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

Treatment of arterial hypertension is an important part of medical care provided in industrialized countries today. When non-drug treatment turns out to be ineffective, or when hypertension levels are higher than target values, or target organ damage is ascertained, drug therapy must be started. This rationale comes from large-scale intervention trials, which have shown that the lowering of elevated blood pressure reduces cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. A logical aim in treatment of hypertension should be both to "normalize" hypertension-induced cardiovascular abnormalities and to maintain the quality of life, without undesirable influence on other cardiovascular risks. Moreover, if we could identify the major hemodynamic impairment behind increased blood pressure and correct it by an appropriate drug therapy, then we would have a satisfactory means to perform individualized treatment. Over the past years the empirical basis for the use of antihypertensive drugs has been replaced by a step-wise approach, but few attempts have been made to provide an approach that fits pathophysiological understanding. For this reason the above-mentioned step-wise approach has been found to be an uncorrected simplification of antihypertensive care. Also, the use of more recent drugs (calcium channel blockers, ACE-inhibitors and serotonin-receptor blockers) as an alternative to beta-blockers and diuretics in first step therapy, has further contributed to the abandonment of the step-wise approach. The different groups of antihypertensive agents are examined with reference to their mechanism of action, pharmacokinetics, indications, and desirable and untoward effects. At present, indirect vasodilators, such as calcium-antagonists, ACE-inhibitors and serotonin-receptor blockers, alone or combined with diuretics, represent an intrinsic part of basic antihypertensive therapy. Beta-adrenoceptor antagonists remain the agents of choice when the principal therapeutic aim is to reduce the adrenergic drive. Both these drugs and direct vasodilators or alpha-adrenoceptor antagonists can be employed in the most severe forms of hypertension. In such cases, combined therapy (vasodilator + antiadrenergic + diuretic agents) is often used. Sublingual nifedipine and intravenous diazoxide or sodium nitroprusside are the drugs of choice for the hypertensive crisis. The use of most of the central or peripheral sympatholytic agents has generally been abandoned. Finally, beta-blockers and calcium-antagonists have been shown to have a secure place in the management of ischemic heart disease complicating arterial hypertension. In this condition captopril also appears to be useful.
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PMID:[Drug therapy of arterial hypertension. Reflections and suggestions]. 252 24

Fifty-nine children with Japanese encephalitis admitted in Maharaj Nakhon Chiang Mai Hospital since 1984-1985 were studied. The male to female ratio was 1.18:1. The age range was between 1 to 14 years old with 74% in the age range of 6-14 years. The symptoms included change of consciousness (100%), fever (96%), headache (76%), convulsions (59%) and vomiting (52%). The neurologic signs, namely positive meningeal signs (61%), hyperreflexia (61%), positive Babinski's sign (49%) hemiplegia (42%), papilledema (22%), and other cranial nerve palsies (23%) were seen. Abnormal respiration were found in 23% and 8% of cases had hypertension. Most children (81%) had blood leukocytosis with predominant neutrophils. The average CSF white blood cell count was 200 cells per mm. with lymphocytosis in 76 percent of the patients. The average CSF protein was higher than normal. Almost all cases had normal CSF sugar levels. The JEV antibody response, mostly primary type, Occurred in about 62 percent of cases. All children received symptomatic and supportive treatment, such as antipyretics, anticonvulsants, anticerebral edema agents, adequate respiration and nutrition and physical and occupational therapies. Associated complications were treated according to the individual's need. The mortality rate and neurological sequelae were found in 17% and 57% of cases respectively. Eighteen percent of the patients suffered severe neurological sequelae. The neurological sequelae included memory deficit (46%), mental retardation (42%), hemiplegia (34%), emotional and behavioral disturbance (24%), epilepsy (20%), motor aphasia (16%), cranial nerve palsies (16%), involuntary limb movement (8%) and blindness (2%).
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PMID:Japanese encephalitis in children in northern Thailand. 256 17

One hundred twenty patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) were delivered during 1986. The incidence of pre-eclampsia and eclampsia, per 1000 births, was 103 and 19, respectively. Two-thirds of eclamptics were nulliparous and three-quarters were less than 25 years of age. All patients with eclampsia had convulsions before admission. Although maternal mortality was 4% in patients with pre-eclampsia and 0% in those with eclampsia, the fetal mortality rate was 32% in pre-eclamptic and 60% in eclamptic patients.
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PMID:The incidence of pregnancy induced hypertension in southeast Turkey. 256 49

