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

The physician who understands the pathophysiology of angina pectoris can apply rational therapeutic measures based on an appreciation of the determinants of myocardial oxygen supply and demand. Most patients with angina secondary to coronary atherosclerosis can be treated conservatively using a systematic approach that includes correction or removal of underlying causes or precipitating factors and the judicious use of sublingual nitroglycerin. In patients with more resistant angina, use of oral or topical nitroglycerin or sublingual isosorbide dinitrite as well as propranolol can be advised. Aortocoronary bypass surgery can offer significant improvement in carefully selected patients with frequent angina poorly controlled by medical therapy. The most important consideration in the treatment of angina is protection of coronary blood flow reserve by primary prevention of the atherosclerotic process itself. All individuals from families prone to coronary artery disease should be evaluated for alterable risk factors, the most important being cigarette smoking, hypertension, and hypercholesterolemia. Considering the high risk of unheralded sudden death in previously asymptomatic patients with coronary atherosclerosis, angina can, in a sense, be considered a fortunate harbinger of coronary stenosis, identifying candidates for secondary preventive measures aimed at retarding the progression of vascular disease. More importantly, angina serves as an index for detecting families at high risk of coronary artery disease, in whom early application of primary prevention may afford a more promising outlook.
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PMID:Angina pectoris. Diagnosis and treatment. 0 83

Among the most important coronary risk factors are a diet rich in saturated fatty acids, cholesterol and calories, hypercholesterolemia, high blood pressure and excessive smoking. The typical pain can be elicited by putting a strain on the patient, e.g. climbing stairs. The disappearance of the pain after treatment with nitroglycerine is one of the most important pointers. Treatment is with nitroglycerine which, moreover, remains the drug of choice, also with nitrates such as pentaerythritol tetranitrate and with betablockers like propranolol. Favorable results have also been reported with a combination of isosorbide dinitrate and propranolol.
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PMID:[Angina pectoris. Results of investigations to date (author's transl)]. 0 84

The physician today is presented with a plethora of possibilities in the therapy of each of the aspects of ischemic heart disease (Fig. 15-5). There is the temptation to recommend complex and impossible dietary prescriptions coupled with several pharmaceutical agents for control of anginal pain, hypertension, arrhythmias, hypercholesterolemia, and clinical congestive heart failure. While each of the objectives may be in part valid, the burden on the patient of following such a constraining and difficult life may make it virtually impossible either to enjoy life or to follow the physician's recommendations explicitly. Often a compromise must be reached between theoretically optimal therapy and that which is reasonable and acceptable to the patient. Again, a review of each aspect of the program with the patient may aid in establishing that which is possible rather than that which is ideal.
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PMID:Principles in selection of therapy. 1 Apr 91

To palliate certain criticisms levelled at workers studying psychological factors in coronary artery disease, the authors have applied a pluri-dimensional approach associating a semi-direct psychological interview, a self-evaluation test (Bortner scale), an Eysenck personality test and Sandler and Hazari's test of obsessional behaviour. This protocol was applied to 222 patients hospitalised for coronary artery disease and 522 random controls. The psychological interview and Bortner test showed a significantly higher proportion of A pattern and especially extreme A pattern behaviour in patients with coronary artery disease (32.6 % in coronary patients 9.7 % in controls). The personality questionnaire showed a greater tendency to neurotic behaviour in the coronary patients. These results were independant of age and sex. In the present study, psychological factors are given equal importance to other major risk factors (tobacco, hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia). They are independant of these other factors. A prospective study using the same protocol is being prepared.
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PMID:[Pluri-dimensional study of psychological factors in coronary disease]. 10 94

The data regarding the effect of physical of physical conditioning on the progression of myocardial is chemia, although suggestive of a favorable influence, are in no way definitive. Efforts to alter the physical activity habits of our population should not supersede efforts directed to alter the major risk factors. The emphasis in the prevention of coronary atherosclerotic heart disease for the general public should be on the well established cardinal risk factors, that is, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, and cigarette smoking. The National Postinfarction Rehabilitation Study, when completed, may demonstrate how physical conditioning influences the progression of myocardial ischemia. However, "moderate activity is a part of a balanced satisfying living and is the safe and sane hygienic prescription of the thoughtful physician for his patients, the high risk and the healthy alike.
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PMID:Does exercise conditioning delay progression of myocardial ischemia in coronary atherosclerotic heart disease? 13 6

