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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Age-related changes in CGRP-containing vasodilator nerve activity in
hypertension
were studied in perfused mesenteric vascular beds isolated from SHR and normotensive rats (WKY). Perivascular nerve stimulation (PNS; 0.5-8 Hz) of both SHR and WKY preparations with active tone produced a frequency-dependent vasodilator response, which was abolished by 100 nM tetrodotoxin, 500 nM capsaicin or
cold
storage denervation. This response in SHR greatly decreased with age, whereas the response in WKY slightly decreased with age. The neurogenic vasodilation in 15- and 30-week-old SHR but not 8-week-old SHR was significantly smaller than that in age-matched WKY. Vasodilator responses to exogenous CGRP (0.1-30 nM) in SHR increased with age, whereas an age-related decrease in the vasodilation was found in WKY. Immunohistochemical studies showed an age-related decrease in CGRP-containing fibers in SHR. These results suggest that CGRP-containing vasodilator innervation is greatly decreased when SHR develop and maintain
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Age-related changes in calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-mediated neurogenic vasodilation of the mesenteric resistance vessel in SHR. 177 6
The working conditions of municipal employees of Botucatu (State of S. Paulo, Brazil) are described with a view to identifying the most frequent and serious occupational risks. Office workers (clerks) were not included in this study. The morbidities registered in the municipal outpatient service (from July 17 through December 4, 1987) and in the occupational accident register for the period 1984-1987 were evaluated. The activities of the majority of the employees were found to be carried out manually with no technological assistance, likely to generate "occupational accidents" (OA) and related to inadequate (antiergonomic) positions. The coefficient of severity of the OA has increased so rapidly that in 1987 it was 1.85 times higher than in 1984. The analysis of the external sources and the nature of the lesions caused by the OA were closely related to the description of the activities and the risk factors observed. The most frequent ailments registered in the outpatient service were: arterial
hypertension
, lumbago, the
common cold
, chronic alcoholism, acute gastroenterecolitis and "personal difficulties". An occupational health program for the municipal workers in Botucatu is proposed.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of working conditions of municipal employees engaged in manual labor]. 178 71
Autonomic functions were evaluated in 25 nondialyzed patients with chronic renal failure and eight controls. Eight patients were reassessed after 6.6 +/- 1.0 weeks of hemodialysis and 12 patients were restudied 24 +/- 4.0 weeks after renal transplantation. In addition, six patients who had been on maintenance hemodialysis for a duration of 21.5 +/- 3.0 weeks were also studied. Autonomic function tests, including blood pressure and heart rate response to sudden loud noise, mental arithmetic, hand immersion in
cold
water, Valsalva maneuver, change in posture and respiration, were performed using brachial artery cannulation and continuous monitoring by electrocardiogram. Baroreceptor sensitivity slope was determined using bolus injections of phenylephrine. Supine and standing plasma norepinephrine levels were measured. The
cold
pressor test, response to sudden loud noise and mental arithmetic were normal in nondialyzed patients with chronic renal failure, suggesting an intact efferent sympathetic pathway. The plasma norepinephrine concentration varied widely but the mean value was similar to the control group (P greater than 0.05). Expiration/inspiration ratio, lying/standing ratio, Valsalva ratio and the baroreceptor sensitivity slope were significantly abnormal (P less than 0.001) in nondialyzed patients. This indicates a defective efferent parasympathetic pathway and depressed baroreceptor sensitivity. The blood pressure response to phenylephrine was lower in the uremics, suggesting a reduced end-organ responsiveness to alpha agonists. The presence of
hypertension
did not affect autonomic function. The heart rate response to standing and the baroreceptor sensitivity were significantly lower (P less than 0.05) in patients who developed hypotension during hemodialysis. Lower baroreflex sensitivity could contribute to hypotension during dialysis. Autonomic functions remained unaltered after short- and long-term dialysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of dialysis and renal transplantation on autonomic dysfunction in chronic renal failure. 178 47
