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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The need to reduce the amount of salt in the diet has remained a very controversial issue in spite of strong evidence from animal experimental and human studies that increased salt intake is associated with increased blood pressure levels. The fundamental problem is the confusion between clinical, preventive medicine, and public health approaches. Reducing salt intake is not as effective as drug therapy to treat hypertension (clinical model). Individual preventive medicine approaches aimed at high risk populations are effective, but the efficacy is limited by the size of the population at risk and the intensity of the intervention. The public health approach to gradual reduction of available salt in the diet is likely to result in decreased morbidity and mortality with little inconvenience to the public.
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PMID:Salt and blood pressure: population and individual perspectives. 916 Jul 77

The clinical, histologic, and immunohistochemical features of six cases of hemorrhagic adrenal pseudocysts are reported together, with a review of the English literature on this topic since 1950. The mean age at presentation was 57 years (range, 30-72 yr). There were four men and 2 women. The average cyst size was 9.2 cm (range, 6-16 cm). In four patients, the hemorrhagic adrenal pseudocysts were incidental findings. The remaining two patients presented with an abdominal mass and hypertension, respectively. The hemorrhagic pseudocysts were unilocular cystic masses surrounded by a fibrous capsule and containing abundant amorphous material, blood, and fibrin. Numerous dilated, thin-walled, vascular channels that stained strongly for Factor VIII-related antigen, collagen IV, laminin, Ulex europaeus agglutinin I lectin, and CD34 were present within the fibrous capsule, cyst contents, and surrounding residual adrenal gland. These findings support a vascular origin for these lesions, and they are thought, therefore, to be related to endothelial adrenal cysts. The literature review of 111 vascular adrenal cysts (85 hemorrhagic pseudocystic type and 26 endothelial type) showed similar clinical features. The mean age at presentation was 44.5 years (range, 5 d-95 yr), with a female predominance (62%). The most common clinical presentation was abdominal pain (35%), followed by incidental findings (32%). There were no significant clinical differences between hemorrhagic and endothelial type cysts. In some cases, the presence of intracystic islands of cortical cells can cause diagnostic confusion with adrenal cortical tumors. The presence, however, of a rich intracystic and capsular vascular network, normal-appearing islands of cortical cells, and abundant thrombotic fibrinous material, rather than necrotic tumor cells, should rule out the possibility of a degenerating adrenal cortical neoplasm.
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PMID:Vascular adrenal cysts: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of six cases and a review of the literature. 919 68

Jimson weed (Datura stramonium, a member of the Belladonna alkyloid family) is a plant growing naturally in West Virginia and has been used as a home remedy since colonial times. Due to its easy availability and strong anticholinergic properties, teens are using Jimson weed as a drug. Plant parts can be brewed as a tea or chewed, and seed pods, commonly known as "pods" or "thorn apples," can be eaten. Side effects from ingesting jimson weed include tachycardia, dry mouth, dilated pupils, blurred vision, hallucinations, confusion, combative behavior, and difficulty urinating. Severe toxicity has been associated with coma and seizures, although death is rare. Treatment consists of activated charcoal and gastric lavage. Esmolol or other beta-blocker may be indicated to reduce severe sinus tachycardia. Seizures, severe hypertension, severe hallucinations, and life-threatening arrhythmias are indicators for the use of the anticholinesterase inhibitor, Physostigmine. This article reviews the cases of nine teenagers who were treated in hospitals in the Kanawha Valley after ingesting jimson weed. We hope this article will help alert primary care physicians about the abuse of jimson weed and inform health officials about the need to educate teens about the dangers of this plant.
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PMID:The dangers of jimson weed and its abuse by teenagers in the Kanawha Valley of West Virginia. 927 42

