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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Preventive medicine perhaps achieved its earliest and most complete successes in the field of pediatrics. Work on the problems of main concern in the last third of the century has reached a stage where preventive medicine has virtually mastered those of nutrition and infection in our countries. The current problems are malformation, accidents, and suicide, and this has meant a major shift of interest for preventive activity. In some fields, prevention-detection of neonatal affections takes place in the prenatal period: here, the pediatrician joins hands with the geneticist and the obstetrician. In other fields, such as accident prevention, the pediatrician's role is of particular importance to the authorities, industry, and the family. Finally, and this is new, the pediatrician is responsible for the prevention of diseases occurring in the adult. His role in this was a matter of course in nutritional diseases such as malnutrition and
rickets
, and in infections such as tuberculosis. It is assuming increasing importance in the detection and prevention of certain risk factors and common affections of the adult such as obesity,
hypertension
and atheroma.
...
PMID:[Current aspects and prospects of preventive pediatrics in France]. 65 40
Since the establishment of a new social order in 1949, China's attempts to feed and nurture its large population has been a topic of serious study in many disciplines. This review focuses on dietary sources of Chinese population and incidence, increase and decline of important diet related health disorders in China during the last four decades. Literature published since 1949 on goiter,
rickets
, riboflavin deficiency, beri beri, vision impairment, favism, cancer, atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease,
hypertension
, dental and smoking related diseases, diabetes mellitus, pancreatitis, lactose intolerance, mineral deficiency, Kashin-Beck disease, parasitic diseases and genetic disorders are reviewed. Also presented selectively are reports related to ethnodietetics, health care, maternal health and pediatric care as well as longevity. In the 1980s, total caloric intake of Chinese population showed a 19% increase on a daily basis from that of late 1940s. In overall terms, plant derived foods supplied 93% of energy, 87% of protein and 55% of fat to the Chinese. Among the animal foods, pork remains the most common and least expensive form of meat, contributing more than 90% of China's total meat production excluding poultry and fish. In 1949, the life expectancy in China was only 36 years. In early 1980s, it has increased to 68 years. This increase in life expectancy is attributed mostly to improved nutrition and lowering of mortality due to decrease in infectious diseases. Though population, disease and mortality statistics of modern China are spotty and sometimes questionable, common consensus among the researchers is that since 1949 the public health situation in China has improved tremendously.
...
PMID:Nutrition and health in China, 1949 to 1989. 229 45
A 7-year-old girl had growth retardation,
hypertension
, and hypokalemic alkalosis. Baseline serum aldosterone concentration and plasma renin activity were low and unresponsive to sodium deprivation and to orthostatic changes. Baseline serum progesterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, 11-deoxycortisol, and cortisol levels were normal and adequately responsive to ACTH stimulation. No steroid was found abnormally elevated. A diagnosis of 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency was established on the basis of elevated urinary tetrahydrocortisol plus allotetrahydrocortisol/tetrahydrocortisone ratio, determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Evaluation of bone mineral metabolism and parathyroid function, and skeletal radiographs, revealed the presence of
rickets
and secondary hyperparathyroidism. Treatment with spironolactone alone for 2 months corrected
hypertension
, hypokalemic alkalosis, and all laboratory and radiologic evidence of
rickets
and hyperparathyroidism, resulting in acceleration of growth rate. The response to spironolactone suggests that a hypermineralocorticoid state is responsible for the hypertensive syndrome and that
rickets
and hyperparathyroidism could be a consequence of excess mineralocorticoid activity.
...
PMID:Spironolactone-reversible rickets associated with 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency syndrome. 302 98
Some of Dr. Goldblatt's important contributions during a notable research career of more than 50 years are reviewed. The research on
rickets
(1922-1932), culminating in the discovery of the antirachitic effect of sterol irradiated with ultraviolet light. The research on cancer (1930-1974), demonstrating the malignant transformation of normal fibroblasts caused by hypoxia and prevented by increased availability of oxygen. The production of benign and chronic experimental
hypertension
by renal ischaemia (1934-1976). The large-scale isolation of human and animal renin (1943-1976). The production of antirenin by immunization with heterologous or chemical only modified homologous renin. Antirenin successfully reversed both acute and chronic experimental renal hypertension, thereby demonstrating the primary role of the renin-angiotensin system in maintaining the elevated blood pressure and that this type of
hypertension
is reversible even in the chronic phase of 6 years.
...
