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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We reviewed the records of 2,400 consecutive patients undergoing cardiac catheterization at USAF Medical Center Keesler between 1978 and 1984 and found 35 patients (1.5 percent of all cardiac catheterizations) aged 35 years or less (mean age, 32 years) who underwent cardiac catheterization after myocardial infarction. These 35 patients (group 1) were compared to a randomly selected group of 100 patients (group 2) aged 55 years or greater who underwent cardiac catheterization for evaluation of coronary artery disease during the same period. The two groups were compared in terms of angiographic features and risk factors for coronary artery disease. The patients in group 1 had a higher proportion of normal coronary arteries (14 percent [5 patients] vs 0; p less than 0.01) and single-vessel disease compared to group 2, while the incidence of three-vessel disease was much less (14 percent [5] vs 47 percent; p less than 0.001). Involvement of the left main coronary artery was uncommon in group 1 (3 percent [1] vs 15 percent in group 2; p less than 0.01). Risk factor analysis revealed smoking to be the most common risk factor in both groups (89 percent [31] in group 1 and 91 percent in group 2).
Hypertension
(28 percent [10] vs 48 percent; p less than 0.05) and diabetes (3 percent [1] vs 23 percent; p less than 0.01) were more common in group 2. Importantly, of 19 patients in group 1 who underwent cardiac catheterization for prognosis despite being asymptomatic and able to reach at least stage 4 on a
Bruce
protocol exercise test, none was found to have residual surgically correctable disease.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction in the young. Angiographic features and risk factor analysis of patients with myocardial infarction at or before the age of 35 years. 318 Aug 96
In a randomly selected population screening study of 8450 men and 9039 women 33 to 71 years of age conducted in Iceland in 1967-1977, 27 men and 17 women were found to have left bundle branch bock (LBBB). The prevalence of LBBB at that time was 0.43% for men and 0.28% for women. The incidence of LBBB was 3.2 per 10,000 per year for men and 3.7 per 10,000 per year for women. All except one of 37 alive patients with LBBB were examined in 1984 including chest X-ray, echocardiography and exercise testing (
Bruce
protocol). Eight men had had myocardial infarction (P less than 0.05), 12 had angina pectoris, 15 had
hypertension
, 7 had cardiomyopathy, 13 had primary conduction disease, and 3 had pacemakers. Five men and two women had died in comparison with 18 men and 1 woman in an age-matched control group of 176 people (P : ns). Three of 5 decreased LBBB men had cardiomyopathy at autopsy. Three men died suddenly. The two women died of noncardiac causes. Only one patient in the control group had cardiomyopathy (P less than 0.01). There was no significant difference in other cardiac diagnoses between the groups. Eleven LBBB women out of thirteen had a normal exercise duration (greater than or equal to 6 min) and 11/17 men exercised normally (less than or equal to 7 min). In comparison with the control group, the LBBB patients had an increased LV diameter 2.85 +/- 0.38 vs 2.58 +/- 0.38 cm m-2 body surface area (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Left bundle branch block: prevalence, incidence, follow-up and outcome. 367 36
Chronic intracranial
hypertension
in the presence of hydrocephalus and/or arachnoiditis is a rare presentation of neurobrucellosis. The present case is exceptional because neither hydrocephalus nor arachnoiditis were present.
Brucellosis
was diagnosed by serological tests. The patient developed asthenia, anorexia, weight loss, violent headaches, explosive vomiting, bilateral papilloedema, diplopia with paralysis of the abducens nerves, left supranuclear facial paralysis and left hemiparesis. A skull radiograph showed destruction of the sella turcica. Rapid recovery was attained with the use of antibiotics. The pathogenesis of this intracranial
hypertension
syndrome with destruction of sella turcica is discussed.
...
