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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Left ventricular function was studied by M-mode echocardiography at rest and during a mental arithmetic stress test and a
cold
-pressor test in 14 patients with mild
hypertension
and in 14 matched normotensive subjects. The elevation of blood pressure at rest in the hypertensive group (154 +/- 4/87 +/- 3 vs. 120 +/- 3/66 +/- 3 mmHg in the control group) was due mainly to a higher cardiac output (6.0 +/- 0.3 vs. 5.0 +/- 0.3 L/min), which was related to elevations of stroke volume and heart rate (73 +/- 2 vs. 66 +/- 2 beats/min). Venous plasma catecholamines were similar in the two groups. Mental stress induced cardiac output-dependent increases in blood pressure in both groups; systemic vascular resistance tended to decrease. The relative increases in diastolic and mean arterial blood pressure were smaller in the hypertensive group (15 vs. 26% and 15 vs. 21%, respectively), which exhibited signs of a reduced cardiac compliance, possibly related to a left ventricular hypertrophy. Mental stress elevated venous plasma adrenaline similarly in the two groups; effects on noradrenaline were small. The
cold
-pressor test increased blood pressure similarly in the two groups, largely due to increased systemic vascular resistance; plasma noradrenaline responses were also similar. Mental stress appears to elicit a differentiated sympathetic nerve activation pattern resembling the hypothalamic defense reaction. Mild
hypertension
seems to be associated with increased arousal and cardiac activation at rest. However, an attenuated blood pressure reactivity to mental stress may reflect reduced stroke volume responsiveness, which is related to structural changes, as heart rate reactivity tended to be enhanced in mild
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Stress-induced changes in blood pressure and left ventricular function in mild hypertension. 164 89
Functional decrements in autonomic control and reflex activity in the elderly resemble the effects of beta-adrenoreceptor blockade. This arises partly from an age-related decrease in intrinsic beta-adrenoreceptor sensitivity and partly from effector changes associated with degenerative processes such as arteriosclerosis. In the elderly, compensatory adjustments in cardiovascular control result from both sympathetic and parasympathetic dysfunction. The characteristics of aging in autonomic nervous control are examined in relation to the treatment of essential hypertension by beta blockers in the elderly. Increased cardiac output with exercise depends more on increased intracardiac volume than on sympathetic modulation of heart rate in older people. Baroreceptor-dependent and renin blood pressure responses are diminished. The
cold
pressor response, which is found to be greater in the elderly than in young adults, is abolished by alpha and not beta blockers. Blood viscosity and blood platelets also increase in moderately
cold
conditions, and a beta blocker with vasodilator and antiplatelet activity may therefore be useful. Trigeminal cardiorespiratory reflex responses to facial cooling evoke a higher blood pressure but smaller bradycardia in old people. These constraints of autonomic nerve function on the use of beta blockers for treating
hypertension
are imposed on a background of altered drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in the elderly.
...
PMID:Age-related changes in autonomic control: the use of beta blockers in the treatment of hypertension. 167 2
The antihypertensive effects of tertatolol, a new non-cardioselective beta-blocking drug, were investigated in 20 patients with mild to moderate primary arterial
hypertension
, in a placebo controlled double blind randomized study. After tertatolol 5 mg o.d. significant decreases in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure and in heart rate were observed at rest (BP from 155/103 +/- 3/1 to 139/91 +/- 4/3 mmHg p less than 0.01; HR from 79 +/- 2 to 60 +/- 2 bpm p less than 0.01). Peak blood pressure, heart rate and myocardial O2 consumption, indirectly measured as cardiac workload, determined during adrenergic stimulation by 70 degrees head-up tilt,
cold
pressor test, mental arithmetic stress, isometric exercise and bicycle exercise were also reduced by 4 weeks of tertatolol treatment in comparison to pretreatment levels. No significant changes in the same parameters were induced by placebo. No side effects were observed during treatment.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular response to adrenergic stimulation during treatment with tertatolol. A new non-cardioselective beta-blocking agent in primary hypertensive patients. 168 11
To collect further evidence that epinephrine (EPI) facilitates norepinephrine (NE) release in humans, the effect of a low-dose intravenous (i.v.) infusion of EPI (20 ng kg-1/min) on arterial levels of NE and on local production of NE in the forearm was studied both before and during isometric exercise,
cold
provocation, head-up tilting, and mental stress in 10 subjects with borderline to mild
hypertension
. Studies were performed during placebo, during beta 1-selective beta-adrenoceptor blockade with atenolol, 50 mg once daily, and during nonselective beta-blockade with bopindolol, 1 mg once daily. Atenolol and bopindolol were administered for 1 week, 2 weeks apart, in a randomized double-blind cross-over design. During infusion of EPI, which increased plasma EPI levels to within the high physiologic range, resting levels of NE increased from 214 +/- 20 to 263 +/- 26 pg/ml (p less than 0.01) and resting NE forearm production increased from 296 +/- 48 to 529 +/- 98 pg 100 ml/min-1 (p less than 0.01). The enhancement of these two indices of sympathetic activity by EPI, observed during placebo, was abolished by bopindolol as well as by atenolol. The response of arterial NE, but not the response of forearm NE production, to three of the four stress tests was also enhanced (p less than 0.05) by EPI. This enhancement was also abolished by both beta-adrenoceptor antagonists. Our findings support the hypothesis that physiologic levels of EPI are capable of enhancing sympathetic activity in humans. This effect is mediated by beta-adrenoceptors and can be blocked not only by a nonselective but also by a beta 1-selective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist.
