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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper deals with the following
hypertension
diagnoses: essential hypertension and five types of
secondary hypertension
: fibrodysplasic renal artery stenosis, atheromatous renal artery stenosis, Conn's syndrome, renal cystic disease, and pheochromocytoma. Only blood pressures, general information and general biochemical data are taken into account. Nineteen items were finally selected, by statistical investigation of experimental data, as being both discriminative and independent. The marginal density distributions of every item, and then joint density distribution functions were determined within six types of
hypertension
. The frequency of a given
hypertension
type within the hypertensive patients was used as prior probability of this state. The loss matrix was established by medical arguments. The expected loss corresponding to six possible decisions could thus be calculated for all cases. Both the ratio of secondary hypertensions that could be inferred from our set of data (not including the results of complementary tests) and that of correct "essential"
hypertension
diagnosis proved to be satisfactory.
...
PMID:Bayesian statistics as applied to hypertension diagnosis. 187 63
The blood pressure shows circadian variation in normal subjects with higher diurnal than nocturnal values: the difference between day and night time blood pressure is about 10-20 mmHg for systolic and for diastolic blood pressure. These variations are mainly related to physical and/or psychosensorial stress: the physician is himself a cause of increased blood pressure (the "white coat" effect). The degree of the nocturnal decrease in blood pressure which is maximal 2 and 3 o'clock is related to the quality and depth of sleep. The nocturnal decrease is followed by an increase in blood pressure when the person wakes up (early morning peak). Diagnostic signs: a physiological inversion of the circadian rhythm may be observed in people who sleep during the daytime and work at night. There would seem to be less of a nocturnal fall in black persons in the United States. Some pathological conditions can inverse or at least disturb the ciacadian variation: apart from
hypertension
, this has been reported in autonomic nervous system disease, in diabetics with autonomic neuropathy in some elderly patients, in Cushing's syndrome, after cardiac transplantation, etc... In hypertensives, the lack of nocturnal decrease of the blood pressure or an inversion in circadian rhythm should be looked for in severe and
secondary hypertension
such as associated with pheochromocytoma, or in renal dialysis patients. In toxaemia of pregnancy, this abnormality may herald an eclamptic crisis. Prognostic signs: in normotensives (especially in black persons) and hypertensives, inversion of the circadian rhythm is associated with more severe left ventricular hypertrophy and a higher morbidity.
...
PMID:[Nyctohemeral changes of blood pressure. Diagnostic and prognostic value]. 195 78
A typical diurnal variation in blood pressure is observed in patients with essential hypertension. Attenuation or lack of circadian periodicity might be expected in patients with
secondary hypertension
. Therefore, non invasive ambulatory blood-pressure monitoring was performed in 172 patients with
secondary hypertension
and in 201 patients with essential hypertension. The following patients with
secondary hypertension
were investigated: renoparenchymatous nephropathy (n = 29), diabetic nephropathy (n = 24), morbus Conn (n = 6), renal artery stenosis (n = 32), pheochromocytoma (n = 5), hemodialysis patients (n = 30), and patients after kidney transplantation (n = 44). In addition, 36 pregnant women (17 normotensives, 19 hypertensives) were studied. 98.5% of patients with essential hypertension showed a nightly decline in blood pressure of at least 15 mmHg (systolic + diastolic), whereas 70% of patients with
secondary hypertension
showed either an attenuated circadian rhythm or no circadian rhythm. Patients with pheochromocytoma who had a nighttime increase in blood pressure demonstrated the greatest difference in the essential hypertension collective, followed by patients with diabetic nephropathy and patients after kidney transplantation. After successful treatment of the condition leading to
hypertension
, circadian periodicity returned in some patients. In summary, these results suggest that the absence of a nighttime decline in blood pressure during 24-h-ambulatory monitoring is an indication of
secondary hypertension
, which should be further investigated. As a practical consequence, antihypertensive drugs should also be applied in an evening dose in secondary hypertensives. Noninvasive ambulatory blood-pressure monitoring is recommended for treatment control, especially in patients who need an efficient blood-pressure control.
...
