Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Maintenance hemodialysis (HD) in Yugoslavia started in the sixties and followed the dialysis trends in the Western Europe. However, in the last decade the development of renal replacement therapy (RRT) slowed down. In this report the epidemiology of ESRD from 1997-1999 and the survey of the status of HD treatment in Yugoslavia in 1999 are presented. Epidemiological data are obtained by the annual center questionnaires (response rate: 92.6 -94.2%). The survey of HD status is based on a specific questionnaire and covered 2108 patients (65%). At the end of 1999 there were 56 RRT centers in Yugoslavia treating 3939 patients: 3232 (82%) patients by HD, 248 (6.3%) by peritoneal dialysis, and 459 (11.7%) living with transplanted kidney. In a three year period, incidence of ESRD ranged from 108-128 pmp, point prevalence from 435-463 pmp and mortality rate from 20.7-17.9. Numerous refugee patients were treated over the last 10 years. Main causes of ESRD were glomerulonephritis (30%); Balkan nephropathy represented 11% and diabetic nephropathy 7% of all primary renal diseases. Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases were the most common causes of death of RRT patients. Most centers are overcrowded and HD machines are worn out. Mean Kt/V was 1.19+/-0.08, mean URR% 58.8+/-7.4. The shortage of drugs prevented adequate management: 83% of HD patients had hemoglobin level less than 100 g/L but only 10.3 -17.8% were treated with rHuEpo; 64.5% of patients had phosphate levels higher than 1.7 mmol/L but only 33.5% used phosphate binders; 47% of patients had hypertension despite the antihypertensive therapy. The prevalence of hepatitis B remained unchanged (about 14%) in HD population during the last three years, but the prevalence of anti-HCV positive patients decreased (31-23%). In conclusion, there is a well developed dialysis service in Yugoslavia but insufficient conditions for adequate treatment.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of end-stage renal disease and current status of hemodialysis in Yugoslavia. 1240 1

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the strategies instituted by the authors' center to decrease the time to transplantation and increase the rate of transplantation for African-Americans, consisting of a formal education program concerning the benefits of living organ donation that is oriented to minorities; a laparoscopic living donation program; use of hepatitis C-positive donors in documented positive recipients; and encouraging vaccination for hepatitis B, allowing the use of hepatitis B core Ab-positive donors. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA The national shortage of suitable kidney donor organs has disproportional and adverse effects on African-Americans for several reasons. Type II diabetes mellitus and hypertension, major etiologic factors for end-stage renal disease, are more prevalent in African-Americans than in the general population. Once kidney failure has developed, African-Americans are disadvantaged for the following reasons: this patient cohort has longer median waiting times on the renal transplant list; African-Americans have higher rates of acute rejection, which affects long-term allograft survival; and once they are transplanted, the long-term graft survival rates are lower in this population than in other groups. METHODS From March 1990 to November 2001 the authors' center performed 2,167 renal transplants; 944 were in African-Americans (663 primary cadaver renal transplants and 253 primary Living donor renal transplants). The retransplants consisted of 83 cadaver transplants and 17 living donor transplants. Outcome measures of this retrospective analysis included median waiting time, graft and patient survival rates, and the rate of living donation in African-Americans and comparable non-African-Americans. Where applicable, data are compared to United Network for Organ Sharing national statistics. Statistical analysis employed appropriate SPSS applications. RESULTS One- and 5-year patient survival rates for living donor kidneys were 97.1% and 91.3% for non-African-Americans and 96.8% and 90.4% for African-Americans. One- and 5-year graft survival rates were 95.1% and 89.1% for non-African-Americans and 93.1% and 82.9% for African-Americans. One- and 4-year patient survival rates for cadaver donor kidneys were 91.4% and 78.7% for non-African-Americans and 92.4% and 80.2% for African-Americans. One- and 5-year graft survival rates for cadaver kidneys were 84.6% and 73.7% for non-African-Americans and 84.6% and 68.9% for African-Americans. One- and 5-year graft and patient survival rates were identical for recipients of hepatitis C virus-positive and anti-HBc positive donors, with the exception of a trend to late graft loss in the African-American hepatitis C virus group due to higher rates of noncompliance, an effect that disappears with censoring of graft loss from that cause. The cadaveric renal transplant median waiting time for non-African-Americans was 391 days compared to 734 days nationally; the waiting time for African-Americans was 647 days compared to 1,335 days nationally. When looking at all patients, living and cadaver donor, the median waiting times are 220 days for non-African-Americans and 462 days for African-Americans. CONCLUSIONS Programs specifically oriented to improve volunteerism in African-Americans have led to a marked improvement in overall waiting time and in rates of living donation in this patient group. The median waiting times to cadaveric renal transplantation were also significantly shorter in the authors' center, especially for African-American patients, by taking advantage of the higher rates of hepatitis C infection and encouraging hepatitis B vaccination. These policies can markedly improve end-stage renal disease care for African-Americans by halving the overall waiting time while still achieving comparable graft and patient survival rates.
...
PMID:A decade of experience with renal transplantation in African-Americans. 1245 18

