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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypertensive patients prescribed captopril while attending a hospital
hypertension
clinic were studied, to identify the benefits of the drug, its adverse effects and factors predisposing to them. One hundred and eighty two patients were followed for a mean of 18 months; 24 received captopril alone, and 158 combinations of captopril and other antihypertensive drugs, especially loop diuretics (91/158), or thiazide diuretics (57/158), or other vasodilators (57/158). The mean final dose of captopril was 67 mg/day. Blood pressure (BP) was effectively controlled in 73% of patients (mean fall in systolic BP 29 mmHg, CI 24 to 34, P less than or equal to 0.001; mean fall in diastolic BP 18 mmHg, CI 16 to 20, P less than or equal to 0.001). Blood urea and creatinine rose slightly in all patients (urea by 0.9 mmol/l [13%], CI 0.5-1.3, P less than or equal to 0.001 and creatinine by 9 mumols/l [8%], CI 4-13, P less than or equal to 0.001). Twenty six patients were withdrawn from captopril therapy: 6 because of poor control of their blood pressure, two because it was no longer necessary and 12 (7.7%) because of extrarenal adverse effects--10 for rashes, one each for gastric upset and
impotence
. Captopril was withdrawn in a further 6 patients, because of deteriorating renal function. Factors discriminating those at risk of renal dysfunction were high doses of captopril, concomitant high dose diuretic therapy and undiagnosed renovascular disease.
...
PMID:Adverse effects of captopril in hospital outpatients with hypertension. 219 Feb 1
Soon after the discovery of radium, a school of practitioners arose who were interested primarily in the physiological rather than the tumoricidal powers of this new radioactive element. This treatment philosophy was called "mild radium therapy" and involved the oral or parenteral administration of microgram quantities of radium and its daughter isotopes, often as cures for rheumatic diseases,
hypertension
, and metabolic disorders. Manufacturers of patent medicines responded to this market by producing a variety of over-the-counter radioactive preparations including pills, elixirs, and salves. One such nostrum was Radithor, a popular and expensive mixture of radium 226 and radium 228 in distilled water. Radithor was advertised as an effective treatment for over 150 "endocrinologic" diseases, especially lassitude and sexual
impotence
. Over 400,000 bottles, each containing over 2 muCi (74 kBq) of radium, were apparently marketed and sold worldwide between 1925 and 1930. The death of the Pittsburgh millionaire sportsman Eben M. Byers, who was an avid Radithor user, by radium poisoning in 1932 brought an end to this era and prompted the development of regulatory controls for all radiopharmaceuticals.
...
PMID:Radithor and the era of mild radium therapy. 223 82
The methods to block the venous drainage of the spongy bodies (ligation, arterialization and embolization of the venous system in the penis) used in the treatment of vascular erectile
impotence
lead to spongy tissue sclerosis. The pathogenetic unfoundedness of the above methods prompted the authors to develop better methods for treating the venous insufficiency of the spongy bodies. Nineteen patients with erectile
impotence
were examined by using drug (papaverin), induced erection, dynamic spongiography, cavernography, and spongiobiopsy. The examination provided a classification of venous insufficiency in the spongy bodies, which included 3 types of the disease: distal, proximal, and mixed. For the treatment of the distal pattern, a new surgical method was developed, namely, immersion of the deep dorsal vein of the penis into the duplication of the tunica albuginea in the spongy bodies. The method partially blocks the venous drainage only in the erected penis, thus avoiding persistent venous
hypertension
in the erected penis, thus avoiding persistent venous
hypertension
in the spongy bodies. Five patients were operated on. The follow-up of 3 months to 1 year showed an improvement of penis erectility. Lower venous drainage in the spongy bodies was evidenced by Doppler sonography and perfusion artificial erection. Thus, the proposed operation is an effective tool to correct venous drainage in the spongy bodies.
...
PMID:[Embedding of the deep dorsal vein into the duplication of the tunica albuginea--a new method for the surgical treatment of venous insufficiency of the corpora cavernosa penis]. 239 45
Penile tissue (consisting of corpus cavernosum and tunica albuginea) was obtained from 19 patients undergoing surgery for the implantation of penile prostheses. The tissue was examined for vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-like immunoreactivity in nerves, acetylcholinesterase-positive staining in nerves and noradrenaline content.
