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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Arterial
hypertension
may be responsible for cognitive impairment indirectly, by means of ischemic or haemorrhagic cerebral lesions. In this regard multi-infarct dementia, subcortical dementia due to "small vessel disease" and Binswanger's syndrome are the clinical pictures more commonly observed. However also in hypertensives free from cerebrovascular events, dysfunctions in memory, attention, abstract reasoning, mental flexibility and psychomotor abilities have been found. The pathogenesis of these findings is uncertain. Small cerebral asymptomatic lesions (lacunae, leukoaraiosis) could disconnect the cortical and subcortical structures in the brain; however other factors, such as global or regional reductions of cerebral blood flow or disturbances in neurotransmitters release cannot be ruled out. The effects of anti-hypertensive therapy are conflicting, some authors reporting an improvement and others a worsening of cognitive performances. In the elderly the risk linked to
hypertension
may be increased by several predisposing factors and therefore this condition must be considered with attention as a pathogenetic factor of
senile dementia
.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects and pathogenetic mechanisms of cognitive impairment in arterial hypertension]. 892 59
In the present study, 126 alcoholics aged 60 years or older were compared with 104 alcoholics aged 35-45 years. No dementia was found in the younger group, whereas 62.7% of the aged patients had dementia; the dementia being irreversible in 32.9% of such patients. Cases of so-called alcohol dementia excluding organic brain diseases accounted for 42.1%. The percentage of aged alcoholics having dementia increased with age, being far beyond the frequency of
senile dementia
in the general aged. Among various physical complications, hepatic injury and myocardiopathy were more frequent in the aged alcoholics than in general aged people, suggesting that
hypertension
, myocardiopathy and hepatic injury underlie the manifestation of dementia. There was no case of dementia attributable to the direct effect of alcohol distinctly exceeding the effects of various physical factors. Problem behaviors characteristic of the aged group included 'being soaked in drink' and being inebriated, showing no correlation with the presence or absence of dementia. There was no significant difference in frequency of delirium between the aged group and the younger group. However, in aged alcoholics delirium tended to continue for a longer period during abstinence and was more likely to occur even during non-abstinence. A similar trend was found in aged alcoholics with dementia compared with those without dementia.
...
PMID:Alcohol dementia and alcohol delirium in aged alcoholics. 920 56
Osteoporosis is an old and continuing problem which has been a challenge to medical research and care throughout the history of mankind. After the break-through with estrogen, many new agents as well as nutritional and physical interventions were found to be effective in preventing and controlling osteoporosis. Calcium represents one of the keys to all these methods, especially with the appearance of new highly biologically available forms influencing cell calcium metabolism. It appears to be important to focus our attention not only on the physical properties and strength of bone but also on its calcium storage function. By controlling osteoporosis and restoring the proper calcium storage function of the bone, many diseases of old age which are due to or exacerbated by calcium deficiency and disturbed calcium distribution in the body, such as
hypertension
, arteriosclerosis and
senile dementia
, may also be successfully controlled.
...
PMID:Osteoporosis: past, present and future. 953 95
Senile dementia
of the Binswanger's type is a term used to describe a dementia syndrome characterized by onset in the sixth or seventh decade of life, subcortical neurologic deficits, psychiatric disorders and evidence of
hypertension
or systemic vascular disease. The status of
senile dementia
of the Binswanger's type as a distinct entity is a matter of some controversy. The array of neuroimaging abnormalities and clinical findings attributed to this condition overlap with a number of other neuropathologies. Leukoaraiosis, or attenuation of subcortical white matter, seen on computed tomographic scans or magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, is a hallmark of
senile dementia
of the Binswanger's type. The clinical findings associated with Binswanger's disease are varied but typically include a progressive dementia, depression and "subcortical" dysfunction such as gait abnormalities, rigidity and neurogenic bladder. Treatment is largely supportive and includes a discussion about advanced directives, social support and antidepressant therapy. Control of
hypertension
and aspirin prophylaxis may help prevent further progression of white matter disease.
...
