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

In this open study, 41 hypertensive patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus were treated with the combined alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor blocker amosulalol hydrochloride for 24 weeks, either alone or added to existing antihypertensive therapy. The effects on blood pressure, glucose and lipid metabolism were examined. Daily administration of 20 to 60 mg amosulalol caused a significant reduction in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure within 2 weeks. This effect was stable, lasting for the entire trial period. The mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure decreased from 174 +/- 13/92 +/- 9 mmHg at the beginning to 148 +/- 16/80 +/- 11 mmHg at the end of the trial. Heart rate was not affected. Plasma glucose and haemoglobin Alc levels showed a tendency to decrease without any statistical significance. Total and HDL-cholesterol and triglyceride levels also remained unchanged. Although 3 patients had complained of dizziness, all were easily manageable. The results indicate that amosulalol is effective in the treatment of hypertension in non-insulin dependent diabetics and does not affect glucose and lipid metabolism.
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PMID:Antihypertensive and metabolic effects of long-term treatment with amosulalol in non-insulin dependent diabetics. 158 38

Non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) has long been recognized as being associated with a cluster of disorders including obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and atherosclerotic heart disease. It was only recently, however, that Reaven, DeFronzo, and Ferrannini with techniques to quantitate insulin resistance suggested that this represents a common factor in this group of disorders and that hyperinsulinemia resulting from insulin resistance could be the cause of the hypertension, dyslipidemia, and atherosclerosis. The names syndrome X or the insulin-resistance syndrome have been used to identify this pathological entity, and considerable investigations have been done and are in progress to establish whether or not these coexisting disorders represent an as yet unexplained association of cardiovascular risk factors or if, indeed, insulin resistance and hyperinsulinism represent the primary cause for most of the other disorders. To paraphrase a philosophical comment, if syndrome X did not exist, we probably would have had to invent it. In addition to the intellectual satisfaction of being able to "lump" these diverse ills under a single etiology, the main value of grouping these disorders as a syndrome is to continually remind physicians that the therapeutic goals are not only to correct hyperglycemia in NIDDM but also to manage the elevated blood pressure and dyslipidemia that cause cerebrovascular and cardiac morbidity as well as mortality in these patients. Having a syndrome X reduces the fragmentation of medical care among subspecialties and decreases the likelihood of prescribing drugs that correct hypertension but raise lipids or drugs that lower lipids but raise blood glucose. Finally, it encourages the selection of drugs that reduce hyperglycemia without increasing insulin secretion and to the development of new drugs for this purpose. Unfortunately, the concept of insulin resistance with hyperinsulinism being a cause of the other associated disorders is still unproved but continues to be open to experimental investigation. The remainder of this article reviewed the use of sulfonylureas in the management of NIDDM, discussed new molecular and cellular mechanisms by which they promote insulin secretion, and reviewed the controversy as to whether an extrapancreatic action contributes to their glucose-lowering effects in NIDDM. A closing section listed some other oral drugs that can lower blood glucose without stimulating the pancreatic beta cell. Their insulin-sparing hypoglycemic effect makes them potentially useful in NIDDM therapy, particularly if the fundamental premise of syndrome X is substantiated, which implicates hyperinsulinemia as contributing to the morbidity and mortality from atherosclerotic vascular disease.
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PMID:Type II diabetes and syndrome X. Pathogenesis and glycemic management. 161 69

Renal protection is defined as an attenuation or significant slowing of the irrevocable decrease in renal function over time, which occurs subsequent to renal dysfunction. Control of systemic hypertension by whatever means exerts a renal protective effect. Evidence suggesting a specific action of individual antihypertensive agents is less certain. Calcium antagonists may exert a specific renal protective effect. Experiments in rats with reduced renal mass, desoxycorticosterone-induced hypertension, chronic angiotensin II infusion, and in spontaneously hypertensive rats support such a view. In three crossover trials, calcium antagonists reduced proteinuria in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Preliminary data from a single prospective trial in patients with renal insufficiency offer additional support; however, definitive conclusions cannot be reached without further trials. In particular, comparative trials of different classes of antihypertensive agents with equal blood pressure control are needed. Thus far, only reducing systemic blood pressure per se has been shown to be of value in attenuating hypertension-induced renal dysfunction in humans.
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PMID:Are calcium antagonists of value in ameliorating the course of chronic renal disease? 161 61

