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

Although it is true that pulmonary perfusion scanning is generally accepted primarily in the differential diagnosis of pulmonary embolism, the introduction of regional ventilation studies with radioactive 133Xe, the use of the computer to provide quantitative data, and the advances being made in cardiovascular nuclear medicine indicate that nuclear medicine procedures will be used more and more in the evaluation of patients with a variety of lung and heart diseases. They have already proved of value in the following circumstances: (1) differential diagnosis of pulmonary embolism; (2) assessment of regional involvement in pulmonary parenchymal disease, including degenerative, neoplastic, and infectious diseases; (3) detection of bullous disease and the determination of the possible effectiveness of surgery; (4) assessment of the response to radiation therapy in patients with carcinoma of the lung; (5) detection of pulmonary venous hypertension in patients with mitral valve or left ventricular disease; (6) detection of cor pulmonale; (7) differential diagnosis of cyanosis in newborn infants.
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PMID:The use of radioisotope techniques for the evaluation of patients with pulmonary disease. 124 35

Cushing's syndrome during pregnancy is most often caused by an adrenal cortical tumour; it is a rare event which bears poor foetal and maternal prognoses. We report 3 cases of adrenal cortex carcinoma diagnosed during pregnancy (after 24, 27 and 28 weeks respectively of amenorrhea) and revealed by local tumoral signs in 2 cases and by pulmonary embolism in the third. Because hair growth was moderate and weight gain as well as high blood pressure had mistakenly been attributed to the pregnant state, these clinical features of hypercortisolism has only lately been related to tumoral secretion. The hypercortisolic state was firmly established by comparing the patients' urinary cortisol levels (677, 941 and 2,167 micrograms/day) and 20-hour salivary cortisol levels (9.9, 15 and 25.3 micrograms/ml) with values obtained in women at the same stage (88 +/- 11.4 micrograms/day and 2.31 +/- 0.25 micrograms/ml). The aetiological diagnosis was made by the finding of a highly increased salivary testosterone levels (50, 34 and 95 pg/ml; normal = 8.6 +/- 4 pg/ml), and by magnetic resonance imaging which showed unilateral adrenal masses of 3, 8 and 20 cm in diameter respectively. These 3 cases illustrate the difficulty of the clinical diagnosis of hypercortisolism during pregnancy. Assessment of the unbound steroids and magnetic resonance imaging are the most useful methods for an early diagnosis, thus preventing the severe complications which may otherwise reveal this rare pathological condition.
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PMID:[Cushing syndrome during pregnancy. New diagnostic methods used in 3 cases of adrenal cortex carcinoma]. 129 77

The mechanisms of action of monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) suggest that patients taking them may respond with hyper- or hypotension when undergoing coronary artery surgery. We describe a case where MAOIs were present and fentanyl and midazolam were the anaesthetic agents used. The anaesthesia and surgery were performed without incident. Postoperative ICU care was complicated by hypertension, hyperthermia, and severe shivering followed by hypotension resistant to therapy and finally death. Diagnoses of pulmonary embolism and sepsis were unproven and may have played a role. The MAOIs may also have played a role. Reactions in patients while taking both meperidine and MAOIs are unusual and animals react differently from humans to a combination of MAOIs and narcotics. There are only five reported cases where fentanyl was given to patients on MAOIs. We conclude that, until there is more information, MAOIs should be discontinued, if possible, before surgery in which catecholamines may be needed.
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PMID:MAO inhibitors and coronary artery surgery: a patient death. 146 33

We report two cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAHT) in HIV infected patients who never were, or had ceased to be, drug addicts. A study of these cases and a review of the literature show that this association is not fortuitous and persists after the classical causes of PAHT (pulmonary embolism, toxic factors, cirrhosis) have been excluded. The clinical features and the results of complementary cardiovascular examinations are identical with those of the so-called "primary" PAHT. The prognosis is severe: 50 percent of the patients died of the consequences of PAHT 1 year after the first clinical signs. Histology displays signs of plexogenic pulmonary arteriopathy, as in primary PAHT. In HIV patients pulmonary arterial hypertension occurs independently of the degree of immunodeficiency. Its relation with other HIV-related vasculites and their physiopathology are discussed.
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PMID:["Primary" pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with HIV infection. Two cases]. 153 6

