Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There are different types of renal hypertension: hypertension due to parenchymal renal disease, renovascular hypertension, hypertension due to urological disease, hypertension of endstage renal disease. Treatment has to consider-above all-the possibility of specific, medical or surgical procedures that may cause the underlying condition. If the underlying disease is not amenable to specific therapy, symptomatic medical treatment to lower blood pressure is indicated: besides control of sodium-intake and body weight antihypertensive drugs are generally indicated. We use them, alone or in combination, in the following line of order: diuretics, beta-adrenergic blockers, dihydralazine, reserpine, clonidine, alpha-methyldopa, guanethidine.
...
PMID:Treatment of renal hypertension. 0 Jan 67

Renal disease and hypertension is a continuing challenge to the nephrologist. At present there are few effective methods of dealing with the common renal diseases such as glomerulonephritis, but fortunately there is now a wide selection of potent antihypertensive agents. Drug resistant hypertension should be a rarity in clinical practice. Malignant hypertension remains a therapeutic emergency. If a patient with hypertension has renal functional impairment it is essential to lower the blood pressure to normal. In the presence of renal failure this should be done with caution so as to avoid a further deterioration in the glomerular filtration rate. However, if the blood pressure is controlled and especially if the renal failure is a result of hypertension alone, renal function may stabilise or even improve, often dramatically.
...
PMID:The kidney and antihypertensive therapy. 0 53

Blood pressure (BP), plasma renin concentration (PRC), plasma renin substrate concentration (PRSC) and exchangeable sodium (ES) have been studied in 27 patients undergoing regular hemodialysis because of end-stage renal disease. PRC was significantly higher in the hypertensive than in the normotensive patients. The pattern of PRSC was similar in the groups of patients but with a marked individual variation. ES was slightly lower in the hypertensives than in the normotensives but the difference was not statistically significant. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated a significant correlation between mean BP, the natural logarithm of PRC and ES, but the effect of ES was negligible. PRC was negatively correlated to ES in all patients, including the hypertensives. These results strongly suggest that the renin-angiotensin system is the most important factor involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension in end-stage renal disease, when sodium balance is adequately controlled. A clinical application of the predictive value of PRC concerning the effect of bilateral nephrectomy on hypertension is outlined.
...
PMID:Hypertension in end-stage renal disease. The relationship between blood pressure, plasma renin, plasma renin substrate and exchangeable sodium in chronic hemodialysis patients. 1 Jul 15

Patients with essential hypertension can be subdivided into groups with low (19%), normal (59%) or high (23%) renin sodium index. The proportion with low renin hypertension increases with age. Patients with high renin fall in two categories: younger patients with fairly mild hypertension and older patients with more severe hypertension and signs of renal disease. The antihypertensive efficacy of betablocker monotherapy is best in high renin forms, good but less consistent in normal renin patients and uniformly bad in low renin hypertensives. In relation to age, betablockers normalized blood pressure (less than or equal to 95 mm Hg diastolic) in three-quarters of the younger-than-40-year-olds, in about half of those 40-60 years of age but in only 20% of those over 60 years. On this basis, it is postulated that the older patients with a low renin exhibit a relatively hypoadrenergic state whereas those with a normal or high renin--for a given age and elevated pressure--have a relatively increased adrenergic nervous activity. Because the betablockers have a potent suppressive action on the renin-angiotensin system--and, as a consequence, on angiotensin vasoconstriction, aldosterone volume expansion and central stimulatory feedback mechanisms--their antihypertensive mode of action may be linked to an important extent, although not exclusively, to renin suppression.
...
PMID:Renin and age as determinants of a predominantly betablocker-based antihypertensive drug program. 1 85

From analyses of the effectiveness of beta-blocker monotherapy in relation to the patient's age and to pre-treatment renin determinations an antihypertensive drug program is proposed in which beta-blockers form the cornerstone. Patients with essential hypertension can be subdivided into groups with low (19%), normal (59%), or high (23%) renin sodium index. The proportion with low renin hypertension increases with age. Patients with high renin fall into two categories: younger patients with fairly mild hypertension and older pateients with more severe hypertension and signs of renal disease. The antihypertensive efficacy of beta-blocker monotherapy is best in high renin forms, good but less consistent in normal renin patients and uniformly bad in low renin hypertensives. In relation to age, beta-blockers normalized blood pressure (larger than or equal to 95 mmHg diastolic) in three-quarters of the younger than 40-year-olds, in about half of those aged 40--60 years, but in only 20% of those aged over 60 years. On this basis, it is postulated that the older patients with a low renin exhibit a relatively hypoadrenergic state while those with a normal or high renin--for a given age and elevated pressure--have a relatively increased adrenergic nervous activity. Because the beta-blockers have a potent suppressive action on the renin-angiotensin system--and, as a consequence, on angiotensin vasoconstriction, aldosterone volume expansion and central stimulatory feedback mechanisms--their antihypertensive mode of action may be linked to an important extent, though not exclusively, to renin suppression.
...
PMID:A beta-blocker-based antihypertensive drug program guided by age and renin. 1 22