PMID:Senile dementia of the Binswanger's type. 986 80
This decade witnessed a resurgence of interest in vascular dementia (VaD) as an increasingly important cause of
senile dementia
. Although definitions of dementia in general, and of VaD in particular, are still controversial recent diagnostic criteria for VaD acknowledge that pathogenetic mechanisms different from multi-infarct dementia are important in dementia causation. These include subcortical strokes, mainly lacunes, global hypoxic-ischemic events during acute stroke, and ischemic periventricular white matter lesions of the Binswanger type. These lesions tend to be manifested primarily by alterations of frontal executive function control. The importance of these ischemic vascular lesions in the clinical expression of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in very old subjects has also been recognized. Clinically, VaD may present in two forms: Acute VaD includes large-vessel infarction, and lacunar dementia due to small-vessel disease, including thalamic and caudate strokes. Subacute VaD includes Binswanger's disease (BD), cerebral angiopathy with leukoencephalopathy and CADASIL. The discovery of CADASIL, a genetic form of VaD mapped to chromosome 19 as a mutation of the Notch 3 gene, opened research avenues into the pathogenesis of BD. Finally, epidemiological evidence suggests that it may be possible to prevent VaD--and perhaps degenerative
senile dementia
--by controlling
hypertension
and other vascular risk factors. These findings offer hope for prevention of this growing public health problem.
...
PMID:Vascular dementia today. 1063 40
Nitric oxide (NO) produced by the endothelium of cerebral arterioles is an important mediator of endothelium-dependent vasodilation (EDV), and also helps to prevent thrombosis and vascular remodeling. A number of risk factors for ischemic stroke are associated with impaired EDV, and this defect is usually at least partially attributable to a decrease in the production and/or stability of NO. These risk factors include
hypertension
, high-sodium diets, homocysteine, diabetes, visceral obesity, and aging. Conversely, many measures which may provide protection from ischemic stroke - such as ample dietary intakes of potassium, arginine, fish oil, and selenium - can have a favorable impact on EDV. Protection afforded by exercise training, estrogen replacement, statin drugs, green tea polyphenols, and cruciferous vegetables may reflect increased expression of the endothelial NO synthase. IGF-I activity stimulates endothelial NO production, and conceivably is a mediator of the protection associated with higher-protein diets in Japanese epidemiology and in hypertensive rats. These considerations prompt the conclusion that modulation of NO availability is a crucial determinant of risk for ischemic stroke. Multifactorial strategies for promoting effective cerebrovascular NO activity, complemented by measures that stabilize platelets and moderate blood viscosity, should minimize risk for ischemic stroke and help maintain vigorous cerebral perfusion into ripe old age. The possibility that such measures will also diminish risk for Alzheimer's disease, and slow the normal age-related decline in mental acuity, merits consideration. A limited amount of ecologic epidemiology suggests that both stroke and
senile dementia
may be extremely rare in cultures still consuming traditional unsalted whole-food diets. Other lines of evidence suggest that promotion of endothelial NO activity may decrease risk for age-related macular degeneration.
...
PMID:Up-regulation of endothelial nitric oxide activity as a central strategy for prevention of ischemic stroke - just say NO to stroke! 1105 18
Arginine, a semi-essential amino acid, is involved in numerous areas of human biochemistry, including ammonia detoxification, hormone secretion, and immune modulation. Arginine is also well known as a precursor to nitric oxide (NO), a key component of endothelial-derived relaxing factor, an endogenous messenger molecule involved in a variety of endothelium-dependent physiological effects in the cardiovascular system. Because of arginine's NO-stimulating effects, it can be utilized in therapeutic regimens for angina pectoris, congestive heart failure,
hypertension
, coronary heart disease, preeclampsia, intermittent claudication, and erectile dysfunction. In addition, arginine has been studied in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, athletic performance, burns and trauma, cancer, diabetes and syndrome X, gastrointestinal diseases, male and female infertility, interstitial cystitis, immunomodulation, and
senile dementia
. Toxicity, dosage considerations, and contraindications are also reviewed.
...
