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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 53-yr-old previously healthy man was admitted to our hospital for thyrotoxicosis without ophthalmopathy. Initial therapy with propylthiouracil caused an acute elevation of liver enzymes. Then, he received a first course of 131I therapy (20 mCi). At the end of 6-mo follow-up after 131I, he was still thyrotoxic and developed moderately severe ophthalmopathy. The patient refused thyroid surgery and decided to undergo second course of 131I therapy (30 mCi). Concomitantly with the 131I, we opted to give high-dose pulse glucocorticoid therapy (PGT) to prevent further deterioration of GO. The patient was started on intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy 1 g daily in a cycle (one cycle every 2 wk, each cycle comprising two infusions on alternate days). After the end of the second day of PGT administration, he suddenly developed onset of acute pulmonary edema and
hypertension
. There was no previous history of cardiac disorder or conditions predisposing to cardiac failure other than thyrotoxicosis. A presumptive diagnosis of fluid overload and/or
hypertension
- induced acute heart failure was made. After prompt investigations excluding cardiogenic causes, we thought that this condition was triggered by PGT that was superimposed on thyrotoxicosis-related hemodynamic instability.
Graves
' patients with uncontrolled thyrotoxicosis should be under careful surveillance when PGT is planned. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of life-threatening acute pulmonary edema caused by PGT in GO.
...
PMID:New-onset acute heart failure after intravenous glucocorticoid pulse therapy in a patient with Graves' ophthalmopathy. 1694 91
We describe a case of pulmonary hypertension and high-output heart failure in a 61-year-old woman suffering from relapsing
Graves disease
. The patient experienced prompt hemodynamic and symptomatic recovery after normal thyroid function was restored. Possible mechanisms for the development of pulmonary arterial
hypertension
due to hyperthyroidism include damage to pulmonary vascular endothelium due to high cardiac output or an autoimmune process or increased metabolism of intrinsic pulmonary vasodilators. Another possible mechanism is vascular vasoconstriction due to decreased cholinergic output.
...
PMID:Hyperthyroidism: a rare cause of reversible pulmonary hypertension. 1696 45
The authors assessed the prevalence of pulmonary arterial
hypertension
(PAH) in patients with hyperthyroidism and evaluated the response to treatment of the thyrotoxicosis. They assessed the pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) at rest (estimated by echocardiography) in 23 consecutive patients diagnosed with hyperthyroidism due to
Graves' disease
or toxic multinodular goiter. Twelve of 23 patients (52%) did not show antithyroglobulin and antithyroperoxidase antibodies. Seventeen patients were followed up for at least 9 months after achieving a stable euthyroid status. Fifteen (65%) patients demonstrated PAH at admission. Four patients were lost to follow-up; therefore they were able to evaluate 17 patients serially with echocardiography. Sixteen patients normalized their PASP value: 13 after methimazole, 2 after total thyroidectomy, and 1 after (131)I treatment. In 1 patient no significant change in PASP was observed. This patient experienced an acute myocardial reinfarction during follow-up. They found a higher prevalence than that previously reported in observational studies. In addition, they demonstrated that the PAH reverses after correction of hyperthyroidism. Elevated PASP at rest on echocardiography may be considered a frequent finding of thyrotoxicosis. Moreover, the data seem not to support an autoimmune pathogenesis for PAH.
...
PMID:Hyperthyroidism as a cause of pulmonary arterial hypertension: a prospective study. 1706 83
Glucocorticoids are usually given for management of Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO) for their anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects. The overall rate of favorable response for moderately severe and active GO is 77% in patients treated with methylprednisolone iv pulse therapy. When radioiodine therapy is indicated for hyperthyroidism in
Graves
' patients with high risk factors, the use of glucocorticoid with small doses and short periods is recommended to prevent the development or progression of GO. Cushingoid features, glucose intolerance, gastritis,
hypertension
, hepatitis, and depression are major adverse effects of glucocorticoids. Fatal liver failure after high dose of pulse therapy (9-12g) was observed in 0.8%. Limiting the cumulative dose to 4.5-6g, assessment of liver virus markers and monitoring liver function before, during and after i.v. treatment are warranted.
...
