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)

Circulating antibodies against certain nuclear acidic protein antigens have been shown to have diagnostic and prognostic importance in connective tissue disease. We describe a new precipitin system found in the sera of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. The antigen, called MA, was prepared from calf thymus nuclei, and was shown to be distinct from other nuclear acidic protein antigens by physicochemical and immunologic techniques. MA antibodies were detected in the serum of 12 of 66 lupus patients and in none of 554 sera from normal controls or patients with other rheumatic diseases. Lupus patients having MA antibodies had more severe disease than did lupus patients with Sm or native DNA antibodies, manifested by recalcitrant skin rashes and a significantly greater incidence of hypocomplementemia, serious renal disease, hypertension, hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and neurological disease (P values range from 0.025 to 0.005). The presence of circulating MA antigen was demonstrated in three lupus patients immediately before a flare of nephritis. These data suggest that MA is a nuclear acidic protein antigen that may identify a subset of lupus patients with very severe disease. The presence of the antigen in the circulation before clinical flares suggests a possible biologic role for the MA system in an immune complex nephritis.
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PMID:Characterization of a distinct nuclear acidic protein antigen (MA) and clinical findings in systemic lupus erythematosus patients with MA antibodies. 8 19

The pattern of neurological disease seen in Ethiopian patients hospitalized in general medical wards in two hospitals in Addis Ababa is analyzed and discussed. Cerebrovascular disease, most commonly cerebral thrombosis, accounted for 45% of the neurological diseases seen. The second commonest disorder was bacterial meningitis (12%). Hepatic encephalopathy and intracranial haemorrhage, the latter commonly due to hypertension, were found to be the commonest causes of admission in coma.
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PMID:Neurological diseases in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 12 34

The case histories of 125 children with hypertension and no apparent primary CNS disease were analyzed for neurological symptoms or complications. Eleven children had neurological symptoms of high blood pressure. In only one of these patients was the diagnosis of arterial hypertension made before the observation of the neurological findings. The symptoms were severe headache in eight children, convulsions and coma in four, hemiplegia in two, and impaired vision and apraxia in one child. Symptomatology was rapidly reversed by antihypertensive treatment in four children, while six had long-term stigmata and one child died in hypertensive crisis. Because elevated arterial pressure can cause severe neurological disease, routine blood pressure measurement in children--especially those with neurological symptomatology--is stressed.
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PMID:Central nervous system involvement in severe arterial hypertension of childhood. 51 Mar 17

Family physicians are often consulted to evaluate medically a patient for various dental procedures. The majority of the referrals are for diseases of the cardiovascular system. General guidelines have been established at the University of Maryland Family Health Center for the evaluation of these patients. These guidelines pertain to the use of local anesthetics and prophylaxis for endocarditis, as well as to the evaluation of patients with cardiac disease, hypertension, pulmonary disease, endocrine disease, neurological disease, hepatic disease, pregnancy, and anticoagulant therapy.
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PMID:Medical evaluation for outpatient dental procedures. 66 Jan 17

Five children are described who developed hypertension in relation to acute neurological disease. Possible pathophysiological mechanisms for the hypertension are considered. It is thought that the hypertension may have been related to interruption of the ascending tracts in the brain stem, leading to failure of integration between, or independent action of, the baroreceptors and osmoreceptor system. Management and treatment are discussed. Diazoxide (5 mg/kg bodyweight, given intravenously) appears to be the most effective drug for use in the acute episodes.
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PMID:Hypertension in acute neurological diseases of childhood. 89 40

To understand better the factors important to the safety of anaesthesia provided for day surgical procedures, we analyzed the intraoperative and immediate postoperative course of patients at four Canadian teaching hospitals' day treatment centres. After excluding those who received only monitored anaesthesia care, there were 6,914 adult (non-obstetrical) patients seen over a twelve-month period in 1988-89. The rate of adverse outcome consequent to their care was identified by a comprehensive surveillance system which included review of anaesthetic records (four hospitals) and follow-up telephone calls (two hospitals). The relationship between adverse events and preoperative factors was determined by using a multiple logistic regression analysis that included age, sex, duration of the procedure and the hospital care. There were no deaths during the study period and major morbid events were infrequent. Patient preoperative disease was predictive of some intraoperative events relating to the same organ system, but not to events in the PACU. Some unexpected relationships emerged including preoperative hypertension being related to a greater risk of difficult intubation, and neurological disease to perioperative cardiac abnormalities. Patients judged obese, or inadequately fasted, were found to experience a greater rate of recovery problems as well as discomfort. While the low response rate (36%) to the telephone interviews created a sampling bias, the high rate of patient dissatisfaction among those reached is disconcerting. We conclude that day surgical patients with preoperative medical conditions, even when optimally managed, are at higher risk for adverse events in the perioperative period.
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PMID:The Canadian four-centre study of anaesthetic outcomes: III. Are anaesthetic complications predictable in day surgical practice? 842 50

