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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A questionnaire survey and review of the literature show that pregnancy can be well tolerated in most women with renal transplants. Fifty-two per cent of the renal transplant recipients who became pregnant had full-term infants with no serious complications. With therapeutic abortions, excluded, 71% of the 308 pregnancies permitted to continue resulted in full-term infants. Rejection episodes were occasionally a serious problem, occurring in 9% of the pregnancies. Mechanical interference with renal excretion or preventing vaginal delivery occurred in 5.6% of the cases.
Hypertension
and proteinuria, often existing prior to pregnancy, became frequently increased during pregnancy.
Infections
not associated with rejection were common but easily controlled in most cases. Prematurity was frequent but related to renal function and the time interval from transplant to conception. The most serious infant complications were related to prematurity. Unknown is the future of these infants and their progeny because of their intrauterine exposure to immunosuppressive drugs.
...
PMID:Pregnancy in renal transplant patients: a review. 37 91
Chronic atrophic pyelonephritis is associated with vesicoureteric reflux in infancy. Reflux disappears during childhood in 50% of cases. It is more commonly detected in infants (49%) and children (26%) with infection than in adults (4.4%). Severe reflux may persist in adults and is usually (94%) associated with scarring. Patients with end-stage renal failure due to pyelonephritis are much younger than patients with end-stage renal failure due to other causes. The incidence of reflux according to sex is equal in infancy, but after infancy both pyelonephritic scarring and reflux are far more common in females.
Infection
is the likely cause of progressive scarring in females.
Hypertension
is associated with chronic atrophic pyelonephritis. Proteinuria is the worst prognostic feature in patients with reflux nephropathy and pyelonephritic scarring. Intrarenal reflux determines the site of scarring. The role of surgical correction of vesicoureteric reflux remains uncertain, but meticulous control of infection appears to prevent progressive scarring.
...
PMID:Reflux nephropathy and chronic atrophic pyelonephritis: a review. 73 56
Patients with end-stage renal failure shouldn't be denied the only possibility of cure just because they're old or have other chronic diseases. In this study of 69 patients over age 50-the largest series reported from a single medical center-kidney transplants from related donors had the same high rate of success as in younger patients. Over 80 percent of the patients who received kidneys from their children or siblings are still alive, in contrast to 52 percent of those who had to settle for a cadaver kidney.
Infection
posed the most serious hazard after surgery. Late complications, particularly
hypertension
and diabetes, were easily controoled and by no means debilitating. Four of the survivors still need hemodialysis, but over two-thirds have recovered completely.
...
PMID:Kidney transplants in patients over 50. 78 13
An analysis was carried out of the mortality rate on the medical wards of the University College Hospital, Ibadan, over a 14-year period (1960-73). A total of 4,568 cases were reviewed with an annual death rate of between 300 and 400. Most of the deaths resulted from cardiovascular diseases, especially
hypertension
, the mortality rate from which has shown no appreciable decline over the years. Death from cerebrovascular accident is steadily increasing.
Infections
contribute considerably to mortality from chest and alimentary tract disease, although there has been a progressive decline in mortality rates from infectious diseases such as tetanus and typhoid fever. The standard of death certification needs to be improved upon, especially with respect to the clarification of the primary and the contributory causes of death and whether post-mortem examination was carrie dout or not. It is suggested that more effort should be made to ensure that post-mortem examination is carried out in cases where there is doubt about the ante-mortem diagnosis unless such a request is specifically refused by the relatives of the deceased after explaining to them the value of such an examination to medical knowledge.
...
PMID:Analysis of the causes of death on the medical wards of the University College Hospital, Ibadan over a 14-year period (1960-1973). 84 50
A series of 262 children suffering from vesico-ureteric reflux is presented. Nearly all presented with a urinary tract infection and the age at onset of symptoms was predominantly in the pre-school years. The reflux was not diagnosed in the majority until after the children started attending school. Over one-third had symptoms for more than half their lives before reflux was diagnosed. The incidence of
hypertension
and renal insufficiency in the series were 4% and 7-8% respectively. Nearly 60% of the children were selected by defined criteria for operation as their initial treatment. The remainder were treated conservatively in the first instance but 30% of these subsequently required operation. Reflux was eliminated in 96.3% of the children at the first operation and 5.5% developed postoperative ureteric dilatation, none of them permanently. Reflux disappeared spontaneously in two-thirds of the children treated conservatively but took more than 3 years in 46%.
Infection
recurred in 24% of children treated by operation and in 29% treated conservatively. The incidence with which reflux disappeared spontaneously in the children treated conservatively was related to time, not to the infection recurrence rate.
...
