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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Some chronic renal failure patients maintained on dialysis have uncontrollable
hypertension
. Those with elevated renin levels require bilateral nephrectomies prior to kidney transplant to avoid nephrosclerosis. The morbidity and mortality from surgical nephrectomies are high. In 2 such patients we embolized the renal arteries with gelfoam and successfully occluded all the major vessels. One patient became normotensive. The second remained hypertensive and had increased renin levels, probably on the basis of
ischemia
. Subsequent surgical nephrectomies demonstrated completely occluded segmental branches but only focal areas of infarction. Collateral blood supply determines the success of the procedure.
...
PMID:Gelfoam embolization of the kidneys for treatment of malignant hypertension. 66 23
The clinical features of 102 cases with transient attacks due to cerebral ischemia were evaluated, and 94 out of 102 cases were followed for an average of 6 years. 1) The clinical study makes comparisons between two groups of patients grouped under the somewhat new definition of Reversible Ischemic Attacks (RIA): classical Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIA) and Stroke with Full Recovery (SFR), in which a complete recovery took place over a longer period, on the average 3 weeks. 2) SFR constitutes the 34.31% of the total cases with transient ischemic episodes. In the carotid district the onset was more frequently gradual in SFR than in TIA and aphasia more frequent in TIA than in SFR. Multiple attacks prevailed in TIA over the SFR group. The definition of transient attack due to
ischemia
is discussed. 3) Completed strokes occurred in 11 cases (11.7%) with RIA.
Hypertension
and cardiac disease were significantly frequent in cases with subsequent stroke. The conclusion was reached that TIA is a symptom, not a pathological state, and TIA should be considered an important symptom but not a specific harbinger of completed stroke.
...
PMID:Clinical features and long-term follow-up of patients with reversible ischemic attacks (RIA). 69 35
Serial blood pressure recordings were taken for 72 hours in 112 patients with acute myocardial infarction and in 96 patients with cardiac
ischemia
, admitted to hospital no more than 6 hours after the onset of chest pain. During the first hour of admission 66 (31.7%) had a blood pressure recorded 160/100 or greater. By the sixth hour, without specific antihypertensive therapy, this number had fallen to 13 (6.3%). This fall was subsequently maintained with very similar trends for both acute myocardial infarction and cardiac
ischemia
. Such an early blood pressure fall in acute myocardial infarction may indicate that this is too labile a measurement to determine the need for, or efficacy of, antihypertensive therapy aimed at the preservation of myocardium. The hospital course and mortality rate of patients with acute myocardial infarction and early
hypertension
, as defined, did not differ significantly from the non-hypertensive group.
...
PMID:Blood pressure levels in acute myocardial infarction. 69 68
Renal prostaglandins have several potential functions in renal physiology. Perhaps their best documented role is the maintenance of renal blood flow during renal ischemia, although they are apparently not essential to blood flow autoregulation in the absence of
ischemia
. Alterations in sodium excretion parallel the hemodynamic changes induced by prostaglandin infusions and prostaglandin inhibition with indomethacin. A direct action on sodium balance is unproven. Numerous studies, in vivo and in vitro, have convincingly demonstrated that prostaglandins or their precursors stimulate renin release and prostaglandin inhibition blunts renin release independent of hemodynamic and electrolyte balance. These functions of prostaglandins have implicated them in the manifestations of Bartter's syndrome, the nephropathy of liver cirrhosis, renovascular
hypertension
, and other nephropathies.
...
PMID:Prostaglandins: renin release and renal function. 72 86
Since sub-endocardial
ischemia
is the consequence of a discrepancy between the blood demand and supply of oxygen at this level, the study of the myocardial performance by the measurement of the endocardial viability ratio (E.V.R.) is both useful and possible during anesthesia. E.V.R. is the ratio between the oxygen supply and demand of the myocardium. It is equal to the diastolic pressure time index (D.P.T.I.) over the tension time index (T.T.I.). Measurements are made at different times, by means of the arterial pressure and the left atrial pressure, as well as with the Datascope-E.V.R. Computer. During gradual morphine administration (0.5-1-1.5 mg/kg) and if no major surgical stress occurs, E.V.R. remains excellent and stable (1.46 - 1.48 - 1.43). It deteriorates more or less (1.29 - 1.09) during tachycardia or
hypertension
. Within the hour following the end of extracorporeal circulation, E.V.R. significantly improves (1.04 - 1.06 - 1.09 - 1.23). Although E.V.R. measurement is easy during cardiac surgery, it is impossible to carry out in case of arrhythmia. While morphine anesthesia induces no variation in E.V.R., tachycardia or
hypertension
require the addition of therapeutic drug. Within one hour following the end of extra-corporeal circulation, E.V.R. measurement shows improved endocardial viability, although the hemodynamic parameters undergo no significant change.
...
