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

Factors contributing to deep vein thrombosis (DVT) were studied in 51 patients (62 knees) who had a cementless total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and in 51 patients (69 knees) who had a cemented TKA. All patients were treated with a primary TKA using a porous-coated anatomic prosthesis with a porous-coated central tibial stem. Deep vein thrombosis was diagnosed by roentgenographic venography, and pulmonary embolism was diagnosed by perfusion lung scanning. Incidence of DVT was 32%, and there was no pulmonary embolism. The factors that do not seem to have much relevancy to DVT were advanced age, orthopedic disease, one- or two-staged bilateral TKA, venous anatomic variations, number of venous valves, coagulation assay data, hypertension, tourniquet time, choice of cementless or cemented TKA, severity or duration of operation, amount of blood loss, and amount of blood transfused. Conversely, more immediate relevant factors were obesity, postoperative prolonged immobilization, earlier venous disease, and hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Factors leading to low incidence of deep vein thrombosis after cementless and cemented total knee arthroplasty. 195 58

The results of a retrospective study comparing two equally large groups of patients treated either surgically for restoration of venous patency and valvular function (24 patients) or medically with heparine, oral anticoagulants and compression stockings (25 patients) are presented. Follow-up time was 7.6 and 7.9 years respectively, operative mortality nil. Assessment of venous function was based on clinical observations as well as on measurements of haemodynamic parameters. Non-fatal pulmonary embolism after onset of treatment occurred in both cohorts with an equal frequency of 13%. Patients operated on for ilio-femoral deep venous thrombosis (DVT) were with few exceptions totally independent of any form of adjunctive hosiery which was in sharp contrast to the conservatively managed group. If onset of DVT had occurred more than three days earlier and extended from the ilio-femoral axis to the popliteo-crural level, surgery usually failed and patients were no better off than in the comparable medical subgroup. The same pattern of late outcome was found for all other clinical and haemodynamic parameters; i.e. clinical signs of venous hypertension, valvular competence as judged by sonography, patient's self-assessment and the expelled volume and refilling time measured by dynamic plethysmography after standardized leg-work. The mean expelled volume was 1.1 +/- 0.5 ml/100 g/min for the surgical subgroup treated early for ilio-femoral DVT and 0.7 +/- 0.5/100 g/min for the corresponding medical group (p = 0.05). Recovery or refilling time was 50 +/- 21 sec for the surgical group and 28 +/- 26 sec for the medical group (p = 0.03).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Surgical thrombectomy versus conservative treatment of ileo-femoral phlebothrombosis. Functional comparison of long-term results]. 207 75

Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was performed in 39 consecutive patients with atheromatous renal artery stenosis associated with hypertension. The mean blood pressure before angioplasty was 191/107 mmHg and this had dropped to a mean of 167/90 mmHg at the patient's most recent visit, representing a significant fall in both systolic (p less than 0.01) and diastolic pressures (p less than 0.001). The mean serum creatinine was 166.7 mumol/l before percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and 155.3 mumol/l at the most recent visit (not statistically significant). The mean number of anti-hypertensive drugs fell from 2.4 to 1.9 after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (p less than 0.05). Three patients (eight per cent) were 'cured' (diastolic blood pressure less than 90 mmHg without medication), 25 (64 per cent) had 'improved' (diastolic blood pressure less than 109 mmHg, with a fall of more than 15 per cent) and 11 (28 per cent) had not improved. Logistic discriminant analysis showed that pre-percutaneous transluminal angioplasty diastolic blood pressure, age, serum creatinine and smoking habit together correctly predicted the outcome of percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in 90 per cent of patients, with four 'false positives' and no 'false negatives'. Ten patients suffered a total of 12 serious complications related to the procedure: one death in acute renal failure, one myocardial infarction, one severe hypotension just after the procedure, one deep vein thrombosis, one episode of transient ischaemia of the toes and seven groin haematomas. Thus percutaneous transluminal angioplasty for atheromatous renal artery stenosis rarely 'cures' hypertension, but improved blood pressure control is often achieved, albeit at the expense of troublesome complications. A prospective, randomized trial is needed to establish whether or not the improvement is due directly to percutaneous transluminal angioplasty.
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PMID:Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty for atheromatous renal artery stenosis--blood pressure response and discriminant analysis of outcome predictors. 214 39

