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

The prevalence of diabetes is greatest among older persons, yet few studies have specifically addressed the impact of age on diabetic complications. The present study examines the prevalence of four diabetic complications: retinopathy, peripheral neuropathy, autonomic neuropathy, and hypertension, as well as depression, in older male patients with noninsulin-dependent diabetes. Participants ranged in age from 53 to 80 years. Multiple risk factors, including age, duration of illness, type of treatment, metabolic control, and obesity were evaluated as predictors of these complications using logistic regression. Results suggest a significant increase in the prevalence of retinopathy with aging, independent of the effects of metabolic control, duration of illness, and other risk variables. Age was also related to prevalence of peripheral neuropathy symptoms, hypertension, and impotence. Current metabolic control was significantly associated with retinopathy, peripheral neuropathy, and hypertension prevalence. Time since diagnosis was only independently related to impotence and hypertension. These findings suggest that the increase in many diabetic complications in older persons cannot be wholly accounted for by simple disease status variables, and may result from an interaction of diabetes variables and general age-related changes.
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PMID:Effects of age on complications in adult onset diabetes. 278 81

A large hypertensive population of patients in general practice was used to assess the tolerability of nifedipine in previously untreated patients and was compared with other antihypertensive drugs in previously treated patients. A total of 3972 patients with a sitting diastolic blood pressure between 95 and 115 mmHg were treated with 20 mg nifedipine twice daily for 1 month. In non-responders the dose was increased to 40 mg twice daily for a second month; responders continued to take 20 mg twice daily. A total of 2772 patients had been previously untreated for hypertension, whereas 857 had previously been treated with beta-blockers alone or in combination and 346 had received diuretics alone or in combination. Adverse events were recorded for 28 days prior to treatment being initiated with or changed to nifedipine and for two 28-day nifedipine treatment periods. Flushing and headache, which diminished with time, occurred during nifedipine treatment. Ankle oedema did not diminish with time. Reductions were seen in occurrences of dyspnoea, impotence, lethargy and cold extremities.
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PMID:General practice data derived tolerability assessment of antihypertensive drugs. 280 16

PBI was measured in 555 patients chosen at random from those who visited our impotence clinic between October 1984 and September 1986. Of 555 patients with impotence 29 (5.2%) showed a low PBI level of less than 0.6. On the basis of carefully taken history, risk factors causing the disturbance of penile blood flow were found in 13 (44.8%) of these 29 patients. They included diabetes mellitus, hypertension, surgery of pelvic organ, vertebral injury, vascular disorder of brain and gangliosympathectomy. Although penile angiography is necessary to make the definite diagnosis of vasculogenic impotence, hospitalization is usually required to perform the examination. Measurement of PBI is useful as a screening test to detect vasculogenic impotence at an outpatient clinic, because this examination is noninvasive and technically easy.
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PMID:[Measurement of penile brachial index (PBI) in patients with impotence]. 281 2

The distribution of four main arterial risk factors (ARF) (diabetes, smoking, hyperlipidaemia (HLP), and hypertension) was investigated in 440 impotent men (mean age 46.8) in whom the penile blood-pressure index (PBPI) (ie, the ratio of the lowest systolic pressure in one of the four main arteries of the penis to the systolic pressure in the arm) was measured. In 222 the cause (organic or functional) of impotence was sought by further investigations, such as cavernosonography. 80% of this subgroup had organic impairment of erection. In 53% of these there was evidence of an arterial lesion. Smoking (64%), diabetes (30%), and HLP (34%) were all significantly more common in the 440 impotent men than in the general male population of a similar age. Whenever two or more ARFs were present mean PBPI was significantly lower. The frequency of organic impotence increased from 49% in the absence of any ARF to 100% in patients with 3 or 4 ARFs. It is concluded that increase in the frequency of impotence with age is mainly related to arteriosclerotic changes for the arteries of the penis and that the ARF and PBPI should be evaluated first in any patient complaining of impotence.
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PMID:Is impotence an arterial disorder? A study of arterial risk factors in 440 impotent men. 285 64