Impotence
was due to a variety of causes; 11 patients were classified as a 'non-neuropathic' group on the basis of their clinical history which included Peyronie's disease, vascular disease,
hypertension
and psychogenic impotence. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-like immunoreactive and acetylcholinesterase-positive nerves were present and the pattern and distribution were similar in each patient in this group. The noradrenaline content of the tunica albuginea was significantly lower than the corpus cavernosum (p less than 0.02), although there was a linear relationship between the noradrenaline contents of the two regions (r = 0.95, p less than 0.01). By comparison, a complete absence of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-like immunoreactivity in nerves was observed in a patient with a cauda equina lesion. Five out of six diabetic patients studied revealed a marked reduction in vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-like immunoreactivity in nerves associated with the cavernous smooth muscle, while acetylcholinesterase-positive staining was reduced in three out of five diabetic patients studied. The noradrenaline content of the corpus cavernosum from diabetic patients was significantly lower (p less than 0.02) than that of the 'non-neuropathic' group. The noradrenaline content of the tunica albuginea, however, was similar in both groups. The results provide evidence that VIPergic, cholinergic and adrenergic nerves in the penis are affected in diabetes mellitus and thus may contribute to the development of
impotence
in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Changes in the VIPergic, cholinergic and adrenergic innervation of human penile tissue in diabetic and non-diabetic impotent males. 243 29
We have treated 128 patients aged 40 +/- 9 years (60 males and 68 females), all with essential hypertension (W.H.O. I and II), over a period of 10 yr. The treatment was performed with clonidine at a dose that ranged from 0.150 to 1,200 mg (twice daily). Forty-two patients also received a diuretic (HCTZ 25 mg daily). Mean blood pressure decreased significantly from 169 +/- 10 mm Hg systolic, 107 +/- 3 diastolic to 145 +/- 6 mm Hg (p less than 0.001) 90 +/- 3 mm Hg diastolic (p less than 0.001). Side effects occurred during the first month. These were drowsiness 28%, dry mouth 35%, constipation 13%, dizziness 9%, postural hypotension 2%, and male
impotence
3.3% (2/60). Side effects still present after 120 months of treatment were drowsiness 11.7%, dry mouth 26.6%, constipation 14.1%, dizziness 4.7%, and male
impotence
1.7% (1/59). The number of patients who discontinued treatment resulting from side effects were 3.34%, all of them within the first 6 months. There were no changes in renal or liver function or in serum electrolytes or lipids. Retinopathy improved in most patients. Electrocardiogram (ECG) improved in 45 patients with LVH. It is concluded that clonidine provided sustained blood pressure control with minimum side effects during 10-year therapy for
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Safety aspects of long-term antihypertensive therapy (10 years) with clonidine. 245 59
Inappropriate ACTH secretion with bilateral diffuse or macronodular adrenal hyperplasia is the most common cause of Cushing's syndrome. This report describes a patient with Cushing's syndrome and feminization due to ACTH-independent bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia. A 47-yr-old black man presented with Cushingoid features, diabetes mellitus,
hypertension
,
impotence
, and gynecomastia. Urinary cortisol and 17-hydroxycorticosteroid excretion were 94 nmol/mmol creatinine (normal, less than 32) and 5.8 mumol/mmol creatinine (normal, 0.6-3.6), respectively. Both decreased by less than 30% after administration of dexamethasone (8 and 16 mg/day), and urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid excretion did not increase after metyrapone (750 mg, orally, every 4 h for six doses). Plasma ACTH was undetectable (less than 1 pmol/L) and was not stimulated by administration of metyrapone or ovine CRH. Serum testosterone was 5.2 nmol/L (normal, 7-30), FSH was 5 U/L (normal, 3-18), LH was 2.8 U/L (normal, 1.5-9.2), and estrone was 767 pmol/L (normal, 55-240). Both adrenal glands were enlarged, with a total weight of 86 g (normal, 8-10), and contained multiple nodules (diameter, greater than 0.5 cm) composed of two active cell types, one of which was also observed between the nodules. Cushing's syndrome with feminization due to ACTH-independent bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia is an unusual process of unknown etiology that should be included with the other known causes of Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Adrenocorticotropin-independent bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia: an unusual cause of Cushing's syndrome. 253 45
Idiopathic orthostatic hypotension (IOH) and primary sympathicotonic orthostatic hypotension (PSOH) are conspicuous orthostatic hypotension syndromes without overt somatic neurologic signs. IOH, also referred as pure autonomic failure, is a syndrome of chronic pandysautonomia, and its clinical features include supine
hypertension
, anhidrosis,
impotence
