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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Panic disorder
is a specific psychiatric entity with specific and successful treatments. A parturient patient with sudden
hypertension
, hyperreflexia and headache was diagnosed with pre-eclampsia and treated with magnesium sulphate. Further attacks after discharge were recognized as panic attacks, and resolved with the anti-depressant imipramine.
...
PMID:Panic disorder masquerading as pre-eclampsia. 828 46
Variable blood pressure responses, manifesting either as a "white-coat" phenomenon or lability between office visits, confound
hypertension
management decisions. An attempt was made to determine whether these phenomena are associated with concurrent diagnoses of psychosocial dysfunction, therefore mitigating against antihypertensive medical therapy. Forty-seven patients with such variable blood pressure responses were identified in a rural family practice over a three-year period and compared to randomly selected age- and sex-matched controls for the following concurrent diagnoses: generalized anxiety, psychogenic spastic bladder,
panic disorder
, depression, alcohol use, chronic headache, fibromyalgia, temporomandibular joint syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, and premenstrual syndrome. No statistical associations between white-coat
hypertension
and these diagnoses were demonstrated although a small sample size tempers conclusions. However, chi-square analysis (P < 0.01) of the phenomenon characterized by lability of blood pressure between different office visits demonstrated a statistical association with alcoholic hepatitis in men. White-coat
hypertension
is a diagnosis that may warrant disassociation from other psychosocial disorders, although further study is indicated. Physicians should remain attuned to the presence of lability of blood pressure in males and consider possible associations with alcoholism.
...
PMID:A pilot study of white-coat and labile hypertension: associations with diagnoses of psychosocial dysfunction. 848 44
Epidemiological studies have found significant comorbidity between
panic disorder
and many medical illnesses. The authors discuss the accumulating psychiatric and medical literature addressing comorbidity between
panic disorder
and cardiac, respiratory, gastrointestinal, and neurological illnesses. Cardiac symptoms such as chest pain and palpitations, as well as certain disorders such as mitral valve prolapse,
hypertension
, and cardiomyopathy, share significant comorbidity with
panic disorder
. Researchers have also shown significant comorbidity between
panic disorder
and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and migraine headache. Pathophysiological mechanisms that may explain the association between
panic disorder
and comorbid medical illnesses, such as autonomic dysregulation of cardiac activity and smooth muscle tone and dynamic abnormalities of the coronary microvasculature, are discussed as well.
...
PMID:Panic disorder and medical comorbidity: a review of the medical and psychiatric literature. 885 25
Pheochromocytoma is a rare but important tumor of chromaffin cells that is frequently considered in the evaluation of
hypertension
, arrhythmias, or
panic disorder
and in the follow-up of patients with particular genetic diseases. This report provides an update about the genetics, neurochemical diagnosis, localization by imaging, and surgical management of pheochromocytoma. Specific mutations of the RET proto-oncogene cause familial predisposition to pheochromocytoma in multiple endocrine neoplasia type II, and mutations in the von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor gene cause familial disposition to pheochromocytoma in von Hippel-Lindau disease. Recent findings demonstrating extraordinarily high sensitivity of plasma levels of metanephrines for detecting pheochromocytoma have led to an algorithm for clinical diagnostic steps. Nuclear imaging approaches, such as(123) I-metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy and 6-[(18) F]fluorodopamine positron emission tomography, enhance both diagnosis and localization of the tumor, as described in an algorithm for patients with positive biochemical test results. Since pheochromocytoma is often benign, surgical resection by laparoscopic adrenalectomy can be curative. Areas requiring further work include determining appropriate follow-up of patients with familial pheochromocytoma, elucidating the bases for phenotypic differences, improving both specificity and sensitivity of biochemical tests, optimizing cost-effectiveness of diagnostic imaging, and testing the risk for tumor recurrence after partial adrenalectomy.
...
