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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The pathophysiological connections between insulin resistance,
hypertension
and type 2 diabetes are discussed in this review article.
Increased blood pressure
levels are often found in type 2 diabetic patients long before the diabetes itself is diagnosed. By contrast, in
type 1 diabetes
hypertension
is predominantly the consequence of diabetic glomerulopathy. Non-pharmacological strategies should be favoured in the treatment of
hypertension
in type 2 diabetic patients before specific pharmacological intervention is started. Antihypertensive treatment with beta-blocking agents and diuretics is criticized by many experts in the field of metabolic disorders, since these drugs induce a deterioration of glycaemic control and lipid metabolism in diabetic patients. Since calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors and alpha 1-specific blocking agents have no influence on metabolism, these drugs are recommended for the antihypertensive treatment of diabetic patients. Further studies should be undertaken to clarify, whether ACE-inhibitors have a specific nephroprotective effect. Since most type 2 diabetic patients do not develop diabetic nephropathy, a possible nephroprotective effect of ACE inhibitors is only relevant to the antihypertensive treatment of type 1 diabetic patients.
...
PMID:[Hypertension, insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus: pathophysiological interactions and therapeutic consequences]. 198 Jul 67
ION typically affects the older population with a sudden decrease in vision, altitudinal visual field loss, and a swollen optic nervehead.
Systemic hypertension
and diabetes mellitus are the most commonly associated medical problems. Occlusion of the posterior ciliary arterial blood supply to the retrolaminar optic nerve leads to axoplasmic stasis and further compromise of vessels in the nerve substance, which causes the typical funduscopic appearance. Although there is no recognized medical treatment that can reverse the visual loss, a recent report suggests optic nerve sheath decompression for a select group of patients with a gradual decline in vision due to ION may be beneficial. When ION occurs in persons less than 50 years of age, such etiologies as
juvenile diabetes mellitus
, antiphospholipid antibody-associated clotting disorders, collagen-vascular disease, and migraines should be considered. Rarely, complications of intraocular surgery or acute blood loss may cause an ischemic event in the optic nerve.
...
PMID:Ischemic optic neuropathy. 201 Nov 5
Diabetes mellitus and
hypertension
constitute two powerful independent risk factors for cardiovascular, renal and atherosclerotic disease. The frequent occurrence of the two diseases in the same individual doubles the risk of cardiovascular death, as well as substantially increasing the frequency of transient ischemic attacks, strokes, peripheral vascular disease with lower extremity amputations, as well as end-stage renal disease and blindness. Although
hypertension
usually occurs in
IDDM
in association with renal disease, in NIDDM the evolution of
hypertension
appears to be multifactorial and independent of renal disease. Obesity appears to be dissociable from
hypertension
and NIDDM with a common link between obesity,
hypertension
and NIDDM appearing to be hyperinsulinism and insulin resistance. It has been suggested that hyperinsulinism and insulin resistance may lead to
hypertension
through altered intracellular calcium metabolism, enhanced renal sodium reabsorption, or through an effect of insulin upon lipid and/or catecholamine metabolism. Further, insulin itself may have a direct effect upon the atherosclerotic process in the hypertensive diabetic patient. These considerations have been taken into account in the structuring of antihypertensive therapy in Type I and Type II Diabetes Mellitus.
...
PMID:Diabetes and hypertension. 207 56
The responsiveness of renin-angiotensin and kallikrein-kinin systems to furosemide challenge has been investigated in forty-six diabetic patients (34 NIDDM/12
IDDM
), subdivided into Group I (uncomplicated DM), Group II (DM with
hypertension
), Group III (DM with nephropathy), Group IV (DM with
hypertension
and nephropathy) and a control group of 10 healthy volunteers. Plasma renin activity (PRA) was estimated by radioimmunoassay in blood samples drawn before and 10 min after furosemide administration (0.5 mg/kg i.v.). Urinary kallikrein levels were measured by bioassay using estrogenized rat uterus preparation in 4h urine samples collected before and after the diuretic. Urinary Na+ and K+ were also measured. The basal PRA in diabetics was not significantly different from controls, whereas, urinary kallikrein levels were markedly low in all patients. Both PRA and kallikrein levels increased after furosemide in controls while in diabetics this response was severely blunted. In a subset of Group I, a paradoxical fall in PRA and kallikrein levels was noted after furosemide, an effect similar to that observed in patients with nephropathy (Group III). This response in absence of clinical and biochemical parameters of nephropathy indicates early derangement of renal hemodynamic mechanisms heralding the onset of nephropathy.
