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)

Two patients with kidney transplants had hypertensive encephalopathy and rapidly progressive kidney failure 10 weeks and 18 months postoperatively. In one patient renal failure was associated with erythrocytosis. Absence of proteinuria, despite progressive renal insufficiency in both patients, suggested that these abnormalities were not due to rejection episodes. Subsequently, angiography proved that each of these patients had renal-artery stenosis. Surgical repair of this lesion increased creatinine clearance at least threefold, and the hypertension and erythrocytosis disappeared. Apparent "rejection" episodes in which there is no proteinuria should alert clinicians to the possiblity of renal-artery stenosis of the graft. Restoration of kidney function and amelioration of hypertension may follow revascularisation, even after many months of renal ischaemia producing severe uraemia.
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PMID:Hypertensive crisis, erythrocytosis, and uraemia due to renal-artery stenosis of kidney transplants. 4 23

We wish to determine what cellular and functional alterations are associated with the development of glomeruloscierosis when rats with one kidney are fed an excess of salt or protein. Rats with one kidney are more likely to develop pronteinuria and glomerulosclerosis than control animals. Blood pressure recordings indicate that proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis occur before hypertension is evident. Fluorescent antibody studies disclose that albumin accumulates in the epithelial cells of glomeruli and tubules. Ultrastructural examination shows that vacuolozation of epithelial cells and basement membrane thickening precede the sclerotic collapse of capillary loops. Increased concentrations of sodium or urea that are found in urines of these rats favor the point of view that an elevation of solute load when combined with a reduction of renal mass will on some unknown manner accelerate the deterioration of glomeruli.
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PMID:Protein overload nephropathy in rats with unilateral nephrectomy. A correlative light immunogluorescence and electron microscopical analysis. 4 49

A prospective study was performed to determine factors at presentation influencing survival in 2587 treated hypertensive patients who were followed for an average of 4 years. 86% had been referred to hospital clinics with hypertension and 14% were seen solely by their general practitioners. Of the 156 deaths, 81% were from cardiovascular causes. Independent risk factors for cardiovascular death were age, impairment of renal function, smoking habits, and systolic blood-pressure before treatment. Other independent factors of importance were proteinuria, history of myocardial infarction, and retinal changes of accelerated hypertension. Increased weight, serum cholesterol, and serum uric acid were not independent risk factors. Although these results agree substantially with data for normal populations, notable exceptions were impairment of renal function, which was very important in hypertensives, and raised serum cholesterol, which was not an independent risk factor in this hypertensive population.
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PMID:Risk factors for death in treated hypertensive patients. Report from the D.H.S.S. Hypertension Care Computing Project. 8 64

A disease characterized by edema, proteinuria, hypoproteinemia and hypertension was seen in late gestation in patas monkeys. The initial sign was edema of the perineum, ankles and lower trunk. The onset was abrupt, occurring 7 days or less prepartum. The affected animals were not depressed, and convulsions were not seen. In 6 of the 98 pregnancies during a 1-year period, symptoms of the disease were present. The highest incidence was manifested by primiparous animals with 3 of 36 pregnancies affected. Two of 38 second pregnancies and 1 of 24 third pregnancies were also affected. Five of the animals recovered spontaneously and were normal 14 days postpartum. Edema persisted for 30 days in one female. This animal continued to be hypertensive and had persistent mild proteinuria and hypoproteinemia. She was killed approximately 1 year postpartum due to severe renal disease. The spontaneous disease seen in patas monkeys resembled toxemia of pregnancy in humans more closely than the experimentally induced disease in other animals.
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PMID:Spontaneous preeclamptic toxemia of pregnancy in the patas monkey (Erythrocebus patas). 10 69

A test of placental function was assessed by measurement of plasma oestradiol levels in 32 patients after intravenous injection of 50 mg dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHAS). Every pregnant patient showed a rise in plasma oestradiol after DHAS; two puerperal patients showed no rise. It was not possible to distinguish the variable response in normal pregnancy from that in patients with severe hypertension and proteinuria or with retarded intrauterine fetal growth. The test was of no value in one hypertensive patient as a predictor of fetal death eight days later or, in another, to confirm fetal death of two days duration. Our results do not suggest that this test is a useful addition to currently available tests of placental endocrine function.
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PMID:Assessment of placental function in normal and pathological pregnancies by estimation of plasma oestradiol levels after injection of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate. 12 94

