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

Cerebrovascular diseases (CVD) claim 1.5 million lives each year in industrialized countries; in developing countries, estimates suggest the same distressing trends. CVD rank as the third leading cause of death after ischaemic heart disease and cancer. Surviving patients are left disabled and paralysed, dependent on their families and on society. Lifestyle, an issue of concern both for the individual and the community, can play an important role in the primary prevention of CVD when combined with dietary adjustments and appropriate drug therapy; it can prevent and slow down the development of atheroma, help to regulate blood pressure and contribute to the prevention of heart diseases likely to cause embolic strokes. The preventive treatment and management of other conditions, such as rheumatic heart disease, coronary artery disease with myocardial infarction and cardiac arrhythmias (embolic strokes), combined with healthy eating habits that tend to reduce the intake of saturated fats (atherosclerosis) and salt (high blood pressure) and the avoidance of smoking and alcohol (ischaemic and haemorrhagic strokes) will help to lower the incidence of mortality and morbidity due to CVD.
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PMID:[Life style and prevention of cerebrovascular accidents]. 192 96

A case of polyarteritis nodosa is reported. The patient, a 56-year-old white woman, had cutaneous nodules, ulcers and livedo reticularis over the limbs. Abdominal angiography revealed the presence of microaneurysms. Hypertension, rheumatic heart disease (under anticoagulation therapy) and diabetes mellitus, were also detected. The controversial attempt in distinguishing between systemic and cutaneous polyarteritis is emphasized, and the influence of warfarin on skin lesions morphology is discussed.
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PMID:[Polyarteritis nodosa. Considerations on a clinical case]. 198

Cardiovascular disease is one of the major causes of death among native Americans. Ischemic heart disease has been relatively uncommon in the past, but this entity is rapidly becoming more frequent among Indians as a result of Western acculturation (Western high-fat diet, smoking, sedentary lifestyle). Hypertension remains a major problem in native American populations. Hypertension is often inadequately detected and treated in Indians. Rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease are moderately common and apparently in decline among native Americans. Finally, the fetal alcohol syndrome with its accompanying cardiac malformations is all too common among North American Indians. The amount of information available concerning cardiovascular disease in native Americans is rather small. Considerably more attention should be paid to this area in the future.
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PMID:Heart disease in native Americans. 202 63

Cardiovascular pathology in African and Afro-Caribbean blacks features three major conditions: hypertension, rheumatic heart disease, and the cardiomyopathies. Ischemic heart disease is as yet distinctly uncommon in these societies but the adoption of Western lifestyle and its inevitable risk factors for atherosclerosis makes it likely that coronary artery disease will emerge ultimately. Hypertension poses special problems in these regions--its prevalence rate is high both in rural and urban settings, its consequences devastating in its severity of target organ involvement, and its management strategy complicated by the high cost of drugs, poor patient compliance, and the lack of clinical resources for effective monitoring of detected and referred cases. Rheumatic heart disease remains an eminently preventable condition. The ultimate strategy lies in improving the quality of life in these communities through adequate housing, sanitation, and health education, and integrating primary prophylaxis into national health care programs to forestall the development of rheumatic fever. Cardiomyopathy poses the greatest challenge as its etiology remains elusive. Its dilated form has been linked with Toxoplasma and with Coxsackie B viruses, but hard evidence of a cause-effect relationship is still lacking.
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PMID:Heart disease in blacks of Africa and the Caribbean. 204 16

Cardiovascular status was studied in 500 natives living at high to extreme altitudes (3000m to 5500m) of the Himalayas. No case of congenital heart disease, rheumatic heart disease, coronary artery disease, primary myocardial disease or hypertension was found. A significant rise, however, was noted in both the systolic and diastolic systemic arterial pressure with age. Serum lipid and lipoprotein profile estimation in 148 subjects showed that with increasing altitude, the HDL cholesterol increased, while the LDL cholesterol, total cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio and the LDL cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio decreased. Electrocardiograms of 160 subjects (120 males and 40 females) above the age of 25 years showed right ventricular hypertrophy in 8 (5%), 6 of whom (17.6%) lived above the altitude of 4800m. Echocardiographic examination showed normal left ventricular function in all, while 27 per cent of the natives at an altitude of 4500m-5000m had evidence of pulmonary hypertension and rise of normalised right ventricular preejection period.
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PMID:Clinical, biochemical, electrocardiographic and noninvasive hemodynamic assessment of cardiovascular status in natives at high to extreme altitudes (3000m-5500m) of the Himalayan region. 208 44