Polyarteritis in the older child is thought to be a rare disease. This study describes 11 children, 3 to 12 years of age, with polyarteritis seen over a five-year period. Fever, abdominal pain, hypertension, and leukocytosis were found in almost all. Renal disease occurred in eight. Examination of muscle, gut, or kidney tissue was an effective means of diagnosis. The pathological changes were the same as those seen in adults. There seemed to be an association between polyarteritis and group A streptococcal infection. Ten patients had a salutary response to high-dose prednisone administration.
...
PMID:Polyarteritis nodosa in older children. 1 1

One hundred and eight patients suffering from hypertension due to a unilateral parenchymatous neophropathy were studied over a period of one to eight years after treatment was starded. The aetiologies were diverse: harmonious hypoplasia, segmental hypoplasia, pyelonephritis, reflux nephropathy, hydronephrosis and tuberculosis. Thirty nine patients were treated surgically, with 50% good results. In 82 cases medical treatment was continued for at least a year with a 52% success rate. Such success was recorded in 94% of cases in which beta-blockers were used (38 cases). Surgical success was not dependent upon the period for which hypertension had been present. The best results were seen in cases of hydronephrosis and pyelonephritis and the worst in tuberculosis. Thirteen patients underwent surgery event though there was no unilateral increase in plasma renin levels. Seven were improved or cured. Ten patients underwent surgery with a renin activity 50% greater than on the healthy side, 9 being improved or cured. Treatment with beta-blockers, alone or in association with diuretics, controlled blood pressure in 90% of cases, regardless of the renin activity. Plasma renin activity in the renal veins is of good prognostic value in terms of the effectiveness of nephrectomy against hypertension. In Call cases, beta-blockers were more effective than surgery.
...
PMID:[Hypertension due to unilateral parenchymatous nephropathy (author's transl)]. 3 35

Oral contraceptives (OCs) are a highly effective and widely accepted means of avoiding pregnancy, but they also worsen the major atherogenic cardiovascular risk factors to some degree in all women. Some OC users may suffer severe hypertensive episodes or massive hypertriglyceridemia with pancreatitis. Mild or severe adverse effects could eventually have serious consequences beyond the childbearing years. OC use would appear imprudent for women with a history of hypertension, gestational hypertension and a family history of hypertension. Special care is needed with blacks, diabetics and women with renal disease. OCs may also affect blood clotting, fibrinolysis and platelet adhesiveness. Also, histochemical and anatomical changes in blood vessels have been noted. Both may precipitate thromboembolic events while the OC user is still at the childbearing age and may also contribute to accelerated atherogenesis in subsequent years. There is a need for more specific guidelines for monitoring women on OCs for a worsening of their cardiovascular risk profile and changes in blood coagulation. Indications and contraindications for OC use in relation to the hazard of thromboembolic sequelae need to be more explicitly defined.
...
PMID:Oral contraceptive hypertension and thromboembolism. 3 10

The incidence of sclerotic glomeruli as a function of age in kidneys from 122 patients without clinical evidence of renal disease or hypertension was estimated by histologic quantitation. Based on statistical analysis of data from this sample, 95% of the normal population up to 40 years of age would be expected to have less than 10% sclerotic glomeruli. After the age of 40 years, the upper limit containing 95% of the normal population exceeds 10% sclerosis, and after the age of 50, there is a broad scatter of observed percentage of sclerotic glomeruli. These findings suggest that, in patients 40 years of age and younger, sclerosis of glomeruli at an incidence greater than 10% is disease-related, while in patients older than 40 years (and particularly those older than 50), there is a transition, and the distinction between abiotrophic involutional sclerosis and disease-related sclerosis becomes less clear.
...
PMID:Age-related incidence of sclerotic glomeruli in human kidneys. 5 91

82 initially normotensive pregnant women with no known history of renal disease were seen at monthly intervals from 16 weeks' amenorrhoea onwards, and their blood-pressure (B.P.) was measured sitting and lying on their left side. 15 developed hypertension (B.P. greater than 135/85 mm Hg lying on the left side) in late pregnancy. When these women were compared with the 67 who remained normotensive throughout, their B.P.s were found to be significantly higher even in early pregnancy, although individual patients were not always separable in this way. When B.P. measured in this rigidly standardised manner was compared with routine antenatal clinic values, it was apparent that the latter did not detect the difference between the two groups. Women who develop hypertension in the third trimester of pregnancy (pre-eclampsia) may represent a separate group from entirely normal pregnant women from the beginning of pregnancy.
...
PMID:Predicting the development of pregnancy-associated hypertension. The place of standardised blood-pressure measurement. 6 80


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>