PMID:Reminiscences and reflections. 353 81
Eight ventilator-dependent infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) were treated with dexamethasone (0.5 mg/kg/day). Therapy was initiated at 19.3 +/- 3.9 days of age, continued at the initial dose for 7 days, then tapered over 2 weeks. The clinical course of these infants with BPD was compared to that of 8 similar ventilator-dependent infants with uncomplicated hyaline membrane disease (HMD). At study entry, the BPD patients had significantly higher ventilator rates, peak inspiratory pressures, mean airway pressures, alveolar-arterial oxygen gradients and fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) values. After 7 days of dexamethasone therapy, ventilator rates, peak inspiratory pressures, mean airway pressures, FiO2 values and alveolar-arterial oxygen gradients improved significantly. At this time, ventilator rates, peak inspiratory pressures and FiO2 values were similar to those of patients with uncomplicated HMD. BPD patients were extubated after 6.5 +/- 2.4 days of therapy. The incidences of septicemia,
rickets
and retinopathy of prematurity were similar in the BPD and uncomplicated HMD patients. Most dexamethasone-treated patients developed arterial
hypertension
during the first 48 h of therapy. Blood pressures returned to normal within 7 days of stopping therapy. All BPD patients had cosyntropin responses tested 5.5 +/- 2.6 weeks after stopping therapy. Six were normal. Two had inadequate responses. At 1 year adjusted age, the dexamethasone-treated BPD infants and HMD infants had similar radiographic bone ages, similar growth patterns and similar scores on the Bayley infant development scale. Dexamethasone was useful in the treatment of early BPD. Used as short-term therapy, the drug had minimal complications and no long-term sequelae.
...
PMID:Short-term dexamethasone therapy for bronchopulmonary dysplasia: acute effects and 1-year follow-up. 358 71
Phosphorus-deficient diets fed to broiler chicks from day 1 to day 21 induced
rickets
. Some chicks were stunted, but most grew well, though they had increased respiratory rates, high arterial carbon dioxide partial pressure, and low oxygen partial pressure and were polycythemic. Most of the broilers that died showed signs of pulmocardiovascular abnormalities, some died from hypoxia, and some died from right ventricular failure with or without ascites. Many broilers had mild to marked right ventricular hypertrophy and dilation with or without ascites when examined at 21 days. It is suggested that right ventricular hypertrophy and dilation was a response to pulmonary arterial
hypertension
caused by chronic hypoxia, which resulted from inability to breathe normally because of poor rib strength and infolding. When right ventricular failure occurred, it was secondary to right ventricular hypertrophy and dilation.
...
PMID:Right ventricular failure and ascites in broiler chickens caused by phosphorus-deficient diets. 376 7
70% of the 2.2 million population of Mongolia are younger than 35 years old. More than 75% of the population live in urban areas, but many adopt the traditional nomadic lifestyle for at least a few weeks each year. 95% of the population is literate. Winters produce extremely cold temperatures and shortages. Mongolia has a well structured and staffed health care system. 3.9 physicians serve 1000 people. Women comprise more than 80% of physicians. Leading causes of mortality and morbidity are acute respiratory infections (ARIs) in the winter and diarrhea in the summer, particularly among children.
Hypertension
and ischemic heart disease are common. Mongolians are the greatest consumers of red meat in Asia and perhaps the world. The health system is in the process of switching from a centralized system of specialist clinics to a family doctor system. Family doctors usually are general physicians, pediatricians, and gynecologists who have undergone family doctor training. They have not received adequate training in treating ARIs, however. Family doctor clinics have 3-6 physicians, each physician with his/her own nurse. Each physician cares for 200-350 families (350-600 children younger than 16). Family doctors must visit each newborn every 2 weeks for the first 3 months and then once a month until age 1. They must also visit each elderly and homebound chronically ill patient at least once a month. Their nurses either come with them or visit patients alone to administer injections, change dressings, take infants' measurements, and encourage persons to come for vaccinations. The small district and county hospitals face shortages of drugs, raw materials, and functional equipment. The few national hospitals provide tertiary care. Treatment without medicine and traditional treatments of herbal remedies and Buddhist rituals and prayers are resurging in popularity. Harmful practices include swaddling babies, which contributes to
rickets
and pneumonia, and giving ill children their mother's early morning urine. Immunization coverage is high. Supplementary ration cards provide milk, flour, meat, rice, and sugar to pregnant women and mothers of children under 1 year old. Milk centers in major towns provide milk to children with a doctor's prescription. Even though malnutrition is rare, vitamin deficiencies are common.
...