A close correlation between body weight and blood pressure has been frequently observed in both clinical and epidemiological studies. The aim of this clinical trial was to evaluate whether, in obese patients, there is any relationship between blood pressure, at rest or during sympathetic stimulation, and blood glucose and serum insulin, both while fasting and during an oral glucose challenge. Twenty obese patients (age 26-65 years, body weight 97 +/- 16 kg, 11 normotensive and 9 hypertensive) entered the study. After a 4-week run-in period on an isocaloric diet with normal intake of sodium, blood pressure and heart rate were measured at rest and during sympathetic stimulation induced by
cold
and isometric testing. Responses of glucose and insulin to a standardized 75 g oral glucose tolerance test were also evaluated. The responses of glucose and insulin to glucose challenge were not statistically different in normotensive and hypertensive obese patients. Levels of insulin in the serum in the serum in the fasting state and during glucose load were significantly correlated with the response of blood pressure to
cold
and isometric exercise, but not to blood pressure at rest. The response of heart rate to
cold
was closely related to insulin only in the subgroup of normotensives. The present findings support the hypothesis that the sympathetic nervous system, which influences secretion of insulin and regulation of blood pressure, is involved in the pathophysiology of the association of obesity and
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Responses of serum insulin and blood pressure to cold and handgrip in obese patients. 179 Oct 88
A patient with orthostatic
hypertension
of neurogenic origin is reported. The Schellong and head-up tilt tests produced a sudden moderate to marked increase of the blood pressure, but the plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone level showed a normal response. The
cold
pressor test also produced a moderate to marked increase in the blood pressure. Pharmacological cardiovascular autonomic nervous function tests showed a decrease of parasympathetic tone and denervation hypersensitivity of the sympathetic nerve terminals. These findings suggest that the orthostatic
hypertension
in this patient was mainly due to sympathetic denervation hypersensitivity.
...
PMID:A case of neurogenic orthostatic hypertension. 180 47
A previous study has shown a strong regional association between
cold
climate and coronary mortality in Sweden. The present study intended to elucidate further this association, in particular whether or not it could be attributed to smoking,
hypertension
and fat consumption. The 284 Swedish municipalities were used as units. The outcome was mortality (SMR) from acute myocardial infarction in men aged 40-64. Prevalence of smoking and use of snuff was estimated by interviews. Sales of antihypertensive drugs were used to estimate prevalence of
hypertension
. Sales of butter and estimates of consumption of saturated fat by interviews were used to estimate the consumption of fat. Weighted determination coefficients (D) were calculated. Apart from the strong association between
cold
climate and coronary mortality (D = 0.39), an association was shown between fat consumption and coronary mortality (D = 0.22). A weaker association was found between prevalency of snuffing and coronary mortality (D = 0.15) and between sales of butter and coronary mortality (D = 0.10) and the weakest between sales of antihypertensives and coronary mortality (D = 0.06). No association was found between prevalence of smoking and coronary mortality. When the other explanatory factors were added to
cold
climate in the model no substantial enhancement of the association was achieved.
Cold
exposure was correlated to the other explanatory factors. To conclude, this study showed that the strong association between
cold
exposure and coronary mortality was not affected by the regional variation in the estimates of fat consumption,
hypertension
or tobacco use.
...
PMID:Smoking habits, sales of fat and antihypertensives fail to explain the high coronary mortality in cold regions of Sweden. 180 75
Hemodynamic responses were studied during work on serial subtraction and digits backwards tasks in 99 healthy male undergraduates jointly classified as high or low heart rate reactors, Type A or Type B behavior pattern, and as having positive or negative parental history of
hypertension
. Heart rate, systolic blood pressure, and diastolic blood pressure were recorded, and rate pressure product was calculated at rest and during the tasks. High heart rate reactors to a
cold
pressor task responded with relatively higher heart rate and rate pressure product during both cognitive tasks than low heart rate reactors. Type A subjects defined by Jenkins Activity Survey did not differ from Type Bs on any of these physiological variables, although behavioral evidence demonstrated greater effort and superior performance by the Type As. Subjects with a positive parental history of
hypertension
manifested greater systolic and diastolic pressures and rate pressure product responses to the cognitive challenge than those lacking such parental history. These results indicate that the individual difference variables of heart rate reactivity and parental history of
hypertension
predicted different hemodynamic response patterns to behavioral challenge.
...