We reviewed 212 patients whom we consulted before elective surgery concerning their indications of operation and anesthetic risks for the last 18 month periods. Patients' ages were between 6 months to 89 years old, and 46% of the patients consulted were over 60 years of age. Main medical problems related to anesthetic risks included cardiovascular problems (36% of patients), respiratory problems (14%), the abnormality of metabolism or endocrine (8%), hepatic dysfunction (8%), and so on. Most of the patients with ischemic heart disease, hypertension, dysrhythmia, or dysfunction of respiratory system, were over 60 years of age. Those with diabetes mellitus, dysfunction of liver or kidney, or anemia were over 40 years of age. Those with convulsion or congenital heart disease were under 19 years of age. In attempting anesthetic evaluations, patients were assessed according to ASA physical status classification; class I (3%), class II (56%), class III (36%), class IV (5%). Although there was no patient who had intraoperative cardiac arrest or death related to anesthesia, postoperative mortality within 3 months were 19% for ASA class III patients and 60% for class IV. And all ASA IV patients who received their operation died postoperatively. In patients who were classified as ASA III or IV, we feel it is better to add more detailed classification such as Goldman's classification in addition to physical status classification of ASA for preanesthetic assessments of patients, because the majority of patients were elderly with life-threatening complications of cardiovascular and/or respiratory systems.
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PMID:[An analysis and evaluation of anesthetic consultations for patients undergoing elective surgery]. 261 94

Primary Teratocarcinoma of Pineal Region. A case of a 12 year old boy admitted for intracranial hypertension of sudden onset has been reported. CT scanning and MR showed a triventricular hydrocephalus due to a space-occupying lesion of the pineal region. Tonic-clonic fits of the upper limbs and Parinaud syndrome were followed by loss of consciousness. Intervention I: ventriculo-peritoneal shunt with sampling of CSF and assay for beta-HCG, alpha FP and CEA, which proved negative. Cytology for neoplastic cells in cerebrospinal fluid was negative. Intervention II: grossly total removal of the tumor. This was followed by partial remission of Parinaud syndrome, total remission of the hypertensive symptoms and discharge on day 12. The 3 cm. whitish-pink tumor of rubbery consistency proved on histological examination to be a teratocarcinoma. The patient was further submitted to chemioterapy and irradiation but died 7 months after the second intervention. This is a rare tumor, much more than teratoma of the pineal gland, which is relatively frequent. It is interesting histologically because of the presence not only of chondroid and mesenchymal portions but also of adamantinomatous rudiments and of epithelial zones resembling embryonal carcinoma of the testis.
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PMID:[Primary teratocarcinoma of the pineal region]. 264 Nov 58

Preeclampsia, a major cause of fetal and maternal morbidity and mortality, may be difficult to distinguish clinically from other hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. Signs helpful in its diagnosis include presentation during late gestation in a nullipara with edema and proteinuria, and one or more of the following: hemoconcentration, hypoalbuminemia, liver function and/or coagulation abnormalities, and increased urate levels. Measures that may prove useful in differentiating preeclampsia from less dangerous forms of hypertension are decreased antithrombin III levels, increments in serum iron and carboxyhemoglobin, and decreases in urinary calcium. Major pathophysiological features of preeclampsia are decreased cardiac output, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, and plasma volume; and marked increases in peripheral vascular resistance, as well as exaggerated pressor responses to endogenous angiotensin II and catecholamines. Renal hemodynamics decrease, in part as a result of a characteristic morphological lesion in glomeruli ("endotheliosis"), and there may be increased vascular permeability leading to albumin loss from the intravascular space. When gestation is advanced, termination is the treatment of choice; when temporization is required, several antihypertensive medications whose safety and efficacy have been tested in pregnant women are available. Magnesium sulfate remains the drug of choice for impending convulsions (the eclamptic phase of the disease). Finally, the etiology of preeclampsia remains unknown, but a popular theory suggests that alterations in prostaglandin metabolism may be responsible for the hypertension and coagulopathy in this disorder. In this respect, prophylactic treatment with low doses of aspirin, which decrease platelet thromboxane production but spare endothelial prostacyclin release, may decrease the incidence of preeclampsia in "high-risk" populations.
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PMID:Preeclampsia: pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management. 265 50

A case of bipolar and relapsing cerebrovascular hemorrhages with hypertension is reported in a 7 year-old Gabonese girl. These strokes were the first sign of a sickle cell disease. Mechanisms of cerebral hemorrhages in sickle cell disease are reviewed and similarities with the "hypertension, convulsion and cerebral hemorrhage after transfusions "syndrome reported by Wasi et al. in thalassemic patients are underlined.
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PMID:[Post-transfusion cerebrovascular hemorrhagic complications disclosing homozygote sickle cell anemia]. 266 Jul 67

