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)

FK 506 was compared with cyclosporin in a randomised trial in good-risk cadaveric renal transplant recipients. The objective was to evaluate whether oral FK 506 dosing was viable and whether blood concentrations in the range 10-20 ng/ml would prove to be practical. Thirty-one adult patients were randomised to FK 506 and 16 to cyclosporin. Both groups received an identical regimen of azathioprine and corticosteroids. Serum creatinine concentrations decreased rapidly in both groups with mean values below 200 mumol/l within 2 weeks. One graft in the cyclosporin group was lost due to renal vein thrombosis. During the 6-week study period, 19.4% of patients on FK 506 and 31.3% on cyclosporin experienced acute rejection. One patient in each group experienced corticosteroid-resistant rejection that responded to anti-lymphocyte therapy. Infections were reported in 51.6% of the FK 506 group compared with 37.5% of the cyclosporin group. The spectrum of adverse events was similar in both groups. However, minor neurological disorders were more common in the FK 506 group (54.8% versus 6.3%) whereas hypertension was less common (48.8% versus 75.0%). The results indicate that oral FK 506 rapidly achieves therapeutic blood concentrations and is an effective immunosuppressant for the initial treatment of renal allograft recipients.
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PMID:FK 506 versus cyclosporin in the prevention of renal allograft rejection--European pilot study: six-week results. 753 70

Increased brain angiotensin II (AII) type 1 receptor (AT1R) expression has been implicated in the hyperactive brain angiotensin system and the development and maintenance of hypertension in the genetically spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rat. Neuronal cells in primary culture from the cardioregulatory-relevant brain areas (hypothalamus/brainstem) mimic increased brain AT1R gene expression and AT1R function of the adult SH rat. They have been utilized in the present study to determine whether cellular actions of AII could be regulated by the transfer of AT1R antisense (AT1R-AS) with the use of a retroviral-mediated gene delivery system developed for the central nervous system cultures. AII stimulates norepinephrine (NE) uptake in neuronal cultures of both normotensive (Wistar Kyoto) and SH rat brains. This neuromodulatory action is mediated by the AT1R subtype, is significantly higher in SH neurons, and is associated with a parallel stimulation of mRNAs for c-fos and NE transporter. Infection of neuronal cultures with a retrovirus vector that contains AT1R-AS (LNSV-AT1R-AS) results in an inhibition of AT1R-mediated stimulation of both c-fos and NE transporter mRNA, as well as NE uptake in both strains of rats; however, the inhibition is more pronounced in SH neurons compared with Wistar Kyoto rat brain neurons. The higher sensitivity of the SH rat brain neurons is further supported by our observation that a certain dose of LNSV-AT1R-AS that fails to induce inhibition of cellular actions of AII in WKY neurons causes a significant inhibition of AII actions in SH neurons. These observations show that retrovirally mediated delivery of AT1R-AS could be used to selectively control the actions of AII in primary neuronal cultures from SH rat brain.
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PMID:Delivery of angiotensin II type 1 receptor antisense inhibits angiotensin action in neurons from hypertensive rat brain. 770 48

Although serologic studies have identified hantaviral infection in the United States, acute disease has not been recognized. This study describes 3 cases of domestically acquired hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in the United States. Infection was due to a local strain of Seoul virus (Baltimore rat virus). A review of the clinical features indicated a mild illness characterized by nausea, vomiting, renal and liver failure similar to HFRS described elsewhere for rat-borne viruses. Follow-up of 2 patients identified persistent hypertension and renal disease providing further evidence of an association between past hantaviral infection and hypertensive renal disease.
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PMID:Domestic cases of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in the United States. 799 Oct 40

A survey of 8080 subjects was conducted in Baltimore, examining the association between infection with hantaviruses and renal disease. Two groups (N = 6060) with no known risk factors were selected to establish a baseline antibody prevalence. Overall, antibody prevalence was 0.25%. Seroprevalence increased with age, without sex- or race-related differences. Patients with proteinuria showed the same patterns of infection but were more commonly seropositive (1.46%) than the reference group (OR, 3.23; P < .05). Infection among dialysis patients with end-stage renal disease was 2.76%, significantly higher than in the reference group (OR, 5.03; P < .05). In the proteinuria and the dialysis groups, hantavirus infection was consistently associated with a diagnosis of hypertensive renal disease. The association was unrelated to other chronic renal disease diagnoses. Overall, 6.5% of patients with end-stage renal disease due to hypertension were seropositive for a hantavirus. These data suggest that hantavirus infection is associated with hypertensive renal disease.
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PMID:Infection with a ratborne hantavirus in US residents is consistently associated with hypertensive renal disease. 809 60