We report a 76-year-old man who developed blurred vision and dementia. He was apparently well until April 4, 1990 (70-year-old at that time) when he had a sudden onset of bilateral loss of vision. Corrected vision was 0.1 (right) and 0.09 (left). He was admitted to the ophthalmology service of our hospital on April 9, 1990, and neurological consultation was asked on April 11. Neurologic examination revealed alert and oriented man without dementia. Higher cerebral functions were intact. He had bilateral large visual field defects with loss of vision; he was only able to count the digit number with his right eye and to recognize hand movement with his left eye. Otherwise neurologic examination was unremarkable. General physical examination was also unremarkable; he had no hypertension. Cranial CT scan was normal on April 11; lumber spinal fluid contained 1 cell/microliter, 63 mg/dl of sugar, and 97 mg/dl of protein; myelin basic protein was detected, however, oligoclonal bands were absent. He was treated with methylprednisolone pulse therapy and oral steroid, however, no improvement was noted in his vision. He started to show gaze paresis to left, ideomotor apraxia, agnosia of the body, and dementia. Cranial CT scan on June 11 revealed a low density area in the deep left parietal white matter facing the trigonal area of the lateral ventricle. He was discharged on July 2, 1990. Hasegawa dementia scale was 2/32.5 upon discharge. In the subsequent course, he showed improvement in his mental capacity and Hasegawa dementia scale was 22.5/32.5 in 1991, however, no improvement was noted in his vision. In 1994, he started to show mental decline in that he became disoriented, and showed delusional ideation of self persecution and depersonalization with occasional confusional state. He also showed unsteady gait. Cranial MRI on February 13, 1996 revealed a T2-high signal intensity lesion on each side of the parietal deep white matter more on the left and another T2-high signal intensity lesion in the left pons as well as in the right thalamus. He complained of right hypochondrial pain and was admitted to another hospital on April 22, 1996. He was markedly confused and demented. He continued to show bilateral loss of vision, but no motor palsy was noted. Cranial CT scan on April 23, 1996 revealed diffuse cortical atrophy and ventricular dilatation in addition to the low density areas in both parietal deep white matter. He developed jaundice in the middle of May. Abdominal CT scan revealed multiple low-to iso-density areas in the liver and marked iso-to high-density swelling of the right kidney. The patient expired on June 9th, 1996. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had had a carcinomatous limbic encephalitis with optic neuropathy and a choleduct carcinoma. Other opinions entertained included acute disseminated encephalomyelitis with optic neuritis, and granulomatous angiitis of the central nervous system. Some participants thought the primary site of the carcinoma was the right kidney with metastasis to the liver. Post mortem examination revealed a mixed type carcinoma in the right kidney with liver metastases. Neuropathologic examination revealed an incomplete softening in the optic chiasm and the left optic nerve, and in the left parieto-occipital areas. (The right hemisphere was frozen for future biochemical assay.) One of the adjacent cortical arteries had an organized thrombus. Other arteries and arterioles also showed sclerotic changes. Some of the leptomeningeal arteries were positive for Congored staining as well as for beta-amyloid immunostaining. Many senile plaques were seen diffusely in the cerebral cortex and neurofibrillary tangles were seen in the CA1 area and the parahippocampal gylus. No cellular infiltrations or demyelinated foci were seen. The neuropathologic features were consistent with circulatory disturbance based on the amyloid angiopa
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PMID:[A 76-year-old man with loss of vision and dementia]. 928 74

Although the concept of the pressure-natriuresis curve is very clear, considerable confusion concerning its importance and utility in understanding the pathophysiology of hypertension persists. We recently showed that the pressure-natriuresis curve could be considered linear. In this brief review, we would like to stress the advantages of treating it as a line. Its linear approximation simplifies understanding of the sodium sensitivity of the blood pressure and mechanisms of hypertension. The blood pressure can be expressed as the sum of two components: the non-sodium-sensitive component determined by the x intercept of the pressure-natriuresis curve and the sodium sensitive one determined by the product of the reciprocal of the slope and the amount of sodium intake. Theoretically, it can be affected in two different ways to cause hypertension; either a parallel shift along the blood pressure axis toward a higher blood pressure level due to the increase in the x intercept or a decrease in the slope. The parallel shift induces non-sodium-sensitive hypertension, whereas the decrease in slope induces sodium-sensitive hypertension. Thus, the linear approximation makes the definition of the sodium sensitivity of the blood pressure very clear and, furthermore, suggests that mechanisms of hypertension can be clarified if the determinants of the x intercept and the slope of the pressure-natriuresis curve are known. A clear definition of sodium sensitivity allows us to study its importance as a marker of a greater risk of renal and cardiovascular complications.
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PMID:Implications of the linear pressure-natriuresis relationship and importance of sodium sensitivity in hypertension. 935 May 78

A wealth of experimental evidence demonstrates that cerebral ischemia causes excessive release of glutamate and that glutamate contributes to ischemic injury. Glutamate antagonism by any of several mechanisms can ameliorate the extent of infarction. These antagonists comprise noncompetitive blockers of the ion channel associated with the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor [e.g., aptiganel (Cerestat)], competitive antagonists of the glutamate recognition site of the NMDA receptor (e.g., selfotel) or of the glycine recognition site (e.g., ACEA 1021, GV150526), antagonists at the polyamine site (e.g., eliprodil), and drugs that may interfere with glutamate release by sodium channel blockade as well as having other actions (e.g., lubeluzole, 619C89). Clinical experience suggests that although some NMDA antagonists are poorly tolerated at putative neuroprotective doses (e.g., selfotel), potentially neuroprotective plasma concentrations can be achieved in humans with others (e.g., aptiganel), though tolerable adverse effects are frequently observed. These clinical effects include hypertension (which is probably preferable to the hypotension seen with nimodipine and lifarizine), sedation, confusion or hallucinations and, at high doses, catatonia. Glycine antagonists may be associated with fewer adverse effects, but preclinical studies suggest that brain penetration may be low. Although recent studies with selfotel and eliprodil have been discontinued because of insufficient evidence for a satisfactory risk/benefit ratio, encouraging experience with aptiganel, magnesium, and glycine antagonists has prompted continued clinical trials with these agents. To be of sufficient size to detect a clinically useful improvement in outcome, these trials need to be large (600-1,000 patients). Present trials with aptiganel (Cerestat) are comparing the efficacy and tolerability of two doses vs. placebo in patients treated within 6 hours of ischemic stroke. Outcome is assessed by the modified Rankin Scale at 3 months.
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PMID:Cerestat and other NMDA antagonists in ischemic stroke. 937 Nov 55