As infection and malnutrition are steadily overcome in the developing world, cardiovascular disease loom large in the profile of morbidity and mortality in these societies. Hypertension, rheumatic heart disease and the cardiomyopathies are already taking their toll and atherosclerosis is certain to pose public health problems soon unless steps are taken now, through attention to known risk factors, to pre-empt or at least minimize its consequences. There are populations in developing countries among whom blood pressure does not appear to rise with age and in whom the prevalence of hypertension is very low. Studies of these communities and of migrant groups indicate that salt has an important effect on blood pressure. In spite of these observations, however, it is well known that black communities tend, on the whole, to show a higher prevalence of hypertension and more severe target-organ damage than white communities. Other distinguishing features are lower cholesterol, triglyceride and low-density lipoprotein fractions and a delayed response to a sodium load in black populations. Economic constraints limit the effective application of stepped-care therapy in the management of moderate to severe hypertension. Beta-blockers and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are not so effective in black communities unless combined with diuretics.
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PMID:Epidemiology of cardiovascular disease in developing countries. 209 92

A study of 115 patients with rheumatic heart disease associated with arterial hypertension revealed significant changes of functioning of depressor kallikrein-kinin system of the kidneys and blood. The period of formation of arterial hypertension is already distinguished by an exhaustion of the depressor systems manifested in a marked reduction of the kallikrein excretion in response to physical loads and a reduction of the extracellular volume deteriorating in the course of stabilization of arterial hypertension.
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PMID:[The humoral depressor system function in rheumatic heart defects with arterial hypertension]. 227 65

Chronically elevated blood pressure predisposes to stroke through effects on the extracranial and intracranial cerebral vessels. Hypertension-associated disease of small-diameter penetrating cerebral arteries may produce either lacunar infarction or intracerebral hemorrhage. The role of hypertension in the pathogenesis of atherothromboembolic cerebral infarction must be questioned in view of the evidence that antihypertensive therapy does not prevent myocardial infarction. Hypertension, in the absence of rheumatic heart disease, is frequently associated with atrial fibrillation. The incidence of stroke due to embolization of thrombus from the fibrillating left atrium of the nonrheumatic heart may have been overestimated in the past. Ideally, investigation of the patient who has had a stroke should include a brain-imaging study and a cerebral arteriogram. In practice, however, arteriography cannot always be justified. Treatment of the completed stroke is unsatisfactory but tissue plaminogen activator and calcium-channel blockers hold promise for cerebral infarction. Surgical decompression of the posterior fossa can be life-saving in cases of cerebellar infarction or hemorrhage. In patients with cerebral infarction, aspirin has been shown to reduce the incidence of stroke recurrence.
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PMID:Pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of hypertension-associated stroke. 266 72

Seven cases of postoperative constrictive pericarditis (PCP) were discovered in a retrospective study of patients given heart surgery in a hospital receiving patients from all over Italy in 1970-85. Five of those patients had received surgery for chronic rheumatic heart disease, 2 for congenital heart defects. Four had received a second heart operation before the pericardial condition was recognised. All were females and all presented systemic venous hypertension (one of them only after acute doses of physiological solution) with thickening of the pericardial layers revealed by sonography. In six cases the electrocardiographic ventricular complexes were normal or increased in amplitude and the heart/chest ratio was greater than 0.55. Pericardial knock was masked by natural or artificial atrioventricular valve opening noises in 6 cases. In one case only there were pericardial calcifications or signs of an earlier postpericardiotomy syndrome. The haemodynamic investigation revealed signs of ventricular diastolic constriction in 6 patients. Three patients died from complications of cardiac cirrhosis: 2 of them had previously received partial pericardiectomy. Another two, given the same operation, preserved a reasonable functional capacity 5 and 10 years after the pericardiectomy. One patient in NYHA functional class III has so far refused haemodynamic assessment (and surgical treatment) of the pericardial disease. Finally, the last patient complains only of attacks of heart palpitation caused by atrial flutter and controlled by antiarrhythmic treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Postoperative constrictive pericarditis]. 277 2

The epidemiology and etiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of congestive heart failure (CHF) are reviewed. CHF affects as many as 4 million Americans and is one of the most prevalent causes of death in hospitalized patients. Major risk factors for developing CHF include advanced age, male sex, hypertension, coronary artery disease, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, and rheumatic heart disease. Heart failure results from decreased intrinsic myocardial contractility caused by one or more of three changes: (1) altered adrenergic nervous system function, (2) impaired delivery of calcium to contractile elements in the heart, and (3) reduced myosin-ATPase activity in the myocardium. The disease is progressive, and no intervention has yet been found to stop it effectively. CHF is diagnosed based on subjective signs and symptoms and objective assessment using auscultation, ECG, chest roentgenogram, laboratory tests, and noninvasive and invasive tests. Treatment of CHF begins with restriction of physical activity and sodium intake. Pharmacologic interventions start with either digitalis glycosides or thiazide diuretics; both may be used concomitantly as the disease progresses. Current studies are focusing on the use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors as first-line agents for CHF. When CHF worsens, loop diuretics are substituted for or added to the thiazide diuretics, and vasodilators are added to reduce the workload on the heart. Other inotropic agents, including the new bipyridine derivatives, may also be used. In patients not responding to these and other aggressive therapeutic interventions, cardiac transplantation is the only option. Despite advances in management of CHF, little improvement in overall survival has been demonstrated, and no intervention has stopped or reversed the progression of CHF.
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PMID:Current concepts in clinical therapeutics: congestive heart failure. 287 92


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