 of 18 patients, in whom corticosteroids were continued, developed acute rejection. Six of these had received blood group (ABO)-compatible nonidentical grafts. Rates for retransplantation in the steroid withdrawal and nonwithdrawal groups were 4.2% and 22.2%, respectively, and mortality in the two groups was 14.6% and 44.4%, respectively. Azathioprine was not given or withdrawn in 28 patients in the group from which corticosteroids were also withdrawn, with no adverse effect. Diabetes mellitus improved following corticosteroid withdrawal, but there was no improvement in
hypertension
. We conclude that corticosteroids can be safely withdrawn in the majority of patients after OLT.
...
PMID:Long-term immunosuppression without corticosteroids after orthotopic liver transplantation: a positive therapeutic aim. 934 86
Liver transplantation is now routinely used as a definitive treatment for patients with advanced cirrhosis. As survival after transplantation in most centers is at or above 70% to 80% at 1 year, an increasing number of liver transplant recipients requires further medical care. Several medical complications may develop during the immediate or long-term postoperative periods, including renal dysfunction, arterial
hypertension
, neurological complications, and psychiatric complications. In addition, other metabolic complications often develop in a more insidious manner, such as obesity, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, and posttransplant
bone disease
. Because the liver allograft function is frequently normal in many recipients experiencing the above-mentioned complications, the gastroenterologist, internist, or family practitioner frequently has a role in the diagnosis and management of these complications. In this review, we discuss the basic pathophysiological concepts and suggest guidelines for the diagnosis and management of frequent medical problems encountered after liver transplantation.
...
PMID:Common medical diseases after liver transplantation. 970 Aug 42
Paragangliomas are infrequent, usually benign tumors developed from neuroectoderm cells. The neck is the most common location, although some cases arise within the abdominal cavity, usually in the retroperitoneal space. We report five cases with bone metastases. In three patients, convincing evidence was obtained that the primary was in the retroperitoneal space. Clinical manifestations of metastatic
bone disease
occurred up to 17 years after the diagnosis of paraganglioma. Useful data were obtained from plain radiographs, magnetic resonance imaging, serum and urine catecholamine assays, and above all meta 123iodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy. Histologic and immunohistochemical studies of the lesion yielded the definite diagnosis. Surgery and radiation therapy are the two mainstays of therapy. Although rare, metastatic forms of paraganglioma should be borne in mind. This diagnosis should be entertained in patients with bone lesions and recent-onset arterial
hypertension
, irrespective of whether they report a history of surgery for a tumor, and even if this tumor was removed many years earlier and labeled benign.
...
PMID:Bone metastases from a paraganglioma. A review of five cases. 1008 67
Polya partial gastrectomy was performed for peptic ulcer in a previously healthy woman aged 28 years. She complained afterwards of a variety of non-specific symptoms including weakness, tiredness, debility, slowness of walking, poor appetite and constipation. Within ten years her back became bent. She was treated for intercurrent
hypertension
and epilepsy. Bone fractures on low-impact trauma occurred in her fifties. At 57 years, she was unable to care for herself and had to be admitted to a nursing home. She could still walk slowly with the aid of a stick. For three months at the age of 65 years, she was unable to rise from her chair. Investigations disclosed severe post-gastrectomy
bone disease
. At no time had she complained of bone pains.
...
PMID:Post-gastrectomy bone disease undiagnosed for forty years. 1049 25
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