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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Japan Nurses' Health Study (JNHS) is a long-term, large-scale cohort study investigating the effects of various lifestyle factors and healthcare habits on the health of Japanese women. Based on currently limited statistical data regarding the incidence of disease among Japanese women, our initial sample size was tentatively set at 50,000 during the design phase. The actual number of women who agreed to participate in follow-up surveys was approximately 18,000. Taking into account the actual sample size and new information on disease frequency obtained during the baseline component, we established the prevalence of past diagnoses of target diseases, predicted their incidence, and calculated the statistical power for JNHS follow-up surveys. For all diseases except ovarian cancer, the prevalence of a past diagnosis increased markedly with age, and incidence rates could be predicted based on the degree of increase in prevalence between two adjacent 5-yr age groups. The predicted incidence rate for
uterine myoma
, hypercholesterolemia, and
hypertension
was > or =3.0 (per 1,000 women, per year), while the rate of thyroid disease, hepatitis, gallstone disease, and benign breast tumor was predicted to be > or =1.0. For these diseases, the statistical power to detect risk factors with a relative risk of 1.5 or more within ten years, was 70% or higher.
...
PMID:Prevalence of diseases and statistical power of the Japan Nurses' Health Study. 1805 12
We present a case of uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) coexisting with both pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis and renal angiomyolipoma. The patient was a 42-year-old woman, suffering from massive abnormal uterine bleeding, progressive dyspnea, and arterial
hypertension
. Her clinical history included diagnoses of bilateral renal angiomyolipoma and pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis. The patient underwent a subtotal hysterectomy and the specimen contained a subserosal tumor with irregular outlines in addition to
uterine leiomyomata
. The uterine tumor was histologically composed of solid sheets and tonguelike infiltration and lymphangioleiomyomalike structures within the myometrium, formed by epithelioid cells with ovoid to round nuclei and clear to light eosinophilic cytoplasms. The tumor did not display any morphologic sign of malignancy. The tumor cells showed expression of HMB-45 and smooth muscle markers. Ultrastructural analysis revealed abundant cytoplasmic microfilaments and rare small cytoplasmic bodies with a gridlike lining. We conclude that identification of lymphangioleiomyomalike growth pattern may aid in the differential diagnosis of uterine PEComa and suggest using both PEComa and smooth muscle tumor terminology.
...
PMID:Uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumor coexisting with pulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis and renal angiomyolipoma: a case report. 1852 74
Uterine fibroids
are the most common benign tumour of the female genital tract. However, their true prevalence is probably under-estimated, as the incidence at histology is more than double the clinical incidence. Recent longitudinal studies have estimated that the lifetime risk of fibroids in a woman over the age of 45 years is more than 60%, with incidence higher in blacks than in whites. The cause of fibroids remains unclear and their biology poorly understood. No single candidate gene has been detected for commonly occurring uterine fibroids. However, the occurrence of rare
uterine fibroid
syndromes, such as multiple cutaneous and uterine leiomyomatosis, has been traced to the gene that codes for the mitochondrial enzyme, fumarate hydratase. Cytogenetic abnormalities, particularly deletions of chromosome 7, which are found in up to 50% of fibroid specimens, seem to be secondary rather than primary events, and investigations into the role of tumour suppressor genes have yielded conflicting results. The key regulators of fibroid growth are ovarian steroids, both oestrogen and progestogen, growth factors and angiogenesis, and the process of apoptosis. Black race, heredity, nulliparity, obesity, polycystic ovary syndrome, diabetes and
hypertension
are associated with increased risk of fibroids, and there is emerging evidence that familial predisposition to fibroids is associated with a distinct pattern of clinical and molecular features compared with fibroids in families without this prevalence.
...