PMID:[Importance of 24-hour blood pressure monitoring in secondary hypertension]. 202 30
Renovascular hypertension is the most important and common cause of
secondary hypertension
. We studied 10 patients with arterial
hypertension
and different degrees of renal artery stenosis to assess the usefulness of dynamic radionuclide renography in evaluating renal perfusion and function, and to compare functional radionuclide results to the morphological findings of renal angiography. Computer-assisted dynamic renal imaging with 99mTc diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) and 131I ortho-iodohippurate (OIH), and renal arteriography were also employed in all patients. In all patients, radionuclide results matched angiographic findings in quality. In particular, 3 patients with hemodynamically insignificant renal artery stenosis exhibited normal perfusion and function at dynamic radionuclide renography. Seven patients had significant renal artery stenosis and associated functional changes at dynamic radionuclide renography. Quantitative comparison of all patients showed a significant correlation (r = 0.866, p less than 0.001) between the degree of renal artery stenosis, quantified as the percentage of narrowing as compared to adjacent/contralateral normal vessel diameter, and the results of split renal function, as assessed during OIH studies and expressed per kidney as a percentage of the net total counts of both kidneys. In conclusion, our results demonstrated dynamic radionuclide renography to be a valuable tool in the assessment of functional changes secondary to renal artery stenosis in hypertensive patients, providing complementary results to arteriography.
...
PMID:[Morpho-functional evaluation of hypertensive patients with renal artery stenosis. Correlations between angiography and dynamic scintigraphy]. 202 49
In order to determine the features that characterize refractory
hypertension
(RH), patients aged less than 65 years in a
hypertension
clinic were screened. Thirty-six patients on triple drug therapy with a supine diastolic blood pressure (DBP) of greater than or equal to 5 mmHg above an identified target pressure (90-100 mmHg), or a systolic blood pressure (SBP) greater than or equal to 170 mmHg for the last 6 months (greater than or equal to 3 measurements) underwent a thorough clinical investigation. The frequency of renal artery stenosis (RAS) in the RH patients was 30%. The non-RAS patients had a low occupational status, 76% being either manual workers or unskilled non-manual workers (reference group: 42%; P less than 0.01). They were more obese (body mass index (BMI) 28.8 vs. 25.8; P less than 0.01), and had a longer duration of hypertensive disease. RH patients had a higher prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (18 vs. 6%; P less than 0.05), and showed a higher prevalence of nervous complaints and mental distress (44% vs. 12%; P less than 0.001) and musculo-skeletal pain (39% vs. 7%: P less than 0.001). It is suggested that refractory
hypertension
should be investigated and treated bearing psychosocial factors in mind, concurrently with a screening for
secondary hypertension
.
...
PMID:Characteristics of patients resistant to antihypertensive drug therapy. 204 Aug 68
The authors investigated the incidence of arterial
hypertension
during acute glomerulonephritis in adults and during the period after glomerulonephritis.
Hypertension
was recorded in 34% of 126 patients treated on account of acute glomerulonephritis (mean age 23 +/- 6 years). Only in six patients the diastolic pressure was higher than 15.3 kPa. At the end of hospitalization
hypertension
persisted in four subjects. After a three-year interval following glomerulonephritis
hypertension
was recorded in 15% of 119 examined subjects. In 7 subjects it was isolated, in another 11 associated with a pathological finding in urine. Four to twenty years after acute glomerulonephritis (mean 11.5 years) in a group of 81 subjects
hypertension
was recorded in 31%. In six patients it was an isolated finding, in 19 instances it was associated with a pathological finding in urine and possibly impaired renal function. In adult age transient
hypertension
is associated with about one third of all cases of acute glomerulonephritis. Subsequent presence of
hypertension
in these patients is frequent and increases with the follow up period. Without an invasive examination it is not possible differentiate
secondary hypertension
from essential hypertension, in particular in subjects with isolated
hypertension
or
hypertension
associated with mild proteinuria.
...