PMID:Heart rate reactivity, behavior pattern, and parental hypertension as predictors of cardiovascular activity during cognitive challenge. 181 91
Neuroendocrine and cardiovascular stress reactivity was studied in healthy middle-aged individuals whose parental history included essential hypertension and/or myocardial infarction and a control group without parental history of cardiovascular disease. All subjects completed a rest session (1 hour) and a stress session (1 hour). The stress session included behavioral (mirror image tracing, mental arithmetic, and the Stroop color word conflict test) and physical stressors (the
cold
pressor test and isometric exercise). Systolic and diastolic blood pressures and heart rate were recorded at baseline before and during all stressors. Specimens for determination of urinary catecholamines and cortisol were sampled after the rest and stress sessions respectively. Generally, a parental history of
hypertension
but not of myocardial infarction influenced neuroendocrine and cardiovascular stress reactivity. A family history of
hypertension
was associated with exaggerated epinephrine, norepinephrine, and cortisol excretion during stress and with enhanced heart-rate reactivity to behavioral (mental arithmetic and mirror image tracing) but not to physical stressors (isometric exercise or the
cold
pressor test). We conclude that individuals with a family history of
hypertension
tend to display exaggerated cardiovascular and neuroendocrine reactivity to stress.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine and cardiovascular stress reactivity in middle-aged normotensive adults with parental history of cardiovascular disease. 181 93
Nisoldipine is a calcium antagonist of the dihydropyridine group under investigation for treatment of
hypertension
. The authors have assessed the cardiovascular response to adrenergic stimulation by isometric exercise,
cold
pressor test and 70 degrees head-up tilt on four occasions: following placebo, acute and chronic administration of nisoldipine 5 mg or 10 mg o.d. in eighteen mild to moderately hypertensive patients (13 M, 5 F; age range 28-69 years). Blood pressure and heart rate were measured by automatic recorder. Blood pressure was significantly decreased at 2 h after administration of nisoldipine. Blood pressure maximal response at 3 min during isometric exercise following nisoldipine 10 mg chronic was significantly lower, compared to placebo as well as to a 5 mg dose (172/105 +/- 13/8 with 10 mg vs. 182/116 +/- 21/14 with 5 mg and 182/113 +/- 18/11 with placebo; p less than 0.05). Cardiovascular response to the
cold
pressor test showed a similar pattern; head-up tilt did not cause hypotension. The results of this study suggest that administration of nisoldipine in hypertensive patients slightly attenuates the pressor response to sympathetic stimulation by isometric exercise.
...
PMID:Responses to sympathetic stimulation and tilting during antihypertensive treatment with nisoldipine. 182 33
Cutaneous capillary flow (tip of the 3rd right finger) was measured with a laser Doppler (Periflux, Perimed), in 100 healthy volunteers without any history of hypertensive or vasospatic diseases, 15 females smoke and were taking contraceptive drugs. Smokers (n = 16 M, 25 F) stopped smoking 3 hours before the study. Basal laser Doppler flux (BLDF), amplitude of vasomotion waves (AV), post-occlusive reactive hyperthermia peakflow (F Max), difference between BLDF and F Max (delta F Max), time to reach 50 percent of the initial value (t1/2 r) and total recovery (tr), t Max (peak of over-shoot) and t/2 over shoot were measured. F Max after heating stimulus (40 degrees) (f Max H), delta F Max H (difference between BLDF and F Max H) and t Max H time (mn) to reach F Max H were measured before a
cold
stimulus was applied. Results were expressed in arbitrary units (cvolts), BLDF showed inter-individual variation but was reproducible over months in the same subject. The basal flux was statistically different between males (352.7 +/- 21.7) and females (249.6 +/- 22.4). Spontaneous vasomotion waves and different times (in sec.) to reach the peak after three minutes of arterial occlusion could be measured with this technique. These normal range of values can allow comparison and assessment of variations in pathological conditions, mainly Raynaud's phenomenon,
high blood pressure
, diabetes, smokers, sickle-cell anemia. Acute pharmacological tests can be carried out with drugs showing specific action on microcirculation and spontaneous vasomotion.
...
PMID:[Cutaneous microvascular flow studied by laser-Doppler. A study of 100 healthy volunteers]. 183 92
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