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

In susceptible persons emotional stress results in immediate sympathetic stimulation, with a vasomotor response that results in a high-output state and elevated blood pressure; the vasopressor response seems to be transient. There seems to be no longitudinal epidemiologic validation of the attractive hypothesis that transiently elevated blood pressures are the prelude to fixed hypertension, however. The acquisition of hypertension by populations abandoning their traditional mode of living has been attributed to the sociocultural stress inherent in westernization, but these studies usually have not taken into account concomitants of this type of acculturation, such as dietary changes and increased body weight. The inverse relationship of blood pressure levels to education could explain the development of hypertension when aspiration to upward mobility is thwarted. The severity of perceived occupational stress relates inversely to blood pressure, suggesting that familiarity with a job renders the demands made by the work environment more predictable and less threatening in terms of vasopressor response.
West J Med 1990 Aug
PMID:Stress and hypertension. 229 81

The association of hypertension, diabetes mellitus and abnormal lipoprotein patterns suggests that this combination has a lethal effect with regard to vascular disease. It is therefore necessary to do something about the known lifestyle factors such as cigarette smoking, obesity and possibly a low fibre diet. The high incidence of ischaemic heart disease among emigrant Indians in South Africa and Trinidad, and the low incidence in blacks of South Africa and the West Indies, suggests that there may be different thresholds for susceptibility to disease in various ethnic groups, beyond which the risk factors begin to operate.
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PMID:Hypertension and vascular disease in India and migrant Indian populations in the world. 225 88

Foot lesions constitute an important cause of morbidity and mortality in Nigerian diabetics, yet remain poorly characterised. We, therefore, prospectively studied 50 diabetics with 84 major foot lesions over a three-year period at Ibadan, Nigeria. Sixty eight percent of the patients were illiterate and 80% ignorant regarding the importance of footcare. Duration of diabetes was significantly longer in these patients (p less than 0.05) than in age- and sex-matched diabetics without foot lesions. The prevalence rates of neuropathy (68%), foot ischaemia (54%), hypertension (42%) and nephropathy (20%) in diabetics with foot lesions were higher than in previous reported groups of Nigerian diabetics. The initiating factors were predominantly trivial trauma and "spontaneous" blisters. Sixty percent were anaemic at presentation, while short-term glycaemic control was generally poor. Mixed bacterial organisms were cultured in 70% of the cases, with anaerobes presumed present in 33%. Chronic osteomyelitis (38%) and soft tissue changes (35%) were the commonest foot x-ray findings. Some aspects of prevention of foot lesions were discussed.
West Afr J Med
PMID:The pattern of presentation of foot lesions in Nigerian diabetic patients. 227 17

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia is a rare, hereditary fibrovascular dysplasia. We report a case associated with hepatolithiasis. Hepatolithiasis, relatively common in East Asia, is rare in the West. The association of the two conditions has not been previously reported. In this case, vascular malformations in the liver gave rise to arteriovenous and arterioportal fistulas, causing arteriovenous shunting and protal hypertension, respectively. Abnormal blood flow is the proposed mechanism for the hepatic fibrosis and nodular regeneration. Hepatic fibrosis, by causing stenosis of large intrahepatic bile ducts, bile stasis, and secondary infection, is the hypothesized mechanism for calculus formation. Hepatolithiasis ultimately caused death from acute bacterial cholangitis and septicemia.
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PMID:Hepatolithiasis in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. 232 2

Phaeochromocytoma is rare and usually presents as paroxysmal or sustained hypertension; none the less, it can also cause severe acute pulmonary oedema in normotensive individuals. Six patients with phaeochromocytoma presenting in Cornwall and West Devon between 1982 and 1986 are described. Five of them died of pulmonary oedema within 24 hours of the onset of symptoms. At necropsy all five had normal sized hearts and in the four hearts examined by histology there was evidence of catecholamine induced heart disease in the form of focal myocardial necrosis. The sixth patient presented with arterial spasms and pulmonary oedema. Surgical removal of the causative tumour was successful in this patient.
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PMID:Phaeochromocytoma and catecholamine induced cardiomyopathy presenting as heart failure. 233 95

Data from 121 consecutive patients with hypertension and renovascular disease, first diagnosed between 1975 and 1982 in Glasgow and Newcastle, were analysed retrospectively to determine the factors which influenced their outcome. Thirty-six patients died between the data of arteriography and 1st January 1987, giving five and ten year survival rates of 83% and 67%. Survival was greatly reduced in comparison with that of age-sex-matched controls in the general population of the West of Scotland, and was also less than that of essential hypertensives matched for age, sex, initial diastolic blood pressure and smoking habit who had attended the Glasgow Blood Pressure Clinic during the same period. Multivariate analysis showed that age, cigarette smoking and presence of atheromatous disease were significantly and independently related to outcome among the patients with renovascular disease, whereas male sex, centre of origin, severity of hypertension when first seen, initial renal function and presence of bilateral disease were not. Despite a trend towards benefit from surgical intervention (ten year survival in medical group 62%, in surgical group 71%; p = 0.19) our data do not prove that intervention is better than medical treatment, largely because the decision on intervention was not randomised. A prospective trial would be required to answer this important question.
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PMID:Survival associated with renovascular disease in Glasgow and Newcastle: a collaborative study. 237 12