The role of hypertension in cardiovascular disease was studied in the hypertensive coarcted monkey during the feeding of an atherogenic and nonatherogenic diet. During the 15-month period of observation, half of the hypertensive coarcted monkeys developed cardiovascular disease which included heart failure, ischemic heart disease, stroke, and sudden death. There were no cardiovascular complications in the control normotensive monkeys except for one cholesterol-fed animal. The incidence of ischemic heart disease and sudden cardiac death was higher in monkeys with both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia than in those with hypertension or hypercholesterolemia alone. Postmortem studies revealed that the former monkeys had both hypertensive and atherosclerotic heart disease, whereas the monkeys with hypertension or hypercholesterolemia had either hypertensive or atherosclerotic heart disease. Hypertensive heart disease was characterized not only by hypertrophy of the left ventricle but also by focal myocardial degeneration and fibrosis and by focal thickening and narrowing of the small coronary arteries, particularly the sinus node artery and the atrioventricular node artery. The finding of transmural myocardial infarction in two monkeys with patient coronary arteries suggests a possible role of coronary artery spasm in ischemic heart disease in hypertension. The cerebral vascular complications of hypertension included hypertensive encephalopathy, transient "ischemic" attacks, and hemorrhagic stroke. The complications were associated with severe hypertension and with hypertensive vascular disease or hypertensive and atherosclerotic vascular disease of the cerebral arteries.
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PMID:Role of hypertension in ischemic heart disease and cerebral vascular disease in the cynomolgus monkey with coarctation of the aorta. 14 28

All WHO requirements and recommendations fulfilled, a one-stage epidemiological study was conducted in a nonorganized population of rural males, aged 30 to 59 years. With the aid of random numbers tables 1450 persons were selected, of whom 1340 were examined (92.4%). The majority of the examined (82.3%) were engaged in physical labour in different branches of agriculture, and only 14.4%--in clerical work. Ischaemic heart disease was found in 55 persons (4.1%), among them 26 (47.2%) were newly diagnosed cases. Among the clarks ischaemic heart disease was found to be more than twice as frequent (7.2%) as in those engaged in hard (3.3%) and moderately hard (3.7%) physical labour. A correlation was established between the incidence of the disease and such leading risk factors as arterial hypertension, smoking, excessive body weight, limited exercises and hypercholesterolemia. The conducted epidemiological study proves the necessity of the development and realization of preventive measures against ischaemic heart disease among the rural population.
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PMID:[Epidemiology of ischemic heart disease among the rural male population of Karaganda Province]. 14 Feb 65

Alterations in the concentrations of the cholesterol and triglyceride moieties of lipoproteins separated by ultracentrifugation and precipitation methods were studied at frequent intervals throughout pregnancy and the puerperium in a group of 43 women. The plasma cholesterol concentration rose on the average by about 50 per cent, the major increase occurring in the second trimester. The plasma triglyceride concentration rose threefold, reaching its peak during the third trimester. All major lipoproteins participated in these changes: in very-low-density lipoproteins, both lipids rose in proportion to the ratio in nonpregnant women, but in low-density and high-density lipoproteins, the ratio of triglyceride to cholesterol rose. The triglyceride enrighment in low-density lipoproteins reflected the inclusion of intermediate-density lipoproteins (d 1.006 to 1.019). The occurrence of hypertension or pre-eclampsia led to a further increase in lipids in very-low-density lipoproteins. Hypercholesterolemia was greatest in women with pre-existing hypercholesterolemia, and women in the third pregnancy showed higher plasma cholesterol concentrations than women in the first pregnancy. Both cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations decreased significantly within 24 hours of delivery and this was reflected in all lipoproteins. However, while triglyceride levels continued to decrease rapidly returning to nonpregnant levels during the puerperium, cholesterol in low-density lipoprotein remained elevated for at least six to seven weeks post partum.
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PMID:The hyperlipidemia of pregnancy in normal and complicated pregnancies. 21 73

