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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diuretics, together with other drugs and general measures, are of prime importance in the medical treatment of most heart failure patients, namely those with
acute pulmonary oedema
and overt congestive heart failure. Their beneficial effects result not only from preload and afterload reduction, but also because diuretics are able to improve responses to nitrates and ACE-inhibitors. The appropriate utilisation of diuretics in heart failure therapy frequently involves the use of efficient small doses and drug associations, namely between loop diuretics, thiazides, potassium sparing agents and spirolactone. Physicians must choose the drug carefully, its dosage, time and route of administration, according to the patient's characteristics: heart failure clinical syndrome, age, activity level, systolic or diastolic, left or right ventricular dysfunction, and associated diseases. The role of diuretics in the treatment asymptomatic systolic left ventricular dysfunction and oligosymptomatic diastolic ventricular dysfunction is unclear and should remain under investigation; diuretics may be of benefit in treating those patients with associated diseases, for example arterial
hypertension
and mild chronic renal failure.
...
PMID:[Diuretics in the treatment of heart failure]. 830 46
The prevalence and clinical picture of hypertensive urgencies and emergencies in an emergency department are poorly known. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of hypertensive crises (urgencies and emergencies) in an emergency department during 12 months of observation and the frequency of end-organ damage with related clinical pictures during the first 24 hours after presentation. Hypertensive crises (76% urgencies, 24% emergencies) represented more than one fourth of all medical urgencies-emergencies. The most frequent signs of presentation were headache (22%), epistaxis (17%), faintness, and psychomotor agitation (10%) in hypertensive urgencies and chest pain (27%), dyspnea (22%), and neurological deficit (21%) in hypertensive emergencies. Types of end-organ damage associated with hypertensive emergencies included cerebral infarction (24%),
acute pulmonary edema
(23%), and hypertensive encephalopathy (16%) as well as cerebral hemorrhage, which accounted for only 4.5%. Age (67 +/- 16 versus 60 +/- 14 years [mean +/- SD], P < .001) and diastolic blood pressure (130 +/- 15 versus 126 +/- 10 mm Hg, P < .002) were higher in hypertensive emergencies than urgencies.
Hypertension
that was unknown at presentation was present in 8% of hypertensive emergencies and 28% of hypertensive urgencies. In conclusion hypertensive urgencies and emergencies are common events in the emergency department and differ in their clinical patterns of presentation. Cerebral infarction and
acute pulmonary edema
are the most frequent types of end-organ damage in hypertensive emergencies.
Hypertension
1996 Jan
PMID:Hypertensive urgencies and emergencies. Prevalence and clinical presentation. 859 78
A syndrome of
acute pulmonary edema
has been previously reported among scuba divers in cold, European waters. Because of the temperatures involved, the name "cold-induced pulmonary edema" was coined in the original 1989 description. We report six individuals who developed the identical syndrome, five while diving in Puget Sound and one in the Gulf of Mexico. The four women and two men ranged in age from 24 to 60 yr. They experienced one to six episodes apiece, each with the development severe dyspnea at depth without excessive exertion. Associated symptoms included cough, weakness, expectoration of froth, chest discomfort, orthopnea, wheezing, hemoptysis, and dizziness. Emergency medical evaluation of four divers revealed rales on examination and pulmonary edema on chest radiograph. In one diver with pulmonary edema on chest radiograph, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure was normal when measured acutely. Symptoms resolved either spontaneously over 1-2 days or with standard medial treatment for pulmonary edema. Prior history of cardiovascular disease was negative except for
hypertension
and mitral valve prolapse in one diver. Cardiac evaluations following recovery from the acute episodes were normal. Episodes in the cold waters of Puget Sound sometimes occurred despite the use of dry suits. Furthermore, one diver developed recurrent episodes in 27 degrees C water off Cozumel, Mexico. Development of pulmonary edema while scuba diving constitutes a distinct clinical entity which may occur in either "cold" or "warm" water. It is not associated with a decompression mechanism. Personnel caring for divers should be aware of the syndrome in order to provide optimal medical management.
...