Chronic liver disease is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Although often used to detect liver disease, the prevalence and etiology of elevated aminotransferases are unknown. We analyzed data on adults ages 17 yr and older (N = 15,676) from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (1988-1994). Participants were classified as having elevated aminotransferase levels if either aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase was elevated above normal. Aminotransferase elevation was classified as "explained" if there was laboratory evidence of hepatitis B or C infection, iron overload, or if there was a history of alcohol consumption. Analyses were weighted to provide national estimates. The prevalence of aminotransferase elevation in the United States was 7.9%. Aminotransferase elevation was more common in men compared to women (9.3% vs 6.6%, p = 0.002), in Mexican Americans (14.9%) and non-Hispanic blacks (8.1%) compared to non-Hispanic whites (7.1%, p < 0.001). High alcohol consumption, hepatitis B or C infection and high transferrin saturation were found in only 31.0% of cases. Aminotransferase elevation was unexplained in the majority (69.0%). In both men and women, unexplained aminotransferase elevation was significantly associated with higher body mass index, waist circumference, triglycerides, fasting insulin, and lower HDL; and with type 2 diabetes and hypertension in women (all p < 0.05). Aminotransferase elevation was common in the United States, and the majority could not be unexplained by alcohol consumption, viral hepatitis or hemochromatosis. Unexplained aminotransferase elevation was strongly associated with adiposity and other features of the metabolic syndrome, and thus may represent nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
...
PMID:The prevalence and etiology of elevated aminotransferase levels in the United States. 1280 14

To assess clinical peculiarities of hypereosinophilia (HEP), determine approaches to treatment and differential diagnosis of the disease, we examined 115 patients in 1969-2002. We made clinical, laboratory and virusological tests with detection of markers of hepatitis B and C viruses, biopsy of the liver (n = 3), on demand echocardiography, indirect immunofluoresence and enzyme immunoassay of the serum for antibodies to neutrophil cytoplasm in some patients. We grouped patients by the presence of Churg-Strauss syndrome (n = 70), an asthmatic variant of nodular polyarteritis (n = 22), hypereosinophilic syndrome (Loffler 11, n = 15) and eosinophilic pulmonary infiltrates (n = 8). Asthmatic nodular polyarteritis was characterized by high arterial hypertension, frequent finding of HBV, aneurysms and infarctions of the viscera. Bronchial asthma and medicines intolerance were absent, though cardiac failure and other cardiac pathology is frequent. Thus, definition of 4 clinical groups of patients with HEP allows a differential approach to the disease treatment and prognosis.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects of hypereosinophilia syndrome]. 1510 7

The study examined health conditions among an aging cohort of male narcotics addicts. This prospective cohort study (1964-1998) included interviews and medical testing for 108 surviving subjects who had been admitted to the California Civil Addict Program during the years 1962 through 1964. Medical testing results were: 51.9% had high blood pressure, 22.4% showed hyperlipidemia, 13.3% had elevated levels of blood glucose, 33.6% had abnormal pulmonary function, half of the sample had abnormal liver function, and 94.2% tested positive for hepatitis C, 85.6% for hepatitis B, 3.8% for syphilis, and 27.3% for TB. The study empirically demonstrated poor health conditions and high morbidity among surviving narcotics addicts.
...
PMID:Health conditions among aging narcotics addicts: medical examination results. 1566 46