A rare cause of pulmonary embolism and pulmonary artery hypertension in young women is choriocarcinoma growing in the pulmonary artery. This growth is reversible, and the disorder can be cured. We describe three patients with this feature who have been treated with appropriate high-risk chemotherapy and who are now in remission. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography can be used to identify major emboli, and progress of the disease can be monitored by serial ventilation/perfusion scans and measurement of serum human chorionic gonadotropin. Recognition of this rare syndrome is important because of the generally excellent outlook with appropriate treatment.
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PMID:Pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension, and choriocarcinoma. 168 95

A consensus conference on stroke was held on March 22, 1991. Subjects on which consensus was reached were: There are different kinds of cerebral haemorrhage and infarction, which can be differentiated by computerized tomography, and this can have practical consequences. At clinical examination special attention should be paid to cognitive impairment. Angiography is indicated only if carotid surgery or unusual causes are considered. CSF examination and EEG are performed only on special indications. Cardiological consultation is necessary in young patients, or if clinical signs of cardiogenic embolism are present. Coumarin derivatives are prescribed in some of these cardiac causes of stroke, to prevent recurrence. There is as yet no effective medical treatment for cerebral infarction. In lobar and cerebellar haemorrhage surgical treatment may be indicated. In the acute phase of stroke it is always important to prevent aspiration pneumonia, pulmonary embolism and decubitus, and to care for muscles and joints. Advantages and disadvantages of gastric tube and indwelling catheter should be weighed. Treatment of hypertension after the acute phase is indicated to prevent recurrent stroke. After TIA and minor stroke, aspirin is prescribed, which reduces the risk of cerebral and myocardial infarction by 30%. Carotid endarterectomy in symptomatic patients with carotid stenosis of 70% or more, reduces the number of fatal or disabling strokes by 50%, if perioperative complications are less than 4%. Rehabilitation after stroke reduces disability and improves the adaptation of both the patient and his environment. The patient should be stimulated and supported; good information, including the family, is essential. Supplying aids and taking special measures should be done on individual basis, after a period of training.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Consensus cerebrovascular accident]. 174 34

Maternal mortality is examined from June 1980 to December 1986 at Mulago, Nsambyo, Old Kampala, Rubaga, and Mengo Hospitals in Kampala, Uganda. Clinical or immediate causes, direct and indirect, were recorded from case summary forms based on ICD9 definitions of obstetric complications. The nonabortion maternal mortality rate (NAMMR) was 2.65/1000 deliveries (580 deaths); the abortion-related maternal mortality rate (ARMMR) was 3.58/1000 abortions. The hospital maternal mortality rate was 2.0/1000 deliveries. 75% of maternal deaths of women of 28 weeks' gestation or more had delivered outside the hospital. NAMMR doubled between 1980-86, a statistically significant increase. ARMMR increases were almost significant. 75% were direct obstetric and 21% were indirect obstetric causes. 38% had clinical anemia, 29% had some sepsis, 18% had substantial bleeding, and 14% had obstructed labor. Other contributing conditions were pneumonia, ruptured uterus, laparotomy, evacuations and curettage, malaria, preeclampsia, sickle cell anemia, pulmonary embolism, malnutrition, tetanus, meningitis, prolonged labor, and hepatitis. At admission, 48% were in poor condition, 30% in good condition, and 22% in fair condition. 27% had sickle cell anemia, high blood pressure, multiple pregnancy, or malaria at admission. 64% were admitted within 24 hours after delivery, 67% 1-7 days after delivery, and 92% 7-42 days after delivery. Those in good condition were all admitted 7 days postdelivery. 41% of deaths were due to lack of drugs, 7% lack of fluids, 20% with theater problems, 14% with doctor-related factors, and 3% with midwife-related factors. Better information is needed on mortality before delivery, mortality in hospitals vs. outside, and mortality from abortion, and ectopic and hydatidiform molar pregnancies. An explanation given for the increase in maternal mortality is the decline in economic conditions. Abortion complications may be due to the concealment practiced. Causes are consistent with trends from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s in Uganda and developing countries in general. Availability and accessibility of gynecological and obstetric services needs great improvement. Training traditional birth attendants and obtaining rural ambulance services are also needed. Health workers lack creativity and imagination for developing country conditions; scarce resources are not the only problem.
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PMID:Incidence and causes of maternal mortality in five Kampala hospitals, 1980-1986. 176 15

