Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fibromuscular dysplasia of renal arteries was the cause of
hypertension
in four consecutive children with renal artery stenosis. Two were asymptomatic, the third had had
hypertension
for seven years but had not been treated, and the fourth, a 9-month-old infant, presented with cardiac failure. Heart enlargement and left ventricular hypertrophy were present in all. Rapid sequence urograms demonstrated a smaller kidney and delayed appearance and disappearance of the contrast medium on the affected side in all. Angiograms showed left RAS in all. Peripheral plasma renin activity was elevated in only three of the four patients. Antihypertensive and diuretic drugs were not very effective therapeutically. Ischemia of the ipsilateral kidney probably prevented normal growth and led to shrinkage of the kidney in one patient. Following nephrectomy the BP has remained normal without any therapy for 24 to 64 months. With normalization of BP, accelerated growth ensued, the cardiomegaly regressed and the
hypertensive retinopathy
resolved. These patients demonstrate that: (1) FMD is an important cause of RAS. (2) the well-known radiologic feature of FMD, the beaded appearance, is usually not seen in children. (3) control of BP leads to normalization of linear growth, usually impaired in severe
hypertension
, and (4) target organ complications such as cardiomegaly, LVH, and
hypertensive retinopathy
are reversible in one to 10 months.
...
PMID:Fibromuscular dysplasia of renal arteries: an important cause of renovascular hypertension in children. 15 54
1. Direct intra-arterial blood pressure (radial artery) has been compared with indirect blood pressures using a regular sized adult cuff and a thigh cuff, with a mercury sphygmomanometer, in 24 hypertensive patients aged 62--84 years, and in 16 hypertensive patients aged 29--59 years. 2. The patients were studied because they were suspected of having a false elevation of their indirect blood pressure, since they had diastolic pressures over 100 mmHg, without
hypertensive retinopathy
, cardiac hypertrophy, or nephropathy. 3. Indirect diastolic pressure was falsely elevated by 30 mmHg or more in 12 out of 24 of the subjects over age 60, and in four of the 16 of those under age 60. Pseudohypertension (indirect diastolic greater than 100 mmHg, direct diastolic greater than 90 mmHg) was present in 12 subjects over age 60 and 5 under age 60. 4. Errors in indirect measurement of blood pressure are a serious problem, particularly in the elderly. Direct intra-arterial measurement may be useful in the management of
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Pseudohypertension in the elderly. 28 97
16 renal transplant recipients underwent ophthalmological examination 11.4, 19.4 and 61.3 months after renal transplantation. The most common side effects of immunosuppressive therapy were steroid-induced cataract formation, steroid glaucoma, and recurrent subconjunctival haemorrhages. Posterior sub-capsular cataracts may develop as early as 2 months after surgery, reach their highest incidence within 2 years and may be reversible under low dosage steroid therapy. 75.5% of 57 ophthalmologically examined patients showed ocular complications or changes, but visual function was not severely disturbed. Despite
hypertension
in 23 cases, no
hypertensive retinopathy
was observed. In the light of these findings we assume that kidney transplantation has a positive influence on ocular functions, and especially on fundus changes dating from the time of regular dialysis treatment.
...
PMID:[Long-term ophthalmologic follow-up after kidney transplantation]. 36 45
51 patients with renal transplants were examined ophthalmologically 31,1 (1--77) months after the transplantation. 80,4 p. c. showed ocular complications: cataract formation in 43,1 p. c. of the patients examined and increased intraocular pressure values between 22 and 30 mm Hg in 3 patients are to be attributed to the systemic immunosuppressive therapy. Further ocular changes were recurrent subconjunctival haemorrhages due to increased vascular rigidity, calcium phosphate deposits in the conjunctiva due to persistant secondary hyperparathyroidism and fundus changes (pigmentary irregularities in the foveal regions, narrow arterial vessels). Although marked arterial
hypertension
was observed in 21 patients after the transplantation, no signs of
hypertensive retinopathy
could be found. Despite the high incidence of ocular complications after renal transplantation the risks of immunosuppressive therapy must be considered as tolerable: cataract formation and increased intraocular pressure do not impair the positive effect of renal transplantation on ocular functions. Regular ophthalmological control examinations of renal transplant patients are advisable.