Diabetic nephropathy is the most important complication of diabetes, because it is a major cause of morbidity and mortality for diabetic subjects. Since not all subjects with diabetes are at risk of developing this complication, we conducted a study to determine if heredity might be a possible risk factor for diabetic nephropathy in non-insulin dependent diabetes. Twenty-one factors including inheritance of nephropathy and hypertension were investigated in 109 individuals with NIDDM: 50 patients without proteinuria (Group I), 20 patients with intermittent proteinuria (Group II), and 39 patients with continuous proteinuria (Group III) matched for age and duration of diabetes. Of those patients, 55 patients with inheritance of diabetes were also divided into three groups: 29 patients without proteinuria (Group I), 9 patients with intermittent proteinuria (Group II), and 17 patients with continuous proteinuria (Group III). Individuals in Groups II and III has significantly higher frequency of inheritance of diabetic nephropathy than those in Group I, and also individuals with inheritance of diabetic nephropathy had significantly higher frequency of diabetic nephropathy than those without it. Frequency of hypertension, retinopathy and body mass index in the past were significantly higher in subjects in Groups II or Group III than in those in Group I. There were no significant differences between subjects in Groups II and III. These findings suggest that susceptibility to diabetic nephropathy in NIDDM may be hereditary, although hypertension and obesity may also be important risk factors for diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:[The possibility of hereditary factors in the susceptibility to diabetic nephropathy in NIDDM]. 163 29

Calcium antagonists have become widely used as antihypertensive treatment in diabetic patients, although data concerning a possible influence on glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, and platelet aggregation during long-term, placebo-controlled studies are lacking. Therefore, the effects of isradipine, a new calcium antagonist, on glucose tolerance and insulin secretion during a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and on ADP- and collagen-induced maximum first-wave platelet aggregation (Tmax%) were studied in 11 type II diabetic patients with borderline hypertension. After a 2-week washout period, patients were treated with placebo or isradipine for 8 weeks in a double-blind, crossover study. Systolic blood pressure was lowered significantly after isradipine therapy compared to placebo (127 +/- 3 vs. 139 +/- 6 mm Hg; p less than 0.05). Fasting blood glucose (153 +/- 14 vs. 157 +/- 16 mg/dl; NS), glucose levels, and basal (17 +/- 4 vs. 17 +/- 2 mU/ml; NS) and stimulated insulin during the OGTT remained unchanged after either treatment. Platelet aggregation after stimulation with different concentrations of ADP and collagen showed no significant differences. These data indicate that calcium antagonists have no adverse effects on glucose tolerance, insulin secretion, and platelet aggregation in type II diabetes mellitus, and are therefore useful in the treatment of hypertension in diabetic patients.
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PMID:Platelet aggregation and metabolic control are not affected by calcium antagonist treatment in type II diabetes mellitus. 169 14

Many lipoprotein abnormalities are seen in the untreated, hyperglycemic diabetic patient. The non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patient with mild fasting hyperglycemia commonly has mild hypertriglyceridemia due to overproduction of TG-rich lipoproteins in the liver, associated with decreased high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels. The more hyperglycemic untreated NIDDM and insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patient have mild to moderate hypertriglyceridemia due to decreased adipose tissue and muscle lipoprotein lipase, (LPL) activity. These patients also have decreased HDL cholesterol levels associated with defective LPL catabolism of TG-rich lipoproteins. Treatment of diabetes with oral sulfonylureas or insulin corrects most of the hypertriglyceridemia and some of the decrease in HDL cholesterol. The abnormality in adipose tissue LPL activity corrects slowly over several months of therapy. The treated IDDM patient often has normal lipoprotein levels. The treated NIDDM patient may continue to have mild hypertriglyceridemia, increased intermediate-density lipoprotein levels, small dense low-density lipoproteins (LDL) with increased apoprotein B, and decreased HDL cholesterol levels. The central, abdominal distribution of adipose tissue in IDDM is associated with insulin resistance, hypertension, and the above lipoprotein abnormalities. Improvement in glucose control, in the absence of weight gain, leads to lower triglyceride and higher HDL cholesterol levels. In addition, the diabetic patient is prone to develop other defects that, in themselves, lead to hyperlipidemia, such as proteinuria, hypothyroidism, and hypertension, treated with thiazide diuretics and beta-adrenergic-blocking agents. When a diabetic patient independently inherits a common familial form of hypertriglyceridemia, he might develop the severe hypertriglyceridemia of the chylomicronemia syndrome.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of hyperlipidemia in diabetes mellitus. 171 Jul 39

