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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Limited weight loss following jejunoileal bypass in 24 diabetic persons who were still distinctly overweight five to ten months after a mean weight decrease of 78 lbs. was accompanied by a return of normal fasting glucose and insulin levels, normal insulin responses, and a decrease in glucose intolerance. The glucose disappearance rate had improved in the majority of the subjects, but only three had attained values in the normal range. Concomitants of the undue
hyperglycemia
and/or obesity included labile and, rarely, sustained
hypertension
and/or cardiomegaly. The blood pressure returned to normal but heart size did not change. Electrocardiographic abnormalities noted in about one-half of the patients persisted after the operation. Triglyceride and cholesterol levels decreased. No patients had diabetic retinopathy visible on funduscopy. Proteinuria did not change in three patients. Neuropathy consisting of absent ankle reflexes and/or decreased vibration perception noted in one-half of the subjects persisted despite the improvement in carbohydrate metabolism.
...
PMID:Remissions of diabetes mellitus after weight reduction by jejunoileal bypass. 72 40
The blood sugar content was determined in 142 patients with myocardial infarction on the 1--3rd, 7-10th, 28--30th days of the disease by the Hagedorn-Jensen method. The standard glucose tolerance test was conducted in 64 patients on the 30th day of the disease and repeated in 20 patients 18 months after infarction. It was concluded that transient
hyperglycemia
developed in 47.8% of patients with myocardial infarction in the acute period, predominantly in those with a sugar curve of the diabetes-decipiens type. Carbohydrate tolerance was reduced in two thirds of the patients. In some of them this disorder was attended with clinical signs of diabetes and a severe course of myocardial infarction. In patients with diminished carbohydrate tolerance the sugar curve remained abnormal 18 months after the disease. Obvious diabetes developed in 6 out of 20 patients examined. Among relatives of patients with disturbed carbohydrate metabolism diabetes mellitus was encountered more frequently and the incidence of ischemic heart disease and
hypertension
was higher.
...
PMID:[Hyperglycemia and the glucose tolerance test in the acute period of myocardial infarct and in the remote post-infarct period]. 92 75
Healthy virgin and breeder rats (Sprague-Dawley) with naturally occurring
hypertension
and arteriosclerosis were fed 5% oxonic acid and 1% uric acid added to their regular diet for 30 days. Although rats are able to convert uric acid into excretable allantoin, abnormal urinary and serum urate levels appeared. Males and females, virgins and breeders, differed in the severity of their increased urate levels. Animals with elevated urate levels developed
hypertension
,
hyperglycemia
, and hypertriglyceridemia, with only slight changes in cholesterol and free fatty acids. The kidneys were greatly enlarged and manifested medullary streaking indicative of urate deposits but were free of significant damage; BUN levels in these animals were abnormally high. Adrenal glands were reduced in size and depleted of lipid, circulating corticosterone levels were subnormal, and thymi were involuted. Serum enzymes CPK and LDH were greatly increased, whereas SGOT and SGPT levels were not elevated. The abnormal urate levels did not induce de novo arterial disease in the formerly healthy virgin rats and did not cause exacerbation of the pre-existing, naturally occurring arteriosclerosis characteristic of repeatedly bred rats. It is suggested that Sprague-Dawley rats are endowed with an especially efficient hepatic and renal capacity to metabolize uric acid. Increased urate levels in rats may have some direct metabolic relationship to the production of
hypertension
,
hyperglycemia
, and hypertriglyceridemia.
...