Despite tremendous development in the field of glaucoma, there is confusion in the nomenclature system for classification, gonioscopy, and mechanisms of primary angle-closure glaucoma. In this article, we critically review the various nomenclature systems and suggest some modifications to the current classifications. These include four diagnostic categories: 1) angle-closure glaucoma suspect; 2) angle-closure hypertension; 3) chronic angle-closure glaucoma; and 4) acute angle-closure glaucoma. Gonioscopy is valuable for evaluating primary angle-closure glaucoma but more precise descriptions of gonioscopic observations are needed. Because of racial differences in the prevalence and mechanisms of primary angle-closure glaucoma, worldwide population-based study is necessary. Newer technologies, such as ultrasound biomicroscopy, show promise for the study of primary angle-closure glaucoma.
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PMID:Clarifying the nomenclature for primary angle-closure glaucoma. 938 66

Although hypercalcemia may cause drowsiness, lethargy, weakness, confusion and coma it rarely causes seizures or cerebral infarction. The patient presented had a clinical evolution from hallucinosis to a generalized tonic-clonic seizure, and subsequent cortical blindness with occipital cerebral ischemia as evidenced by SPECT and MRI scans. EEG revealed occipital PLEDs. With reversal of hypercalcemia, there was a return of vision, resolution of EEG epileptiform activity, although with some residual occipital infarction. This case, in concert with a literature review of hypercalcemia, reveals examples of occipital and watershed ischemia, blindness, seizures and hypertension, a pattern markedly similar to that of eclampsia. Furthermore, medications such as magnesium sulfate, believed to reverse cerebrovasospasm responsible for the eclamptic neurologic findings, may counter the effects of hypercalcemia at a cellular level, lending support to a calcium-mediated injury in eclampsia.
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PMID:Reversible hypercalcemic cerebral vasoconstriction with seizures and blindness: a paradigm for eclampsia? 966 11

We report a 4 year old boy in whom the clinical features of craniosynostosis and bilateral absent radii led to a diagnosis of Baller-Gerold syndrome. Additional congenital abnormalities included midface hypoplasia, atrial and ventricular septal defects, right hydronephrosis, partial sacral agenesis, and anterior ectopic anus. Evidence of portal venous hypertension was present from 8 months and a congenital portal venous malformation was discovered at 2 years. This is the first reported case of Baller-Gerold syndrome associated with a congenital portal venous malformation. We discuss the diagnostic confusion between this syndrome and other overlapping malformation syndromes and propose optimal evaluation strategies aimed at clarifying the nosology of these syndromes.
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PMID:Baller-Gerold syndrome associated with congenital portal venous malformation. 973 37

Taking into consideration the available data in 1998, we believe that short-acting calcium antagonists should no longer be used in hypertensive patients. The practice of using oral or sublingual nifedipine in hypertensive emergency or pseudoemergency should be abandoned because it can lead to serious side effects such as syncope, myocardial infarction, stroke and even death. However, the use of a low dose of the long-acting formulations seems to be safe and promising in patients with essential hypertension. In the Hypertension Optimal Treatment (HOT) trial a calcium-antagonist based combination therapy reduced blood pressure by over 20 mmHg in most of the nearly 19,000 patients. Cardiovascular mortality in this study was with 3.8 per 1000 patient years clearlylower as compared to 6.5 per 1000 patient years reported in previous intervention trials. A long-acting dihydropyridine calcium antagonist was used in 78% of these patients. Clearly the calcium antagonists controversy was helpful in alerting physicians to the fact that hypertension remains a surrogate endpoint and that not all drugs that reduce blood pressure will reduce morbidity and mortality to the same extent. What was completely unnecessary, however, was the inappropriate news media coverage to the calcium blocker controversy that led to panic and confusion among patients and frustration among physicians. In this context we should perhaps remember the first rule in the treatment of Sir George Pickering: "Never frighten your patients."
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PMID:[Calcium antagonists in cardiovascular diseases--a valuable controversy, but unnecessary panic]. 1006 34


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