, neurogenic urinary and bowel disturbances. PSOH is different from IOH in which it is not accompanied with autonomic features outside of cardiovascular symptoms, and has been most commonly described in German-Scandinavian literatures. The controversy in the nosology of IOH and PSOH has prevented the both concepts from world-wide acceptance, and little has been known about IOH in Japanese population. In the present study, statistical analyses were made to elicit the cases of orthostatic hypotension syndrome without somatic neurologic signs from the pooled results of hemodynamic autonomic functional tests in our laboratory. The subjects were 287 Japanese cases comprising 253 normotensive volunteers and 34 hypertensive patients. Apart from
hypertension
, none of the subjects exhibited abnormal findings on physical, neurological and routine laboratory examinations. The test of 70 degrees passive head-up tilt and other hemodynamic tests were performed upon the subjects, and the results were pooled by ages. By means of the method of maximum normed residual, statistically screened out were 7 cases with extremely great orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure (OH-I). Another OH group (OH-II) consisted of 24 cases who showed orthostatic decrease in systolic blood pressure of 30 mmHg or more, but did no fall into the extreme observation. Assuming that the orthostatic regulation mechanism of blood pressure was well maintained in the remaining 256 cases, they were used as the control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Primary orthostatic hypotension syndromes without somatic neurologic signs--idiopathic orthostatic hypotension and primary sympathicotonic orthostatic hypotension]. 262 22
Appropriate preoperative vascular assessment of patients presenting with aortic aneurysms and arterial occlusive disease is essential to obtain the optimal results from aneurysm repair. The renal arteries should be evaluated in patients with
hypertension
or renal dysfunction, and stenosis must be addressed when seen on arteriograms. Hemodynamically significant lesions are candidates for bypass concomitant with aortic replacement. The stump pressure of a patent inferior mesenteric artery should be assessed intraoperatively, and bypass or reimplantation should be performed if colon ischemia might result from internal mesenteric artery ligation. If vasculogenic
impotence
is suggested by preoperative studies, meticulous nerve-sparing dissection and revascularization of the internal iliac arteries may result in recovery of erectile function in some patients. In all cases of aneurysm repair, the hypogastric circulation must be maintained through either direct revascularization or bypass to major collateral arteries. Iliac occlusive disease may be evaluated with several modalities, including physical examination, noninvasive laboratory testing, arteriography, and the papaverine test, to determine whether critical or subcritical stenoses are present. Aortic bifurcation grafts should be used to construct the distal anastomoses beyond areas of significant disease. The extent of lower-extremity occlusive disease directly affects the long-term patency of aortic replacement, and diligent follow-up is necessary for timely intervention to maintain patency of vascular reconstructions.
...
PMID:Repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms in patients with renal, iliac, or distal arterial occlusive disease. 266 50
Erectile tissue was removed from the corpora cavernosa of 25
impotent
men undergoing surgery for insertion of penile prostheses. Strips, set up in an organ bath, were contracted by the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine. There was no significant difference between tissue taken from men with diabetes, alcoholism, Peyronie's disease or men with no obvious condition causing the
impotence
. The sensitivity of tissues from hypertensive patients was significantly reduced but this was probably due to drugs being taken for
hypertension
. Precontracted tissues could be relaxed by acetylcholine or isoprenaline. The responses, however, were inconsistent, so that no difference between the different groups of patients was apparent.
...
PMID:Responses of erectile tissue from impotent men to pharmacological agents. 271 24
One thousand, two hundred and eighty-five men and 1,080 women being followed in the DHSS
Hypertension
Care Computing Project answered the questions on sexual activity included in a self-administered questionnaire. In men, both
impotence
and sexual inactivity were increased in patients receiving hydralazine. No gross excess of these complaints could be determined in patients receiving either beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs or methyldopa, nor was failure of ejaculation increased with these drugs. The survey could not exclude any deterioration in sexual function occurring uniformly across all treatment groups. However, the rates of complaint were similar in men taking a diuretic alone, a beta-adrenoceptor blocking drug alone and those taking the combination of these two drug groups. In women with
hypertension
, frequency of sexual intercourse and the achievement of orgasm was not associated with the giving of hydralazine, beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs or methyldopa.
...
PMID:The effects of anti-hypertensive drugs on sexual function in men and women: a report from the DHSS Hypertension Care Computing Project (DHCCP). 272 72
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