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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary aldosteronism and renovascular
hypertension
are two different diseases in which renin determinations are necessary for establishment of diagnosis or therapeutic procedure. Low renin values which are not stimulated by acute stimuli combined with elevated plasma aldosterone concentrations confirm the diagnosis of primary
aldosteronism
. When in a patient with proven renal artery stenosis a significant difference in renal venous renin activity is observed between the two kidneys, a connection between
hypertension
and renal artery stenosis is likely when in addition the renin secretion of the unaffected kidney is suppressed. A favourable outcome for surgery can be predicted when the individual clinical picture in such a case is also considered. A similar view also holds for the connection between
hypertension
and unilateral small kidney not due to renal artery stenosis. In essential hypertension the plasma renin level makes it possible to a certain extent to predict whether a patient will benefit from diuretics or from beta-blocking agents. Despite this experience, however, renin determinations are not indicated in every case of essential hypertension. It has not been proven that the prognosis of this disease is improved by renin oriented monotherapy rather than by effective treatment with other antihypertensive agents.
...
PMID:[The value of renin determination in the diagnosis of hypertension]. 0 81
Hypertension
was found in four patients after unilateral renal-artery thrombosis following blunt abdominal trauma. In one patient, who was followed up from the time of injury, renin hypersecretion and secondary
aldosteronism
developed within a few days, and
hypertension
was present 12 weeks later. Increasing haemoglobin and raised blood-erythropoietin concentrations were also found. In the three other patients,
hypertension
was found casually within 3 years of trauma. In all patients, unilateral renin production by the affected kidney was significantly increased. Nephrectomy of the diseased kidney corrected
hypertension
and endocrine abnormalities in all patients. The delayed onset of
hypertension
despite early activation of the renin/angiotensin/aldosterone axis accords with the course of events observed in experimentally induced
hypertension
in rats, and suggests that several weeks or even months are required for
hypertension
to develop after sudden renal-artery occlusion in man. Slowly acting mechanisms, probably initiated by hypersecretion of renin, may be responsible for the
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Renin/angiotensin system in hypertension after traumatic renal-artery thrombosis. 5 38
11 patients with primary
aldosteronism
have been encountered over 11 years and submitted to surgery in a provincial teaching hospital serving a population of 3 million. Contrary to classical teaching, the
hypertension
has usually been very severe. Precise identification of the site of the lesion preoperatively has been possible by the measurement of adrenal-vein aldosterone levels, and results of surgery have been excellent. The iodocholesterol adrenal scan also correctly identified the site of the adenoma in 5 out of 7 patients in which it was used. Adrenal venography was of little value except in siting catheters.
...
PMID:Severe hypertension in primary aldosteronism and good response to surgery. 8 65
In forty patients suspected clinically of having an endocrine cause for
hypertension
, an adrenal cortical adenoma was confirmed histologically in five.
Hyperaldosteronism
with enlarged or normal adrenals was demonstrated in three patients. The diagnosis in a further eight patients with an abnormal hormone pattern and/or an abnormal venogram has not yet been confirmed. Adrenal glands show considerable variation in their size, shape and localisation on venography.
...
PMID:[Supra-renal venography in patients with suspected endocrine hypertension (author's transl)]. 13 Oct 84
An unusual case of orbital tumor with high renin content and severe
hypertension
is described. The patient was a 15-year-old girl with juvenile
hypertension
(200-140 mmHg) associated with right exophthalmos and hypokalemia. The patient showed extremely high levels of plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone concentration. No difference was present in plasma renin activity from either side of the renal veins. Preoperatively,
hypertension
responded to treatment with spironolactone. The tumor could not be completely removed because of intracranial metastasis and infiltration, and the hyperreninemia and secondary
hyperaldosteronism
persisted. The renin content in the orbital tissue was 1,403-2,225 ng/angiotensin I generated/h/g wet weight of tissue. The postmortem histopathologic diagnosis was orbital hemangiopericytoma. This is the first case of extrarenal (ectopic) renin-secreting (or -producing) hemangiopericytoma of the orbital origin. Furthermore this case is worthy of note in the point of view of the presence of the extrarenal renin-angiotensin system, particularly in the brain.
...
