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

The renin system plays a critical role in hypertension as well as in the edematous states of heart failure, cirrhosis, and nephrosis. Properly performed measurements of plasma renin, with techniques now widely available, can be used as indicators of risk and of therapeutic strategies. The results of the plasma renin measurements are equally relevant whether they are high or low. The renin profile should be part of the routine workup of the patient with hypertension of any type or of the patient with an edematous disorder. Once the renin component of hypertension is established, management with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, such as perindopril, follows, for ACE inhibitors attack the pathophysiologic source, thus providing adequate perfusion and protection of vital organs. The role of renin's involvement in hypertensive states is elaborated, as well as that of the ACE inhibitors.
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PMID:A decade of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition. 158 Feb 77

Reduction of renal mass (11/12) in rats leads to progressive azotemia, proteinuria, and hypertension. Less extensive renal ablation resulting from uninephrectomy also accelerates the progression of focal glomerulosclerosis (FGS) induced by experimental diabetes, renal irradiation, aminonucleoside nephrosis, or aging. The consequence of the absence of one kidney in man are examined in three different clinical situations. Unilateral renal agenesis seems to predispose to the development of FGS, but most reports include isolated cases and the true incidence of FGS is not known. The solitary kidney following uninephrectomy for acquired unilateral disease undergoes a compensatory rise in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) that remains stable for several decades. Finally, kidney donors followed for over 2 decades show unimpaired GFR, elevated at 70% to 80% of the normal (two-kidney) GFR. Some donors develop mild, nonprogressive proteinuria. Their incidence of hypertension matches that in the control population. Thus, hyperfiltration secondary to 50% reduction of renal mass in humans does not lead to loss of function of the remaining parenchyma.
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PMID:The solitary kidney: a model of chronic hyperfiltration in humans. 277 30

Budralazine was evaluated for its protective effect on the onset of cerebrovascular lesions in SHR given 1.5% NaCl as drinking water. The salt-loading for 67 days rapidly accelerated the development of hypertension in SHR (from 180 to over 250 mmHg, 40 days after the loading). The acceleration of hypertension was accompanied by an increase in the incidence of brain softening, cerebral infarct, angionecrosis and hemorrhage by 30-60% following the thrombosis and necrosis of cerebral arterioles. Renal angionecrosis associated with the interstitial nephrosis was also observed by 90% in the animals. Throughout the salt-loading period, oral administration of budralazine (1, 4 and 15 mg/kg/day) resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of the accelerated hypertension. At larger doses (4 and 15 mg/kg/day), budralazine almost completely ameliorated the cerebral and renal lesions and significantly attenuated the rise of weight in the brain and heart observed in the salt-loaded control rats. Changes in the serum biochemical findings were also inhibited by this drug. In some of the parameters measured, budralazine appeared to be more efficacious than hydralazine (1, 4 and 15 mg/kg/day, p.o.). These results suggest that budralazine attenuates the serious development of hypertension and reduces the incidence and severity of stroke in salt-loaded SHR.
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PMID:[The effect of an antihypertensive drug budralazine on cerebrovascular lesions in salt-loaded SHR]. 279 61

Post-transplant polycythemia is not uncommon in adult patients and is usually transient, responding to phlebotomy. Five pediatric patients developed erythrocytosis post-transplantation. Three patients had end-stage renal disease due to cystinosis, one had reflux glomerulopathy and one had focal glomerular sclerosis. The probable causes of the polycythemia were graft arterial stenosis in three patients. In one, polycythemia occurred with nephrosis. Polycythemia with hypertension may indicate the presence of arterial stenosis in children post-transplantation.
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PMID:Polycythemia in pediatric renal transplantation. 329 38

This study reports the results of 310 cadaver kidney transplantations in 295 children and adolescents performed from 1973 to 1983. The actuarial survival of patients was 97% at one year and 92% at 5 years; that of grafts was 79% at 1 year and 65% at 5 years, these rates having improved during the last years. Results were similar and even better for the 18 second transplantations. Among the causes of failure, rejection comes first (65%), then thromboses of renal artery (13%) and relapses of oxalosis or steroid resistant nephrosis (12%). Patients with cytotoxic antibodies have a less good survival of grafts, especially after 5 years. HLA A and B compatibility is a factor of success. Among complications hypertension is frequent, 53% of patients receiving antihypertensive treatment after 1 year. It is sometimes severe and was responsible for death in 5 cases. Growth was variable after transplantation: 25% of children before puberty had a catch-up curve, 25% had an unchanged growth and 50% an increased retardation. The average standard deviation was near zero but it was -0.49 SD/year in patients with creatinine level greater than or equal to 150 mumol and +0.24 SD in children under alternate day steroid therapy. Rehabilitation was excellent, less than 3% of patients not being engaged in any activity 1 year after transplantation.
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PMID:[Results of 310 cadaver kidney transplants in children and adolescents]. 389 Jul 96