The incidence and risk factors of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) have never been prospectively determined. To determine the frequency and risk factors of NAFLD and chronological ordering between NAFLD, weight gain, and features of insulin resistance, a historical cohort study was conducted in a Japanese workplace. A cohort free of previous liver injury, alcohol consumption of more than 140 g/wk, and hepatitis B or C infection (529 of 1537 subjects), and a subcohort of 287 subjects free of insulin resistance-related features were identified. Elevated aminotransferases in nonalcoholics were used as a surrogate for NAFLD. High aminotransferases together with weight gain of more than 2 kg and insulin resistance-related features in the subcohort were sought for up to 5 years. The incidence of high aminotransferases was 31 per 1000 person-years (71 events). A significant interaction occurred between age and sex in the development of high aminotransferases. In subjects younger than age 40 years, male sex (hazard ratio [HR]: 4.6), elevated body mass index (HR: 2.1), hypertension (HR: 2.6), and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HR: 2.8) increased the risk of high aminotransferases, whereas age (HR: 0.6 for each 5 years) decreased the risk. In subjects older than age 40 years, glucose intolerance (HR: 5.3) was the only significant risk factor. In the subcohort, weight gain preceded high aminotransferases and other insulin resistance-related features, which appeared sequentially in order of low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, hypertriglyceridemia/hypertransaminasemia/hypertension, and glucose intolerance. In conclusion, this cohort study clearly showed chronological ordering and an association between development of elevated aminotransferases and risk factors of NAFLD.
...
PMID:Chronological development of elevated aminotransferases in a nonalcoholic population. 1569 Apr 83

Chronic renal failure represents a major problem of public health. Incidence for patients arrived at the terminal stage of the disease is in France 126.4/million inhabitants and the cost of medical care reaches 2 % of the expenses of the National Health Insurance. The progression of the disease is divided into 5 stages that are defined by the level of creatinine clearance from the stage of renal diseases with a normal renal function (clearance>90 ml/min) to the terminal stage (clearance <15 ml/min). Prevalence of patients at this ultimate stage is around 50,000. Prevalence for the totality of patients with a renal disease is evaluated between 2 and 3 millions. Renal diseases must be screened because they are silent and because an early pre-dialysis nephrological care allows renal replacement therapy to be delayed and the number of cardiovascular accidents to be diminished. Screening must be performed in the high-risk populations, essentially patients with diabetes, hypertension, coronary ischemia, renal tract diseases and all subjects treated with drugs toxic for the kidneys. Screening in the total population seems inadequate because of a high cost to benefit ratio. Screening is based on testing for the presence of proteinuria, quantifying the number of formed elements and plasma creatinine determination, the latter allowing, together with age and weight, glomerular filtration rate to be evaluated according to Cockcroft's formula. Prevention of renal diseases in the whole population necessitates the same life style as that recommended for prevention of cardiac and metabolic diseases. In the high-risk populations, one must control glycemia, blood pressure and cholesterol plasma level. In patients that have been already screened, renal function decay has to be slowed down by blocking the renin angiotensin system with converting enzyme inhibitors, controlling plasma cholesterol with statins and diminishing dietary proteins. In the light of these various data, the National Academy of medicine recommends: 1 - in the field of public health, to extend to the whole country the registries containing data on patients with terminal chronic renal failure, to support the creation of medical networks for the screening of renal diseases, to vaccine the patients against hepatitis B, flue and pneumococcal infections and to verify whether a low birth weight is associated with a greater risk of renal diseases in adulthood; 2 - in the field of teaching and research, to stop the decrease in the number of nephrologists, to promote research in genetics, to evaluate the efficacy of antifibrosis drugs and the possible renal toxicity of all new drugs.
...
PMID:[Prevention and screening of chronic renal failure]. 1591 71

