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

Sixty million Americans have hypertension, a major cardiovascular risk factor. Its presence accelerates the atherosclerotic process, producing strokes, heart attacks, heart failure, renal failure, and peripheral vascular disease. This article highlights the historical landmarks in the study of this disease from the first documented measurement of blood pressure in 1733, through the most recent pharmacologic approaches to treatment. In addition, the roles of the kidney and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system are examined.
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PMID:Historical reflections on hypertension. 194 83

By use of noninvasive tests (Doppler segmental pressure study, supraorbital Doppler flow analysis, and segmental plethysmography), coexistent carotid (CTD) or lower extremity peripheral vascular disease (PVD) were diagnosed and correlated with subjective symptoms, coronary risk factors (CRFs), coronary arteriograms (CAGs), cardiac hemodynamics, and infarct size in 121 consecutive patients with documented coronary artery disease (CAD). PVD was found in 16.5%, CTD in 33.1%, and both PVD and CTD in 9.9% of the patients studied; 20% of PVD patients and 47.5% of CTD patients were asymptomatic with respect to coexistent PVD or CTD. There were no significant differences between the presence or absence of PVD or CTD as regards number of CRFs, Killip classification, cardiac hemodynamics, or number of stenotic coronary arteries. However, serum creatine kinase (CK) and CKMB release curves in the PVD group showed significantly higher peak CK and peak CKMB values than those in the PVD(-) group (4096 +/- 5408/282 +/- 263 vs 1706 +/- 1715/179 +/- 186, p less than 0.05) because of the higher prevalence (100%) of multivessel disease on CAG. Investigation of the relationship of CRFs to coexistent PVD revealed that the smoking ratio in men (86.7%) and the hypertension ratio in women (80%) were extremely high in PVD patients, and statistically significant differences between PVD(+) patients and PVD(-) groups were found with respect to the obesity ratio (p less than 0.05) in men and the hypercholesterolemia ratio (p less than 0.05) and obesity ratio (60%, p less than 0.05) in women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical features and coronary backgrounds of coexistent peripheral vascular disease in Japanese coronary artery disease patients. 195 77

The results of previous studies have suggested that significant stenosis of the carotid artery occurs in less than 6 per cent of asymptomatic patients. However, some populations studied were not representative of those seen by most vascular surgeons. Accordingly, we examined two cohorts of patients at the Veterans Administration Medical Center using Duplex scanning. There were 153 volunteers in group 1, all more than 50 years of age, who were being treated at our outpatient department for nonvascular problems. There were 116 patients of similar age in group 2 but who were known to have significant arterial occlusive disease of the lower extremity. The majority of patients were men with a mean age of 64.4 years. Risk factors in the total population included hypertension, diabetes mellitus, coronary arterial disease, peripheral vascular disease and smoking. Over-all, significant (greater than 50 per cent diameter) stenosis of the carotid artery was discovered in 25 of 269 patients. The prevalence for those in group 1 was 6.5 per cent versus 12.9 per cent for those in group 2 (p = 0.058). The prevalence in patients with cardiac disease was 15.2 per cent compared with 6.8 per cent in those without cardiac disease (p = 0.032). Smoking was associated with a 10.6 per cent rate of significant disease compared with a 2.3 per cent rate in nonsmokers (p = 0.065). Hypertension and diabetes were not significant risk factors. Significant stenosis of the carotid artery was found in seven of 40 patients in whom coronary arterial disease, peripheral vascular disease and smoking were all present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Prevalence of hemodynamically significant stenosis of the carotid artery in an asymptomatic veteran population. 198 34