A summary of what is currently known about the negative side effects associated with oral contraceptive usage is presented, and recommendations for prescribing OCs (oral contraceptives) are made. According to the results of several investigations, 2-18% of all women who take OCs develop hypertension. For most of these women the effects are mild; however, for some the increase in blood pressure is marked and results in renal damage. Several studies demonstrate that the risk of peripheral venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism is enhanced for women who use OCs compared to nonusers. The risk is somewhat reduced for those who take low estrogen OCs. Women aged 30-39, who take OCs, are 3 times more likely to suffer a myocardial infarction than those who do not use OCs. This risk is markedly increased among OC users who either smoke or suffer from hypertension, diabetes, or hypercholesterolemia. OC users have a 9.5 times greater risk of thrombolic stroke and a 2.0 times greater risk of hemorrhagic stroke than nonusers. For women over 27 years of age, OC usage is associated with the development of benign hepatic adenoma. This risk increases markedly with duration of pill use and is greater for women who take pills containing mestranol compared to those who take pills containing ethinyl estradiol. Occasionally cases of pulmonary hypertension, peripheral arterial occlusion, mesenteric vascular insufficiency, Budd-Chiari syndrome, and noninflammatory cholestatic liver injury are reported among OC users. Recommendations are: 1) women with thromboembolic disorders and women over 34 years old, who smoke or who are obese or hypertensive should be advised to consider other forms of contraception; 2) prescriptions should be written for a 6 month supply and renewed only after a follow-up visit; 3) women who experience elevated blood pressure readings should be advised to discontinue usage; 4) serum triglyceride and cholesterol should be checked every 6 months; and 5) consider the use of low dose heparin for OC users who are recovering from trauma or surgery or who are confined to bed for long periods of time.
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PMID:A review: adverse effects of oral contraceptives. 22 69

The purpose of the present paper was to study clinical, morphological and immunological aspects of late rejection of renal allotransplants. We have, therefore, analyzed the occurrence and nature of renal transplant disease and graft failure among 125 recipients surviving for 1 to more than 8 years after transplantation. In this population transplant disease as defined by the appearance of heavy proteinuria and/or steadily declining graft function occurred in 22 patients. At the closure date of the study on December 31, 1972 complete graft failure had occurred in 12 of these 22 patients and 4 of these have died. In addition two patients died in the presence of normal graft function, due to chronic hepatitis and metastatic cancer respectively. As based on clinical findings, pathophysiological features and renal lesions the patients with late transplant disease were classified into two groups and described accordingly. Group A, termed glomerular transplant disease, included a majority of 16 patients, constituting a rather homogenous idsease entity in relation to course of disease, clinical findings and renal lesions as studied by light-, immunofluorescence- and electron microscopy. All these patients presented with heavy proteinuria, which was non-selective in all but two, resulting eventually in complete loss of graft function in eight cases. All these patients developed hypoalbuminemia and hypercholesterolemia, and one half manifested a classical nephrotic syndrome. Arterial hypertension occurred in all patients except two. Glomerular structure as studied by light microscopy revealed a number of lesions of a rather polymorphous pattern in all patients in group A. Endomesangial proliferation, hyperplasia and segmental proliferation of epithelial cells and thickening of capillary walls were prominent features, although the degree of severity, extension and type of lesion occurred in such varying proportions that classification into any well characterized category of glomerulonephritis was not possible. All cases in group A revealed immune deposits, most frequently containing IgG, IgM, complement and fibrinogen. IgA, IgD and IgE were also demonstrated in a lesser proportion of cases in this group. The immunofluorescent pattern was a mixed granular and linear, and in no case strictly linear or granular alone. The ultrastructural investigation contains a detailed analysis of the
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PMID:Late failure or human renal transplants. An analysis of transplant disease and graft failure among 125 recipients surviving for one to eight years. 23 63


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