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

A unique case of a Chinese boy with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) associated with Takayasu's arteritis is reported. He had eczema, epistaxis and recurrent infections since early infancy and was found to have thrombocytopenia, negative delayed-type skin hypersensitivity, low T cell number and impaired lymphocyte proliferation to phytohaemagglutinin and concanavalin A. He had high normal serum immunoglobulin (Ig)G and IgA with low IgM and isohaemagglutinin. He presented with hypertensive encephalopathy at 5.5 years of age and an aortogram demonstrated abdominal aortic aneurysm with bilateral stenosis of renal arteries resulting in renovascular hypertension. His hypertension was difficult to control medically and autotransplant of his kidneys to the iliac arteries was performed, but he died in the immediate postoperative period. The relationship between immunodeficiency and collagen-vascular disease was discussed.
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PMID:Takayasu's arteritis associated with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. 135 86

In order to determine the incidence and causes of death during the first 100 days after BMT (early deaths) in a pediatric population we have examined data reported in the AIEOP BMT Registry. Up to July 1990, data on 486 children who underwent allogeneic (180) or autologous (306) BMT were evaluable. The children had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (148 cases), acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (127 cases), neuroblastoma (82 cases), chronic myelogenous leukemia (15 cases), aplastic anemia (nine cases), solid tumors, lymphoma, immunodeficiency or storage diseases. The overall survival is 55% for allogeneic HLA matched and 38% for autologous transplants at 5 years, 24% for HLA mismatched graft at 2 years. Out of the 486 children, 70 (14%) died during the first 100 days after BMT: 33/306 (11%) after autologous BMT, 24/150 (16%) after allogeneic matched BMT and 13/30 (43%) after mismatched BMT. Causes of early death were as follows: disease progression: 12 children (10/306 after autologous and 2/180 after allogeneic BMT); infection: 12 children (five after autologous and seven after allogeneic BMT); interstitial pneumonitis: 21 children (seven after autologous and 14 after allogeneic BMT); cardiac failure: five children (four after autologous BMT); veno-occlusive disease: eight children (three after autologous, five after allogeneic BMT); acute renal failure: three children (one after autologous and two after allogeneic BMT); multiple organ failure: two cases (one after autologous BMT); cerebral hemorrhage: three children (one after autologous BMT); hypertension: one child; acute GVHD: three children (12% of early deaths after allogeneic BMT).
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PMID:Early deaths in children after BMT. Bone Marrow Transplantation Group of the Italian Association for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP) and Gruppo Italiano Trapianto di Midollo Osseo (GITMO). 146 3

We report two cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAHT) in HIV infected patients who never were, or had ceased to be, drug addicts. A study of these cases and a review of the literature show that this association is not fortuitous and persists after the classical causes of PAHT (pulmonary embolism, toxic factors, cirrhosis) have been excluded. The clinical features and the results of complementary cardiovascular examinations are identical with those of the so-called "primary" PAHT. The prognosis is severe: 50 percent of the patients died of the consequences of PAHT 1 year after the first clinical signs. Histology displays signs of plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy, as in primary PAHT. In HIV patients pulmonary arterial hypertension occurs independently of the degree of immunodeficiency. Its relation with other HIV-related vasculites and their physiopathology are discussed.
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PMID:["Primary" pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with HIV infection. Two cases]. 153 6

Increases in physical fitness are often associated with improvements in certain chronic diseases, such as hypertension and coronary heart disease. Recent evidence has shown that exercise also influences the neuroendocrine and immune systems, resulting in a potential to benefit those with chronic immunodeficiency diseases. Therefore, exercise may prove to have a profound impact on the management of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Our current work includes the investigation of the immunologic and stress-attenuating effects of an aerobic exercise training program for individuals at risk for AIDS. Upon completion of training, the subjects showed a significant increase in helper/inducer (CD4) cells and the inducer subset (CD45RA+CD4+) which activate suppressor/cytotoxic (CD8) cells. These increases, which average about 50 cells per cubic millimeter, are comparable to those observed in some studies of the AIDS drug comparable to those observed in some studies of the AIDS drug azidothymidine (AZT), but without the accompanying side effects. Also, individuals undergoing aerobic training reported no increases in anxiety and depression in response to notification of a positive HIV-1 serologic status. These findings taken together indicate that an aerobic exercise training program may enhance certain critical components of cellular immunity as well as acting as a buffer for the detrimental mood changes that typically accompany stress, thus providing a timely, promising behavioral approach to helping HIV-1-infected individuals.
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PMID:Aerobic exercise training in an AIDS risk group. 168 Jan 8