Over the last three years we have carried out studies on the urine output of both sodium and dopamine in five different ethnic groups: whites, Ghanaians, Zimbabweans, Iranians and Thais. Sodium was measured by ion specific electrode and dopamine by HPLC with electrochemical detection (using epinine as an internal standard). In several groups salt loading studies were also carried out. The five ethnic groups differed substantially with regard to the correlation between their urinary sodium and dopamine outputs. Three groups (whites, Thais and Zimbabweans) showed a strong positive correlation (P less than .001) and this may reflect their traditionally salt rich diet. In two groups (Ghanaians and Iranians) there was no correlation and this may reflect a salt scarce environment. Taken together with our previously reported studies showing that normotensive Ghanaians do not mobilize dopamine on salt loading, this would suggest that certain ethnic groups are predisposed to develop hypertension on salt loading--that is, they are 'salt sensitive.' This genetic trait may have passed from the West Coast of Africa, with the slaves, to America and the Caribbean. Other workers have reported deficiencies in vasodilator systems in the American black, such as dopamine, kallikrein and the renal prostaglandins. These defects may lead to the nosologic entity of 'low renin' hypertension, well described in American blacks, and could open up avenues of therapy based either on DA1 activators (such as fenoldopam) or on renal prodrugs (such as gludopa).
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PMID:Ethnic differences in the renal sodium dopamine relationship. A possible explanation for regional variations in the prevalence of hypertension? 238 74

Thirty patients with gouty arthritis were studied over 3 years. The diagnosis was established with the help of polarised light microscopy. All the patients were males, with a median age of 45 years. They belonged to the middle or upper socio-economic class and were obese (mean body mass index 29.7). Chronic alcoholism, diabetes mellitus and hypertension were present in one patient each. No patient had symptomatic coronary artery disease. Although 6 patients had a history of renal colic, only one had gouty nephropathy with chronic renal failure. Six patients had a positive family history of gout. The disease involved mostly the joints of the lower extremity and podagra was observed in 70% of patients. Eight patients had tophi at various sites. There were 17 'over producers' and 13 'under excretors' of uric acid. The treatment consisted of patient education, symptomatic control with non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and/or colchicine and antihyperuricaemic therapy. The overproducers were treated with allopurinol while the under excretors were treated with [corrected] sulfinpyrazone. In general, there was a good response to therapy as indicated by lowering of serum uric acid and the number of painful episodes per year. The overall profile of the disease appears similar to that seen in the West.
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PMID:Clinical profile, therapeutic approach and outcome of gouty arthritis in northern India. 238 54

Aortic dissection was confirmed in 33 patients at autopsy at the University Hospital of the West Indies between 1975 and 1988. Twenty-five cases were acute and 8 chronic and the diagnosis was made antemortem in 5 cases overall. The high risk of rupture of proximal dissections involving the ascending aorta into the pericardial sac is clear, and the overriding importance of systemic hypertension is once again confirmed. An unusual finding was the higher proportion of females to males. A higher index of suspicion should permit an antemortem diagnosis and appropriate therapy in a larger proportion of patients.
West Indian Med J 1990 Jun
PMID:Aortic dissection. An autopsy experience. 240 4

We assessed the efficacy of long-acting nifedipine as monotherapy in 52 patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension in a randomized, controlled crossover study. Good blood pressure control was achieved in 34 of 40 patients (85%) receiving nifedipine (mean daily dose, 52 mg in 2 divided doses) compared with 23 of 40 patients (58%) receiving metoprolol (mean daily dose, 155 mg in 2 divided doses). After treatment for 4 weeks, the mean blood pressures with nifedipine (149.7 +/- 16.6/88.7 +/- 11.1 mm of mercury) and metoprolol administration (163.9 +/- 23.3/94.2 +/- 10.2 mm of mercury) were significantly lower than with placebo (176.7 +/- 17.3/100.9 +/- 7.1 mm of mercury) (P less than .05). The mean systolic pressure during nifedipine treatment was 14.2 mm of mercury lower (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.9 to 24.5 mm of mercury) and mean diastolic pressure 5.5 mm of mercury (95% CI, 0.3 to 10.7 mm of mercury) lower than with metoprolol therapy. Both drugs were reasonably well tolerated, and intolerance requiring withdrawal was encountered in 3 of 45 (7%) patients receiving nifedipine, compared with 1 of 45 (2%) of those taking metoprolol and placebo, respectively. Adverse effects of nifedipine, most of which were transient, included palpitations, headache, facial flushing, and ankle edema. Long-acting nifedipine is a promising agent when given alone for mild to moderate hypertension and can be safely administered in clinical practice.
West J Med 1990 Feb
PMID:Long-acting nifedipine versus metoprolol as monotherapy for essential hypertension. A randomized, controlled crossover study. 240 30


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