PMID:Effect of increased serum urate levels on virgin rats with no arteriosclerosis versus breeder rats with preexistent arteriosclerosis. 92 65
Renal disease was detected in 21 of 56 progeny from a specific line of inbred Norwegian Elkhound (NE) dogs. Results of hematologic and clinical chemistry examinations revealed that minor differences existed between affected and nonaffected NE dogs. Of 21 NE dogs with renal disease, 3 had persistent glucosuria without
hyperglycemia
. The 21 affected dogs had impaired ability to concentrate urine. According to renal function tests, glomerular filtration rate of normal NE dogs was less than that of normal mixed breed dogs. Although a few affected NE dogs excreted large amounts of amino acids in urine, statistically significant differences did not exist between normal and affected NE dogs with regard to alpha-amino acid nitrogen content of their plasma or urine. By paper chromatographic separation techniques, free amino acids of plasma, urine, and extracts of liver and kidney were not qualitatively different for mixed breed dogs, normal NE, and NE with renal disease. Statistically significant differences were not detected between serum calcium concentrations of normal and affected NE dogs. In NE dogs with renal disease, there was significant hypercalciuria, but a few normal dogs excreted more than did some dogs with disease. Blood pressure values of normal mixed breed dogs and affected NE dogs were similar. It was concluded that hematologic and blood chemical abnormalities, derangement of amino acid or calcium metabolism, and
hypertension
were not associated with renal disease in these NE dogs.
...
PMID:Familial renal disease in Norwegian Elkhound dogs: physiologic and biochemical examinations. 94 38
A large number of individuals currently diagnosed as having diabetes mellitus are asymptomatic. In order to provide rational therapy for this patient population, it is necessary to focus upon the differences between these patients and the classic prototypes with polyuria and weight loss, who require insulin for survival. Patients with asymptomatic diabetes do not need insulin for survival, and, by definition, they do not need it to alleviate symptoms. They tend to be middle-aged and overweight, but they can be young and thin. Their degree of
hyperglycemia
is moderate, often indistinguishable from that of normal individuals in their day-to-day existence. Indeed, they can often be differentiated from normal persons only on the basis of their blood glucose response to the stress of a large dextrose challenge; in this regard, the potential problem of over-diagnosing diabetes has been discussed. Since the major problem facing patients with asymptomatic diabetes is accelerated atherogenesis, the therapeutic approach must be based upon efforts to delay or prevent the onset of vascular disease. It has yet to be shown that any therapeutic intervention helps such patients, but an argument has been made in support of the following goals in subjects with asymptomatic diabetes whose fasting blood glucose level is less than 170 mg/100 ml: (1) stop smoking, (2) control
hypertension
, (3) attain ideal body weight, and (4) maintain blood triglyceride and cholesterol levels well within normal limits. Attempts to lower blood glucose with either insulin or oral agents do not seem indicated in the majority of patients within this defined diabetic population.
...
PMID:Treatment of asymptomatic diabetes mellitus. 97 61
The effect of chronic administration of growth hormone (GH) to osteoporotic patients was studied using the techniques of total body neutron activation analysis, whole body counting, calcium tracer kinetics, photon absorptiometry, quantitative microradiography, and urinary hydroxyproline. Two dosage schedules were utilized for six months each: 2 units daily and 0.2 w3/4 units of GH daily (where W represents body weight expressed in kg). The lower dosage (2 units) did not produce any appreciable change in the indices studied. Following the higher dose, no evidence of any anabolic effect was apparent in most patients (i.e., no increase in total body levels of Ca, Na, K, P, or Cl). Increases were noted in the urinary calcium excretion rate and in the urinary hydroxyproline excretion. Bone mineral content decreased. The bone biopsies displayed an increase in bone formation and resorption surfaces in response to treatment, but these changes were not statistically significant. It may be concluded that under the conditions of this study, GH administration did not result in an increment in skeletal mass. Several side effects that are characteristic of acromegaly were observed, including
hyperglycemia
,
hypertension
, arthralgia, and the carpal tunnel syndrome. Because of the lack of demonstrated benefit and the associated complications of therapy, GH administration does not appear to be of value in the treatment of osteoporosis.
...
