Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The efficacy of correlating the L/S ratio in the amniotic fluid with fetal lung maturity has been substantiated in normal pregnancies. In gestations complicated by fetomaternal diseases, however, the assay is less reliable. This study involves 555 pregnancies in which there was a significant maternal, fetal, or placental disorder. The L/S ratio was related to fetal respiratory maturity as measured by Dubowitz criteria and the occurrence of RDS. The results show that pre-eclampsia, chronic hypertension, diabetes (Class D, E, F), significant cardiovascular disease, severe hemoglobinopathies, various congenital anomalies, chronic placental insufficiency, and prolonged ruptured membranes accelerated the L/S ration. Conversely, mild diabetes (Class B, C), intrinsic renal disease, hepatitis, collagen disease, hydrops fetalis, syphilis, and toxoplasmosis were associated with a delay in the L/S ratio. A significant increase in erroneous responses was noted in these patients when the L/S ratio was correlated to infant maturity and to the incidence of RDS. Possible mechanisms for these findings are discussed.
...
PMID:The lecithin/sphingomyelin ratio in cases associated with fetomaternal disease. 57 73

Some pregnancy complications depend on its term. The frequency of spontaneous abortions, hypertension, urinary infections, toxoplasmosis, cardiovascular diseases tend to decrease in relation to the term of pregnancy. The analytical equations based on this tendency make a good approximation and can be used for extrapolation in estimating projections of pathological conditions at different terms of pregnancy.
...
PMID:[Methods of evaluating the incidence of pregnancy complications in relation to pregnancy trimester]. 253 27

We report the neurological, intellectual and visual outcome of 77 children with hydrocephalus of non tumoral origin. Neurological deficits and epilepsy were common, particularly in those with severe intellectual deficit and with acquired brain damages. Intellectual level prognosis was usually good, although lower than in a healthy population: 75% of children had full intellectual quotient (FIQ) higher than 70 but often, there was an heterogeneous pattern of the IQ with greater differences between verbal and performance results because of poor visual-spatial skills. Attention and syntax comprehension of language disabilities were also specifically encountered. Meningitis or toxoplasmosis secondary to hydrocephalus often resulted in a poor intelligence level but other causes did not influence intelligence level or pattern. Visual-spatial deficits, attention disorders and language disabilities did not seem related to the degree of hydrocephalus or the delay before shunting, but were especially encountered when ventricular dilatation persisted in spite of the operation. Functional amblyopias were frequent, certainly related to strabismus. Optic atrophy was rare and linked to direct compression of the optic nerves or to major and repeated episodes of intracranial hypertension.
...
PMID:[What future is there for hydrocephalus children? Intellectual and visual neurological prognosis in series of 77 cases of non-tumor hydrocephalus]. 344 57

Three hundred and fifty-seven serum samples from pregnant African women were examined for Toxoplasma gondii antibodies with indirect haemagglutination test in Dar es Salaam. Out of these 222 women were normal, sixty-nine had anaemia and sixty-six were suffering from hypertension. Infection rate in normal pregnant women was 41.9%, in anaemic women 52.5%, and in those suffering from hypertension 66.7%. Highly significant relationship was observed between Toxoplasma infection and anaemia, and hypertension. Infection rate was significantly high in women who had histories of abortion. The results suggested associations of Toxoplasma gondii infection with hypertension and anaemia in African women.
...
PMID:Prevalence of Toxoplasma antibodies in pregnant African women in Tanzania. 630 81

Incidence, type and clinical significance of cardiac involvement in advanced HIV infection was determined in 32 patients (30 men, two women; mean age 34.2 [21-52] years; mean CD4-cell number 52.2 [0-192]/microliters) over a period of 31 months. Any cardiac involvement was assessed diagnostically by one- and two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography, complemented by other examinations and results of treatment. 14 patients (43.8%) had abnormal cardiac findings, presumably AIDS-associated. This included left ventricular pump dysfunction of various degrees of severity (n = 11), left ventricular dilatation (n = 2), pericardial effusion (n = 11), as well as cor pulmonale in primary pulmonary arterial hypertension (n = 2). In one patient the first manifestation of AIDS was tubercular pericarditis; in two patients there was a likely connection to disseminated pneumocystis infection and toxoplasmosis, respectively. In 11 patients no specific cause was found for the cardiac involvement. Nine of the 14 patients (64%) had symptoms due to the cardiac involvement. These findings indicate that the incidence and clinical significance of cardiac involvement must be taken into account in any treatment concept for AIDS.
...
PMID:[Cardiac manifestations in advanced HIV infection]. 818 20

Blood and urinary tests which are necessary for pregnancy diagnosis and follow-up, for newborn and mother medical supervision, during the month following birthday, are today described in reglementary texts, laws, and recommendations such as advised medical references (RMO). These documents specify the nature of obligatory tests, the checking rhythm and the list of useless tests. hCG research remains necessary for pregnancy diagnosis, but hCG dosage is essential only in case of programmed medical assistance or pathological pregnancy (extrauterine pregnancy, hydatiform mole, choriocarcinoma). The obligatory follow-up of a pregnant woman includes determination of blood groups, research of infectious agents responsible for diseases (toxoplasmosis, rubeola, hepatitis B, syphilis), proteinuria and glycosuria research and blood count according to a given calendar. When the mother's condition is bad and reminiscent of a pathological pregnancy, when a genetic risk exists for the fetus or when fetal growth is abnormal as indicated by echographic control (intra-uterine growth retardation), laboratory tests are used to follow the maternal pathological course (arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, anemia, bacterial, viral or parasitic disease), to verify the existence of a genetic disease, to know about the fetal functional state (by amniocentesis or cordocentesis), to identify an erythrocyte fetomaternal incompatibility. Since last trimester pregnancy accidents are able to endanger mother's and fetus lives, the feto-maternal follow-up must be adjusted to pathological diagnosis types and requires a particular supervision of the delivery. Finally mother and child must undergo a post-natal follow-up during the four weeks after birthday (perinatality control).
...
PMID:[Pregnancy and perinatality: biological follow-up]. 930 27