Information on whether a woman had ever had any children was recorded for all deaths registered to ever-married women in England and Wales between 1938 and 1960. Analysis of the relation between parity and cause of death for 1.2 million women aged 45-74 years revealed that parous women had lower mortality from breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancer than did nulliparous women but a higher mortality from diabetes mellitus, gallbladder disease, cancer of the uterine cervix, nephritis and nephrosis, hypertension, ischaemic and degenerative heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and all causes of death. There is a parallel between the long term effects of pregnancy and of oral contraceptives on health.
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PMID:Long term effects of childbearing on health. 408 66

Hypertension develops in about 10% to 50% of patients with nephrosis or cirrhosis and peripheral edema, but the hemodynamic mechanism of the hypertension and its reversal by diuretic therapy has not been elucidated. In eight patients with marked edema and mild hypertension, diuretics (furosemide and spironolactone) decreased mean arterial pressure because of concurrent decrease in cardiac output and total peripheral resistance. Neither total blood volume nor plasma volume were decreased by the diuretics and the decrease in body weight was therefore attributed to the decrease in interstitial fluid volume. This, in turn, resulted in increased venous capacitance (as can be judged from the diuretic-induced decrease in the ratio of cardiopulmonary blood volume/total blood volume).
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PMID:Hemodynamic effects of diuretics in patients with marked peripheral edema and mild hypertension. 706 Mar 19

Renal biopsy, the introduction of immunohistologic methods and electron microscopy have allowed the differentiation of clinicopathologic entities associated to nephrotic syndrome. Two main categories must be differentiated: in the first, diffuse lesions of the glomerulus, including those secondary to specific diseases the same as those that are apparently primary, are responsible for the increased permeability of glomerular capillaries. Any one of the following clinical signs suggests this category: acute onset with nephritic syndrome, moderate nephritic syndrome, moderate nephrotic syndrome, gross hematuria, persistent hypertension and/or renal failure, poor selectivity of proteinuria and drop in complement serum levels (C3). In the second category, known as idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, the mechanism of disorder of the glomerular capillary is unknown and the nephrotic syndrome is more marked. In most cases with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, minimal glomerular lesions (MGL) are present. The clinicopathologic correlation among these three types of lesions shows that the type with MGL is characterized by selective proteinuria, absence of hematuria, good response to corticosteroids and good outlook; whereas in types with diffuse mesangial proliferation (DMP) and segmentary sclerosis, proteinuria is frequently non selective, hematuria shows in 50 to 75% of the patients; prognosis is poor. However, MGL, DMP and focal segmentary glomerular sclerosis are not different entities, but represent variants of the same disease. Considering that corticosensitive nephrosis to this moment is the most common cause of the nephrotic syndrome, especially in children under 8 years, renal biopsy should be done only under two circumstances: a) when the clinical symptoms suggest diffuse glomerular lesions and b), when resistance to corticosteroids becomes evident.
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PMID:[Prognosis of nephrosis]. 727 76

In order to explore the effect of immunologically-induced nephropathy versus a non-immunological model on development of hypertension, rats with either Heymann nephritis or N,N'-diacetylbenzidine (N,N'-DAB)-induced nephropathy were subjected to DOCA-NaCl treatment. Hypertension developed during DOCA-NaCl treatment in Heymann nephritic rats but not in rats wih N, N'-DAB nephropathy, despite similar degrees of proteinuria and other features of nephrosis. There were no signs of different fluid balance, either. Azotemia did not ensue. Histology and immunohistology showed membranous glomerulonephritis in Heymann nephritic rats whereas glomerular epithelial cell alterations without immune deposits along the glomerular capillary walls were seen in rats with N, N'-DAB nephropathy. The type of renal damage or factors mediating such damage appear to be important determinants for the hypertensive response of Heymann nephritic rats to DOCA-NaCl treatment.
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PMID:Different blood pressure response to DOCA-NaCl treatment in autoimmune and N,N'- diacetylbenzidine-induced nephropathies. 731 56

Alternate-day steroids are currently recommended to treat children with membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN). This recommendation is based largely on uncontrolled studies demonstrating improved renal survival with steroid therapy. We reviewed the outcome of 39 children who presented with MPGN between 1968 and 1990; 27 children were treated with steroids and 12 children received no drug therapy. Life-table analysis comparing renal survival of treated versus untreated children demonstrated no difference by log rank analysis. Treated and untreated groups were compared on the basis of nine features at presentation: age, sex, type of MPGN, presence and type of hematuria, hypocomplementemia renal insufficiency, hypertension, and nephrosis. Treated children were likely to be female (P < 0.01) and nephrotic (P < 0.02). Actuarial survival analyses were performed comparing the nine features with renal survival through 10 years of follow-up. Normotensive (P < 0.025) and non-nephrotic (P < 0.05) children had improved renal survival. The 11 non-nephrotic children demonstrated 100% long-term renal survival, including 7 who received no steroid therapy. At last follow-up, all non-nephrotic children had normal renal function, serum albumin levels > 3 g/dl, and were normotensive. These data suggest that non-nephrotic children with MPGN may forego steroid treatment without compromising long-term renal function. The current common practice of treating all children with MPGN with steroids should be re-examined.
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PMID:Non-nephrotic children with membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis: are steroids indicated? 779 5


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