PMID:Pulmonary edema of scuba divers. 906 53
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is a rare condition which most frequently follows gastrointestinal or respiratory infection episodes in young children, but it can also occur in other settings such as the postpartum period and during use of drugs such as oral contraconceptives, immunosuppressors, and antineoplastics. In early pregnancy, however, its frequency is thought to be very low. The authors report a case of a 30-year-old woman who developed HUS early in her first pregnancy. She had persistent aqueous diarrhea from the beginning of the pregnancy. At the 21st week she developed
hypertension
which in 2 weeks was followed by seizures, oliguria, and
acute pulmonary edema
despite intensive medical efforts to control her blood pressure. Surgical intervention for fetal delivery was performed. The patient was initially kept on continuous hemodialysis (CVVHD) followed by an alternate-day conventional hemodialysis schedule. A peripheral blood analysis showed a microangiopathic hemolytic anemia with thrombocytopenia; blood coagulation tests were completely normal. A brain CT scan and an abdominal MRI showed no major abnormalities. HUS was confirmed by a percutaneal kidney biopsy, performed at the 21st day of anuria. Techniques for identification of verotoxin-producing E. coli were not available. Renal function did not recover and the patient has been undergoing regular maintenance hemodialysis for a year.
...
PMID:Early gestational hemolytic uremic syndrome: case report and review of literature. 915 64
A 39-year-old white female underwent an uneventful vaginal hysterectomy for dysfunctional bleeding. Evaluating a mild aortic insufficiency murmur preoperatively an echocardiogram revealed normal left ventricular wall motion and function. Postoperatively the patient developed severe abdominal pain, acute
hypertension
(200/100 mmHg), and sinus tachycardia. Within minutes she decompensated into
acute pulmonary edema
. ECG demonstrated acute ST segment elevation in the precordial leads consistent with acute infarction. Emergency left heart catheterization showed normal coronary vessels with severe left ventricular dysfunction. An abdominal ultrasound was obtained, revealing a right adrenal mass. Plasma epinephrine was 334, norepinephrine 34,543 pg/ml; urine epinephrine 45, urine norepinephrine 2,137 micrograms/24 hours. She was started on prazosin and nifedipine sustained release with good blood pressure control. Four days later, an echocardiogram demonstrated the left ventricular wall motion reverting to normal. The adrenal tumor was subsequently resected successfully.
Acute pulmonary edema
causing dilated cardiomyopathy is a rare complication of pheochromocytoma that has been seldomly reported. A progressive fatal course is common: reversibility and survival depend on identifying and removing the pheochromocytoma.
...
PMID:Postoperative acute pulmonary edema: a rare presentation of pheochromocytoma. 928 51
Many fatal or potentially fatal cardio-cerebrovascular diseases present a definite circadian distribution in their onset. In order to verify if episodes of acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema have a significant daily periodicity in their occurrence, a retrospective analysis of 1,204 episodes has been conducted. In all cases, the hour of the day of onset has been identified with certainty; all episodes occurred in hospitalized patients. The rhythmometric circadian inferential statistical analysis by means of the single cosinor method demonstrates that the episodes of acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema present a significant (p < 0.002) circadian distribution, with a peak at 1:00 a.m. (from 10:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m.). No significant differences (p > 0.05) were found in the circadian distribution regarding sex, age (less or more than 60 years), absence or presence of arterial
hypertension
and coronary artery disease. Several factors may contribute to this behavior, especially the relationships between several endogenous circadian rhythms, sleep and disease. The knowledge that
acute pulmonary edema
is a high chronorisk disease could be of interest for the better understanding of its pathophysiology and for a better causative control and prevention.
...