PMID:Recent advances in genetics, diagnosis, localization, and treatment of pheochromocytoma. 1118 43
Although work performance has become an important outcome in cost-of-illness studies, little is known about the comparative effects of different commonly occurring chronic conditions on work impairment in general population samples. Such data are presented here from a large-scale nationally representative general population survey. The data are from the MacArthur Foundation Midlife Development in the United States (MIDUS) survey, a nationally representative telephone-mail survey of 3032 respondents in the age range of 25 to 74 years. The 2074 survey respondents in the age range of 25 to 54 years are the focus of the current report. The data collection included a chronic-conditions checklist and questions about how many days out of the past 30 each respondent was either totally unable to work or perform normal activities because of health problems (work-loss days) or had to cut back on these activities because of health problems (work-cutback days). Regression analysis was used to estimate the effects of conditions on work impairments, controlling for sociodemographics. At least one illness-related work-loss or work-cutback day in the past 30 days was reported by 22.4% of respondents, with a monthly average of 6.7 such days among those with any work impairment. This is equivalent to an annualized national estimate of over 2.5 billion work-impairment days in the age range of the sample. Cancer is associated with by far the highest reported prevalence of any impairment (66.2%) and the highest conditional number of impairment days in the past 30 (16.4 days). Other conditions associated with high odds of any impairment include ulcers, major depression, and
panic disorder
, whereas other conditions associated with a large conditional number of impairment days include heart disease and
high blood pressure
. Comorbidities involving combinations of arthritis, ulcers, mental disorders, and substance dependence are associated with higher impairments than expected on the basis of an additive model. The effects of conditions do not differ systematically across subsamples defined on the basis of age, sex, education, or employment status. The enormous magnitude of the work impairment associated with chronic conditions and the economic advantages of interventions for ill workers that reduce work impairments should be factored into employer cost-benefit calculations of expanding health insurance coverage. Given the enormous work impairment associated with cancer and the fact that the vast majority of employed people who are diagnosed with cancer stay in the workforce through at least part of their course of treatment, interventions aimed at reducing the workplace costs of this illness should be a priority.
...
PMID:The effects of chronic medical conditions on work loss and work cutback. 1128 69
Regional sympathetic activity can be studied in humans using electrophysiological methods measuring sympathetic nerve firing rates and neurochemical techniques providing quantification of noradrenaline spillover to plasma from sympathetic nerves in individual organs. Essential hypertension: Such measurements in patients with essential hypertension disclose activation of the sympathetic outflows to skeletal muscle blood vessels, the heart and kidneys, particularly in younger patients. This sympathetic activation, in addition to underpinning the blood pressure elevation, most likely also contributes to left ventricular hypertrophy, and to the commonly associated metabolic abnormalities of insulin resistance and hyperlipidaemia. Antihypertensive drugs, such as moxonidine, which act primarily by inhibiting the sympathetic nervous system, should have additional clinical benefits beyond those attributable to blood pressure reduction, in protecting against hypertensive complications. Obesity-related
hypertension
: Understanding the neural pathophysiology of
hypertension
in the obese has been difficult. In normotensive obesity, renal sympathetic tone is doubled, but cardiac noradrenaline spillover (a measure of sympathetic activity in the heart) is only 50% of normal. In obesity-related
hypertension
, there is a comparable elevation of renal noradrenaline spillover, but without suppression of cardiac sympathetics (cardiac sympathetic activity being more than double that of normotensive obese and 25% higher than in healthy volunteers). Increased renal sympathetic activity in obesity may be a 'necessary' cause for the development of
hypertension
(and predisposes to
hypertension
development), but apparently is not a 'sufficient' cause. The discriminating feature of the obese who develop
hypertension
is the absence of the adaptive suppression of cardiac sympathetic tone seen in the normotensive obese. Heart failure: In cardiac failure, the sympathetic nerves of the heart are preferentially stimulated. Noradrenaline release from the failing heart at rest in untreated patients is increased as much as 50-fold, similar to the level seen in the healthy heart during near-maximal exercise. Activation of the cardiac sympathetic outflow provides adrenergic support to the failing myocardium, but at a cost of arrhythmia development and progressive myocardial deterioration. Psychosomatic heart disease: No more than 50% of clinical coronary heart disease is explicable in terms of classical cardiac risk factors. There is gathering evidence that psychological abnormalities, particularly depressive illness, anxiety states, including
panic disorder
and mental stress, are involved here, 'triggering' clinical cardiovascular events, and possibly also contributing to atherosclerosis development. The mechanisms of increased cardiac risk attributable to mental stress and psychiatric illness are not entirely clear, but activation of the sympathetic nervous system seems to be of prime importance.
...