PMID:Effects of growth hormone in osteoporosis. 99 24
The prevalence of coronary risk factors was assessed in 1,817 asymptomatic adults in Long Beach, California, at the beginning and end of a 10-11 month interval. The risk factors evaluated were hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia,
hypertension
, smoking,
hyperglycemia
, and marked obesity. The results of the tests were sent to the participants and to their physicians. An educational program aimed at reducing coronary risk factors was offered to the first 1,250 persons screened. Eight hundred and seventy-two of those 1,250 allocated to the education group returned for a second screening. The prevalence of 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 coronary risk factors did not change significantly between the two screens in either the total group of 1,817 adults or in the 872 adults in the educational program. The Long Beach Heart Association mass screening program for coronary risk factors was ineffective in reducing the number of coronary risk factors.
...
PMID:Follow-up of mass screening for coronary risk factors in 1817 adults. 113 94
Repeatedly bred male and female rats of many strains develop
hyperglycemia
, hyperlipidemia,
hypertension
, and arteriosclerosis spontaneously. The intensity of their arterial disease and related metabolic derangements appear to be related to their reproductive activity. Repeatedly bred spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) were found to have severe
hypertension
,
hyperglycemia
, hyperlipidemia, elevated creatine phosphokinase (CPK), serum glutamic oxaloacetic and glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGOT, SGPT), and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), as well as high circulating corticosterone levels. Despite these atherogenic metabolic derangements and their severe
hypertension
, the breeder SHR did not develop the severe, generalized arteriosclerosis found in other strains of breeder rats. Instead, the arterial lesions, consisting of intimal hyalinization and fibrosis, medial hypertrophy, and occlusion of the lumen, were found only in male breeder SHR and were confined to the intratubular arteries of the testes. It is suggested that the severe
hypertension
, genetic influences, or differences in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-gonadal function in breeder SHR may not have been conducive to the development of arteriosclerosis in this particular strain of rats.
...
PMID:Arterial lesions in repeatedly bred spontaneously hypertensive rats. 126 99
To assess the factors which may initiate and accelerate degenerative senile calcification of the aortic valve, two-dimensional echocardiograms and the clinical characteristics of 259 consecutive cases with senile calcification of the aortic valve were studied. The results were compared with those of similar studies among 186 consecutive cases with the normal aortic valves. An aortic cusp with an area of increased echo greater than 3 mm in width and with decreased pliability was regarded as calcified. Among patients with calcification of one aortic cusp, 114 exhibited calcification of a noncoronary cusp, 17 calcification of the left coronary cusp and 3 calcification of the right coronary cusp (p < 0.001). Among patients with calcification of 2 aortic cusps, 39 had calcification of a noncoronary and left coronary cusps, 3 calcification of the left and right coronary cusps and 16 calcification of the right and noncoronary cusps (p < 0.001). In patients with calcification of their aortic valves, the end-diastolic angle between the interventricular septum and the ascending aorta was 102 +/- 10 degrees; whereas, it was 89 +/- 10 degrees in the control group (p < 0.001). There were no differences in frequency of aortic root calcification, mitral annular calcification,
hypertension
, ischemic heart disease, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia, or
hyperglycemia
, between patients with and without calcification of their aortic valves. Of the female patients ranging in age from 65 to 74 years, 88% in those with calcification of 3 cusps and 30% in those with calcification of one cusp (p < 0.05) had mitral annular calcification.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Influence of systolic left ventricular blood flow direction on genesis of senile calcification of the aortic valve]. 133 4
Diuretics have been most commonly used to treat
hypertension
in the last 25 years. Their tolerance is good, they have been effective specially in negroes, older and obese patients and they are relatively inexpensive. The emergence of new and more potent drugs: beta blockers, calcium antagonists, and ACE inhibitors, has led to a decrease in diuretic use.
Hyperglycemia
and lipid disorders induced by diuretics have been invoked to explain the lack of effect on coronary mortality among treated hypertensive patients. Hypokalemia induced by diuretics has been suspected as the cause for sudden deaths. However, these effects are not sufficiently proven and do not warrant, at present, the elimination of diuretics in the treatment of
hypertension
.
...
PMID:[Diuretics and their current role in the treatment of essential arterial hypertension]. 134 1
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