...
PMID:[Report on renal transplant patients. Ocular changes due to renal disease and immunosuppressive therapy (author's transl)]. 37 46
With advancing age blood pressure rises in most populations with the exception of some isolated tribes. In western countries 30 to 40% of the people above the age of 60 years have casual blood pressure levels greater than or equal to 160/95 mm Hg. Advancing age per se produces a number of physiological changes related to blood pressure, such as a decrease in cardiac output, an increase in peripheral vascular resistance and a decrease in plasma renin-angiotensin-aldosterone levels. The mechanism causing the elevation in pressure with age are unknown though increased rigidity of the great vessels contributes to the rise in systolic pressure. There is a decline in the sensitivity of the baroreceptor reflex, but the contribution of this to the elevation of pressure has not be elucidated. Elderly patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension have a low cardiac output and high peripheral vascular resistance. The rise in blood pressure is associated with an increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality even in the elderly hypertensives. The available data on the efficacy of hypotensive treatment in the elderly is scanty. There are no data proving that hypotensive therapy prolongs life. Controlled studies on the prevention of organ damage especially cerebrovascular accidents are inconclusive, showing either a significant decrease or no effect. Isolated reports illustrate, however, that drastic blood pressure reduction can provoke serious side effects, thus decreasing the quality of life. Hypotensive treatment is indicated in elderly hypertensive patients with
hypertensive retinopathy
grade III or IV, congestive heart failure or cerebral haemorrhage, in elderly patients with a markedly elevated diastolic blood pressure (greater than or equal to 120 mm Hg) and a trial of hypotensive therapy should be offered in milder forms of
hypertension
when it is accompanied by certain specific symptoms such as angina, headache and dyspnoe. The management of elderly hypertensive patients is more difficult than in the young. General measures are often not well accepted. The dose adjustment of the hypotensive agent is more critical and volume depletion or orthostatic hypotension are more likely to occur.
...
PMID:Aging and the cardiovascular system. 37 49
Following effective long-term antihypertensive therapy, hemodialysis could be discontinued in 4 patients with malignant hypertension in view of improved renal function. Diagnoses included nephroangiosclerosis (2 cases), scleroderma and chronic glomerulonephritis. All patients had symptoms of
hypertension
or renal disease for at least one year prior to initiation of hemodialysis treatment. At the outset, blood pressure averaged 249 +/- 43/150 +/- 22 mm Hg (mean +/- SD) and all patients had grade IV
hypertensive retinopathy
. After 1 to 20 months strict blood pressure control, renal function had improved to such a degree that hemodialysis could be discontinued. One year later, blood pressure averaged 138 +/- 20/89 +/- 6 mm Hg and serum creatinine 3,2 +/- 1,2 mg/100 ml. These data suggest that in hypertensive patients with chronic renal failure, strict control of blood pressure is of the utmost importance whatever the severity and nature of the underlying renal disease.
...
PMID:[Discontinuation of chronic hemodialysis due to improved kidney function caused by the control of arterial hypertension]. 39 20
The mechanism of recumbent
hypertension
induced by fludrocortisone was studied in seven patients with orthostatic hypotension. All showed increases in blood pressure in the recumbent and standing positions, and hypertensive levels were achieved on recumbency in four of them.