...
PMID:Plasma renin activity and urinary kallikrein excretion in response to intravenous furosemide in diabetic patients. 208 34
Patients with
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
IDDM
) often suffer from cardiovascular diseases as renal failure occurs. Elevated albumin excretion rate (AER) is a predictive value of this event. Relations between AER, blood pressure, serum lipids and apoproteins concentrations in 100 patients with
IDDM
have been surveyed. Twenty one hypertensive patients (HT group) were compared to 21 patients without
hypertension
(n HT group), matched for sex, age, diabetes duration, and metabolic control, assessed by glycosylated haemoglobin. Comparison of both groups showed HT group had elevated systolic blood pressure (137 +/- 12 vs 126 +/- 20 mmHg; p less than .05), elevated diastolic blood pressure (80 +/- 7 vs 71 +/- 8 mmHg; p less than .001), increase in AER (27 range 3-4023 vs 6 range 2-51 mg/day; p less than .001), slightly elevated serum creatinine (95 +/- 32 vs 78 +/- 15 mumol/l; p less than .05). In HT group, serum lipid composition showed: raise in total cholesterol (251 +/- 43 vs 221 +/- 41 mg/dl; p less than 0.5), elevated apoprotein B (130 +/- 30 vs 99 +/- 21 mg/dl; p less than .001) elevated apoprotein B/apoprotein A1 ratio (.91 +/- .32 vs .66 +/- .27; p less than .001), elevated triglycerides (157 +/- 53 vs 98 +/- 43 mg/dl; p less than .005) and elevated LDL-cholesterol (170 +/- 42 vs 143 +/- 33 mg/dl; p less than .05). Levels of apoprotein A1 and HDL-cholesterol were not significantly different. Body mass index, daily insulin requirement and tobacco usage were similar in both groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Urinary excretion of albumin and lipid abnormalities in hypertensive insulin-dependent diabetics]. 212 64
The prevalence of microalbuminuria and persistent proteinuria was studied in a population of 801 diabetic patients (535 with type II and 266 with type I diabetes). Urinary albumin excretion rate (AER) was measured on morning samples by laser nephelometry. Normoalbuminuria, as defined, in the absence of contaminated urine, by an albumin: creatinine (A/C) ratio below 2, was found in 551 patients, microalbuminuria (NC greater than or equal to 2 with AER below 200 mg/l) in 190 patients and persistent proteinuria (AER greater than or equal to 200 mg/l) in 60 patients. Microalbuminuria was present in 48 (18 p. 100)
IDDM
patients and 142 NIDDM patients. In
IDDM
patients, AER increased with the duration of the disease with no apparent influence of age at the onset. The prevalence of
hypertension
was 25 p. 100 and 61 p. 100 in
IDDM
patients with microalbuminuria and macroproteinuria respectively versus 10 p. 100 in patients with normoalbuminuria. This prevalence increased in NIDDM patients from 39.3 p. 100 with normoalbuminuria to 40.8 p. 100 and 76.2 p. 100 with microalbuminuria or macroproteinuria respectively. Proliferative retinopathy in type I and type II patients with normal AER was 7.4 p. 100 and 1.2 p. 100 respectively increasing to 15.2 p. 100 and 8.9 p. 100 with microalbuminuria and 27.8 p. 100 and 23.1 p. 100 with macroproteinuria. The prevalence of coronary disease increased from 4 to 10.4 p. 100 in patients with type I diabetes and microalbuminuria. The prevalence of cardiac failure increased from 1.5 to 2.1 p. 100 in type I diabetics and from 3.2 to 7.8 p. 100 in type II diabetics in the presence of microalbuminuria. Patients with microalbuminuria had increased levels of glycosylated hemoglobin A 1C but statistical difference was only obtained for patients with type II diabetes. Routine analysis of AER in diabetics allows early detection of diabetic nephropathy and emphasizes the need for tight metabolic and blood pressure control.
Hypertension
can be detrimental to nephropathy but might also initiate renal lesions in NIDDM patients.
...