The standard angiotensin I (Ang I) radioimmunoassay for renin activity determination is a useful clinical tool for the diagnosis of high renin levels in certain cases of hypertension. It depends upon the liberation of Ang I from human plasma angiotensinogen. We considered whether a commercially available synthetic tetradecapeptide (TDP), Asp-Arg-Val-Tyr-Ile-His-Pro-Phe-His-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-Ser, would produce authentic Ang I upon incubation with protease from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). This peptide is also known to be cleaved by renin at the Leu-Leu bond to yield the decapeptide Ang I. When the TDP is incubated with the HIV-1 protease, the peptide is readily hydrolyzed. Product formation is linear with respect to time and enzyme concentration. HPLC analysis of reaction products showed two new peaks, as one would expect from the cleavage of a TDP into a decapeptide and a tetrapeptide. Amino acid analysis of HPLC-purified peaks confirmed that the HIV-1 protease cleaves TDP at the Leu10-Leu11 site to produce the desired decapeptide, Ang I. Production of Ang I by the HIV-1 protease, like human renin, is inhibited in the presence of a protease inhibitor. Implications of the discovery of an HIV-1 protease substrate that produces authentic Ang I are discussed in light of a screening assay for soluble HIV-1 protease inhibitors.
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PMID:Could angiotensin I be produced from a renin substrate by the HIV-1 protease? 179 23

Many current health status instruments either are too long to use in many acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) clinical trials or omit important concepts. In this study, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-relevant items developed for the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) from subscales for cognitive function, energy/fatigue, health distress, and a single quality of life item were added to a portion of the MOS Short-form General Health Survey. The resulting 30-item questionnaire reliably and distinctly measured ten aspects of health and took less than 5 minutes to complete. To test its validity, this modified measure was used to compare the health of 73 subjects with asymptomatic HIV infection and 44 with early AIDS-related complex (ARC). Compared with ARC subjects, asymptomatic individuals reported superior overall health, less pain, and better physical function, role function, cognitive function, and quality of life (rank-sum, P less than 0.02). Asymptomatic subjects' scores were higher on most subscales than the age-adjusted scores of MOS outpatients with hypertension, diabetes, recent myocardial infarction, or depression; ARC patients scored closest to hypertensive patients. This instrument, containing a subset of the MOS measures of health-related quality of life, may be a useful outcome measure for AIDS clinical trials.
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PMID:A health status questionnaire using 30 items from the Medical Outcomes Study. Preliminary validation in persons with early HIV infection. 187 45

A case of polyarteritis nodosa (PN) in childhood involving various organs such as the gastrointestinal tract, skin, CNS, kidneys and liver with hypogammaglobulinemia is reported. This 6 month old girl was admitted to our hospital with vomiting, diarrhea, bloody stools with mucous and weight loss. For the past 5 months she had these abdominal symptoms. She was diagnosed as having PN of the Kussmaul-Maier variety on the grounds of the biopsy of skin lesion where a necrotizing vasculitis was found. Prednisolone and methylprednisolone pulse treatment were not effective in suppressing the progress of the disease. At the age of 1 year 7 month a combination therapy of prednisolone and immunosuppressants (cyclophosphamide) was started and this was found to be effective. She was discharged when she was 2 year and 2 month. The dosage of prednisolone was tapered as the activity of the PN decreased and she did well with a maintainance dosage of 9.5 mg/day. At 3 year 6 month of age she suddenly developed hypertension (the plasma renin activity was found to be 16.6 ng/m/hr. and the aldosterone 220 ng/dl). CNS involvement such as spinal cord dysfunction, left sided convulsions, cerebral hemorrhage developed 5 months later. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy was performed 3 times and 2 mg/kg/day of prednisolone was administered. In spite of this therapy she passed away with a massive cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 4 year 8 month. Unfortunately an autopsy was not performed. Results of the immunological tests proved that the hypogammaglobulinemia was a common variable immunodeficiency (CVI). It has been reported that primary immuno-deficiency syndrome is often associated with collagen disease and auto-immune disease. This lack of the defense mechanism against the virus or extra antigen could be related to the onset of collagen and auto-immune disease. As the correlation between CVI and PN has not been clarified this case is of interest as concerns the cause of PN.
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PMID:[A case of hypogammaglobulinemia associated with polyarteritis nodosa presenting a variety of symptoms in childhood]. 197 16