PMID:[Steroid therapy for Graves' ophthalmopathy]. 1715 92
The objective of high activity antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in patients with AIDS, is to obtain immune restoration. This means a reduction of the viral load and restitution of the CD4 cell count. A decreased rate of HIV replication improves both the number and function of CD4 cells. Nevertheless, this treatment sometimes results in the reappearance of previous symptoms from treated conditions due to opportunistic infections (ie: tuberculosis, criptococcosis, hepatitis, Pneumocystis jirovesi, toxoplasmosis, etc) or non infectious condition such as sarcoidosis,
Graves disease
or Kaposi sarcoma. This is known as Inflammatory Reconstitution Immune Syndrome (IRIS). We report a 37 year-old woman in stage C3-AIDS with a previous criptococcal meningitis. She was treated, achieving a marked improvement with treatment and subsequent suppressive therapy with fluconazole 200 mg/day. IRIS appeared after 8 months of ongoing antiretroviral therapy with immune restoration with the development of aseptic meningitis and intracranial
hypertension
. The opportunistic agent could not be identified by cultures. Additional laboratory tests excluded toxoplasmosis, tuberculosis, bacterial cerebral abscesses, syphilitic cerebral gummas, and lymphoma. Brain CT and magnetic resonance studies were compatible with brain vasculitis and leptomeningitis. The patient condition improved with general measures, such as a repeated lumbar punctures and non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. We conclude that this patient had an IRIS due to a Cryptococcus neoformans antigen.
...
PMID:[Inflammatory reconstitution immune syndrome associated to antiretroviral therapy and meningeal cryptococcosis]. 1718 3
Symptomatic ascites as a presenting symptom of hypothyroidism is quite rare. In most of the case reports, patients with ascites requiring therapeutic abdominal paracentesis have long-standing hypothyroidism. We present a case of symptomatic ascites in a subject with hypothyroidism following radioiodine therapy for
Graves disease
. A 70-year-old African-American man presented with increasing weakness, shortness of breath, weight gain, constipation, and abdominal distention. Past history was significant for coronary artery disease, diabetes,
hypertension
and history of radioiodine therapy for
Graves disease
9 months prior to the presentation. He was taking levothyroxine at 50 microg per day for 3 months prior to the presentation. Physical examination findings were significant for puffiness around the eyes, decreased breath sounds at the lung bases, and distended abdomen with free fluid, hung-up reflexes, and cold extremities. The thyroid-stimulating hormone level at the time was 64 with a free T4 less than 0.4 ng/dL. Analysis of the ascitic fluid revealed an exudative effusion with a serum to ascitic fluid albumin gradient of 1.2. The patient required therapeutic abdominal paracentesis twice, with 4 L each time, to relieve the symptoms. Work-up to rule out other causes did not reveal any other relevant abnormality. After initiation of thyroid hormone replacement, the patient responded very well and the ascites resolved within 2 months. We conclude that ascites associated with hypothyroidism is rare but must be recognized early, since thyroid replacement is the definitive therapy.
...
PMID:Symptomatic ascites in a patient with hypothyroidism of short duration. 1722 Jun 93
A 72-year-old white woman with an abnormal serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) concentration was referred to our facility for a comprehensive evaluation. Circulating thyroxine (T4) and free thyroxine (FT4) concentrations were all in the normal range. Tri-iodothyronine (T3) concentrations were in the low end or slightly below the normal range. TSH was detectable but was below the limits of the normal range. The patient was clinically euthyroid and was receiving medication only for treatment of
hypertension
. The clinical and laboratory thyroid function status was consistent with a diagnosis of subclinical hyperthyroidism. The physical examination did not reveal thyroid enlargement, nor was there any evidence for the presence of thyroid nodules or ocular changes suggestive of
Graves disease
. Among thyroid autoantibodies of particular interest was the presence of a moderate thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulin (TSI) level that was stable and consistently present during a 7-month observational period. At 13 months after the initial visit, TSI antibodies were absent and TSH concentration had returned to the normal range. Based on the TSH agonist activity of TSI and the observed reciprocal relation of TSI and TSH, there was no need to suggest pituitary hypersensitivity to thyroid hormone.
...