PMID:Incidence, aetiology and epidemiology of uterine fibroids. 1853 13
Uterine fibroid
admissions in the nation's hospitals have grown more than 20 percent over the past five years. Substantial variations exist in inpatient treatment patterns. In spite of this dramatic growth, there are no national studies of the hospital costs associated with the treatment of uterine fibroids in the hospital setting. Using 11 years of data (1993-2003) from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, a nationally representative 20 percent sample of the nation's inpatient admissions, trends in hospital charges, costs, and lengths of stay (LOSs) are reported. For 2001 to 2003, determinants of hospital costs and LOS for inpatients with a primary diagnosis of uterine fibroids were analyzed using univariate analyses and regression techniques. Hysterectomies for women with a primary diagnosis of uterine fibroids have in-hospital costs of over $1.5 billion. Among the major procedures for treating uterine fibroids, in 2003, total abdominal hysterectomy had the longest LOS, averaging 2.9 days with a mean cost of $6331. In contrast, the treatment with the shortest LOS, 1.72 days, was laparoscopically assisted vaginal hysterectomy but it had the highest mean costs of $7108. In 2003, supracervical hysterectomies and myomectomies had mean costs of $6809 and $6707, respectively. Multivariate results show that patient characteristics and structural aspects of the hospital are strong predictors of lengths of stay and cost per day but there are major differences across some of the surgical procedures. Although the patient characteristics-insulin-dependent, non-insulin dependent diabetes, obesity, morbid obesity, smoker,
hypertension
, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease-all have significant impacts on LOS and cost per day for some of the major
uterine fibroid
treatments, they are not consistent. Compared with white women, black, Hispanic, and Asian/Pacific Island women all had higher lengths of stay and costs per day. Bedsize and teaching status are generally positively associated with lengths of stay and costs per day; for-profit status always had a significant positive association with LOS and cost per day. Hospital costs for treating women with uterine fibroids are continuing to grow. Further research on the determinants of the resource utilization could be helpful in predicting and alleviating these costs and improving patient care.
...
PMID:National trends and determinants of hospitalization costs and lengths-of-stay for uterine fibroids procedures. 1917 28
African-Americans experience an excessive prevalence of a number of apparently disparate disorders that all appear to be, at least in part, mediated by the over-expression or activation of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) signaling pathways, and that certain genotypes including the codon 10 polymorphism occur more commonly among African-Americans and appears to predispose to these disorders. These disorders, fibrosing in nature, include
hypertension
, focal glomerulosclerosis, diabetic nephropathy, end stage renal disease, sarcoidosis,
uterine leiomyoma
, keloids, myocardial fibrosis, and glaucoma. The specific polymorphism for TGF-beta, codon 10, has been implicated in glomerulosclerosis and diabetic nephropathy as well as cardiac transplant rejection. Although TGF-beta over-expression is not the sole factor in these disorders, it is suggested that by designing future clinical studies that consider genomic differences in TGF-beta expression, a more complete understanding of these clinical disorders will be possible. A more thorough understanding of the genetic basis of disease will like promote improved therapeutic regimens and may help reduce the disparate health outcomes for African-Americans as well as improve treatment of individuals of various and diverse ethnic backgrounds.
...
PMID:Does over-expression of transforming growth factor-beta account for the increased morbidity in African-Americans?: possible clinical study and therapeutic implications. 2045 94
The Life Span Study (LSS) is a follow-up study of atomic bomb (A-bomb) survivors to investigate the radiation effects on human health and has collected data for over 60 years. The LSS cohort consists of 93,741 A-bomb survivors and another 26,580 age and sex-matched subjects who were not in either city at the time of the bombing. Radiation doses have been computed based on individual location and shielding status at the time of the bombings. Age at death and cause of death are gathered through the Japanese national family registry system and cancer incidence data have been collected through the Hiroshima and Nagasaki cancer registries. Noncancer disease incidence and health information are collected through biannual medical examinations among a subset of the LSS. Radiation significantly increases the risks of death (22% at 1 Gy), cancer incidence (47% at 1 Gy), death due to leukemia (310% at 1 Gy), as well as the incidence of several noncancer diseases (e.g. thyroid nodules, chronic liver disease and cirrhosis,
uterine myoma
, and
hypertension
). Significant effects on maturity (e.g. growth reduction and early menopause) were also observed. Long-term follow-up studies of the A-bomb survivors have provided reliable information on health risks for the survivors and form the basis for radiation protection standards for workers and the public.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of atomic bomb survivors. 2244 May 34
We report a case of cardiac arrest before and after emergent exploratory laparotomy for panperitonitis in an 84-year-old woman with a history of
hypertension
, gastric ulcer,
uterine myoma
and dementia. She complained of lower abdominal pain, and suffered from septic shock and DIC. The first cardiac arrest occurred after anesthesia induction. Following resuscitation, a left hemicolectomy and colostomy were performed. The second cardiac arrest occurred immediately after the operation. Cardiac arrest in this case may have been due to preexisting cardiac dysfunction enhanced by septic shock. Prompt preoperative evaluation of cardiac function is necessary for successful circulatory management during anesthesia induction for surgical patients in septic shock.
...
PMID:[A case of cardiac arrests before and after emergent exploratory laparotomy for panperitonitis]. 2274 28
We report the case of a 50-year-old woman presented with a history of right hemicolectomy due to an ileocecal neuroendocrine tumor and left breast metastasis. Owing to a slightly elevated chromogranin A-level and lower abdominal pain, single photon emission computed tomography-computer tomography (SPECT-CT) was performed. There were no signs of recurrence on the SPECT-CT scan, but the patient was incidentally found to have an inflamed intramural myoma. We believe that the slightly elevated chromogranin A-level was caused by the
hypertension
that the patient presented. In the clinical context, this is a report of an inflamed
uterine myoma
seen as a false positive result detected by TC-99m-Tc-EDDA/HYNIC-Tyr3-Octreotide (Tektrotyd) SPECT-CT hybrid imaging.