Patients with sickle cell disease often develop acute chest syndrome (ACS). Signs of ACS include chest pain, fever, prostration, and pulmonary opacities. Pneumonia and infarction have been implicated in the pathogenesis of this syndrome. Infarction as a result of microvascular occlusion and pneumonia are not easily differentiated with chest radiography or ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy. The authors evaluated the ability of thin section (3-mm) chest computed tomography (CT) to help diagnose microvascular occlusion in ACS and thus help differentiate two of its most likely causes. CT scans of the chest of 10 patients with moderate to severe ACS were retrospectively reviewed by two observers, who listed the number of bronchopulmonary segments showing consolidation; areas of ground-glass attenuation due to early hemorrhagic edema; and paucity or absence of small vessels, arterioles, and venules. In all patients, the degree of hypoxia was out of proportion to the extent of consolidation evident at chest radiography. The CT scans showed microvascular occlusion and areas of ground-glass attenuation in nine patients. Infection was ruled out in eight patients. High-resolution CT may play an important role in the initial evaluation and timely selection of an appropriate treatment regimen aimed at improving tissue perfusion, thus forestalling irreversible organ damage and chronic pulmonary arterial hypertension in patients with sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Acute chest syndrome in sickle cell disease: CT evidence of microvascular occlusion. 845 35

A national survey was performed in France from May to June, 1993. The aim of this study was to evaluate general practitioners' attitudes and behaviors when diagnosing and managing patients with lower extremity arterial disease (LEAD). One thousand general practitioners, randomly drawn from an exhaustive list, were contacted to participate in a telephone interview concerning the last patient with intermittent claudication seen in their practice. Four hundred seventy-six general practitioners participated. Risk factors noted for these 476 patients with intermittent claudication were in agreement with the literature: 86% were men aged 64 +/- 10 years (mean +/- SD) and 14% were women aged 73 +/- 8 years. Sixty-two percent had a pain-free walking distance of between 100 and 500 meters at diagnosis. Forty-five percent were former smokers and 37% currently smoked; 55% had hypertension, 14% diabetes, and 56% disturbances of lipid metabolism. A majority of them were hypercholesterolemic. The diagnosis of the disease was based primarily on a clinical assessment, confirmed for 33% by Doppler or echo Doppler. The mean duration of diagnosis was 4.4 +/- 4.1 years. Management of the disease was mainly by prescription of vasodilators (91%), antiplatelet agents (59%), and anticoagulants (8%). Use of Doppler or echo Doppler was recommended once a year. Infection was observed in 27% of patients. Thirty-eight percent had had a cardiac incident (angina pectoris or myocardial infarction) and 10% a cerebrovascular accident. They differed significantly from those with LEAD alone for the following parameters: age (68.5 +/- 9.2 vs. 63.2 +/- 10.3 years; p < 0.001); duration of LEAD (5.6 +/- 4.6 vs. 3.6 +/- 3.5 years; p < 0.001); hypertension (65% vs. 50%; p < 0.01); and current smoking (29% vs. 43%; p < 0.01). This survey confirmed the feasibility of telephone interviewing, on a large sample of general practitioners in France. The high level of association with other cardiac incidents was, for these patients, a much higher risk of mortality and morbidity than LEAD alone. It would be interesting to validate the associations observed with a prospective study of comorbidity.
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PMID:National study of obliterative arterial disease of the lower limbs involving general practitioners in France: Artemio study. 869 62