PMID:Reciprocal relation of thyroid-stimulating hormone and thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulin in a patient with endogenous subclinical hyperthyroidism. 1750 73
A 52-year-old woman with
hypertension
and
Graves' disease
was scheduled for surgical removal of a meningioma. Intraoperative events were significant for hypotension requiring a vasopressin infusion. Prophylactic dolasetron was administered to the patient before emergence. The patient's trachea was easily extubated and she was neurologically intact at the end of the surgical procedure. On transport to the neurological intensive care unit, the patient developed torsades de pointes, requiring cardiopulmonary resuscitation, before a return to normal sinus rhythm.
...
PMID:Dolasetron-induced torsades de pointes. 1892 94
Recent large-scale genome-wide association (GWA) studies of SNP variations captured many thousands individual genetic profiles of H. sapiens and facilitated identification of significant genetic traits which are highly likely to influence the pathogenesis of several major human diseases. Here we apply the integrative genomics principles to interrogate relationships between structural features and gene expression patterns of disease-linked SNPs, microRNAs and mRNAs of protein-coding genes in association to phenotypes of 15 major human disorders, namely bipolar disease (BD); rheumatoid arthritis (RA); coronary artery disease (CAD); Crohn's disease (CD); type 1 diabetes (T1D); type 2 diabetes (T2D);
hypertension
(HT); ankylosing spondylitis (AS);
Graves' disease
(autoimmune thyroid disease; AITD); multiple sclerosis (MS); breast cancer (BC); prostate cancer (PC); systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE); vitiligo-associated multiple autoimmune disease (VIT); and ulcerative colitis (UC). We selected for sequence homology profiling a set of approximately 250 SNPs which were unequivocally associated with common human disorders based on multiple independent studies of 220,124 individual samples comprising 85,077 disease cases and 129,506 controls. Our analysis reveals a systematic primary sequence homology/complementarity-driven pattern of associations between disease-linked SNPs, microRNAs and protein-coding mRNAs defined here as a human disease phenocode. We utilize this approach to draw SNP-guided microRNA maps of major human diseases and define a consensus disease phenocode for fifteen major human disorders. A consensus disease phenocode comprises 72 SNPs and 18 microRNAs with an apparent propensity to target mRNA sequences derived from a single protein-coding gene, KPNA1. Each of microRNAs in this elite set appears linked to at least three common human diseases and has potential protein-coding mRNA targets among the principal components of the nuclear import pathway. We confirmed the validity of our findings by analyzing independent sets of most significant disease-linked SNPs and demonstrating statistically significant KPNA1-gene expression phenotypes associated with human genotypes of CD, BD, T2D and RA populations. Our analysis supports the idea that variations in DNA sequences associated with multiple human diseases may affect phenotypes in trans via non-protein-coding RNA intermediaries interfering with functions of microRNAs and defines the nuclear import pathway as a potential major target in 15 common human disorders.
...
PMID:An SNP-guided microRNA map of fifteen common human disorders identifies a consensus disease phenocode aiming at principal components of the nuclear import pathway. 1871 69
Thyroid storm, sudden onset of life-threatening manifestations of hyperthyroidism, often appears during and after surgery in patients with uncontrolled hyperthyroidism. We report perioperative and postoperative management of two such cases with uncontrolled hyperthyroidism. The first patient is a 41-year-old man with a past history of uncontrolled
Graves disease
, and was scheduled for emergency video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery for spontaneous pneumothorax. The second patient is a 25-year-old man with a past history of
hypertension
, and was scheduled for open reduction and internal fixation for mandibular fracture. In both patients, tachycardia and
hypertension
were observed at admission to the operating room. Therapy included the use of landiolol infusion, a short acting beta blocker, for control of tachycardia. Heart rate was controlled around 90 beats x min(-1) using landiolol during surgery. In each case, landiolol was administered until they can take long acting beta blocker and antithyroid drug orally. In the postoperative period, delirium appeared for a few hours in the first case, but no severe complications were observed in each case. Short acting beta blocker was useful for control of tachycardia in the perioperative and postoperative management of the patient with uncontrolled hyperthyroidism.
...
PMID:[Perioperative and postoperative management of two patients with uncontrolled hyperthyroidism using short acting beta blocker, landiolol]. 1880 3
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