PMID:A case of ectopic renin-secreting orbital hemangiopericytoma associated with juvenile hypertension and hypokalemia. 15 52
Persons participating in a 5-day diagnostic protocol were routinely typed for ABO, Rh, MNS, Kell, Kidd, Duffy, P, Haptoglobin, phosphoglucomutase-1 (PGM-1), and acid phosphatase (AcP). The study population was composed of 164 normotensive whites, 34 normotensive blacks, 161 whites and 43 blacks with essential hypertension, and 52 whites with secondary forms of
hypertension
(18 atherosclerotic renovascular hypertensives, 17 patients with fibromuscular disease, and 17 patients with primary
aldosteronism
). There were no significant differences in phenotype frequencies in ABO, Rh, Kidd, Kell, Duffy, P, Haptoglobin, PGM-1 or AcP in any of the comparisons. However, there was a significantly different distribution of MNS phenotypes in comparisons of essential and atherosclerotic renovascular hypertensives with normotensive controls. Essential hypertensives had a lower frequency of the S gene and a higher frequency of s in whites (X2 = 12.21, p less than 0.005). Atherosclerotic renovascular hypertensives differed from the normotensive population in the frequencies of both MN (X 2 = 4.34, p less than 0.05) and Ss (X2 = 4.21, p less than 0.05). The finding of disease-blood group associations supports the hypothesis that there may be significant physiological differences between individuals of different blood types.
Hypertension
PMID:Association of blood groups with essential and secondary hypertension. A possible association of the MNS system. 16 54
18-hydroxy 11-deoxycorticosterone (18-OH DOC), a weak mineralocorticoid, was estimated by a radioimmunoassay procedure after purification in 49 patients with
hypertension
and 38 normal control subjects. The sensitivity of the method was 2-4 pg; there was no detectable blank, and the precision was 9-10%. In normal subjects the absolute plasma levels were similar to those of aldosterone. ACTH administration produced a 23-fold increase, and sodium restriction resulted in a 4-fold increase (5.4+/-0.7-20.5+/-3.0 ng/dl). On the other hand, the plasma levels of 18-OH DOC declined by nearly 50% with upright posture or angiotensin II infusion. During both of these procedures, plasma aldosterone levels significantly increased. Patients with normal and low renin
hypertension
had similar changes in plasma 18-OH DOC levels with sodium restriction. However, the mean high sodium level in the normal renin essential hypertension group (11.6+/-1.6 ng/dl) was significantly greater (P is less than 0.001) than in the control group (5.4+/-0.7 ng/dl). In addition, at least 22% and perhaps as high as 37% of the hypertensive subjects had levels greater than the upper limits of normal on a high sodium intake. Differences between the groups were less impressive in the sodium-restricted studies. There were no significant differences in age, duration of
hypertension
, sodium balance, serum sodium, potassium, or blood urea nitrogen in those patients who had elevated levels of plasma 18-OH DOC. Patients with primary
aldosteronism
had levels within the normal range on both dietary intake. However, in contrast to the other groups there were no significant changes in the plasma levels with sodium restriction. Thus, a significant number of patients with essential hypertension presumably have an alteration in 18-OH DOC secretion.
...
PMID:The regulation of plasma 18-hydroxy 11-deoxycorticosterone in man. 18 59
Aldosterone receptors from rat kidney slices were utilized in a competitive binding technique to analyze the contribution of various steroids to plasma "mineralocorticoid" activity and to assess their possible role in
hypertension
. To consider simultaneously the plasma binding, steroids were incubated with slices in undiluted plasma; competitor activities for [3H]aldosterone binding were aldosterone, 100%; deoxycorticosterone, 16.2%; cortisol, 0.4%; and 18-hydroxy-deoxy-corticosterone and d18-hydroxy-corticosterone, 0.1%. These steroids were more active in buffer than plasma, suggesting that they bind to plasma and that this reduces their receptor binding. Analysis of the competition data suggests that at normal plasma concentrations, aldosterone occupies the receptors to a major extent, cortisol occupies some of the receptors, and deoxycorticosterone and 8-hydroxydeoxycorticosterone contribute little to receptor occupancy. Two steroids implicated in low-renin essential hypertension, 16beta-hydroxy-dehydro-epiandrosterone and 16-oxoandrostenediol, did not have significant competitor activity. Competitor activity in plasmas from normal subjects taken at 12 noon (upright) was greater than that in those taken at 8 a.m. (supine). Since the 12 noon samples had higher aldosterone and lower cortisol levels than the 8 a.m. samples, the competitor activity under these physiological circumstances reflects aldosterone more than cortisol. The competitor activities of plasmas from patients relative to normal subjects (100+/-12.1%; mean+/-SEM) were: normal renin "essential"
hypertension
, 117+/-14%; low-renin essential hypertension, 101+/-6.6%; and primary
aldosteronism
, 176+/-14.3%. Thus a significant increase in activity of steroids that interact with mineralocorticoid receptors was detected in primary
aldosteronism
(P LESS THAN 0.01) BUT WAS NOT DETECTED IN LOW-RENIN OR NORMAL-RENIN ESSENTIAL
HYPERTENSION
.