PMID:Daily distribution of episodes of acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema. 939 3
Ischemic renal disease (IRD) is defined as a clinically important reduction in glomerular filtration rate or loss of renal parenchyma caused by hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis. IRD is a common and often overlooked clinical entity that presents itself in the setting of extrarenal arteriosclerotic vascular disease in older individuals with azotemia. Eleven to 14% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) cases are attributable to chronic IRD. A high percentage of patients entering ESRD programs are hypertensive. Many patients with a presumed diagnosis of hypertensive nephrosclerosis actually have undiagnosed ischemic nephropathy as the etiology of their ESRD. It is important for the clinician to identify IRD, because IRD is a potentially reversible cause of chronic renal failure in a hypertensive patient. Atherosclerotic renal artery disease is common among patients with coronary artery disease and aortic and peripheral vascular disease. Atherosclerotic renal artery disease is a progressive disorder, and its progression is associated with loss of renal mass and functioning. A decrease in glomerular filtration rate sufficient to cause an elevation of the serum creatinine concentration requires injury to both kidneys. Consequently, IRD can arise from one of two main clinical situations: bilateral hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis leading to bilateral renal ischemia; and hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis in a solitary functioning kidney, or in a kidney that is providing the majority of a patient's glomerular filtration. The primary reason for establishing the diagnosis of IRD is the hope that correction of a renal artery stenosis will lead to improvement of renal function, or a delay in progression to ESRD. There are six major clinical settings in which the clinician could suspect IRD: acute renal failure caused by the treatment of
hypertension
, especially with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors; progressive azotemia in a patient with known renovascular
hypertension
;
acute pulmonary edema
superimposed upon poorly controlled
hypertension
and renal failure; progressive azotemia in an elderly patient with refractory or severe
hypertension
; progressive azotemia in an elderly patient with evidence of atherosclerotic disease; and unexplained progressive azotemia in an elderly patient. Noninvasive testing modalities that have been used recently include the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor renal scan, duplex Doppler sonography, magnetic resonance angiography, and the spiral computed tomography. Treatment methods include percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, endovascular stenting, and surgical revascularization. The results of treatment for preservation of renal function have been encouraging, with stabilization or improvement in renal function observed in a significant proportion of cases.
...
PMID:Ischemic renal disease: an emerging cause of chronic renal failure and end-stage renal disease. 943 40
A 45-year-old male presented with
acute pulmonary oedema
, chest pain and electrocardiographic manifestations of acute myocardial ischaemia in the setting of
hypertension
crisis from a hyperfunctioning large left-sided pheochromocytoma. Coronary artery disease was excluded on the basis of thallium stress testing and coronary angiography. The latter revealed a picture consistent with dilated cardiomyopathy. After surgical resection of the tumour, both the hypercatecholaminaemia and the arterial
hypertension
subsided promptly with gradual improvement of the cardiomyopathy and complete resolution of the congestive heart failure symptoms.
...
PMID:Cardiomyopathy due to a pheochromocytoma. A reversible entity. 984 9
Ischemic renal disease (IRD) is defined as a significant reduction in glomerular filtration rate and/or loss of renal parenchyma caused by hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis. IRD is a common and often overlooked clinical entity that presents in the setting of extrarenal arteriosclerotic vascular disease in older individuals with azotemia. IRD is an important cause of chronic renal failure and end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and many patients with a presumed diagnosis of hypertensive nephrosclerosis may actually have undiagnosed ischemic nephropathy as the cause of their ESRD. The primary reason for establishing the diagnosis of IRD is the hope that correction of a renal artery stenosis will lead to improvement of renal function or a delay in progression to ESRD. There are six typical clinical settings in which the clinician could suspect IRD: acute renal failure caused by the treatment of
hypertension
, especially with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors; progressive azotemia in a patient with known renovascular
hypertension
;
acute pulmonary edema
superimposed on poorly controlled
hypertension
and renal failure; progressive azotemia in an elderly patient with refractory or severe
hypertension
; progressive azotemia in an elderly patient with evidence of atherosclerotic disease; and unexplained progressive azotemia in an elderly patient. It is important for the clinician to identify IRD, because IRD represents a potentially reversible cause of chronic renal failure in a hypertensive patient.
...
PMID:University of Miami Division of Clinical Pharmacology Therapeutic Rounds: ischemic renal disease. 1009 60
Pheochromocytoma is known to increase morbidity and mortality. We describe a case of pheochromocytoma during pregnancy. A patient was transferred to our hospital during gestational week 15 with severe
hypertension
,
acute pulmonary edema
, and cardiomyopathy. One day after transfer, she had a spontaneous abortion of the fetus. One week after hospital transfer, she developed acute dyspnea, supraventricular tachycardia degenerating into ventricular tachycardia, and respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation. Pheochromocytoma caused by a right adrenal mass was diagnosed. The patient was treated with titrated doses of phenoxybenzamine, intravenous nicardipine, and metyrosine over a period of 3 weeks with resultant stabilization of her blood pressure. She underwent a successful right adrenalectomy 1 month after her initial presentation. Four months after surgery, all antihypertensive medications were discontinued and her blood pressure remained stable 1 year after the surgery. This case describes the maternal morbidity and fetal mortality that may be associated with pheochromocytoma during pregnancy.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of pheochromocytoma during pregnancy: a case report. 1048 9
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