PMID:Sympathetic nervous system activation in essential hypertension, cardiac failure and psychosomatic heart disease. 1134 14
Although the importance of sympathetic nervous activation in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension is well documented, the exact pathophysiology of the sympathetic nervous dysfunction present remains to be delineated. This review details three relatively new findings of disturbed sympathetic neurobiology in
hypertension
. Adrenaline cotransmission is present in the cardiac sympathetic nerves of patients with essential hypertension, as it is in patients with
panic disorder
, providing presumptive evidence of exposure to high levels of mental stress in hypertensive patients. In lean patients with
hypertension
there is also evidence of faulty noradrenaline reuptake into the sympathetic nerves of the heart, an abnormality amplifying the sympathetic neural signal by impairing removal of noradrenaline from the synaptic cleft. If both abnormalities are present in the sympathetic nerves of the kidneys also (which we did not test), there would most probably be a direct contribution to
hypertension
development. In the kidneys the causal chain between sympathetic overactivity and the development of
hypertension
is stronger than for the heart. In obesity-related
hypertension
there is evidence that renal sympathetic tone is high, based on approximately a doubling of the measured rate of spillover of noradrenaline into the renal veins. This increase in sympathetic outflow to the kidneys appears to be a necessary but apparently not a sufficient cause for the development of clinical
hypertension
, commonly being present also in overweight people with blood pressure in the normotensive range. High renal sympathetic tone in the latter, of course, may well still contribute to elevation of their pressure level, although not on such a scale as to cause clinical
hypertension
.
...
PMID:The sympathetic neurobiology of essential hypertension: disparate influences of obesity, stress, and noradrenaline transporter dysfunction? 1141 49
The authors aimed to determine whether hypertensive patients with panic attacks or
panic disorder
have a larger white coat effect (difference between clinic blood pressure measured under standard conditions and mean daytime ambulatory blood pressure) than hypertensive patients without panic attacks. White coat effect was compared in a hospital
hypertension
clinic between 24 patients with panic attacks in the previous 6 months (12 with
panic disorder
) and 23 hypertensive controls. There were no significant differences between cases and controls in clinic blood pressure, mean daytime ambulatory blood pressure, or white coat effect (18/3 vs. 19/6 mm Hg; difference for systolic, -1.9 mm Hg; 95% confidence interval, -15.8 to +12.0; difference for diastolic, -3.0 mm Hg; 95% confidence interval, -10.2 to +4.3). Comparing only patients with
panic disorder
with controls, there were again no significant differences in clinic blood pressure, mean daytime ambulatory blood pressure, or white coat effect. This study provides no evidence for an exaggerated white coat effect in hypertensive patients who have experienced panic attacks or
panic disorder
. However, only larger studies could exclude differences in white coat effect <12/4 mm Hg, or an exaggerated white coat effect in a minority of patients with panic attacks.
...
PMID:No evidence that panic attacks are associated with the white coat effect in hypertension. 1267 28
Approximately one quarter of patients who present to physicians for treatment of chest pain have
panic disorder
.
Panic disorder
frequently goes unrecognized and untreated among patients with chest pain, leading to frequent return visits and substantial morbidity. Panic attacks may lead to chest pain through a variety of mechanisms, both cardiac and noncardiac in nature, and multiple processes may cause chest pain in the same patient.
Panic disorder
is associated with elevated rates of cardiovascular diseases, including
hypertension
, cardiomyopathy, and, possibly, sudden cardiac death. Furthermore, patients with
panic disorder
and chest pain have high rates of functional disability and medical service utilization. Fortunately,
panic disorder
is treatable; selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, benzodiazepines, and cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy all effectively reduce symptoms. Preliminary studies have also found that treatment of patients who have
panic disorder
and chest pain with benzodiazepines results in reduction of chest pain as well as relief of anxiety.
...
PMID:Panic Disorder and Chest Pain: Mechanisms, Morbidity, and Management. 1501 45
Arterial blood pressure (BP) variability increases progressively with the development of
hypertension
and an increase in BP variability is associated with end organ damage and cardiovascular morbidity. On the other hand, a decrease in heart rate (HR) variability is associated with significant cardiovascular mortality. There is a strong association between cardiovascular mortality and anxiety. Several previous studies have shown decreased HR variability in patients with anxiety. In this study, we investigated beat-to-beat variability of systolic and diastolic BP (SBP and DBP) in normal controls and patients with
panic disorder
during normal breathing and controlled breathing at 12, and 20 breaths per minute using linear as well as nonlinear techniques. Finger BP signal was obtained noninvasively using Finapres. Standing SBPvi and DBP BPvi (log value of BP variance corrected for mean BP divided by HR variance corrected for mean HR) were significantly higher in patients compared to controls. Largest Lyapunov exponent (LLE) of SBP and DBP, a measure of chaos, was significantly higher in patients in supine as well as standing postures. The ratios of LLE (SBP/HR) and LLE (DBP/HR) were also significantly higher (P<.001) in patients compared to controls. These findings further suggest dissociation between HR and BP variability and a possible relative increase in sympathetic function in anxiety. This increase in BP variability may partly explain the increase in cardiovascular mortality in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Linear and nonlinear measures of blood pressure variability: increased chaos of blood pressure time series in patients with panic disorder. 1502 43
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