PMID:Mongolia: a health system in transition. 829 57
Vitamin D is absolutely essential for the maintenance of a healthy skeleton. Without vitamin D, children develop
rickets
and adults exacerbate their osteoporosis and develop osteomalacia. Casual exposure to sunlight is the major source of vitamin D for most people. During exposure to sunlight, ultraviolet B photons photolyze cutaneous stores of 7-dehydrocholesterol to previtamin D3. Previtamin D3 undergoes a thermal isomerization to form vitamin D3. Increased skin pigmentation, changes in latitude, time of day, sunscreen use, and aging can have a marked influence on the cutaneous production of vitamin D3. Once vitamin D3 is formed in the skin or ingested in the diet, it must be hydroxylated in the liver and kidney to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3]. It is now recognized that a wide variety of tissues and cells, both related to calcium metabolism and unrelated to calcium metabolism, are target sites for 1,25(OH)2D3. 1,25(OH)2D3 stimulates intestinal calcium absorption and mobilizes stem cells to mobilize calcium stores from bone. Noncalcemic tissues that possess receptors for 1,25(OH)2D3 respond to the hormone in a variety of ways. Of great interest is that 1,25(OH)2D3 is a potent antiproliferative and prodifferentiation mediator. As a result, 1,25(OH)2D3 and its analogs have wide clinical application in such diverse clinical disorders as rheumatoid and psoriatic arthritis; diabetes mellitus type I;
hypertension
; cardiac arrhythmias; seizure disorders; cancers of the breast, prostate, and colon; some leukemias and myeloproliferative disorders; chemotherapy-induced hair loss; and skin rejuvenation as well as skin diseases like psoriasis and ichthyosis.
...
PMID:Noncalcemic actions of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and clinical applications. 857 91
Vitamin D is one of the oldest hormones that have been made in the earliest life forms for over 750 million years. Phytoplankton, zooplankton, and most plants and animals that are exposed to sunlight have the capacity to make vitamin D. Vitamin D is critically important for the development, growth, and maintenance of a healthy skeleton from birth until death. The major function of vitamin D is to maintain calcium homeostasis. It accomplishes this by increasing the efficiency of the intestine to absorb dietary calcium. When there is inadequate calcium in the diet to satisfy the body's calcium requirement, vitamin D communicates to the osteoblasts that signal osteoclast precursors to mature and dissolve the calcium stored in the bone. Vitamin D is metabolized in the liver and then in the kidney to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25(OH)(2)D]. 1,25(OH)(2)D receptors (VDR) are present not only in the intestine and bone, but in a wide variety of other tissues, including the brain, heart, stomach, pancreas, activated T and B lymphocytes, skin, gonads, etc. 1,25(OH)(2)D is one of the most potent substances to inhibit proliferation of both normal and hyperproliferative cells and induce them to mature. It is also recognized that a wide variety of tissues, including colon, prostate, breast, and skin have the enzymatic machinery to produce 1,25(OH)(2)D. 1,25(OH)(2)D and its analogs have been developed for treating the hyperproliferative disease psoriasis. Vitamin D deficiency is a major unrecognized health problem. Not only does it cause
rickets
in children, osteomalacia and osteoporosis in adults, but may have long lasting effects. Chronic vitamin D deficiency may have serious adverse consequences, including increased risk of
hypertension
, multiple sclerosis, cancers of the colon, prostate, breast, and ovary, and type 1 diabetes. There needs to be a better appreciation of the importance of vitamin D for overall health and well being.
...
PMID:Vitamin D: A millenium perspective. 1252 May 30
Hypertension
has been anecdotally reported in children with familial hypophosphatemic
rickets
(XLH). To better identify and characterize the clinical and laboratory features of hypertensive XLH children, we reviewed the medical records of 41 XLH children, all treated with phosphate and vitamin D analogues. Eight children, who were originally normotensive, developed
hypertension
during the 2nd decade of life. At diagnosis of
hypertension
all had persistent secondary/tertiary hyperparathyroidism (HPTD), defined as high serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) for 12 months or longer. Seven had nephrocalcinosis (NC). Analysis of data showed that of 11 children with HPTD, 8 developed
hypertension
compared with 0 among 30 without HPTD (P<0.001). Of 40 children studied, 18 had NC that was significantly associated with both HPTD (P<0.01) and
hypertension
(P<0.025). At diagnosis of
hypertension
, serum calcium was elevated in 2. Plasma renin activity was high in 3 of 4 patients in whom it was measured. Doppler ultrasonography or renal scan was normal in the 5 children studied. Early echocardiography showed left ventricular hypertrophy in only 2 of 5 children studied. In 3 patients who underwent parathyroidectomy,
hypertension
persisted and 1 progressed to renal failure. Serum creatinine remained normal in all others. Successful treatment of
hypertension
consisted of beta-adrenergic blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, and Ca channel blockers as monotherapy or in combination. We conclude that
hypertension
in treated XLH children is closely associated with HPTD. Emphasis should therefore be placed on prevention of the development of HPTD as a complication of XLH treatment, and close monitoring for
hypertension
in those who do develop HPTD.
...
PMID:Hypertension in hypophosphatemic rickets--role of secondary hyperparathyroidism. 1257 6
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