PMID:The management of ureteric reflux in children. 87 Jan 34
There are now laboratory means of screening and identifying people who, although they are free from the signs of urinary tract infection, fit into abnormal groups owing to the high numbers of bacteria and leukocytes in their urine. Chronic bacteriuria and pathologic pyuria, with or without symptoms, have important physiologic and pathologic consequences. It is the physicians opportunity to recognize and treat these asymptomatic as well as symtomatic urinary tract infections. If untreated and uncorrected the result, with progressive frequency over a period of 10-15 years, is increased morbidity, especially with pregnancies, structural damage to the kidneys, kidney stones, uremia,
hypertension
, and premature death.
Infection
1975
PMID:Diagnosis and importance of asymptomatic bacteriuria in adults. 122 9
The most suitable antibiotics for chemoprophylaxis in neurosurgery and risk factors for postoperative neurosurgical infection were investigated by retrospective analysis of 807 neurosurgical procedures in 566 patients between 1980 and 1989. Prophylactic antibiotics were administered intravenously for 6 or 7 postoperative days in all instances. The 807 operations were classified according to the antibiotics used into: 1) penicillin, 2) cephem-I, 3) cephem-II, 4) cephem-III, and 5) others. Postoperative neurosurgical infections occurred in 27 of 807 operations (3.3%), or 27 of 566 patients (4.8%).
Hypertension
and surgery performed in summer carried a significantly higher risk of infection. Diabetes mellitus, steroid administration, prolonged surgery, re-exploration, and surgery for hemorrhagic cerebrovascular diseases were associated with increased risk, but were not statistically significant.
Infection
rates by type of chemoprophylaxis were: 3.6% in the penicillin group, 3.7% in the cephem-I group, 1.7% in the cephem-II group, 5.7% in the cephem-III group, and 2.8% in the others group. This result indicates that the best choice for prophylactic antibiotic therapy may be a second-generation cephem.
...
PMID:Postoperative neurosurgical infection and antibiotic prophylaxis. 137 63
The neutropenia often seen in infants of hypertensive mothers (IHMs) at < 12 hours of age has been associated with nosocomial infection in the first 18 days of life. To assess maternal
hypertension
as an independent factor for nosocomial infection, we compared 101 low birth weight (< or = 2.00 kg) IHMs to a concurrent birth weight-matched group of infants of normotensive mothers (INMs). Infants without differential leukocyte counts at < 12 hours of age were excluded, leaving 93 IHMs and 98 INMs. The incidence of neutropenia at < 12 hours among IHMs was not significantly different from that among INMs (42/92 (45%) vs 37/98 (38%)). Nosocomial infection was more frequent in neutropenic IHMs than in neutropenic INMs (12/42 vs 2/37; p = 0.007).
Infection
in IHMs included omphalitis (2 infants), pneumonia (4), and sepsis with or without meningitis (6); INMs had cellulitis (1) and sepsis (1). The underlying mechanism(s) for this predisposition remains to be elucidated, although limited data suggest that neutropenia may be more severe and prolonged among IHMs.
...
PMID:Increased nosocomial infection in neutropenic low birth weight (2000 grams or less) infants of hypertensive mothers. 144 66
Two hundred thirty-one cases of neurocysticercosis are reviewed. Diagnosis was established by cerebral computed tomography during a seven-year period (1983-1989). One hundred and fourty-four (62%) presented with symptom-related disease (symptomatic neurocysticercosis and in 87 the diagnosis was incidental (asymptomatic neurocysticercosis). In symptomatic neurocysticercosis the parasitosis was considered inactive in 115 cases and active in 29. Seizures occurred in 135 patients (96% of the symptomatic neurocysticercosis). In the active form we also found: meningitis (n = 15), intracranial
hypertension
(n = 12), hydrocephalus (n = 10) and arteritis (n = 2). Treatment included praziquantel (n = 21), albendazole (n = 4), dexamethasone (n = 18) and surgery (n = 10).
Infection
PMID:Neurocysticercosis--a review of 231 cases. 158 85
Long-term experiments with the total artificial heart (TAH) are a source of valuable knowledge for later clinical application. Our observations result from 66 long-term experiments on calves and one goat ranging from 30 to 314 days, which have shown the main possible complications in the early period (one month) and later in the experiment. Problems until the second month of pumping concern the clinical pendant of the TAH as a bridge for transplantation, i.e. surgical problems, blood coagulation disorders, infection etc. Later problems are high venous pressure or arterial
hypertension
, infection with septic thromboembolization, mineralization of the driving diaphragm, etc., and are more closely comparable to the conditions of permanent clinical use of the TAH. Faultless surgery, device function and the regimen of pumping are essential factors in every long-term experiment, just as in clinical application.
Infection
is a threat throughout any experiment, as in clinical cases. The TNS-BRNO-VII/clin/80 TAH has been implanted in six patients.
...
PMID:The applicability of experimental experience with the total artificial heart to its clinical use. 160 17
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