Effects of smoking are highlighted in a posthoc analysis of this randomized, double-blind International Prospective Primary Prevention Study in Hypertension (IPPPSH). At the time of entry, 37% of the men and 23% of the women were smoking cigarettes, and only 537 patients changed their smoking status during the trial. In men and women, smoking doubled cardiac and cerebrovascular event rates. Nonsmoking men had fewer myocardial infarctions and sudden deaths when treated with oxprenolol. Smoking status did not affect in-study blood pressure control, the type of drugs, or the combinations used, but smokers were given higher doses of oxprenolol. For a given blood pressure during antihypertensive treatment, rates for cardiac and cerebrovascular events were higher in smokers. Heart rates were higher in both oxprenolol and non-beta-blocker-treated smokers. Smoking dose dependently increased hematocrit level. Among physician-elicited symptoms, dyspnea and cold extremities were more frequent in smokers, whereas dyspnea, headaches, impotence, dizziness, and anxiety states were common, with unsatisfactory blood pressure control (diastolic blood pressure greater than 95 mm Hg). Quality of life may be more jeopardized by smoking, poor blood pressure control, or diuretic use than by beta-blocker-based therapy. In the IPPPSH, the patient who smoked had double the cardiovascular complication rates without cardiac benefit from the beta-blocker despite higher doses given; the higher heart rate and hematocrit level may have been contributing factors.
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PMID:Impact of smoking on heart attacks, strokes, blood pressure control, drug dose, and quality of life aspects in the International Prospective Primary Prevention Study in Hypertension. 289 88

Relaxation of the smooth muscle of the corpora cavernosa of the penis is necessary for penile erection. To determine the relation of impaired relaxation to impotence in diabetic patients, we performed an in vitro examination of corpus cavernosum tissue obtained at the time of implantation of a penile prosthesis in 21 diabetic and 42 nondiabetic men with impotence. Contraction was induced in isolated strips of corporal smooth muscle by norepinephrine; then relaxation was assessed with electrical stimulation of autonomic nerves and with the administration of three agents: acetylcholine, which is known to be mediated by endothelium-derived relaxing factor; papaverine; and sodium nitroprusside. The latter two act directly on smooth muscle (i.e., they are endothelium-independent). Autonomically mediated relaxation with electrical stimulation was less pronounced in the smooth muscle from diabetic men (n = 18) than in the smooth muscle from nondiabetic men (n = 24; P = 0.001). The degree of impairment increased with the duration of diabetes (r = 0.61, P = 0.007). Endothelium-dependent relaxation was also impaired, as evidenced by a lower degree of muscle relaxation after the administration of acetylcholine in the tissue from diabetic men (n = 16) than in that from nondiabetic men (n = 22; P = 0.001). The adverse effects of diabetes persisted after we controlled for smoking and hypertension. Endothelium-independent relaxation after the administration of nitroprusside and papaverine was similar in tissue from the diabetic and nondiabetic men. We conclude that diabetic men with impotence have impairment in both the autonomic and the endothelium-dependent mechanisms that mediate the relaxation of the smooth muscle of the corpora cavernosa. These findings may provide a rationale for the treatment of diabetic men with impotence by intracavernosal injection of vasodilators to induce endothelium-independent relaxation of the smooth muscle.
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PMID:Impaired neurogenic and endothelium-mediated relaxation of penile smooth muscle from diabetic men with impotence. 292 81

Twenty-one patients with high aortic occlusion treated at our institution from 1967 to 1986 were reviewed. There were seventeen men aged from 39 to 78 (mean age: 61.0) underwent surgical intervention. All patients presented clinical manifestations of vascular insufficiency of the lower limbs; rest pain in eleven patients, intermittent claudication in nine and the others. Sexual impotence was present in eight patients. Renal artery involvement was seen in one case, and renovascular hypertension was observed in this patient. Hypertension and ischemic heart disease were present in twelve cases, cerebrovascular insufficiency in one case, diabetes mellitus in three cases. The following surgical treatments were performed; end-to-end Y-shaped Dacron graft implantations from the infrarenal abdominal aorta to the common femoral arteries in six patients, onlay V-shaped Dacron graft implantations in three patients, axillofemoral extra-anatomic bypass in four patients, and amputation only in one. The hospital mortality was 18% (3/17). Twelve patients discharged from the hospital are followed up (average period was 118 months), but the follow up was lost in two patients. There were two late deaths, which course was not related to operations. The prognosis of high aortic occlusion after anatomic bypass is good, thus it was concluded that anatomic bypass with Y-shaped or V-shaped Dacron graft was recommended and extra-anatomic bypass might be performed only in a high risk patient.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment and result of high aortic occlusion]. 296 80

