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

The incidence of atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis was compared in consecutive renal angiography of 28 hypertensive diabetics and 104 hypertensive non-diabetics. Mean age and sex distribution were comparable. Angiographic evidence of atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis was present in 10 diabetics (36 per cent) and 50 non-diabetics (48 per cent). Stenosis was considered hemodynamically significant if the renal vein renin ratio of the involved to uninvolved side was 1.4:1.0 or more. A renal vein renin ratio equal to or more than 1.4 was observed in 4 of 7 diabetics (57 per cent) and 31 of 47 non-diabetics (67 per cent). Fibromuscular hyperplasia was not seen in diabetics but was present in 12 per cent of the non-diabetics. Hypertension was treated surgically and improved in 2 of 3 diabetics (67 per cent) and in 17 of 19 non-diabetics (89 per cent) with angiographic and hemodynamic evidence of renal artery stenosis. In this series the incidence of atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis of physiologic consequence was not significantly different in hypertensive diabetics when compared to hypertensive non-diabetics.
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PMID:Renal artery stenosis in hypertensive diabetics. 43 46

Acute changes in kidney size during IV urography were studied in normal rats and in rats with artificial unilateral renal artery stenosis. In normal rats, IV bolus injection of sodium iothalamate (400 mg I/ml), 1.5 ml/kg body weight, produced an increase in area of the renal silhouette by an average maximum of 12.7% after 60 seconds. In nine out of ten rats which developed hypertension after left sided renal artery clamping, renal distension was either small or absent on the stenosed side, while the contralateral right kidney showed normal distension during IV urography. Two out of three rats, which remained normotensive after renal arterial clamping, showed normal distension of both kidneys. These results confirm earlier observations in man that the acute changes in size of the kidney during IV urography can be used as an aid in the urographic screening of hypertensive patients for significant renal arterial stenosis. In all rats with arterial clamp and hypertension, the stenosed kidney was smaller than its contralateral mate. An index between the size of the non-stenosed and the stenosed kidneys greater than 1.15 was only seen in these particular rats.
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PMID:Kidney distension during IV urography in normal rats and in rats with artificial unilateral renal artery stenosis. 46 22

Blood pressure responses to the infusion of saralasin and plasma renin levels were measured in 31 hypertensive patients following preparation with frusemide. Five patients had unilateral renal artery stenosis, with renal vein ratios lateralising strongly to the affected side. Saralasin produced depressor responses in 3 of these but failed to evoke significant effects in the other 2, despite the fact that in both cases hypertension was subsequently alleviated by renal bypass surgery. A further period of more severe sodium depletion increased plasma renin levels and the depressor effect of saralasin, but did not help to differentiate renal artery stenosis from other forms of hypertension.
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PMID:False-negative saralasin responses in renovascular hypertension. 46 80

With the aid of an electromagnetic flowmeter and a mechano-electrical pressure transducer, peroperative renal artery blood flows and pressures in the aorta and the renal artery distal to the stenosis were measured in 48 patients with renovascular hypertension before and after renal artery reconstruction. Calculations of pressure difference across the stenosis and resistances over the stenosis and the renal parenchyma were made. There was a significant blood flow increase through the renal artery after arterial reconstruction in all patients, irrespective as to whether they were normotensive, improved or failures postoperatively. The pressure difference across the stenosis after reconstruction was eliminated in all 3 groups of patients. The highest resistances over both the stenosis and the renal parenchyma before arterial reconstruction were found in the normotensive group, but there was no significant variation between the 3 groups. After reconstruction, a significant decrease in resistance over the renal parenchyma was found in the normotensive and the improved group of patients. The resistance of the stenosis was higher than over the renal parenchyma only in the postoperatively normotensive patients. This indicates that the removal of a resistance over the renal artery stenosis, that is higher than that over the renal parenchyma, gives the most favourable long-term results concerning normalization of the blood pressure.
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PMID:Haemodynamic studies in renal artery stenosis. 47 74

In five patients with hypertension and marked impairment of renal function due to renal artery stenosis in a solitary functioning kidney, a nonsurgical technique, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, was used to dilate the stenotic renal artery. Blood pressure improved in all five patients, and renal function improved in three. One patient subsequently died of multiple cardiovascular complications, and in one patient the procedure resulted in acute renal failure requiring hemodialysis. Although preliminary, this experience suggests that percutaneous transluminal angioplasty may provide an attractive alternative to surgery in severely ill patients at high surgical risk.
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PMID:Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty for renal artery stenosis in a solitary functioning kidney. 49