The causes of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) are multiple, involving many different factors. Studies in humans and animals have shown that the maternal environment is the most important determinant of newborn weight, accounting for more similarity in birth weights of siblings than does genetic affinity. In addition to a direct relationship with the degree of maternal plasma volume expansion, many clinical factors are associated with IUGR. These factors include multiple gestation; fetal, genetic, and chromosomal anomalies (Down's syndrome and Turner's syndrome); infections such as TORCH syndrome (acronym for toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalic disease, and herpes); and various maternal disorders including anemia, severe chronic asthma, chronic renal disease, heart disease and hypertension. Maternal stress factors, including narcotic addiction, cigarette smoking and chronic alcoholism, are associated with IUGR. Placental anomalies including hemangiomas, placental infarcts, single umbilical artery, and small placental size are also associated with intrauterine growth retardation. Poor nutritional status of the mother at conception and inadequate energy and protein intakes during pregnancy can also result in IUGR. Because IUGR children are not a homogeneous group, they have a broad spectrum of growth, health, and developmental outcomes. In general they have higher rates of subnormal growth, morbidity, and neurodevelopmental problems. The biomedical mechanisms reflected in nutritional, infection-related, hormonal, and metabolic parameters are not likely to be independent causative factors of IUGR, but important mediating factors of a pathologic process set in motion by other agents and insults. This paper focuses mainly on the possible negative effects that a deficient maternal diet might have on fetal development and growth.
...
PMID:Biological mechanisms of environmentally induced causes of IUGR. 951 Oct 16

We report 8 patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and intracerebral haemorrhage. There were 7 men and 1 woman (mean age 37.2 years) with a mean CD4 count of 81.2/mm3. Alcohol abuse was recorded in 7 patients, intravenous drug use in 4, homosexual activity in 2, thrombocytopaenia in 1 and severe hypertension in 1. There were 5 lobar and 3 deep haemorrhages. Potential aetiologies of intracerebral haemorrhage included cerebral toxoplasmosis (n = 2), thrombocytopenia (n = 2), hypertension (n = 1) and cerebral tuberculosis (n = 1). Data of these patients were compared with those of 30 AIDS inpatients without brain haemorrhage matched by age and sex and no statistically significant differences in risk factors for AIDS except for alcohol abuse (> 80 g/day) (p = 0.045) were found. Causes of brain haemorrhage in AIDS patients are heterogeneous. The relationship between both conditions may be explained by the effect of several predisposing factors to stroke in association with AIDS-related complications. Intracerebral haemorrhage is a late and serious complication of AIDS (mortality 62.5%). The frequency of intracerebral haemorrhage in AIDS (1.0%) is higher than that expected in a general population of young adults.
...
PMID:Intracerebral haemorrhage in AIDS. 968 62

Childbearing is important to women with renal disease, but pregnancy has generally been regarded as very high risk in these women. In this review, an attempt is made to clarify the nature and severity of those risks in the settings of chronic renal insufficiency and end-stage renal disease, including dialysis patients and transplant recipients. Hypertension is the most common life-threatening problem in all three groups. A wide range of antihypertensive medications have been used, with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors the only drugs absolutely contraindicated because of their association with neonatal anuria, pulmonary hypoplasia, and neonatal death. Women with serum creatinine levels of 1.4 mg/dL or greater are at risk for accelerated loss of renal function compared with women who don't become pregnant. Transplant recipients have a risk for loss of renal function similar to controls as long as renal function is well preserved. The frequency of conception is decreased in women with renal insufficiency and markedly decreased in dialysis patients (0.5% per year). Return of fertility is the rule in transplant recipients. Exposure to immunosuppressive drugs, including prednisone, azathioprine, cyclosporine, and tacrolimus, has not been associated with an increase in congenital anomalies. These drugs, particularly cyclosporine, have been associated with small-for-gestational-age babies. Transplant recipients are at risk for infections that have implications for the fetus, including cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex, and toxoplasmosis. All groups have an increased risk for prematurity and intrauterine growth restriction. The percentage of pregnancies resulting in surviving infants in women with renal insufficiency and transplant recipients ranges from 70% to 100%. For women who conceive after starting dialysis, the likelihood of a surviving infant is approximately 50%.
...
PMID:Pregnancy in chronic renal insufficiency and end-stage renal disease. 1002 34

A study was conducted in the Internal Medicine unit of Bobo-Dioulasso Hospital. Of the 1828 HIV positive patients admitted in medical wards, 268 presented neurological symptoms. 25.4% had positive Toxoplasma gondii serology. Encephalitis was associated with 12.5% of this latter group and intracranial hypertension with focal neurological defects affected a further 47.5% of them. Presumptive treatment of toxoplasmosis led to significant clinical improvement in 60% of cases. Toxoplasma gondii serology should be part of the standard check-up for every HIV-infected patient, and toxoplasmosis chemoprophylaxis should be given to those with positive toxoplasma serology. Presumptive therapy of toxoplasmosis should be started for all HIV positive patients with focal neurological manifestations in the absence of a cerebral scanner.
...
PMID:[Toxoplasma serology in HIV infected patients and suspected cerebral toxoplasmosis at the Central Hospital of Bobo-Dioulasso (Burkina Faso)]. 1077 87


1 2 3 Next >>