PMID:Chronic intracranial hypertension secondary to neurobrucellosis. 381 88
The effects of monotherapy with atenolol or diltiazem-SR on blood pressure, 24-h blood pressure (BP) load, and exercise capacity were tested in patients with mild to moderate (stages I and II) essential hypertension. After 3-week single-blind placebo therapy, patients with sitting diastolic blood pressure (SDBP) of 94-114 mmHg were randomized to atenolol 50 mg/day (62 patients) or diltiazem-SR 90 mg b.i.d. (60 patients) in a double-blind parallel study. Depending on SDBP response, the dose was increased to 100 mg/day for atenolol and 180 mg b.i.d. for diltiazem-SR. Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure measurements and exercise tolerance test by the
Bruce
protocol were done at the end of placebo and active treatment. Compared with placebo, both atenolol and diltiazem-SR significantly decreased heart rate (HR), sitting systolic blood pressure (SSBP), SDBP, ambulatory BP, BP load for waking and sleeping hours, area under the BP curve, rate-pressure product (p < 0.001), and exercise time (NS). Atenolol exerted a greater effect on ambulatory BP, HR, rate-pressure product, waking diastolic BP load, and area under the 24-h BP curve. The drugs were well tolerated and caused no serious side effects necessitating discontinuation of treatment. These findings indicate that (1) monotherapy for
hypertension
with atenolol or diltiazem-SR is effective and well tolerated, (2) it decreases the 24-h BP load, (3) it does not interfere with exercise capacity.
...
PMID:Effects of atenolol and diltiazem-SR on exercise and pressure load in hypertensive patients. 786 40
Diltiazem hydrochloride in a once-daily capsule formulation (DCD) has recently been approved in the United States for the treatment of mild to moderate
hypertension
and chronic stable angina pectoris. This trial evaluated the dose response of DCD in patients with chronic stable angina pectoris. In a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-design trial, the effects and tolerability of once-daily therapy with placebo or DCD (60, 120, 240, 360, or 480 mg) were evaluated 24 hours after dosing, following 3 weeks of therapy in 227 patients with reproducible stable exertional angina pectoris. A significant linear dose trend (p = 0.004) was present across the 6 treatment groups for the primary end point--time to exercise termination at 24 hours after dosing--using a standard
Bruce
treadmill exercise test. A significant linear dose trend was also seen for time to 1 mm ST-segment depression at 24 hours after dosing. Similar effects on exercise parameters were also seen at 4 hours after dosing. A linear dose trend (p = 0.04) was noted relative to the overall anginal attacks during daily activities and for anginal attacks during exercise (p = 0.02). Overall frequency of treatment-related adverse effects was dose-related and occurred in 24.4% and 17.5% of patients treated with DCD and placebo, respectively. At a dose up to 240 mg/day, improvement in exercise tolerance was achieved without an associated increase in the rate of treatment-related adverse events compared with placebo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dose-response evaluation of once-daily therapy with a new formulation of diltiazem for stable angina pectoris. Diltiazem CD Study Group. 801 16
A reduction of functional capacity has been reported in severe
hypertension
. However, the reduced peripheral vasodilation observed in the early stages of
hypertension
, could also impair the blood supply to exercising muscles in mild hypertensives presenting a normal left ventricular mass. In this paper the cardiopulmonary exercise capacity of early hypertensives has been investigated. Thirty mild hypertensives (9 in stage I and 21 in stage II according to WHO) and 36 normotensives divided into two age and weight-matched groups, were investigated. All subjects underwent a stress test according to the modified
Bruce
protocol with contemporary assessment of breath-by-breath expiratory gas analysis and measurement of the anaerobic threshold (AT) and of the oxygen consumption at peak exercise (PVO2). Exercise duration and maximal workload, in stage I hypertensives, were similar to controls but the O2 consumption was significantly reduced in comparison to controls (P = 0.043). On the contrary, in stage II patients exercise duration, maximal workload, PVO2 and AT were significantly lower than in normotensives. No relationship between myocardial hypertrophy and ergometric or ventilatory (PVO2, AT, VE) parameters was found. In conclusion an early impairment of the aerobic exercise performance is detectable in uncomplicated (stage I WHO) mild hypertensives.
...
PMID:Early impairment of the cardiopulmonary exercise capacity of hypertensive patients. 804 62
Since dyspnoea on exertion is very often the first symptom of precapillary pulmonary hypertension (PPH), either from chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) or from idiopathic pulmonary hypertension (IPH), these patients are often first examined in a pulmonary function laboratory. We carried out a retrospective study (1987-1992) on pulmonary function in 34 patients diagnosed to have PPH by means of specific diagnostic tools, out of 5,467 patients first attending our laboratory. Nine suffered from IPH, 10 from CTEPH and 15 from Eisenmenger physiology. This last group differed from the others, since its diagnosis had been known for a long time and the stage of the disease was more advanced, when pulmonary function tests were performed in our laboratory (with a view to transplantation). Respiratory function, blood gases and arterial oxyhaemoglobin saturation (HbSaO2) during exercise (
Bruce
protocol), diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide (DLCO), shunt fraction (QS%) (approximation obtained from arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) after 100% oxygen breathing) had been evaluated. In the first two groups, in contrast to other reports, we could observe no obstructive defect. Only 20% of the subjects had restrictive defects, however mild. The typical functional picture of these patients revealed normal lung volumes, normal or slightly reduced DLCO, mild hypoxaemia with hypocapnia, severe HbSaO2 drops during exercise, and pathological QS%. We conclude that every time a patient presents with breathlessness at rest or on exercise, a normal chest X-ray and respiratory function tests, pulmonary hypertension must be suspected and subject to specific and invasive tests. More severe functional impairment was observed in the PPH from the Eisenmenger disorder. This might be due to a more advanced stage of this type of
hypertension
at the time of our observation and/or to the different mechanisms of the diseases themselves.