The significance of antibodies against ethinyl estradiol (anti-EE-Ab) and other risk factors was discussed for a series of 1318 cases of venous and arterial thrombosis in oral contraceptive users, in comparison to 61 non-users and 124 health current pill users. The cases included 264 deep vein thromboses, 159 pulmonary embolism, 37 coronary artery, 33 systemic artery, 763 cerebrovascular artery thromboses, and 10 hepatic vein thromboses collected from 88 French hospitals from 1976-1988. There were 98 cases with successive or multiple sites involved. The mean age of contraceptive users with thrombosis was 32.1, compared to 28.8 in healthy users. Duration of use was slightly longer in affected users than healthy users, but some cases were affected as early as their 1st cycle. 87.2% had no related history. The anti-EE-Ab were absent in never users, averaged 318 c./min in pill users with thrombosis, but 60 in healthy pill users. There was no correlation between anti-EE-Ab level and dose or duration of pill use. Similar anti-EE-Ab levels were found in those with venous or arterial thrombosis, but women with arterial thrombosis were older, had used pills longer, had fewer predisposing factors of surgery or labor and delivery, but more frequent incidence of hyperlipidemia, smoking, and hypertension. The most frequent associated factors with thrombosis were presence of anti-ee-Ab and smoking: 15.6% smoked, 31.1% had anti-EE-Ab, and 47.6% had both, but only 9.5% had neither factor. It is interesting that lowering the estrogen dose of oral contraceptives has decreased the frequency of venous thrombosis, but not that of arterial thrombosis or mortality, nor anti-EE-Ab levels. The vascular lesions in arterial thrombosis seen in pill users are thought to resemble those in many autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Oral contraceptives, sex steroid-induced antibodies and vascular thrombosis: results from 1318 cases. 178 53

Factors contributing to deep vein thrombosis (DVT) were studied in 51 patients (62 knees) who had a cementless total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and in 51 patients (69 knees) who had a cemented TKA. All patients were treated with a primary TKA using a porous-coated anatomic prosthesis with a porous-coated central tibial stem. Deep vein thrombosis was diagnosed by roentgenographic venography, and pulmonary embolism was diagnosed by perfusion lung scanning. Incidence of DVT was 32%, and there was no pulmonary embolism. The factors that do not seem to have much relevancy to DVT were advanced age, orthopedic disease, one- or two-staged bilateral TKA, venous anatomic variations, number of venous valves, coagulation assay data, hypertension, tourniquet time, choice of cementless or cemented TKA, severity or duration of operation, amount of blood loss, and amount of blood transfused. Conversely, more immediate relevant factors were obesity, postoperative prolonged immobilization, earlier venous disease, and hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Factors leading to low incidence of deep vein thrombosis after cementless and cemented total knee arthroplasty. 195 58

In cerebral amyloid angiopathy, the contractile elements of the leptomeningeal and cortical arteries are replaced by noncontractile amyloid beta protein. The incidence of amyloid angiopathy increases with advancing age. It is associated with Alzheimer's disease and spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage. The latter can have the characteristic acute computed tomographic appearance of a hematoma at the cortex-white matter junction with extension of blood into the subarachnoid, subdural, and intraventricular spaces. Multiple hemorrhages are frequent. Additional bleeding can occur after evacuation of the hematoma, and postoperative hemorrhage can occur after cortical biopsy. To elucidate the role of surgery in this condition, we have reviewed 20 consecutive operated cases of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. A first group of 8 patients with senila dementia underwent cortical biopsy without resultant hemorrhage. A second group of 6 patients in good clinical condition had delayed evacuation of a spontaneous cerebral hematoma from cerebral amyloid angiopathy because of the radiological misdiagnosis of a hemorrhage within a tumor. One patient died of a pulmonary embolism, and another had subsequent multiple hemorrhages that were ultimately fatal. A third group of 6 patients in poor neurological condition had the acute evacuation of a spontaneous cerebral hematoma to relieve intracranial hypertension. All died or were severely disabled. One had repeated hemorrhages which added a progressively more severe organic dementia onto an initial hemiplegia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Surgical considerations in cerebral amyloid angiopathy. 196 1


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