A variety of renal structural and functional abnormalities have been associated with sickle cell disease. To define the relationship between the hemoglobinopathy and glomerular disease, clinicopathologic correlations, renal morphologic, ultrastructural immunohistologic and functional studies were performed on seven patients with clinical and laboratory evidence of glomerular disease. In addition, immunologic studies including isolation and characterization of cryoprecipitable immune complexes, and determination of immunoglobulin, total complement and complement component levels, and antibody titers to several antigens were performed in an attempt to define the etiologic and pathogenic mechanisms of the renal disease and its relationship to sickle cell anemia. Proteinuria was presnet in all patients. The nephrotic syndrome, hypertension, hematuria and renal insufficiency were found in more than one half the patients. All patients had membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis of varying degree; glomerular basement membrane splitting, electron dense deposits in the glomerulus; interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy and hemosiderin deposits were frequent. Immunoglobulin complement components (classif complement pathway) and renal tubular epithelial antigen were distributed in a granular pattern along the glomerular basement membranes of all patients studied by these methods. Cyroprecipitable complexes of renal tubular epithelial antigen-antibody to renal tubular epithelial antigen as well as antibody to renal epithelial antigen were detected in the circulation of some patients. There was no serologic evidence of activation of the alternate complement pathway. These studies demonstrated an immune deposit normocomplementemic nephritis associated with sickle cell anemia; they further support our hypothesis that the relationship is more then coincidental, and is mediated by glomerular deposition of immune complexes of renal tubular epithelial antigen-antibody to renal tubular epithelial antigen, the antigen possibly released after tubular damage secondary to oxygenation and hemodynamic alterations related to sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Nephropathy associated with sickle cell anemia: an autologous immune complex nephritis. II. Clinicopathologic study of seven patients. 12 92

The renal lesions of a 5-year-old girl with progressive systemic sclerosis are described. The nephropathy was clinically characterised by moderate proteinuria, microscopic hematuria and transient hypertension. Light microscopy showed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis of segmental character. On electron microscopy intramesangial, subendothelial and extramembranous glomerular deposits were observed. By immunofluorescence miscrosocpy deposit of IgG, Clq, C4, C3, C5, C8 and C9 in a predominantly subendothelial location were found in all glomeruli. Vascular lesions were of minor degree. Histological and immunohistological findings are compatible with an immune complex disease.
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PMID:Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in systemic sclerosis of childhood. 15 Jun 97

Dahl hypertension-resistant (R) and hypertension-sensitive (S) rats were used to determine whether cadmium-induced hypertension is dependent on genetic predisposition. In experiment I, 16 wk-old R and S rats of both sexes were injected with two doses of cadmium (1 and 2 mg/kg body wt, ip), whereas the controls received the same volumes of saline. Hypertension and renal vascular changes were observed in cadmium-injected S rats but not in R rats. The S females appeared more sensitive than S males to the hypertensinogenic effect of cadmium. In experiment II, groups of weanling female R and S rats were given 0, 1, 2.5, 5, or 10 mg cadmium/liter drinking water and fed either a low-salt (0.4% NaCl) or a high-salt (4% NaCl) diet for 28 wk. Cadmium produced cardiac hypertrophy (1 mg cadmium/liter) and hypertension associated with renal vascular changes (1--5 mg cadmium/ liter), and it enhanced proteinuria (1-10 mg cadmium/liter) in S rats on a low-salt diet. Also, the development of salt-induced hypertension was accelerated in cadmium-fed (1 and 2.5 mg/liter) S rats. These adverse effects of cadmium were not detected in R rats on either salt diet. In experiments I and II, cadmium concentrations in the kidneys and liver of S rats were higher (P less than 0.001) than in those of R rats. These data indicate that genetic differences influence the pathogenesis of cadmium-induced hypertension.
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PMID:Genetic influence on cadmium-induced hypertension. 15 9

Big renin, a relatively inactive renin which possesses a molecular weight larger than that of normal plasma or renal renin, has been demonstrated by gel filtration in certain human plasma, tumor extracts, and amniotic fluid. Big renin was not present in normal plasma or kidney extracts. Plasma from 3 hypertensive patients with nephropathy contained chiefly big renin. Varying proportions of both big and normal renin activity were present in plasma of other patients with hypertension and proteinuria. The renin present in amniotic fluid, which increased in activity following exposure to acid pH, was shown to be big renin in two patients. Large amounts of circulating big renin apparently can cause hypertension in patients with Wilms' tumors. Furthermore, the relatively inactive big renin may replace normal plasma renin in some patients, resulting in low plasma renin activity.
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PMID:Occurrence of big renin in human plasma, amniotic fluid and kidney extracts. 16 87

Focal glomerular sclerosis was diagnosed in nine patients by renal biopsy. Proteinuria, hematuria, hypertension, and slowly progressive renal insufficiency unresponsive to corticosteroid and immunosuppressive therapy were consistent clinical findings. Focal, segmental, and global glomerular sclerosis with intraluminal deposits of hypereosinophilic and strongly PAS-positive material, intracapillary foam cells, and moderate interstitial involvement were consistent morphologic findings. The importance of this clinicopathologic entity in the spectrum of renal diseases has only recently been appreciated.
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PMID:Focal glomerular sclerosis. 18 92


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