The antihypertensive effect of nitrendipine, 20 mg once daily was studied in 30 patients with mild or moderate hypertension and type II diabetes mellitus under metabolic control. Blood pressure was measured at the end of a 15-day washout period from previous antihypertensive treatment and on the 15th, 30th, 60th, and 90th day of treatment. Systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure were significantly reduced by nitrendipine. The reduction involved lying and orthostatic blood pressure and was maintained throughout the treatment period. Heart rate, fasting and postprandial glycemia, and lipid profile were not significantly affected by nitrendipine. It is concluded that this drug effectively lowers blood pressure in diabetic hypertensive subjects with no alteration of lipid and glucose metabolism.
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PMID:Effect of nitrendipine in mild or moderate essential hypertensive subjects with type II diabetes. 172 69

Hyperinsulinemia, hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia and obesity are independent risk factors for coronary artery disease and are often found in the same person. This study investigated the effects of an intensive, 3-week, dietary and exercise program on these risk factors. The group was divided into diabetic patients (non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus [NIDDM], n = 13), insulin-resistant persons (n = 29) and those with normal insulin, less than or equal to 10 microU/ml (n = 30). The normal groups had very small but statistically significant decreases in all of the risk factors. The patients with NIDDM had the greatest decreases. Insulin was reduced from 40 +/- 15 to 27 +/- 11 microU/ml, blood pressure from 142 +/- 9/83 +/- 3 to 132 +/- 6/71 +/- 3 mm Hg, triglycerides from 353 +/- 76 to 196 +/- 31 mg/dl and body mass index from 31.1 +/- 4.0 to 29.7 +/- 3.7 kg/m2. Although there was a significant weight loss for the group with NIDDM, resulting in the decrease in body mass index, 8 of 9 patients who were initially overweight were still overweight at the end of the program, and 5 of the 8 were still obese (body mass index greater than 30 kg/m2), indicating that normalization of body weight is not a requisite for a reduction or normalization of other risk factors. Insulin was reduced from 18.2 +/- 1.8 to 11.6 +/- 1.2 microU/ml in the insulin-resistant group, with 17 of the 29 subjects achieving normal fasting insulin (less than 10 microU/ml).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of diet and exercise in the management of hyperinsulinemia and associated atherosclerotic risk factors. 173 2

Kidney disease is a primary cause of morbidity and mortality in diabetic patients. Factors that predetermine development of nephropathy remain unknown. Poor glycemic control, insulin requirement, duration of diabetes and family history of hypertension appear to be associated with an increased risk. Arterial hypertension, which is twice as common in diabetic patients as in the normal population, accelerates the progression of diabetic nephropathy. The pathophysiologic mechanisms responsible for hypertension appear to be different in IDDM and NIDDM. In IDDM, hypertension occurs usually as a consequence of diabetic renal disease. Conversely, the pathogenesis in NIDDM appears to be multifactorial. In either condition, aggressive blood pressure control is the single most important intervention proven to retard the progression of nephropathy. A stepped-care approach similar to that for essential hypertension with slight modifications is indicated in the treatment of the hypertensive diabetic patient with nephropathy. Nonpharmacological therapy, including dietary protein restriction, should be used as first step. Selection of the ideal antihypertensive must be based not only on efficacy but also on its side effect profile. Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and calcium antagonists have a low incidence of side effects and do not induce metabolic disturbances. Therefore, they are the agents of choice for patients who do not respond to nonpharmacological therapy alone. Thiazide diuretics and beta-blockers should be used as first line therapy only for specific indications. Antihypertensive therapy combined with good glycemic control and dietary protein restriction constitute the standard of care for diabetic patients with hypertension and renal disease.
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PMID:Hypertension and kidney disease of diabetes mellitus. 176 55

In order to study the possible relationship between sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) and diabetes mellitus, we first examined the prevalence of SAS among 12,787 general patients (6554 males and 6233 females) who visited Katsumata Hospital at Nagoya, Japan. Among them, thirty-five males and five females were diagnosed as having SAS. The male patients were statistically analysed by the corrected Mantel-Haenszel chi-square test taking the body type into account, and it was found that the prevalence of SAS was significantly high both in a diabetic population and in a hypertensive one. Among 40 SAS patients of both sexes, 34 were given a glucose tolerance test (GTT) with oral administration of 75 g glucose. Thirteen showed a diabetic pattern, 12 a borderline pattern and only 9 had a normal pattern. All 13 diabetic patients had non-insulin-dependent type diabetes (NIDDM). The present results showed that SAS has a close relationship not only to hypertension but also to NIDDM.
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PMID:High incidence of sleep apnea syndrome in a male diabetic population. 177 13


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