Approximately 5.8 million people in the United States have been diagnosed by a physician as being diabetic, and an additional 4 to 5 million people have undiagnosed diabetes. Although the incidence of diabetes appears to be declining from a peak of 300 per 100,000 population in 1973, to 230 per 100,000 in 1981, its prevalence continues to rise, due to a 19 percent decline since 1970 in deaths caused by diabetes. In 1982, 34, 583 deaths were attributed to diabetes, resulting in diabetes being ranked as the seventh leading underlying cause of death. Medical and surgical complications of diabetes due to macro- and microvascular disease result in 5,800 new cases of blindness, 4,500 perinatal deaths, 40,000 lower extremity amputations and 3,000 deaths due to diabetic coma (ketotic and hyperosmolar) and at least 4,000 new cases of end-stage renal disease. Hyperglycemia is a major if not sole determinant of diabetic glomerulopathy. The exact mechanism underlying diabetic vasculopathy is under intensive study. Experiments in the induced-diabetic rat and dog suggest that small vessel injury may--under defined circumstances--be associated with the polyol (sorbitol) pathway of glucose metabolism, myoinositol deficiency, capillary hypertension, plasma hyperviscosity, stiff erythrocytes, elevated circulating thromboxane, and platelet-derived growth factor(s). As yet, no single hypothesis fits these seemingly disparate pieces together into a unified formulation of the genesis of diabetic complications. Clinical experience sustains the contention that a functioning kidney transplant proffers the uremic diabetic younger than age 60 a higher probability for survival with good rehabilitation than does either peritoneal dialysis or maintenance hemodialysis. Diabetics treated by kidney transplantation require more than the routine preoperative and postoperative attention afforded to nondiabetic ESRD patients. During initial nephrologic evaluation, concurrent extrarenal vascular disease--especially ophthalmic, cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and in the extremities, often demands immediate attention. Inventory of co-morbid risk factors pre-transplant facilitates their management post-transplant, thereby improving chances for rehabilitation. Consultations with an ophthalmologist and podiatrist familiar with management of the uremic diabetic should be obtained prior to transplant surgery. When performed as a component of pre-transplant evaluation, coronary angiography permits identification and correction, in many patients, of potentially fatal coronary artery disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Renal failure in diabetes: a substantive problem in provision of health care. 267 7

Post-transfusion hypertension, convulsion and cerebral haemorrhage is a serious complication that may occur in the thalassaemias. In this study we evaluated the effect of blood transfusion on blood pressure, plasma renin activity (PRA), blood viscosity, and urinary vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) and catecholamines in 11 beta-thalassaemia/haemoglobin E patients. The results showed that after each unit of blood transfusion the blood viscosity was increased and correlated with the increased in haematocrit level. At the same time the PRA level was significantly decreased and tended to return to the normal level in a few days after the transfusion. There was no alteration in the urinary VMA and catecholamine levels. During the study two patients developed hypertension and headache. Their PRA were still lower than the pre-transfusion levels and the blood pressure returned to the normal pre-transfusion levels within 30-90 minutes after the intravenous injection of furosemide.
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PMID:Study of mechanisms of post-transfusion hypertension in thalassaemic patients. 269 89

Bicuculline (either 25 mumol or 12.5 mumol/kg body wt) was administered to rats by intraperitoneal route. Animals treated with 25 mumol/kg experienced convulsions, whereas those receiving 12.5 mumol/kg did not. Controls received saline instead of the drug. Radioactive precursors [2-3H] glycerol and/or [1,2 14C] ethanolamine were injected into cerebral ventriculi simultaneously with bicuculline and the rats were killed 12 min afterwards. Their brains were dissected by hand into four parts (cerebellum, brain stem, hippocampus, cerebral cortex) and the labeling of lipid classes determined after extraction and separation. Although glycerol was incorporated into lipid better than ethanolamine in all areas, the fate of the injected radioactive precursors varied according both to area and treatment. The lowest uptake of radioactivity was in the cerebral cortex and the highest in the brain stem and hippocampus. Moreover, the administration of bicuculline influenced the distribution of radioactivity among lipid classes; these variations, however, were not dependent on the administered doses of bicuculline. We conclude that the effects on glycerolipid metabolism observed in convulsing animals are due to several causes including alterations of systemic parameters (hypertension, hypoxia, etc.). The distribution of glycerol label between phospholipid and neutral lipid is proposed as a biochemical model for the study of convulsive and subconvulsive states.
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PMID:Effect of subconvulsive doses of bicuculline on the incorporation of radioactive precursors into glycerolipids in rat brain areas. 276 41


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