PMID:[Microalbuminuria and diabetic nephropathy. Detection and correlation with other degenerative complications]. 214 8
Alteration in transcapillary albumin escape rate (TERalb) is an indicator of changes in macromolecular movement at the capillary filtering bed, which can change the balance of Starling forces for fluid movement from the vasculature to the interstitium and has an impact on volume homeostasis. TERalb can be affected by morphological changes in the capillary membrane and/or alterations in the Starling forces driving larger solutes across the capillary membrane via convection. Previous studies have demonstrated an increased TERalb in established insulin-dependent diabetes (
IDDM
); however, whether increased TERalb is the result of morphological alterations in the microvasculature or contributes to microangiopathies could not be resolved. TERalb was examined in awake Wistar rats with untreated
IDDM
induced by streptozocin infusion (65 mg/kg body wt i.v.) at 24 h and 7 and 15 days and compared with control and insulin-treated 7-day
IDDM
rats. Increased TERalb occurred at the 24-h time point and remained elevated at 7 and 15 days of
IDDM
(P less than 0.05). Blood volume remained unchanged; however, systemic protein concentration increased from 4.9 +/- 0.1 g/dl in controls to 6.4 +/- 0.4 g/dl in 15-day
IDDM
rats. Blood glucose was significantly increased, and glycosuria was evident at all three time points of
IDDM
. The observed increase in TERalb within 24 h of
IDDM
is indicative of a functional change in the Starling forces in the capillaries, because specific morphological capillary damage is not evident at this time point in the model. The early onset of TERalb in
IDDM
could indicate functional changes, such as capillary
hypertension
, and may contribute to future vascular complications in established
IDDM
.
...
PMID:Early onset of increased transcapillary albumin escape in awake diabetic rats. 214 57
All
IDDM
patients without late complications have blood pressures similar to the nondiabetic background population, and those who develop clinical nephropathy in Denmark have no familial predisposition to
hypertension
. Blood pressure remains normal until after development of microalbuminuria, indicating no primary role for
hypertension
in the pathogenesis of nephropathy. When microalbuminuria is present it does, however, play a crucial role in the progression of nephropathy. Sodium retention, possibly induced by hyperinsulinemia, and perhaps glucose-coupled sodium reabsorption in insulin treated patients, seem to play a central role in elevating the blood pressure, but this needs further clarification.
...
PMID:Hypertension in the course of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus and its pathogenetic mechanisms. 214 1
A survey was done to determine the prevalence of diabetes mellitus,
hypertension
and renal disease, as well as extent of diabetic control, amongst the workers of Malaysian Railways. The prevalence of diabetes was high at 6.6%, with 3.8% of these being
insulin dependent diabetes
. The highest prevalence was in Indians (16.0%) followed by Chinese (4.9%) and Malays (3.0%). Using HbA1 measurements, diabetic control was poor in 70.6% of the diabetics.
Hypertension
was found in 37% and proteinuria in 35%. Renal impairment was present in 30% of the diabetics. This survey shows that diabetes,
hypertension
and renal disease are high amongst the railway workers in Malaysia.
...
PMID:Prevalence of diabetes, hypertension and renal disease amongst railway workers in Malaysia. 215 75
Nephron loss is a common progression of a diverse range of kidney diseases. Recent experimental models of chronic renal disease have suggested that hemodynamic and nonhemodynamic mechanisms play key roles in progressive renal injury. Extensive renal ablation in the rat was followed by development of altered glomerular hemodynamics. Albuminuria and histologic damage leading to focal glomerulosclerosis were preceded by the development of increased glomerular pressures and were prevented by interventions such as severe dietary protein restriction and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor therapy. Both experimental interventions ameliorated glomerular
hypertension
. It was therefore concluded that these interventions ameliorated injury by glomerular hemodynamic effect. Similar findings were obtained in a rat model of
type I diabetes mellitus
induced by streptozotocin in which glomerular hemodynamic factors appeared important to the development of progressive renal disease. Recent studies have suggested that nonhemodynamic factors have important roles in the progression of glomerular injury. For example, although the predominant effects of ACE inhibitor therapy appear to be hemodynamically mediated, data are emerging which suggest that these agents may also influence growth/proliferation of glomerular cells. Because hyperplasia/hypertrophy may influence glomerular susceptibility to injury, this may also be a potential mechanism whereby ACE inhibitor therapy influences glomerular damage. In addition, a variety of studies have suggested that hyperlipidemia, which is frequent accompaniment of glomerular disease, is an important modulator of glomerular injury independent of glomerular hemodynamic effects. Coagulation factors, calcium phosphorus balance, as well as the genetic susceptibility of the glomerulus to injury, all appear to contribute to progressive nephron destruction.
...
PMID:Renal protective effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition. 218 11
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