Lipodermatosclerosis of the lower extremity, with or without ulceration, is a common manifestation of severe venous disease and the result of sustained venous hypertension. The latter is generally a sequela of deep vein thrombosis. Factors that enhance clot formation or impair fibrinolysis contribute to the pathogenesis of venous disease. It is already established that faulty fibrinolysis may play a pathogenic role in patients with venous disease. We examined the possibility that patients with venous disease have abnormally low plasma levels of proteins C and S, two proteins whose deficiencies have been reported to cause an increased frequency of thromboembolic disease. Using immunologic and functional assays for plasma proteins C and S, we found that 4 (21%) of 19 patients with lipodermatosclerosis and leg ulcers had abnormally low levels of protein C or protein S. One of 7 patients with lipodermatosclerosis without ulceration had a profoundly depressed level of protein C and a history of cerebral stroke at a young age. Plasma levels of protein C were normal in five patients with arterial insufficiency severe enough to cause leg ulceration. We conclude that abnormally low plasma levels of proteins C and S may be found in patients with lipodermatosclerosis and venous ulceration. As with the abnormally low fibrinolytic activity in these patients, our findings indicate a possible propensity for increased thrombotic disease.
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PMID:Protein C and protein S plasma levels in patients with lipodermatosclerosis and venous ulceration. 203 43

The authors present the results of their blind prospective comparative study of the postoperative thromboembolic protection of 490 gynecologic patients. Among them 250 (51%) were protected by a low dose heparin (LDH) subcutaneously in 12-hour intervals, 240 (49%) received heparindihydergot (HDHE). Thromboembolisms diagnosed by the 125J fibrinogen uptake test appeared in 26 (10.4%) patients protected by LDH and 23 (9.6%) by HDHE. The most frequent risk factors in patients with thromboembolisms were malignant diseases, obesity, varicose veins, hypertension and a history of deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism. Haemorrhages appeared in 7 (2.8%) patients protected by LDH and 8 (3.3%) by HDHE.
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PMID:[Prevention of thromboembolic disease in gynecologic surgery]. 221 51

The overall risk of oral contraceptive (OC) use is minimal when women over 35 years of age, smokers, and those with multiple risk factors (thromboembolic disorders, cerebrovascular or coronary artery disease, liver tumors, breast cancer, estrogen-dependent neoplasms, undiagnosed abnormal genital bleeding, and congenital hyperlipidemia) are excluded. OC use increases the risk of hypertension by 1-5%, depending on age, parity, and duration of use, but even this small risk is decreased when multiphasic OCs are prescribed. Deep venous thrombosis in the leg is 4 times more prevalent in OC users than nonusers and the risk of superficial thrombosis is doubled. Again, fewer thromboembolic complications occur when the estrogen dosage is low. The risk of myocardial infarction is not believed to increase with OC use as long as other risk factors--smoking, obesity, hypertension, age over 35 years, hypercholesterolemia--are not present. Studies involving the original high-dose OCs revealed a 3-fold increase in the risk of thrombotic stroke and a 2-fold increase in the risk of hemorrhagic stroke, but low-dose OCs appear to have no effect on the potential for stroke. The impact of OC use on breast cancer cannot yet be determined given the very long latency period of this cancer. In terms of benign breast disease, OC users have been shown to be at substantially reduced risk of lesions, fibroadenomas, and fibrocystic changes. OCs also protect women from endometrial and ovarian cancer, although the pill seems to accelerate the progression of cervical dysplasia. Other beneficial effects of OC use include reductions in the incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease, endometriosis, ectopic pregnancy, and ovarian cysts.
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PMID:Oral contraceptive pills. Part II: Potential complications and health benefits. 228 19

Recent findings on the relation between alcohol abuse and ischaemic brain infarction are reviewed. Much of the association has hitherto been explained by the effects of confounding factors such as smoking. Alcohol increases blood pressure in both hypertensive and normotensive subjects and alcohol induced hypertension enhances the risk of both hemorrhagic and ischaemic strokes. Analysis of case histories shows that alcohol abuse has precipitated cerebral embolism in conjunction with cardiac diseases including alcoholic cardiomyopathy and paradoxical embolism due to deep vein thrombosis via atrial septal defect. Among young adults, falling when intoxicated with alcohol has caused traumatic dissection of the carotid artery and consequent brain infarction. Alcohol may predispose individuals to cerebral embolism, thrombosis and ischaemia via its effects on the coagulation cascade, platelet count and function and contractility of the cerebral vessels. Further studies are needed to prove that these mechanisms are significant and to identify any other mechanisms which may mediate the risk associated with alcohol abuse. On the basis of current data, alcohol should be considered as an independent risk factor for ischaemic cerebral infarction in young adults.
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PMID:Alcohol abuse and brain infarction. 229 43