PMID:Arginine: Clinical potential of a semi-essential amino acid.. 1249 75
The "lifestyle-related disease" has been increasing in Japan as the population advances in age and the food culture becomes westernized. Although prevention, treatment and therapy for this disease have been attempted using certain kinds of food and nutritive elements, so-called "health foods" such as DHA and EPA, which are mostly contained in fish oil, have been a special focus within these attempts. There have been many reports regarding the pharmacological functions and the mechanisms of DHA and EPA. Also, in the past few years, it has become possible to produce ingestible DHA and EPA oils, oils for chemical compounds, oils for animal feed, and highly purified DHA and EPA for medical and pharmaceutical use. EPA ethyl ester has a wide market as a preventive medicine in Japan. Initially in 1990, this medicine was administered in cases of arterisclerosis obliterans, using its anti-platelet aggregation ability. Four years later, in 1994, its effectiveness in triglyceride reduction was recognized, and its application was extended to cases of hyperlipidemia, which has remarkably broadened its market. Clinical studies with DHA have shown improvement in
senile dementia
(cerebral thrombosis, Alzheimer's disease), atopic dermatitis, and the ability to focus on moving objects, as well as control of aggressiveness against others caused by stress, and prevention of hyperlipidemia,
hypertension
, and cancer.
...
PMID:[Importance of "health foods", EPA and DHA, for preventive medicine]. 1513 25
Low-salt diets have potential for prevention and treatment of
hypertension
, and may also reduce risk for stroke, left ventricular hypertrophy, osteoporosis, renal stones, asthma, cataract, gastric pathology, and possibly even
senile dementia
. Nonetheless, the fact that salt restriction evokes certain counter-regulatory metabolic responses-- increased production of renin and angiotensin II, as well as increased sympathetic activity--that are potentially inimical to vascular health, has suggested to some observers that salt restriction might not be of unalloyed benefit, and might in fact be contraindicated in some "salt-resistant" subjects. Current epidemiology indicates that lower-salt diets tend to reduce coronary risk quite markedly in obese subjects, whereas the impact of such diets on leaner subjects (who are less likely to be salt sensitive) is equivocal--seemingly consistent with the possibility that salt restriction can exert countervailing effects on vascular health. There is considerable evidence that sodium chloride, rather than sodium per se, is responsible for the known adverse effects of dietary salt. Other non-halide sodium salts, such as sodium citrate or bicarbonate, do not raise plasma volume, increase blood pressure, boost urinary calcium loss, or promote stroke in stroke-prone rats. Nonetheless, these compounds have been shown to blunt the impact of salt restriction on renin, angiotensin II, and sympathetic activity in humans. This may rationalize limited clinical evidence that organic sodium salts can decrease blood pressure in salt-restricted hypertensives. Furthermore, organic sodium salts have an alkalinizing metabolic impact favorable to bone health. These considerations suggest that restricting dietary salt to the extent feasible, while encouraging consumption of organic sodium salts in mineral waters, soft drinks, or other nutraceuticals--preferably in conjunction with organic potassium salts and taurine--may represent a superior strategy for controlling blood pressure, promoting vascular health, and preserving bone density. Further clinical studies should determine whether a moderately salt-restricted diet supplemented with organic sodium salts has a better and more uniform impact on
hypertension
than salt restriction alone, while rodent studies should examine the comparative impact of these regimens on rodents prone to vascular disease.
...
PMID:Should we restrict chloride rather than sodium? 1519 67
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of
senile dementia
. There are 24.3 million people suffering from this progressive neurodegenerative disorder worldwide. A century ago, AD was characterized with regard to the clinical manifestations and pathology for the first time. Up till now, there is a lack of full understanding of the underlying causes and molecular mechanisms leading to this progressive form of dementia. The majority of AD cases occur sporadically, what suggested that they could arise through interactions among various genetic and environmental factors. Current epidemiological investigations show that midlife
hypertension
, cardiovascular diseases, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, obesity, inflammation, and viral infections can significantly contribute to the development and progression of AD, whereas active engagement in social, mental and physical activities may delay the onset of the disease. Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) is considered as the main genetic risk factor in the sporadic AD that is closely connected to lipid metabolism. Other genes involved in the disease pathways related to AD pathology in addition to cholesterol metabolism, neuroinflammation, amyloid and tau cascade, neuronal signalling, and plasticity are under investigation. In spite of the significant progress achieved, it is still not clear how genetic vulnerability and environmental exposures may contribute to the susceptibility of the disease. Therefore, understanding the role of disease-related risk factors for AD pathogenesis may help to identify specific modifiable risk factors that could provide possibility for the prevention of Alzheimer's dementia.
...
PMID:Risk and protective factors for sporadic Alzheimer's disease. 1819 29
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