Odds ratios (ORs) were estimated for the prevalence of antecedent endocrine, metabolic, or vascular diseases among 45 patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis from the Rochester, Minn, population compared with 90 control subjects matched for sex, year of birth, period of observation, and residence. Hypertension occurred less frequently in male patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (4%) than in control subjects (30%; OR = .10). Because of small population size, no conclusions can be drawn with respect to the following antecedent conditions: thyroid disease (OR = 1.61), coronary artery disease (OR = .58), obesity (OR = .52), diabetes (OR = 1.00), cerebrovascular disease (OR = .21), and peripheral vascular disease (OR = 1.23). The heterogeneity of antecedent thyroid disease makes it highly unlikely that any specific thyroid lesion is causally associated with most cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Hypertension may be a marker for protective factors against the development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in men.
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PMID:Antecedent medical diseases in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. A population-based case-controlled study in Rochester, Minn, 1925 through 1987. 200 Nov 86

The clinical, biochemical, and vascular laboratory measurements potentially associated with the development and/or progression of peripheral occlusive arterial disease (POAD) were assessed during a 4-year period in 110 normal control subjects, 112 patients with POAD without diabetes mellitus, 240 patients with diabetes mellitus without POAD, and 100 patients with diabetes mellitus and POAD. Age, history of hypertension or coronary heart disease, history of cigarette smoking, presence of POAD, systolic blood pressure, and beta-thromboglobulin level were associated with progression of POAD. A multivariate logistic regression model indicated that the presence of diabetes mellitus or POAD or both at baseline, decreased postexercise ankle-brachial index, increased arm systolic blood pressure, and current smoking were independently associated with progression of POAD. This study suggests that cessation of smoking and control of hypertension are essential treatment modifications to decrease the risk of progression of peripheral vascular disease in diabetic patients.
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PMID:Progression of peripheral occlusive arterial disease in diabetes mellitus. What factors are predictive? 201 54

Percutaneous rotational atherectomy (Rotablator), a high speed (greater than 100,000 RPM) rotational burr, was used successfully in 38 of 43 patients (88%) (mean age: 65 +/- 7 years) with 82 lesions (71 stenoses and 11 occlusions). The clinical indications were claudication (84%), nonhealing ulcer (7%), and renovascular hypertension (7%). Rotablation was successful in 78 of 82 lesions (95%): 68 of 71 (96%) stenoses (12 of 12 iliac, 11 of 11 femoral, 7 of 8 popliteal, 36 of 37 tibial, and 2 of 3 renal arteries; 60% of lesions were diffuse, i.e., greater than or equal to 4 cm in length), and 10 of 11 (91%) occlusions (5 of 6 femoral, 1 of 1 popliteal, 3 of 3 tibioperoneal, 1 of 1 brachial artery). The Rotablator significantly (p less than 0.001) reduced the arterial obstruction (stenoses: 85 +/- 11% to 12 +/- 12%); occlusions: 100% to 25 +/- 10%). The effective final burr size for arteries varied at 3.5-4.5 mm for renal, 3.0-3.5 mm for femoral, and 2.0-3.0 mm for brachial and tibial. Complications included gross hemoglobinuria without sequelae in 27 patients (63%), groin hematoma in 10 (23%), arterial spasm in 10 (23%), and arterial bypass in 2 (5%). The Rotablator was successfully used, without concomitant conventional balloon angioplasty, to open arterial lesions with excellent angiographic results in both diffuse and segmental peripheral vascular disease. There was gratifying patient clinical improvement.
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PMID:Acute angiographic and clinical outcome of high speed percutaneous rotational atherectomy (Rotablator). 201 77

Since the late 1970s patients with diabetic nephropathy have formed an increasing proportion of new entrants to the Hospital renal dialysis and transplantation programme, reaching 28% for the three year period to December 1988. Between 1 January 1975 and 31 December 1988, 87 diabetic patients were accepted for treatment. Fifty-one per cent were European, predominantly type I diabetics. Maori (9% of the total reference population) accounted for a disproportionately high 47% due to an over-representation by type II diabetic patients (34 of 41 Maori). These findings cannot be explained by the higher prevalence in Maori of type II diabetes but appear to be due to a more prevalent and/or aggressive diabetic renal lesion in this group. On commencing treatment, nearly all patients had retinopathy and the majority had evidence of peripheral vascular disease, hypertension and neuropathy. CAPD was the initial mode of renal replacement therapy in 70% of patients. Overall patient survival was 77% at one year and 42% at three years, and survival on CAPD was 76% and 37% at one and three years, respectively. Patient survival on transplantation was 63% at one year and 58% at three years. Graft survival was 51% at one year and 46% at three years. Although the short term outlook for diabetic patients on renal replacement therapy is encouraging, longer term survival compared to non-diabetic patients is poor. Vascular disease is the major cause of death and an important factor in patient morbidity.
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PMID:Diabetic end stage renal failure--the Wellington experience 1975-1988. 203 73