...
PMID:Aldosterone receptors and the evaluation of plasma mineralocorticoid activity in normal and hypertensive states. 18 23
The relationship of plasma aldosterone concentration to its identified stimuli was examined in three patients with
hypertension
,
hyperaldosteronism
, and idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia. Four patients with
hyperaldosteronism
due to adrenal adenomas served as controls. Plasma aldosterone, cortisol, sodium, and potassium concentrations and renin activity were measured in blood samples taken at 20 minute intervals from 2 A.M. to 8 A.M. during recumbency and sleep. The tests were performed on all patients following a regular sodium diet both before and after short-term treatment with dexamethasone. Two of the three subjects with adrenal hyperplasia were re-examined after 2 weeks of dexamethasone therapy. All four control patients with adenomas had episodic increases of plasma aldosterone which were significantly correlated with those of plasma cortisol (r = +0.48 to +0.90). This confirms the previously reported relationship between aldosterone and ACTH in such patients. Two patients with idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia had a similar secretion pattern and a highly significant correlation of the two hormones (r = +0.76 and +0.77); one did not (r = 0.13). Short-term dexamethasone pretreatment attenuated the episodic release pattern and partially suppressed the mean plasma concentrations of aldosterone in the four patients with an adenoma and in the two patients with idiopathic hyperplasia whose plasma aldosterone and cortisol concentrations were positively correlated. There was no such effect in the third patient. The first two patients with idiopathic hyperplasia were subsequently retested following 2 weeks of dexamethasone treatment to determine if the episodic secretion pattern of plasma aldosterone would correlated with other stimuli following this period of ACTH suppression. One showed little change from the pattern observed after short-term glucocorticoid treatment. The second had a similarly blunted aldosterone response until ACTH secretion led to a resumption of episodic changes in plasma aldosteerone concentrations. These data indicate that ACTH frequently is the dominant stimulus of the episodic secretion of aldosterone in patients with either adrenal adenomas or hyperplasia. When ACTH is suppressed, the hypersecretion of aldosterone is presumably sustained by an intrinsic adrenal abnormality or by an as yet unidentified stimulus.
...
PMID:The role of ACTH in the episodic release of aldosterone in patients with idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia, hypertension, and hyperaldosteronism. 18 90
Low renin essential hypertension and the syndrome of mineralocorticoid excess have two features in common, low plasma renin activity and volume-sensitive
hypertension
. The proposal that both disorders share a common mechanism--because of the ability of agents that inhibit or antagonize the adrenocortical secretion to lower blood pressure in the low renin hypertensive group--appears to be based on a circular argument. The beneficial effect of removal or neutralization of the adrenocortical contribution only constitutes evidence for volume-dependency or sensitivity, which is how the low renin group is defined. Any measure that blocks a component of the normal homeostatic chain for the maintenance of extracellular and intravascular volume including the adrenal cortex would be expected to have a beneficial effect in volume-sensitive
hypertension
. Evidence for an adrenal factor in low renin
hypertension
must rest on the isolation of an active substance that reproduces the effect when readministered. 18-Hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone (18-OH-DOC) does not meet these criteria. It is not significantly increased in experimental
hypertension
and, although its overproduction in unselected low renin essential hypertensive patients remains controversial, the magnitude of the reported elevations is insufficient in relation to the low biologic activity of the steroid to account for a significant effect. Apart from its increase in the 17alpha-hydroxylase defect, 18-OH-DOC is increased in primary
aldosteronism
and may also be an indicator of a histologic variant of the aldosteronoma. On the basis of a large body of evidence showing parallelism between the 11beta- and 18-hydroxylase functions of the fasciculata zone, we have proposed that both enzymic functions are functionally related and may involve the same enzyme protein and catalytic site. According to this view, the secretion of 18-OH-DOC would have no special significance of its own but would be an obligatory consequence of the secretion of fasciculata zone corticosterone.
...
PMID:Adrenocortical factors in hypertension. I. Significance of 18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone. 18 51
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