Hypertensive retinopathy
developed in two patients and cardiomegaly in one. Initial blood-pressure elevations were associated with sodium retention and plasma-volume expansion. However, with long-term treatment, plasma volume decreased to control levels despite further blood-pressure increases. Treatment did not affect plasma levels of catecholamines but did enhance pressor responsiveness to infused norepinephrine in some subjects. Hemodynamic studies indicated that
hypertension
in the recumbent position was related to increases in total peripheral-vascular resistance and not to changes in cardiac output. Clinically,
hypertension
in the recumbent position is an important risk of fludrocortisone treatment in patients with orthostatic hypotension. This unusual model of chronic mineralocorticoid-induced
hypertension
is not volume dependent but is related to increased peripheral-vascular resistance.
...
PMID:Mineralocorticoid-induced hypertension in patients with orthostatic hypotension. 44 47
Four Black South African patients, representative of a larger group, are described in detail. The common features were long periods of observation, multiple hospital admissions in both normotensive and hypertensive cardiac failure,
hypertensive retinopathy
and good renal function. All had been diagnosed as having cardiomyopathy. Two of the patients in a normotensive phase became hypertensive after responding to therapy for heart failure. One patient with malignant hypertension showed the features of idiopathic cardiomyopathy at necropsy. These cases are regarded as evidence in favour of the hypothesis that many cases of cryptogenic heart disease (cardiomyopathy, congestive cardiomyopathy, idiopathic cardiomegaly) are in fact cases of
hypertension
presenting with normotensive cardiac failure.
...
PMID:Hypertensive heart disease and cardiomyopathy in blacks. Diagnostic confusion. 45 82
In patients with essential hypertension increased albumin excretion in the urine compared to healthy controls is well known. In 38 patients (age: Mean +/- SD = 37 +/- 16 yr, f: m = 19:19) with benign essential hypertension and normal renal function (creatinine clearance: Mean +/- SD = 99 +/- 16 ml/min) we found a mean urinary albumin excretion of 79 +/- 61 mg/24 h in comparison to 14 +/- 13 mg/24 h (p less than 0.01) in 10 healthy controls (age: Mean +/- SD = 35 +/- 14 yr, f: m = 5:5). In 13 patients with
hypertension
urinary albumin excretion was increased (greater than 25 mg/24 h) in a subclinical range (microalbuminuria), the other 25 hypertensive patients had normoalbuminuria. Comparing the hypertensive patients with and without microalbuminuria, those with elevated albumin excretion were older (age: Mean +/- SD = 42 +/- 12 yr vs. 32 +/- 19 yr), had a longer average duration of
hypertension
(8 +/- 5 yr vs. 5 +/- 4 yr) and a higher prevalence both of
hypertensive retinopathy
(77% vs. 28%) and of abnormalities in the electrocardiogram (23% vs. 4%) than those with normal albumin excretion. The difference in the prevalence of
hypertensive retinopathy
(grade I and II) was statistically significant (p less than 0.05). Furthermore the patients with microalbuminuria required a more intensive antihypertensive therapy than those with normoalbuminuria, 46% requiring triple drug therapy as opposed to 24% in the latter group. Thus the demonstration of microalbuminuria in patients with benign essential hypertension is associated with a higher prevalence of funduscopic and electrocardiographic abnormalities, and therefore can be considered as an indicator of early vascular damage in essential hypertension.
...
PMID:[Microalbuminuria in essential hypertension and normal kidney function]. 155 22
A retrospective study in two university hospitals investigating retinal changes in pregnancies complicated by
hypertension
, seldom revealed retinal vascular changes in pre-eclamptic toxemia. Fluorescein angiography was performed on 16 severe pre-eclamptic toxemias and 14 chronic
hypertension
pregnancies. Normal caliber retinal vessels and normal filling time, with no subretinal or subepithelium leakage, was found in all pre-eclamptic toxemic patients. Four out of the 14 chronic hypertensive patients showed signs of mild
hypertensive retinopathy
. A review of the literature on fluorescein angiography in pregnancy showed that vascular changes in pre-eclamptic toxemia are choroidal rather than retinal.
...
PMID:Fluorescein angiography in hypertensive pregnancies. 167 66
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>