Renal dysfunction due to renal artery occlusive disease is potentially reversible and this diagnosis should be considered in all patients with renal failure, especially in patients with other manifestations of occlusive peripheral vascular disease, those with severe hypertension, and those over 45 or under 20 years of age at the onset of hypertension (i.e., older or younger than the usual age for onset of "essential" hypertension). Renovascular disease should also be suspected in hypertensive patients with mild to modest impairment of renal function who demonstrate a sudden worsening of renal function following administration of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor. Effective and safe techniques for renal revascularization are available in almost all cases to achieve greater longevity and improved quality of life, as well as to reduce the economic impact of chronic renal failure and renovascular hypertension.
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PMID:Retrieval of renal function by revascularization of renovascular disease. 205 76

Diabetes mellitus and hypertension constitute two powerful independent risk factors for cardiovascular, renal and atherosclerotic disease. The frequent occurrence of the two diseases in the same individual doubles the risk of cardiovascular death, as well as substantially increasing the frequency of transient ischemic attacks, strokes, peripheral vascular disease with lower extremity amputations, as well as end-stage renal disease and blindness. Although hypertension usually occurs in IDDM in association with renal disease, in NIDDM the evolution of hypertension appears to be multifactorial and independent of renal disease. Obesity appears to be dissociable from hypertension and NIDDM with a common link between obesity, hypertension and NIDDM appearing to be hyperinsulinism and insulin resistance. It has been suggested that hyperinsulinism and insulin resistance may lead to hypertension through altered intracellular calcium metabolism, enhanced renal sodium reabsorption, or through an effect of insulin upon lipid and/or catecholamine metabolism. Further, insulin itself may have a direct effect upon the atherosclerotic process in the hypertensive diabetic patient. These considerations have been taken into account in the structuring of antihypertensive therapy in Type I and Type II Diabetes Mellitus.
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PMID:Diabetes and hypertension. 207 56

The objective of this study is the identification of the most important risk factors of atherosclerosis and the determination of its multicentricity, the goal being an efficient primary and secondary prevention of this disease. Over the course of eight years, at the Department of Diagnosis and Surgical Physiopathology of Peripheral Vascular Diseases, 829 subjects with atherosclerosis were examined, of whom 513 males and 316 females between 18 and 85 years old, as well as to 200 healthy control subjects. The risk factors in consideration were: age, sex, hypertension, diabetes, lipoidoproteinosis, smoking, alcohol and coffee intake. From the data obtained it was revealed that smoking represents the most important risk factor for atherosclerosis (65% of the cases, 40% of the controls), followed in decreasing order by hypertension (31% of the cases, 6% of the controls), diabetes (26% of the cases, 2% of the controls), lipoidoproteinosis (15% of the cases, 6% of the controls). Furthermore 21% of the subjects drank coffee and 28% ingested alcoholic beverages, compared with, respectively 19% and 24% of the controls. In 70% of the cases the presence of atherosclerotic lesions were found in more than one vascular region. Atherosclerosis has a multifactorial etiology as there exists a correlation between the predisposition of the patient to acquire the disease and environmental factors. It is difficult to distinguish the determining effects of a single risk factor, because often many risk factors are tightly interrelated in the same individual; a nearly direct relationship clearly exists between the number and entity of the risk factors and the clinical picture of the patient examined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Risk factors and multicentricity of vascular atherosclerotic disease. Our experience]. 208 79


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