The health condition of man has changed considerably since life insurance companies have been established. The initial problem of the companies was the fact that many young persons died from tuberculosis. For many decades persons from families with tuberculosis cases or with underweight were not accepted for insurance on their lives. Nevertheless companies observed many deaths causes by this disease. Medical directors and actuaries studied these cases in detail (dates and numbers), even of the deceased. The resulting statistics formed the premium calculation basis for persons with an increased risk. Comparative studies allowed acceptance for more people. Within the last decades when sulfonamides, antibiotics and insulin were discovered and produced the mortality ratio decreased. Nowadays, even persons who suffered from tuberculosis do not present an increased risk anymore. The life expectancy has doubled during the last century. This is why degenerative diseases increased, especially the coronary heart diseases. While thirty years ago the mortality ratio stood at about 500%, improved medical and surgical therapy made prognosis easier and when risk factors can be eliminated the mortality ratio tends to be less than 200%. Since insulin is available, patients with type I-diabetes do not die anymore in coma, the remaining risk is the sclerosis of the vessels. Diabetes with adults increases with overweight, high blood pressure and hyperlipemia. The mortality ratio depends on these risk factors. Morbus Crohn, first described in 1932, seems to increase. Life insurance needs more long-term statistical data. For only some years we are confronted with the immunodeficiency "Aids".(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Change in the panorama of chronic diseases and their insurability by life insurance]. 273 88

Heroin-associated nephropathy (HAN), a complication of intravenous heroin abuse, was initially recognized at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, NY, in the early 1970s. Our recent experience indicates that after a steady incidence of new cases of HAN throughout the mid-1980s, a sharp decrease in incidence of new cases occurred starting in 1989. We sought to explore possible explanations for what amounts to disappearance of a previously prevalent disease. By means of retrospective analysis of a hospital-specific registry of new cases of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, incidence curves from 1981 through 1993 for new cases of HAN, diabetes-induced renal disease, and human immunodeficiency virus-associated nephropathy were constructed. From hospital computer records, the number of admissions directly related to opioid abuse were extracted and charted. Unpublished surveillance records of the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services as well as reports from the New York City Department of Health, Office of AIDS Surveillance and the US Department of Justice Drug Enforcement Administration were used to determine the pattern of change in the prevalence of heroin abuse. Additionally, we used analysis of "street" heroin by the Drug Enforcement Administration to draw curves detailing drug cost and purity in New York City. There were no new cases of ESRD due to HAN for the years 1991 through 1993. The rates for new cases of ESRD due to diabetes and hypertension remained relatively constant throughout this interval.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Disappearance of uremia due to heroin-associated nephropathy. 774 21

A 46-year-old woman who noticed tightness of the skin in September, 1993, was admitted to a local hospital due to hypertension, congestive heart failure and renal dysfunction on the 2nd of November. After admission, renal function deteriorated progressively. A diagnosis of scleroderma renal crisis (SRC) was suspected from her skin biopsy and clinical course. She was referred to our hospital for further evaluation and maintenance of hemodialysis. Her blood pressure was kept normal by anti-hypertensive drugs including cilazapril. Acute interstitial pneumonia, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia appeared during her clinical course. Corticosteroid therapy was effective for acute interstitial pneumonia, but in-effective for thrombocytopenia. Plasma exchange was not effective for thrombocytopenia, which was successfully treated with intravenous gamma-globulin therapy. She died of cytomegaloviral encephalitis, which might have resulted from immunodeficiency caused by prolonged corticosteroid therapy and uremia. Complications other than SRC might have appeared during the clinical course based on the immune disorder of progressive systemic sclerosis itself. In order to improve the prognosis of patients with SRC such complications should be detected promptly and treated correctly.
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PMID:[A case of scleroderma renal crisis with acute interstitial pneumonia, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and refractory thrombocytopenia]. 796 79


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