...
PMID:An incidentally found inflamed uterine myoma causing low abdominal pain, using Tc-99m-tektrotyd single photon emission computed tomography-CT hybrid imaging. 2404 83
Hypertension
remains the main risk factor for cardiovascular death. Environmental and biological factors are known to contribute to the condition, and circulating creatine kinase was reported to be the main predictor of blood pressure in the general population. This was proposed to be because of high resistance artery creatine kinase-BB rapidly regenerating ATP for vascular contractility. Therefore, we assessed whether creatine kinase isoenzyme mRNA levels in human resistance arteries are associated with blood pressure. We isolated resistance-sized arteries from omental fat donated by consecutive women undergoing
uterine fibroid
surgery. Blood pressure was measured in the sitting position. Vessels of 13 women were included, 6 normotensive and 7 hypertensive, mean age 42.9 years (SE, 1.6) and mean systolic/diastolic blood pressure, 144.8 (8.0)/86.5 (4.3) mm Hg. Arteriolar creatine kinase isoenzyme mRNA was assessed using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Normalized creatine kinase B mRNA copy numbers, ranging from 5.2 to 24.4 (mean, 15.0; SE, 1.9), showed a near-perfect correlation with diastolic blood pressure (correlation coefficient, 0.9; 95% confidence interval, 0.6-1.0) and were well correlated with systolic blood pressure, with a 90% relative increase in resistance artery creatine kinase B mRNA in hypertensives compared with normotensives, normalized copy numbers were, respectively, 19.3 (SE, 2.0) versus 10.1 (SE, 2.1), P=0.0045. To our knowledge, this is the first direct evidence suggesting that resistance artery creatine kinase mRNA expression levels concur with blood pressure levels, almost doubling with
hypertension
. These findings add to the evidence that creatine kinase might be involved in the vasculature's pressor responses.
Hypertension
2014 Jan
PMID:Resistance artery creatine kinase mRNA and blood pressure in humans. 2412 76
The Radiation Effects Research Foundation (RERF) studies various cohorts of Japanese atomic bomb survivors, the largest being the Life Span Study (LSS), which includes 93,741 persons who were in Hiroshima or Nagasaki at the times of the bombings; there are also cohorts of persons who were exposed in utero and survivors' children. This presentation attempts to summarize the total impact of the radiation from the bombs on the survivors from both an individual perspective (both age-specific and integrated lifetime risk, along with a measure of life expectancy that describes how the risk affects the individual given age at exposure) and a group perspective (estimated numbers of excess occurrences in the cohort), including both early and late effects. As survivors' doses ranged well into the acutely lethal range at closer distances, some of them experienced acute signs and symptoms of radiation exposure in addition to being at risk of late effects. Although cancer has always been a primary concern among late effects, estimated numbers of excess cancers and hematopoietic malignancies in the LSS are a small fraction of the total due to the highly skewed dose distribution, with most survivors receiving small doses. For example, in the latest report on cancer incidence, 853 of 17,448 incident solid cancers were estimated to be attributable to radiation from the bombs. RERF research indicates that risk of radiation-associated cancer varies among sites and that some benign tumors such as
uterine myoma
are also associated with radiation. Noncancer late effects appear to be in excess in proportion to radiation dose but with an excess relative risk about one-third that of solid cancer and a correspondingly small overall fraction of cases attributable to radiation. Specific risks were found for some subcategories, particularly circulatory disease, including stroke and precedent conditions such as
hypertension
. Radiation-related cataract in the atomic bomb survivors is well known, with evidence in recent years of risk at lower dose levels than previously appreciated. In addition to somatic effects, survivors experienced psychosocial effects such as uncertainty, social stigma, or rejection, and other social pressures. Developmental deficits associated with in utero exposure, notably cognitive impairment, have also been described. Interaction of radiation with other risk factors has been demonstrated in relation to both cancer and noncancer diseases. Current research interests include whether radiation increases risk of diabetes or conditions of the eye apart from cataract, and there continues to be keen interest as to whether there are heritable effects in survivors' children, despite negative findings to date. Introduction of Impact on the Japanese Atomic- Bomb Survivors (Video 1:52, http://links.lww.com/HP/A29).
...
PMID:Impact on the Japanese atomic bomb survivors of radiation received from the bombs. 2437 4
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