Since their introduction in clinical practice in 1980, ACE inhibitors have been found useful in the treatment of hypertension and CHF. In hypertension, they are effective as monotherapy in 40% to 50% of the patients, and in combination with diuretics or calcium antagonists, they are effective in up to 85% of the patients. They are well tolerated, are not associated with depression, impotence, bronchospasm or metabolic derangements such as hypokalemia, hyperuricemia or hyperglycemia, and do not have adverse effects on the quality of life. As a result, they are preferred in hypertensive patients with CHF, left ventricular dysfunction, mental depression, older age, coronary artery disease, metabolic disorders, chronic destructive pulmonary disease, and peripheral vascular disease. In CHF they cause long-lasting hemodynamic and symptomatic improvement, improve exercise tolerance, and may lower mortality in certain patient subsets. Evolving new indications for ACE inhibitors include the diagnosis of renovascular hypertension, the prediction of surgical success, the treatment of scleroderma renal crisis, the reduction of proteinuria, renal protection, cardioprotection, the improvement of arterial compliance, in Bartter's syndrome and idiopathic edema, etc. ACE inhibitors are usually well tolerated but in some instances they may cause class-specific side effects such as hypotension; usually reversible azotemia or renal failure, especially in patients with renal artery stenosis or with CHF with low blood pressure; cough; angioedema; and hyperkalemia. Differences among ACE inhibitors are emerging and include chemical class (e.g., zinc ligand), biotransformation, potency, pharmacokinetics, prodrugs, tissue effects, additional pharmacologic properties, and drug interactions.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. II. Clinical use. 305 46

The prevalence of diabetes mellitus and hypertension in the United States is increasing partly because of the incidence of these diseases in the growing geriatric population. Diabetes and hypertension have been associated with sexual dysfunction in both men and women. Neuropathy, vascular insufficiency and psychological problems have been implicated in impotence, impaired ejaculation and decreased libido in men and in decreased vaginal lubrication, orgasmic dysfunction and decreased libido in women. Several investigations of women with diabetes suggest fewer reports of sexual dysfunction than have been reported by diabetic men. However, there have been few evaluations of sexual dysfunction in women and no standard methods for assessment. Antihypertensive agents, especially diuretics, sympathetic inhibitors and beta-blocking agents have been associated with sexual dysfunction due to autonomic and hormonal effects. An estimated 40 to 80% of diabetic hypertensives have reported sexual dysfunction in several investigations. Clearly, the diabetic hypertensive patient should be evaluated for sexual dysfunction, and appropriate therapy, including changes in medication or referral for sex counseling, should become routine in clinical care.
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PMID:Sexual dysfunction in the diabetic patient with hypertension. 328 48

A personal series of 256 cases of acromegaly/gigantism seen over a 20-year period from 1963 is described. The insidious nature of the condition resulted in delay in diagnosis which was often made by a doctor when seeing the patient for an unrelated problem. Other features which commonly led to the diagnosis being made were headache, change in appearance, carpal tunnel syndrome, amenorrhoea and diabetes. The Hardy system for grading the radiological appearance of the pituitary tumour was used. Widely invasive tumours were not common but tended to occur in patients with younger age of onset and high GH levels. The occurrence of various symptoms and clinical features was noted and the changes resulting from reducing the GH level to normal. The incidence of hypertension, but not of coronary artery disease, is increased and the blood pressure may be reduced following successful treatment. The effects on the upper and lower respiratory tract are reported as well as sleep apnoea and problems associated with anaesthesia. Skin manifestations included sweating, pigmented skin tags, acanthosis nigricans and cutis verticis gyrata. In the skeletal system the incidence of kyphoscoliosis and osteoarthritis especially of the hip is reported: the question of hip replacement is discussed. Diabetes mellitus disappeared in most cases if the acromegaly was cured. In men but not in women the incidence of colloid nodular goitre was increased as was hyperthyroidism in middle-aged women. In two patients a parathyroid adenoma was present: hypercalcaemia was present in five additional patients, but the cause was not determined. The common occurrence of amenorrhoea in the younger women was noted, it was not always associated with hyperprolactinaemia, and often responded to successful treatment of the acromegaly. The association of acromegaly with hirsutism and galactorrhoea is confirmed. The incidence of impotence and loss of libid in the men is discussed: in a proportion of those in whom the acromegaly was cured, potency returned, but in a number depression occurred and what was believed to be psychogenic impotence persisted. Hyperprolactinaemia was found in 49 out of 151 patients with active acromegaly in whom the prolactin level was measured. Previous reports have indicated a doubling of death rates in acromegalics. In this series there were 47 deaths observed compared to 37.2 expected. The increased death rate was in women of all ages and in men under the age of 55, The increased deaths in the women were from cardiovascular and cerebrovascular causes and from breast cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Acromegaly. 330 90


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