The complications of drug abuse encompass a spectrum of glomerular, interstitial, and vascular diseases. They comprise the heroin-associated nephropathy seen in African-American intravenous drug addicts, which, however, has given way in the 1990s to HIV-associated nephropathy. Infections with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus may cause acute glomerulonephritis by releasing bacterial superantigens. Hepatitis C has supplanted hepatitis B and may give rise to membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis and cryoglobulinemia. Addicts who inject drugs subcutaneously ('skin popping') may develop amyloidosis. Cocaine causes rhabdomyolysis, severe hypertension, occasionally renal failure in the absence of rhabdomyolysis, and may hasten progression to uremia in patients with underlying renal insufficiency. 'Ecstasy', an amphetamine-like recreational drug, has caused acute renal failure, electrolyte disturbances, and malignant hypertension. In Belgium and some other European countries, women taking Chinese herbs in a slimming regimen have developed a severe and irreversible interstitial fibrosis that is assuming epidemic proportions.
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PMID:Drugs of abuse and renal disease. 874 32

Infection with verotoxigenic Escherichia coli, mainly strain O157:H7, has been incriminated in the cause of the hemolytic uremic syndrome and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. Both syndromes, which cause serious problems in children and elderly patients, are not readily treated. Conventional treatment with antibiotics has been reported to not only stimulate bacteria to increase toxin production, but also to enhance its release from the cell. This in turn increases the severity of the disease. An alternative approach to the control of the disease would involve treatment with the amino acid L-arginine, in high amounts through total parenteral nutrition. L-arginine will generate high amounts of nitric oxide which will decrease platelet aggregation and increase vasodilation. Both effects will decrease the development of the tubular occlusion and the accompanied hypertension. In summary, we hypothesize that L-arginine can be used to control two diseases caused by E. coli O157:H7.
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PMID:L-arginine as a therapeutic approach for the verotoxigenic Escherichia coli-induced hemolytic uremic syndrome and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. 929 73

Infection following median sternotomy is a devastating and potentially life-threatening complication. The use of muscle flaps has become widely accepted as a mainstay in the treatment of these problems. We have previously described our successful use of a bipedicle muscle flap for reconstruction of sternal defects in 16 patients. In this paper, we describe follow-up in those patients as well as an evaluation of this procedure in an additional 26 patients. All records of those patients who had sternal reconstruction using the bipedicle pectoralis major-rectus abdominis flap were reviewed. Factors analyzed included the type of cardiac surgery, associated conditions, complications of surgery, and outcome. There were 42 patients in this group from 1989 to 1996. There were a variety of cardiac procedures represented. Associated conditions included diabetes, chronic hypertension, prolonged postcardiotomy hypotension, prior radiation therapy, pulmonary failure, and steroid use. There were no deaths in this series. There was one flap failure, one persistent infection, one pneumothorax, and one hernia in this series. Three patients developed hematomas after surgery. The most common complication was a skin slough, which occurred in nine patients. This technique provides a large flap that can fill the entire mediastinum. The dissection is rapid, and the complication rate compares favorably to that of other methods.
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PMID:Bipedicle muscle flaps in sternal wound repair. 946 66

The introduction of tacrolimus has shown decreased rates of acute and steroid-resistant rejection after liver transplantation (LTx). The aim of the present study is to examine the long-term efficacy and safety of tacrolimus in primary liver transplant recipients. The first 121 consecutive adults (aged >16 years) who underwent primary LTx at a single center from August 1989 to February 1990 were followed up until August 1997. The mean follow-up was 93.2 +/- 1.2 months (range, 90.5 to 96.5 months). Patient survival, graft survival, rate of rejection, and adverse events were examined. The actual 7-year patient survival rate was 67.8%, and the graft survival rate was 63.6%. Infections, recurrence of disease, de novo malignancies, and cardiovascular events constituted the main causes of graft loss and death in the long term. Graft loss related to acute or chronic rejection was rare. The rate of acute rejection beyond 2 years was approximately 3% per year, and most rejections were steroid responsive. Approximately 70% of the patients received only tacrolimus after 1 year. Four patients developed end-stage renal disease, and 2 patients underwent kidney transplantation. Hyperkalemia and hypertension were observed in one third of the patients. New-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus was observed in 9% and 13% of the patients at the 1-year and 7-year follow-up, respectively. Seven patients developed de novo malignancies, including two skin malignancies. Six patients developed posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorder during the entire follow-up period. Actual patient and graft survival at 7 years was excellent, and few adverse events developed after the first year. Graft loss from acute or chronic rejection was rare under tacrolimus, and approximately 70% of the patients were steroid free on tacrolimus monotherapy after the first year after LTx.
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PMID:Primary adult liver transplantation under tacrolimus: more than 90 months actual follow-up survival and adverse events. 1007 54


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