...
PMID:Respiratory function in precapillary pulmonary hypertension. 836 83
The clinical course of 30 patients (27 women and 3 men) diagnosed with syndrome X (angina pectoris, positive exercise test and normal coronary arteries) was evaluated during 5-year follow up. Patients were divided at the control examination into 2 groups according to the median value of the heart rate/blood pressure product variation from rest to the first stage of a modified
Bruce
protocol, as follows: group 1 < or = 1,050 (n = 15) and group 2 > 1,050 mm Hg x beats/min (n = 15). All patients were followed at 6-month intervals during a mean follow-up of 60 +/- 8 months. During follow-up, chest pain was unchanged in 20 patients, decreased in severity and frequency in 9 (7 in group 1, and 2 in group 2), and disappeared in 1 in group 2; 3 patients in group 1 had prolonged episodes of anginal chest pain (> 30 minutes) that needed hospitalization. In group 2, 7 patients developed
systemic hypertension
, 4 had a progression of exercise-induced left bundle branch block to constant left bundle branch block, and 4 continued to develop rate-dependent block during exercise, but at a reduced heart rate. In the latter 8 patients, left ventricular ejection fraction at rest during follow-up decreased significantly from 61 +/- 6% to 51 +/- 8% (p < 0.02).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of patients initially diagnosed with syndrome X. 844 63
Persistent
hypertension
is one of the causes of sudden death which sometimes happens in patients operated on for coarctation of the aorta. Seven patients operated on for coarctation of the aorta were examined using exercise testing (Treadmill-
Bruce
), Echo-Doppler and NMR. Pressure gradients between the right upper and lower limbs were compared with those of normal young people and evaluated using NMR. The authors conclude that the patients operated on have resting blood pressure and pressure gradients, both resting and during exercise, greater than normal. Some patients operated on, with normal resting blood pressure and a slight gradient, can develop
hypertension
during exercise and a significant pressure gradient. Significant gradients during exercise are correlated to isthmic obstruction which is visible on the NMR. Follow-up after surgical repair of coarctation of the aorta cannot exclude measurement of exercise pressure gradients. This gives more physiological information compared with pressure gradients measured at rest.
...
PMID:[Echo-Doppler, exercise test, NMR in the follow-up of surgically treated aortic coarctation]. 848 24
Neurohormonal factors may account for the fact that patients with similar severity and duration of
hypertension
develop different degrees of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). The purpose of this work was to compare the pressor hormone profiles of hypertensive subjects off medication during exercise testing. Nineteen patients, stratified according to echocardiographically diagnosed absence (Group I n = 6) or presence (Group II n = 13) of LVH, underwent testing on the treadmill according to the
Bruce
protocol. Both groups were comparable in age, severity and duration of
hypertension
and reached similar double product at peak exercise. Measurements of plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma catecholamines and vasopressin (AVP) at baseline, peak exercise and post exercise revealed significant differences between groups: Group I had suppressed PRA levels throughout and had significantly higher baseline AVP levels, which increased further at peak effort. Group II had significantly higher baseline PRA levels, which tended to increase further at peak effort, and had suppressed AVP levels throughout. There was a significant negative correlation between percent increments in AVP and increments in double product. Norepinephrine increased significantly with effort in both groups, but the levels attained were higher in Group I. In view of the known negative inotropic action of AVP and the trophic effect of angiotensin, we speculate that lower baseline AVP and higher PRA, together with inability of AVP to increase with effort, may be causally related to development of LVH.
...
PMID:Pressor hormone profile during stress in hypertension: does vasopressin interfere with left ventricular hypertrophy? 849 May 95
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