...
PMID:Epinephrine-induced enhancement of sympathetic activity in humans: inhibition by nonselective as well as beta 1-selective beta-adrenoceptor blockade. 169 92
The present study describes the results from the 10-year follow-up data of a prospective epidemiological study for
hypertension
and cardiovascular diseases in two communities of rural agricultural districts in Hokkaido, Japan. The number of incidences of cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs) in persons who were normotensive, borderline hypertensive (BHT), untreated hypertensive (HT), well-controlled HT [blood pressure (BP) less than 150/90 mm Hg], and poorly controlled HT (BP greater than or equal to 150/90 mm Hg) were 0.46, 3.24, 4.17, 3.49, and 12.76 per 1,000 person-years. respectively: CVAs were markedly high in poorly controlled HT persons. The winter-summer mean BP differences in the first year were significantly and positively correlated with the differences in mean BP between the tenth and the first year, and were significantly higher in the progression to
hypertension
group than in the nonprogression group in both towns. Multivariate analysis indicated that the winter-summer mean BP difference was a significant variable for indication of progression to
hypertension
. From these results, we concluded that (a) good control of
hypertension
could considerably prevent CVA, (b)
cold
environment may contribute to the progression to
hypertension
, and (c) winter-summer variation in BP may predict the future course of BP.
...
PMID:Hypertension and cardiovascular diseases in an epidemiological study in Hokkaido, Japan. 170 35
The aim of this study was to differentiate the effects of changes of arterial pressure from those of regression of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) on systolic and diastolic function at rest and during a rapid increase in afterload, induced by handgrip and
cold
pressor tests. An additional purpose was to assess the hemodynamic mechanisms responsible for the increase in arterial pressure after treatment withdrawal. Therefore, we evaluated the cardiac anatomy and function (TM echo) at rest and during handgrip and
cold
pressor tests in 23 hypertensive patients, before therapy and 20-30 days after withdrawal of treatment, which had lasted 6-12 months, when left ventricular mass index (LVMI) was significantly reduced (from 140 +/- 44 to 113 +/- 13 g/m2, p less than 0.001) but the arterial pressure had increased again to pretreatment values (166 +/- 19/105 +/- 7 mm Hg before treatment vs. 162 +/- 15/100 +/- 12 mm Hg). The LVMI reduction was due to a decrease in LV wall thickness, whereas the LV internal dimensions did not change. Systolic function was evaluated by the relationship between LV end-systolic stress (ESS) and fractional shortening (FS): at rest as well as at the peak of handgrip and
cold
pressor tests, highly significant negative correlations between ESS and FS (range of -0.71 to -0.96) were found. Considering each point of relation between ESS and FS in hypertensive patients, in comparison with 95% prediction limits of the correlation obtained in normal subjects, a "supernormal" systolic function at rest was observed in 10 of 23 patients and a reduced systolic function was not present after treatment withdrawal and redevelopment of
hypertension
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Improved left ventricular systolic and diastolic function after regression of cardiac hypertrophy, treatment withdrawal, and redevelopment of hypertension. 171 77
1. The cardiovascular effects of the proprietary
cold
remedies, Mu-cron and Boots Cold Relief tablets were compared with 'placebo' Boots Pain Relief tablets in a double-blind study involving 16 healthy volunteers. Measurements (impedance cardiography, forearm plethysmography) were made over 4 h after oral drug administration. 2. Two Mu-cron tablets (containing phenylpropanolamine [(1R,2S)- plus (1S,2R)-norephedrine] 50 mg) increased blood pressure (maximal effect 18 +/- 1/8 +/- 1 mm Hg (mean +/- s.e. mean), P less than 0.001), stroke volume (4.9 +/- 0.8 ml m-2, P less than 0.05), total peripheral resistance (243 +/- 27 dyn s cm-5 m2, P less than 0.001) and forearm vascular resistance (1.3 +/- 0.3 mm Hg ml-1 min, P less than 0.01) and reduced the ratio of pre-ejection period to ventricular ejection time (-0.031 +/- 0.003, P less than 0.05) and forearm blood flow (-2.6 +/- 0.5 ml min-1, P less than 0.05) but did not affect heart rate or cardiac index. 