PMID:[Incidence of arterial hypertension during and after acute glomerulonephritis]. 205 96
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring can determine the average blood pressure level and the short- and long-term blood pressure variability (circadian rhythm). The circadian blood pressure rhythm appears to be mediated mainly by the circadian rhythm of the sympathetic tone which is linked to changes in physical and mental activity, e.g. the waking-sleeping cycle. A statistically significant circadian blood pressure rhythm was observed in approximately 80% of mild to moderate essential hypertensive patients as well as in normal subjects. However, in patients with Cushing's syndrome, under glucocorticoid treatment, or with hyperthyroidism, central and/or peripheral autonomic dysfunction (Shy-Drager syndrome, spinal cord injury, brainstem lesions, diabetic neuropathy, uremic neuropathy, etc), chronic renal failure, eclampsia, malignant hypertension, sleep apnea syndrome or systemic atherosclerosis, the normal circadian blood pressure rhythm appears to be eliminated or reversed, while in those with primary aldosteronism, renovascular
hypertension
, pheochromocytoma without paroxysmal
hypertension
, diabetes insipidus, acromegaly, hyperparathyroidism or hyperprolactinemia, the nocturnal blood pressure fall has been observed as in normal subjects. The alteration in the circadian blood pressure rhythm was observed with different pathophysiological conditions, although no specific pattern was observed for any condition. A disturbance in any part of the hierarchy of factors that regulate the circadian rhythm of sympathetic neural tone seems to disturb the circadian blood pressure rhythm. We conclude that ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is not critically important in the diagnosis of
secondary hypertension
although it does help in screening for
secondary hypertension
.
...
PMID:Does ambulatory blood pressure monitoring improve the diagnosis of secondary hypertension? 208 1
Ketanserin is a specific antagonist of the 5-HT2 serotoninergic receptors; it is located on the smooth muscle cells of the vessel wall, and its stimulation causes vasoconstriction. The aim of this study is to evaluate the antihypertensive effect of ketanserin in patients with essential and
secondary hypertension
. Both systolic and diastolic blood pressure significantly decreased, in 18 patients, after chronic treatment with oral therapy (40-80 mg/day), and in 37 patients, after acute administration of sublingual (20 mg) and intravenous (10 mg) ketanserin. Acute administration of ketanserin was less effective than nifedipine (10 mg) in severe
hypertension
. Ketanserin, compared to placebo, permitted the normalization of blood pressure in 6/10 patients. Cardiovascular effects of ketanserin were studied with the ECOCG method in 8 patients with
hypertension
: peripheral resistances decreased, but left ventricular function and structure did not change. The effect of ketanserin on Na transmembrane transport systems in erythrocytes was studied both in vivo and in vitro, in order to evaluate the ketanserin action mechanism. The Na/K pump decreased and Na/Li countertransport increased, while different concentrations of serotonin did not change the transmembrane transport systems. In conclusion, ketanserin has a direct effect on transmembrane transport systems, not mediated by the serotonin receptors. This effect, with an antagonist of 5-HT2 serotoninergic and alpha 1 adrenergic receptor action, can cause a hypotensive effect.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of acute and chronic effects of ketanserin in the treatment of hypertension and hypothesis on a new mechanism of action]. 210 30
Since the pathogenesis of essential hypertension has not yet been clarified, laboratory examinations are needed to identify
secondary hypertension
and to classify the patients with essential hypertension into subclasses. We reviewed the recent topics on
hypertension
-research related to laboratory examinations such as 1) recording of arterial pressure, 2) plasma renin activity and digitalis-like substances as the cause of essential hypertension, and 3) atrial natriuretic polypeptides and endothelin, as possible indices of atherosclerosis, one of major complications of
hypertension
.
...
PMID:[Pathophysiology and laboratory examinations of essential hypertension--a review of recent topics]. 214 38
In order to investigate the relationships between insulinemia and
hypertension
, fasting insulinemia has been assessed in 117 subjects: 69 normotensive subjects, 36 with essential hypertension, and 12 with renovascular
hypertension
, all untreated and newly diagnosed, classified in subgroups (euglycemic nonobese, euglycemic obese, with impaired glucose tolerance and with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus). In the patients with essential hypertension fasting insulinemia was significantly higher than in normotensive subjects (P less than .0005). The patients with
secondary hypertension
and the normotensive subjects had similar fasting insulinemia values. In each subgroup fasting insulinemia was higher in hypertensive patients than among normotensive subjects (P less than .05). A significant correlation between fasting insulinemia and mean blood pressure has been found in patients with essential hypertension (r = 0.408, P less than .05), but not in patients with renovascular
hypertension
. Our data suggest a possible direct relationship between fasting insulinemia and blood pressure, especially in obese patients or patients with impaired glucose metabolism, and that increased blood pressure per se is not an insulin resistant state.
...
PMID:Insulinemia and blood pressure. Relationships in patients with primary and secondary hypertension, and with or without glucose metabolism impairment. 219 8
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