Pulmonary embolism can produce severe cardiopulmonary dysfunction characterized by pulmonary artery hypertension, right ventricular failure, and hypoxemia. The search for the source of a pulmonary embolus, by exploration of the veins of the lower limbs and the inferior vena cava should be systematically carried out in all cases of pulmonary embolus which are not immediately life-threatening to the patient. The treatment of deep vein thrombosis associated with pulmonary embolism with thrombolytic agents has been proposed and utilized for approximately 20 years. Although superior results have been claimed with thrombolytic agents, the use of this type of treatment remains limited to massive or sub-massive pulmonary embolism. Fibrinolytic agents with high specificity for fibrin in the thrombi and little systemic activation of the fibrinolytic system have been developed and tested in preliminary clinical trials of patients with acute pulmonary embolism. The largest published experience available has been with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA). The acylated streptokinase-plasminogen complex (APSAC) and pro-urokinase also gave promising results. All these agents were accompanied by unexpectedly high incidence of systemic activation of the fibrinolytic system and by hemorrhagic complications with frequencies similar to those that follows the use of first generation products (urokinase and streptokinase). Hence, their superior clinical efficacy must be clearly proven before they are substituted for a more widely available and less expensive drug, such as streptokinase.
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PMID:Pathogenesis and management of acute pulmonary embolism. 251 49

The presence of a lupus anticoagulant (LA) is paradoxically associated with a high incidence of arterial and venous thrombosis. In a patient with a lupus-like systemic disease, having received phenindione for 11 years, LA was discovered in association with recurrent deep venous thrombosis, a right atrial thrombus, coronary occlusion, arterial hypertension, thrombopenia, and anticardiolipin antibodies without anti-DNA antibodies. Renal cortical ischemia was detected by a tomographic scan. Renal biopsy showed glomerular ischemia and diffuse interstitial fibrosis. After a one-year anticoagulant and steroid therapy, LA has disappeared despite a high level of anticardiolipin antibodies, and renal function remains normal.
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PMID:[Renal cortex ischemia, right atrial thrombosis and coronary occlusion in anti-phospholipid antibody syndrome]. 251 17

Vascular risk, mainly thromboembolitic risk, attributed to oral contraceptives (OCs) since 1962, has been primarily linked to ethinyl estradiol (EE). OCs which combine estrogen and have been associated with cerebral vascular accidents. A 1977 study showed a 40% increase of mortality due to cardiovascular complications in women taking OCs. There were of both an arterial and a venous character. The risk of myocardial infarction was 3 times more frequent among OC users. Deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism were more numerous. Some other risk factors include smoking, hypertension, diabetes, and age 35. The risk of heart attack vanishes a few years after stopping OC use. The reduction of EE (and similarly progesterone) dosage from 100-50 mcg also lower the risk of hypertension, cerebral vascular accidents, and venous thrombosis. Prolonged use of OCs causes disorders of hemostasis affecting the walls of blood vessels, modifying the viscosity of blood flow (increase of hematocrits, reduction of venous tonus), modifying plasmatic coagulation (increase of platelets, increase of factors VII and X and plasma fibrinogen, and decrease of antithrombin III activity), and increased fibrinolysis. These anomalies are exclusively associated with high doses of estrogens. 5% of women using OCs develop moderate hypertension of 5-10 mm Hg of systolic pressure 5 years later, but after cessation it is reversed. OCs stimulate the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system causing accelerated production of angiotensin II with the resultant forceful vasotension. 3 months after quitting OC use, high blood pressure returns to normal. EE can provoke diabetes; it increases very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) production, but total cholesterol is hardly affected. The androgenic property of progestogens reduces HDL. Combined OCs are contraindicated for women with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, and a family history of vascular accidents.
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PMID:[Oral contraception and the vascular risk]. 251 20


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