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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clozapine has demonstrated superior efficacy in relieving positive and negative symptoms in treatment-resistant schizophrenic patients; unlike other antipsychotics, it causes minimal extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) and has little effect on serum prolactin. Despite these benefits, the use of clozapine has been limited because of infrequent but serious side effects, the most notable being agranulocytosis. In recent years, however, mandatory blood monitoring has significantly reduced both the incidence of agranulocytosis and its associated mortality. The occurrence of seizures appears to be dose-related and can generally be managed by reduction in clozapine dosage. Less serious and more common side effects of clozapine including sedation, hypersalivation, tachycardia, hypotension,
hypertension
, weight gain, constipation,
urinary incontinence
, and fever can often be managed medically and are generally tolerated by the patient. Appropriate management of clozapine side effects facilitates a maximization of the benefits of clozapine treatment, and physicians and patients alike should be aware that there is a range of benefits to clozapine use that is wider than its risks.
...
PMID:Review and management of clozapine side effects. 1081 Dec 38
Carbon monoxide (CO) has the toxic effects of tissue hypoxia and produces various systemic and neurological complications. The main clinical manifestations of acute CO poisoning consist of symptoms caused by alterations of the cardiovascular system such as initial tachycardia and
hypertension
, and central nervous system symptoms such as headache, dizziness, paresis, convulsion and unconsciousness. CO poisoning also produces myocardial ischemia, atrial fibrillation, pneumonia, pulmonary edema, erythrocytosis, leucocytosis, hyperglycemia, muscle necrosis, acute renal failure, skin lesion, and changes in perception of the visual and auditory systems. Of considerable clinical interest, severe neurological manifestations may occur days or weeks after acute CO poisoning. Delayed sequelae of CO poisoning are not rare, usually occur in middle or older, and are clinically characterized by symptom triad of mental deterioration,
urinary incontinence
, and gait disturbance. Occasionally, movement disorders, particularly parkinsonism, are observed. In addition, peripheral neuropathy following CO poisoning usually occurs in young adults.
...
PMID:Carbon monoxide poisoning: systemic manifestations and complications. 1141 Jun 84
The pharmacological effect of amezinium on the urethra and bladder of rabbits was investigated. Amezinium produced concentration-dependent contractions in isolated urethral strips. The maximum response was approximately 30% of that caused by norepinephrine (NE). The concentration-response curve of NE was shifted to the left by amezinium. Moreover, amezinium enhanced the relaxative effect of NE on carbachol-induced contractions in isolated bladder strips. In anesthetized rabbits, amezinium significantly increased the intraurethral pressure (IUP) but produced only slight increases in mean blood pressure (MBP). Pre-treatment with amezinium ehhanced NE-induced increases in IUP index and MBP. The enhancing effect on the IUP index lasted much longer than that on MBP. In a stress incontinence model amezinium significantly inhibited the
incontinence
after an i.v. infusion of a low dose of NE. This effect was antagonized by pre-treatment with prazosin. These results suggest that amezinium may produce an excellent effect for stress incontinence, especially mixed, without severe adverse events such as sudden
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Pharmacological effect of amezinium on urethra and bladder of rabbits. 1145 Oct 5
The aim of this case-control study was to identify etiologic factors predictive for the development of severe pelvic organ prolapse. Three hundred and sixty-eight controls from a database describing pelvic organ support in the general population were identified as having known good pelvic organ support. Eighty-seven cases were identified from a urogynecology clinic with severe pelvic organ prolapse. The risk of severe prolapse was modeled using stepwise multiple logistic regression analysis. Additional analyses using chi2 and two-sample t-tests were conducted to determine differences in means for individual variables. Variables examined included age, gravidity, parity, number of vaginal deliveries, weight of largest infant delivered vaginally, menopause status, race, body mass index prior to pelvic surgery, and medical illnesses. The following four variables were selected in the regression analysis as predicting severe prolapse: age, weight of largest vaginal delivery, hysterectomy and previous prolapse surgery. Other variables that demonstrated statistically significant differences between groups by chi2 and two-sample t-tests were gravidity, parity, number of vaginal deliveries, menopausal status, race, history of
incontinence
surgery and the presence of
hypertension
. Variables that did not demonstrate any significant differences were body mass index, the presence of chronic obstructive pulmonous disease and diabetes mellitus. Advancing age, increasing weight of infants delivered vaginally, a history of hysterectomy and a history of previous prolapse surgery were found to be the strongest etiologic predictors of severe pelvic organ prolapse in our population.
...