PMID:Measurement of endocardial viability ratio (E.V.R.) during anesthesia for cardiac surgery. 75 39
Limb loss is the outcome in one third of previously reported popliteal artery injuries. This report summarizes 83 injuries with an amputation rate of 9.6%. Penetrating traumas accounted for 61 (73%) injuries and blunt traumas for 22 (27%). The incidence of amputation varied with injury type from none in seven stab wounds to three of 19 (15.8%) shotgun wounds. Distal
ischemia
or a pulse deficit highlights the presence of arterial trauma, and the external wound defines its site in most patients. Urgent operation is indicated by these findings. Equivocal findings suggest less compromised flow, and such patients are managed best by arteriographic confirmation before operation. Early systemic anticoagulation is indicated to decrease distal small-vessel thrombosis. The successful management of these injuries requires early and complete restoration of arterial and venous flow. This is accomplished most effectively by priority definitive reconstruction. Compulsive attention to complete restoration of arterial flow during the initial procedure is mandatory. Resection or bypass of all damaged arterial wall, liberal use of autogenous vein grafts, and repair of concomitant venous injuries enhance continued arterial patency. Routine distal catheter thrombectomy and frequent intraoperative arteriography promote and confirm complete reconstruction. Early performance of four quadrant fasciotomy is indicated if compartmental
hypertension
is suspected. Thorough debridement of injured and questionably viable soft tissue and adequate fracture stabilization are integral parts of successful revascularization.
...
PMID:Civilian popliteal artery trauma: an eleven year experience with 83 injuries. 75 9
The clinical syndrome of "stroke" at first calls for a differentiation between the prognostic more unfavorable massive hemorrhage and the syndromes of cerebral hypoxia or
ischemia
. The ratio of hemorrhage to
ischemia
is about 1 to 5. Conclusions may already be drawn on the nature of the apoplectic insult from the clinical symptomatology. For example, the hemorrhagic insult in general begins with severe manifestations of neurological dysfunction such as hemiplegia and coma, while the symptoms of the ischemic insult frequently do not develop all of a sudden but in the course of hours, rarely from 1-2 days. Digitalisation in combination with dextran infusions is the method of choice in treating intermittent ischemias, particularly those provoked by
hypertension
. Rehabilitation, i.e. passive and active physical exercise, should be started as early as possible. In addition, particular importance must be attributed to prevention and especially to the early recognition of
hypertension
and of cardiac diseases as a socio-medical problem.
...
PMID:[Clinical picture and therapy of cerebral apoplexy]. 85 97
Blockade of prostaglandin synthesis with indomethacin (1) did not induce significant changes in blood pressure or in renal circulation in renovascular hypertensive rabbits with normal renal blood flow; (2) induced renal insufficiency and aggravated
hypertension
in hypertensive rabbits whose renal blood flow was below normal levels; (3) did not alter the reversal of renovascular
hypertension
produced by the release of the renal arterial constriction; and (4) induced a decrease in plasma renin activity by decreasing renin release. These findings indicate that the vasodilator and natriuretic actions of prostaglandins may play an important role in protecting the kidney against
ischemia
; the facilitating role of renal prostaglandins on renin release raises the possibility that a primary hypersecretion of renal prostaglandins is responsible for Bartter's syndrome, whereas a primary deficiency may be responsible for "low-renin
hypertension
."
...
PMID:Hypertension and the interrelated renal circulatory effects of prostaglandins and the renin-angiotensin system. 87 71
In order to study if rapid elevation of blood pressure is associated with cerebral ischemia, anesthetized (70% N2O) and artificially ventilated rats were subjected to angiotensin-induced
hypertension
. After a 5 min hypertensive period, cerebral cortex tissue was frozen in situ for subsequent measurements of labile glycolytic metabolites, ammonia, and organic phosphates. The degree of
hypertension
induced, which gave evidence of blood-brain barrier damage in 7 of 8 rats, did not affect the tissue concentrations of labile metabolites. It is concluded that
ischemia
does not contribute to the barrier damage, nor is it likely to be the cause of the clinical symptoms that may occur in conscious rats in the same experimental model.
...
PMID:Brain energy metabolism in angiotensin-induced acute hypertension in rats. 88 9
Recent epidemiologic studies have suggested that cardiac disease in common in diabetics and may often have a noncoronary basis. To examine the status of the left ventricle, 17 adult-onset diabetics of familial type without
hypertension
or obesity underwent hemodynamic study and were compared to 9 controls of similar age. Of the 17, 12 subjects had no significant occlusive lesions by coronary angiography. From this group eight without heart failure had a modest, but significant, elevation of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. End-diastolic and stroke volumes were reduced, but ejection fraction and mean rate of fiber shortening were within normal limits. The left ventricular end-diastolic pressure/volume ratio was significantly higher than controls. Afterload increments effected a significant increase of filling pressure compared to normals without a stroke volume response, consistent with a preclinical cardiomyopathy. Four patients with prior heart failure had similar but more extensive abnormalities. None had local dyskinesia by angiography, and lactate production was not observed during pacing-induced tachycardia. Left ventricular biopsy in two patients without ventricular decompensation showed interstitial collagen deposition with relatively normal muscle cells. These findings suggest a myopathic process without
ischemia
. Postmortem studies were performed in 11 uncomplicated diabetics. Nine were without significant obstructive disease of the proximal coronary arteries, and the majority succumbed with cardiac failure. On left ventricular sections, none had evident luminal narrowing of the intramural vessels. All nine exhibited periodic acid-Schiff-positive material in the interstitium. Collagen accumulation was present in perivascular loci, between myofibers, or as replacement fibrosis. Multiple samples of left ventricle and septum revealed enhanced triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations, as compared to controls. Thus, a diffuse extravascular abnormality may be a basis for cardiomyopathic features in diabetes.
...
PMID:Evidence for cardiomyopathy in familial diabetes mellitus. 89 79
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