The authors studied the efficacy of cavinton as an agent helpful in preventing neurologic disorders in the newborn with hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy due to intracranial birth trauma. The short-term results of the treatment were elucidated in 61 children. In group I including 20 persons given conventional therapy, the disappearance of seizures was recorded in 6 patients; out of 41 children (group II) given additionally cavinton, in 27. Twenty-nine children were followed up for a year. In group I, convulsive paroxysms recurred in 4 patients, whereas in the group II children, no convulsive syndrome was recorded on the follow-up. The group II children also showed a decrease of the phenomena of intracranial hypertension and normalization of the psychomotor development. The preventive effect of cavinton seen in children with a history of birth trauma may be accounted for by its capacity of normalizing cerebrovascular disorders and by its own anticonvulsive properties.
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PMID:[Cavinton in the prevention of the convulsive syndrome in children after birth injury]. 166 6

Early onset vascular disease unexplained until today by usual risk factors (hyperlipidemia, hypertension, tobacco, stress), can now find an explanation in sulfur amino acid metabolism defect. By transsulfuration, alimentary methionine leads to homocysteine, which is itself turn into cysteine, or remethylated into methionine. Several abnormalities of these different pathways lead to plasma accumulation of homocysteine, which will be responsible of arterial or venous occlusive lesions, concerning peripheral or deep vessels. Homocysteine stays in plasma upon several forms: 75% being linked by disulfide bounds to proteins, 22% as disulfide, homocystine (homocysteine-homocysteine) or mixed-disulfide (homocysteine-cysteine), and less than 3% as free reduced homocysteine. Plasma reduction allows total homocysteine evaluation with amino acid autoanalyzer. The basal plasma homocysteine level is less than 14 microMl. However, levels near this basal value can be found in patients with latent abnormality, which needs to be revealed by a methionine loading test. This study concerns two methodologies and their application to the exploration of a patient with unidentified neurologic disorders. The first one describes a new galenic oral form of methionine. Other authors use the methionine load of 100 mg/kg dissolving it in a fruit juice glass. In order to obtain a complete dissolution of this weakly soluble substance and to ensure its total absorbtion by the patient, we prepare a granular form aimed to give in water a perfect flavoured suspension. The second methodology concerns methionine loading test and amino acid analysis. After 10 hours fasting, a 100 mg/kg peroral methionine load is realized performing 5 EDTA blood samples before and 4, 8, 12 and 24 hours after loading.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The homocysteinemia vascular risk factor. Methodologies and application to a clinical case]. 179 72

During an 18-month period in a pediatric intensive care unit, nine patients with vocal cord paralysis were identified using flexible bronchoscopy. When tracheally extubated, each child was found to have stridor. The children ranged in age from 17 days to 5 1/2 years. Two patients had unilateral paralysis, but neither required tracheostomy. Seven patients displayed bilateral abductor vocal cord paralysis. Of these, six patients required tracheostomy. Surgical injury to the recurrent laryngeal nerve was the probable cause in two patients. The other seven patients had neurologic disorders with documented or suspected increases of intracranial pressure. Four of the seven patients with bilateral abductor vocal cord paralysis regained cord mobility within 4 months. Both children with unilateral cord paralysis have no stridor and vocalize well 1 year later. Cord paralysis in the setting of intracranial hypertension probably results from compression or ischemia of the vagus nerve before it exits the skull. Early visualization of the larynx should be done in patients who become stridulous when extubated, especially those with prior thoracic procedures or with neurologic disorders associated with intracranial hypertension.
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PMID:Stridor: intracranial pathology causing postextubation vocal cord paralysis. 198 16

A stratified random sample of 83 black and 81 white community residents aged 65 years and older in a five-county area in the Piedmont region of North Carolina was evaluated for dementia, using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke--Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association criteria. Of 164 subjects, 26 were found to be demented, resulting in an estimated prevalence rate of dementia in the five-county area of 16% (95% confidence interval, 7.92 to 24.08) for blacks and 3.05% (95% confidence interval, 0 to 6.91) for whites. The estimated prevalence of dementia for white women (2.9%) was similar to that for white men (3.3%), but the rate for black women was distinctly higher than for black men (19.9% and 8.9%, respectively). Blacks were more likely than whites to have a history of stroke, hypertension, and other chronic disorders that might have contributed to the development of dementia. Apart from differences in rates of institutionalization, no other relevant factors were identified that might explain the difference in the prevalence of dementia in these black and white community residents.
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PMID:Estimated prevalence of dementia among elderly black and white community residents. 203 81


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