PMID:Case-control study of etiologic factors in the development of severe pelvic organ prolapse. 1145 Oct 7
The potential for good health is largely dependent on the prevention and reduction of early onset of fatal disease and death. The male population, in particular, is at risk from early onset of fatal disease and death. Prevention strategies must be developed in order to reduce the risk factors leading to the currently most common causes of death (heart disease, cancer, accidents). Due to the increase in life expectancy, however, other illnesses generally affecting the elderly population (osteoporosis, dementia, cancer, heart attack,
incontinence
etc.) are gaining in significance. The above average reduction in life expectancy in men can be counteracted particularly through preventative measures and the active promotion of good health. In particular risk factors, such as, smoking, overweight,
high blood pressure
and metabolic disease, are responsible for the high mortality rate in men. New research areas must be defined for the male population, which particularLy focus on the ageing male. In the field of age related illness, gender specific investigations are definitely required. The main focus has to be on therapy and prevention of those diseases and their subsequent debilitating effects, that commonly effect the elderly. Particularly with men there is still a deficit of information with regards the role of hormones and their relationship with andropause and ageing.
...
PMID:[Social medicine aspects of the aging man]. 1181 49
Severe obesity is associated with multiple comorbidities and is refractory to dietary management with or without behavioral or drug therapies. There are a number of surgical procedures for the treatment of morbid obesity, including purely gastric restrictive, a combination of malabsorption and gastric restriction or primary malabsorption. The purely gastric restrictive procedures, including vertical banded gastroplasty and laparoscopic adjustable silicone gastric banding, do not provide adequate weight loss. African-American patients do especially poorly after the banding procedure with the loss of only 11% of excess weight in one study. Gastric bypass (GBP) is associated with the loss of 66% of excess weight at 1 to 2 years after surgery, 60% at 5 years and 50% at 10 years. For unknown reasons, African-American patients lose significantly less weight than Caucasians after GBP. There is a risk of micronutrient deficiencies after GBP, including iron deficiency anemia in menstruating women, vitamin B12, and calcium deficiencies. Prophylactic supplementation of these nutrients is necessary. Recurrent vomiting after bariatric surgery may be associated with a severe polyneuropathy and must be aggressively treated with endoscopic dilatation before this complication is allowed to develop. The malabsorptive procedures include the partial biliopancreatic bypass (BPD) and BPD with duodenal switch (BPD/DS). The BPD appears to cause severe protein-calorie malnutrition in American patients; the BPD/DS may be associated with less malnutrition. Weight loss failure after GBP does not respond to tightening a dilated gastrojejunal stoma or reducing the size of the gastric pouch. These patients may require conversion to a malabsorptive distal GBP, similar to the BPD. However, because of the risk of severe protein-calorie malnutrition and calcium deficiency BPD should be reserved for patients with severe obesity comorbidity. The risk of death following bariatric surgery is between 1% and 2% in most series but is significantly higher in patients with respiratory insufficiency of obesity. In most patients, surgically induced weight loss will correct
hypertension
, type II diabetes mellitus, sleep apnea, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, gastroesophageal reflux, venous stasis disease,
urinary incontinence
, female sexual hormone dysfunction, pseudotumor cerebri, degenerative joint disease pains, as well as improved self-image and employability.
...
PMID:Bariatric surgery for severe obesity. 1185 Dec 1
Phenotypic variability in smooth muscle cells accounts, in large part, for the incredible functional diversity required of the involuntary hollow organs of the body (i.e., respiratory passages, blood vessels, gastrointestinal tract, urogenital tract, etc.). In all instances coordination of smooth muscle cell responses, that is, contraction and relaxation, is critical to normal organ function. While numerous biological mechanisms exist for coordinating smooth muscle cell responses, intercellular communication through gap junctions represents a common denominator present in all organ systems. In this report, we review the evidence documenting the presence and functional significance of myocyte gap junctions to physiologically distinct organ systems, and furthermore, provide some examples of their putative roles in organ pathology. Finally, we advance the thesis that despite their ubiquity and heterogeneous expression, gap junctions are nonetheless potentially attractive therapeutic targets for the treatment of certain smooth muscle disorders. Their therapeutic efficacy will necessarily hinge on the existence of connexin isoform-selective junctional effects. The overall rationale for targeting the intercellular pathway is therefore analogous to strategies that target other ubiquitously expressed ion channels, such as calcium or potassium channels. Such strategies have proved efficacious for the treatment of a wide range of human smooth muscle disorders including
hypertension
,
urinary incontinence
and sexual function.
...
PMID:The physiology, pathophysiology and therapeutic potential of gap junctions in smooth muscle. 1244 95
The comorbidities of diabetes mellitus were evaluated in an Asian American population with podiatric symptoms living in southern California. The three most common nonpedal complaints in men were blurred vision (73.6%),
hypertension
(64.1%), and erectile dysfunction (52.3%) and in women were blurred vision (84.5%),
incontinence
(71.5%), and low-back pain with radiculopathy-like symptoms (56.5%). The most significant finding was that only 3.2% of all patients had any previous knowledge or understanding of the risks of foot infection, ulceration, and amputation secondary to diabetes mellitus. The prevalence of diabetes mellitus in ethnic populations once considered practically exempt continues to rise steadily, and Asians living in the United States are becoming casualties of diabetes mellitus and its complications.