We have described a case which documents two possible surgical correctable causes for hypertension in a 55-year-old white man. Preoperative renal arteriograms and renal vein renin determinations suggested the possibility of renal artery stenosis due to fibromuscular hyperplasia. At operation, a pheochromocytoma was found in the left suprarenal area. The presence of two unusual causes for hypertension in a single patient suggests that more than one remediable cause of hypertension should at least be considered in a given hypertensive patient.
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PMID:Pheochromocytoma and fibromuscular hyperplasia. 50 91

The rare opportunity arose to assess in detail the renin-angiotensin system before and after the development of a renal artery stenosis with severe hypertension. Peripheral plasma concentrations of renin, angiotensin II, and aldosterone were known to be normal before the development of renal artery stenosis, and there were no lateralising features on renal vein sampling. Acute hypertension associated with very high peripheral plasma concentrations of renin and angiotensin II, and with pronounced lateralisation on renal vein sampling followed the development of acute unilateral renal artery stenosis. These measurements all returned to normal after nephrectomy, conforming with the pattern of changes previously established only in experimental animals.
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PMID:Renal artery stenosis with severe hypertension. A rare case with detailed assessment of renin-angiotensin system before and after development of lesion. 50 79

The value of radiological examinations in hypertension was analyzed in a series of 44 children. An i.v. urography had been performed in 43 cases with a pathological finding in 19 (44%). Renal angiography, employed in 19 cases, revealed abnormal findings in 12 (63%) patients. Micturating urethrocystography performed in 16 children gave no additional important information. The only complication noted was thrombosis of the femoral artery subsequent to renal angiography in one child less than one year of age. The diagnosis of hypertension based mainly on the i.v. urography in 12 cases but the renal angiography gave additional important information in 6 children. One child with obstructive hydronephrosis was also found to have a renal artery stenosis at renal arteriography. Based on these results, and particularly because secondary hypertension may frequently be treated surgically, we consider extensive radiological investigation with renal angiography is mandatory before receiving a final diagnosis of essential hypertension, and before starting long-term treatment.
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PMID:The radiological evaluation of children with hypertension. 51 Mar 18

1. In 13 patients with hypertension and renal artery stenosis the stenosis was dilated by an intra-arterial balloon catheter under local anaesthesia. 2. In all but one instance arteriography after the dilatation showed considerable widening of the stenosed area. 3. Six patients had a temporary increase of serum creatinine that lasted only a few days. 4. In seven patients, who had a prolonged transit time at renography, this marker of renal blood flow improved after the dilatation. 5. The effect of the dilatation on the blood pressure in this group of patients, selected on arteriographic criteria only, was variable, but comparable with results of renovascular surgery. 6. Dilatation of renal artery stenosis by an intra-arterial balloon catheter is a promising treatment for patients with hypertension and renal artery stenosis. It is a rapid procedure needing only local anaesthesia. Complications in our experience so far are minor.
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PMID:Intraluminal dilatation of renal artery stenosis. 54 Apr 66

A positive saralasin test in patients with angiographic evidence of renovascular disease and other positive functional tests gives further assurance that these patients will achieve normal or substantially reduced blood pressure postoperatively. In our experience with proved renovascular hypertension there was a 19% incidence of falsely negative saralasin tests. Therefore, saralasin should not be used as the sole screening test in hypertensive patients suspected of having surgically correctable lesions. There is a direct correlation between elevated renin activity and a positive saralasin test. In some patients saralasin may be more sensitive than any other currently used test to detect overactivity of the renin-angiotensin system. This would determine those patients with technical errors in renin sampling and assays. Of the 16 patients (all normotensive) who had 6-month followup tests 5 had elevated peripheral renin activity, probably owing to furosemide stimulation. Of these 5 patients 2 had a positive postoperative saralasin test, raising the question of potential falsely positive responses in cases of essential hypertension and coincidental non-functional renal artery stenosis. Patients with high renin essential hypertension may respond to saralasin, even in the absence of renal artery lesions. A saralasin test should be done in a hospital where all specific conditions can be met and potential complications handled promptly.
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PMID:Saralasin test as a diagnostic and prognostic aid in renovascular hypertensive patients subjected to renal operation. 54 21


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