The goal of the donor evaluation is to ensure the suitability, safety and well being of the donor. In order to avoid important omissions, the evaluation of potential living kidney donors should be carried according to a protocol that includes a logical sequence of complementary explorations. Old age alone is not an absolute contraindication to donation but the evaluation should be more rigorous, because increased age may be associated with more post-operative complications after nephrectomy and renal function and long term graft survival could be shorter than the ones obtained from younger living donors. A body mass index of more than 35 kg/m2 should be an absolute contraindication to renal donation. Between 30 and 35 kg/m2 the donor evaluation should be more rigorous and it should be recommended to lose weight before nephrectomy. Hypertension is one of the most common reasons to declare a potential kidney donor unsuitable. Evidence of organ damage is an absolute contraindication to kidney donation. The donation is only reasonable when hypertension is well controlled with less than two drugs. To excluded diabetes mellitus all donors should have a fasting plasma glucose measurement. Diabetes mellitus is an absolute contraindication to living donation such as an impaired glucose tolerance or impaired fasting glucose with a family history of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Another contraindication to living donation is malignant disease, and the same standards should be adopted for cadaveric donors. The exceptions are low-grade non-melanoma skin cancer and carcinoma in situ of the uterine cervix. The presence of active infection usually precludes donation. It is very important to perform a routine test for viral infections. HIV, hepatitis B and C infection of the donor are usually a contraindication to living donor. CMV donor and recipient status should be taken into account before transplantation, and the recipients at risk for CMV disease should recieve prophylactic treatment according to the transplant unit policy.
...
PMID:[Assessment of the living renal donor. Analysis of extra-renal pathology as a limitation for donation]. 1605 Apr 3

Breast milk contains hormones, growth factors, cytokines, cells, etc., and offers many advantages over cow's milk or soy protein infant formulae. The composition of breast milk is influenced by gestational and postnatal age. Prevalence of breastfeeding in France is one of the lowest in Europe: in 2003, only 58% of infants were breastfed when leaving the maternity ward, for a median duration of 10 weeks. Breastfeeding allows normal growth until at least 6 months of age, and can be prolonged until the age of 2 years or more, provided that complementary feeding is started after 6 months. Breastfeeding is associated with slightly enhanced performance on tests of cognitive development. Exclusive breastfeeding for at least 3 months is associated with a lower incidence and severity of diarrhoea, otitis media and respiratory infection. Exclusive breastfeeding for at least 6 months is associated with a lower incidence of allergic disease in at-risk infants (infants with at least one first-degree relative presenting with allergy). Breastfeeding is also associated with a lower incidence of obesity during childhood and adolescence, as well as with a lower incidence of hypertension and hypercholesterolemia in adulthood. Maternal infection with hepatitis B and C virus is not a contraindication to breastfeeding, as opposed to HIV infection and galactosemia. A supplementation with vitamin D and K is necessary in the breastfed infant. Very few medications contraindicate breastfeeding. Premature babies can be breastfed and/or receive mother's milk and/or bank milk, provided they receive energy, protein and mineral supplements. Return to prepregnancy weight is earlier in breastfeeding mothers. Breastfeeding is also associated with a decreased risk of breast and ovarian cancer in the premenopausal period, and of hip fractures and osteoporosis in the postmenopausal period.
...
PMID:[Breast feeding: health benefits for child and mother]. 1627 76

This study among elderly renal Egyptian patients (n=220) with only 20 of them were subjected to renal biopsy. Results showed: diabetic nephropathy in 28.2%, hypertensive nephrosclerosis 25.5%, UTI, cystitis and pyelonephritis in 6.8%, renal stones in 5.9%, obstructive uropathy in 7.6%, simple cysts in 4.5%, CRF of unknown origin in 13.1%, and others in 26.4%. DM and HTN were S related to kidney function tests and increase in elderly. Other cardiovascular risk factors and smoking are reported by previous workers to be HS related to renal diseases. Age was significantly related to GFR, BUN and Cr. but sex difference was not significantly related to renal diseases. Multiple myeloma, lupus nephritis, vasculitis and hepatitis B were all recorded in few numbers of elderly Egyptians. HCV was more common and more likely to cause renal diseases. Abdomino-pelvic ultrasound was confirmatory to clinical renal diseases diagnosis. Among patients (n=20) biopsies showed focal necrotizing GN in 20%, membranous nephropathy in 50% and renal amyloidosis in 30%. CTIN was associated in some cases due to NSAID intake. Analgesic nephropathy was a common problem that might lead to ARF in some cases especially in the elderly. Ultrasound results among the biopsy group were confirmatory to clinical diagnosis.
...
PMID:Pattern of renal diseases among elderly Egyptians patients with acute or chronic renal diseases in Ain Shams University and Nasser Institute Hospitals, Cairo, Egypt. 1633 99


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>