3. Two Boots Cold Relief tablets (containing phenylephrine 10 mg and caffeine 60 mg) caused a small and short-lived increase in total peripheral resistance but did not have consistent effects on other measurements. Two Boots Pain Relief tablets (containing caffeine 60 mg) did not have important cardiovascular effects. 4. The cardiovascular effects of phenylpropanolamine, including vasoconstriction and an increase in cardiac performance, are consistent with its alpha- and beta 1-adrenoceptor agonist action. While it may help the symptoms of rhinitis, its use in patients with heart disease or
hypertension
is hazardous.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A comparison of the cardiovascular effects of phenylpropanolamine and phenylephrine containing proprietary cold remedies. 172 92
Cardiovascular reactivity in response to the
cold
pressor test has been associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease in middle-aged men. We studied 905 white male medical students, median age 22 years, in the Johns Hopkins Precursors Study. Systolic blood pressure, systolic blood pressure change during the
cold
pressor test, smoking, cholesterol, Quetelet index, and family history of coronary heart disease were measured on enrollment during 1948-1964. Incidence of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality was ascertained by annual questionnaires and death certificates. There was no association between change in systolic blood pressure during the
cold
pressor test, whether examined as a continuous variable or a 20 mm Hg or more rise, and the risk of subsequent cardiovascular disease or coronary heart disease. These findings did not change after adjustment for cardiovascular disease risk factors. Previously reported associations may have been due to preexisting arteriosclerosis, which increases the rise in systolic blood pressure during the
cold
pressor test. We conclude that cardiovascular reactivity to the
cold
pressor test in young adulthood is not a strong predictor of future cardiovascular disease.
Hypertension
1992 Feb
PMID:Vascular reactivity in young adults and cardiovascular disease. A prospective study. 173 83
A case of erythermalgia with arterial
hypertension
that appeared in a 13 year-old boy is described. This condition led to a loss of weight of 10 kg within one month. None of the diseases known as a cause of this rare condition was found. Clinical manifestations were only improved when extremities were placed in
cold
water: treatment with pizotifene was also effective suggesting the role of serotonine in the mechanism of the crises.
...
PMID:[Erythermalgia: a rare vascular acrosyndrome]. 176 95
The present study was designed to determine whether antihypertensive agents known to affect the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (RAA) system might affect the elevation of blood pressure induced by chronic exposure to
cold
. Spironolactone, a mineralocorticoid receptor blocker, was added to the food and administered to rats chronically exposed to
cold
. In addition, clonidine, and alpha 2-adrenergic agonist and inhibitor of renin secretion, was administered to another group of
cold
-exposed rats by daily intraperitoneal injection. A warm-adapted and a
cold
-treated control group were also used. Chronic administration of spironolactone prevented the development of
hypertension
but failed to prevent other adaptive physiological changes characteristically occurring during exposure to
cold
and seen in the
cold
-treated control rats. Thus, increased weight of the heart, kidneys, adrenals and brown adipose tissue, increased dipsogenic responsiveness to angiotensin II, increased urinary outputs of norepinephrine and epinephrine, and increased food and water consumption were observed in all rats, treated and untreated, during exposure to
cold
. Similarly, daily injection of clonidine attenuated the elevation of blood pressure but also failed to prevent the other adaptive physiological changes characteristic of
cold
. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the RAA system plays a role in the development of the
cold
-induced elevation of blood pressure.
...
PMID:Effect of chronic treatment with clonidine and spironolactone on cold-induced elevation of blood pressure. 177 Nov 71
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