...
PMID:Comorbidities associated with diabetic foot complications among Asian Americans in southern California. 1253 55
Studies have shown significant variation in stroke case fatality across Europe. These variations suggest the need to explore whether differences in physiological support in acute stroke exist across Europe. Data were collected in four European centres over 6 months. These included clinical status and management of acute physiology (hydration, oxygenation, nutrition,
hypertension
, hyperglycaemia and temperature in the first week of ischaemic stroke) and survival at 3 months. Differences in acute supportive care between centres were adjusted for case mix. Patients admitted to centres in London (n = 106), Dijon (n = 95), Erlangen (n = 91) and Warsaw (n = 72) were studied. There were significant differences in
incontinence
, dysphasia, dysphagia, conscious level, pyrexia, hyperglycaemia and comorbidity between centres. After adjusting for case mix, there were significant differences in intravenous fluid use (P = 0.04), enteral feeding (P = 0.003), initiation of new antihypertensive therapy (P = 0.0006) and insulin therapy (P = 0.004) between centres, with the London centre having the lowest uptake of interventions. Three-month case fatality rates varied from 10 to 28%. This pilot study shows significant variation in acute physiological support in acute stroke across four European centres, which remains unexplained by case mix. Further research is required to link variation in acute care with stroke outcome, to identify which interventions appear to be the most effective.
...
PMID:Variation in the management of acute physiological parameters after ischaemic stroke: a European perspective. 1253 89
A 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference concluded that severely obese adults could be eligible for bariatric surgery if they had a body mass index (BMI) > or =35 kg/m(2) with or > or =40 kg/m(2) without obesity comorbidity. It was thought at that time that there were inadequate data to support bariatric surgery in severely obese adolescents. An estimated 25% of children in the United States are obese, a number that has doubled over a 30-year period. Very little information has been published on the subject of obesity surgery in adolescents. Therefore we reviewed our 20-year database on bariatric surgery in adolescents. Severely obese adolescents, ranging from 12 to less than 18 years of age, were considered eligible for bariatric surgery according to the National Institutes of Health adult criteria. Gastroplasty was the procedure of choice in the initial 3 years of the study followed by gastric bypass, which was found to be significantly more effective for weight loss in adults. Distal gastric bypass (D-GBP) was used in extremely obese patients (BMI > or =60 kg/m(2)) before 1992 and long-limb gastric bypass (LL-GBP) was used for superobese patients (BMI > or =50 kg/m(2)) after 1992. Laparoscopic gastric bypass was used after 2000. Thirty-three adolescents (27 white, 6 black; 19 females, 14 males) underwent the following bariatric operations between 1981 and June 2001: horizontal gastroplasty in one, vertical banded gastroplasty in two, standard gastric bypass in 17 (2 laparoscopic), LL-GBP in 10, and D-GBP in three. Mean BMI was 52 +/- 11 kg/m(2) (range 38 to 91 kg/m(2)), and mean age was 16 +/- 1 years (range 12.4 to 17.9 years). Preoperative comorbid conditions included the following: type II diabetes mellitus in two patients,
hypertension
in 11, pseudotumor cerebri in three, gastroesophageal reflux in five, sleep apnea in six,
urinary incontinence
in two, polycystic ovary syndrome in one, asthma in one, and degenerative joint disease in 11. There were no operative deaths or anastomotic leaks. Early complications included pulmonary embolism in one patient, major wound infection in one, minor wound infections in four, stomal stenoses (endoscopically dilated) in three, and marginal ulcers (medically treated) in four. Late complications included small bowel obstruction in one and incisional hernias in six patients. There were two late sudden deaths (2 years and 6 years postoperatively), but these were unlikely to have been caused by the bariatric surgical procedure. Revision procedures included one D-GBP to gastric bypass for malnutrition and one gastric bypass to LL-GBP for inadequate weight loss. Regain of most or all of the lost weight was seen in five patients at 5 to 10 years after surgery; however, significant weight loss was maintained in the remaining patients for up to 14 years after surgery. Comorbid conditions resolved at 1 year with the exception of
hypertension
in two patients, gastroesophageal reflux in two, and degenerative joint disease in seven. Self-image was greatly enhanced; eight patients have married and have children, five patients have completed college, and one patient is currently in college. Severe obesity is increasing rapidly in adolescents and is associated with significant comorbidity and social stigmatization. Bariatric surgery in adolescents is safe and is associated with significant weight loss, correction of obesity comorbidity, and improved self-image and socialization. These data strongly support obesity surgery for those unfortunate individuals who may have difficulty obtaining insurance coverage based on the 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference statement.
...
PMID:Bariatric surgery for severely obese adolescents. 1255 91
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