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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical course and treatment outcome of scorpion envenoming in 293 children was studied in a hospital at Mahad in Raigad district of Maharastra. 111 (38%) children who reported 1-10 hours (mean 3.5 hours) after sting had
hypertension
, 87 (29.6%) with tachycardia reported within 1-24 hours (mean 6.7 hours) of being envenomed and 72 (24.5%) children developed
acute pulmonary edema
after 6-24 hours (mean 8 hours) of sting. Six victims were brought dead, while 17 (6%) died later owing to multiorgan failure with loss of consciousness and convulsions (who reported after 24 hours of sting). Early administration of prazosin (125-250 ug orally) improved the clinical symptoms. Morbidity and mortality due to scorpion envenoming depends upon time lapse between sting and administration of post synaptic alpha-1 blocker, prazosin hydrochloride.
...
PMID:Indian red scorpion envenoming. 1077 89
Diabetic patients have a higher prevalence of
hypertension
, dyslipidemia and obesity. However, diabetes is by itself a major independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. About two-thirds of total mortality are due to diabetic macroangiopathy. It is characterised by accelerated atherosclerosis, with more severe, more extensive and more diffuse lesions, as compared with nondiabetic patients. Patients with diabetes present more frequently
acute pulmonary oedema
despite similar infarct sizes than do nondiabetic patients. They are more frequently at risk for ventricular dysfunction, for ventricular aneurysm and for congestive heart failure. At the time of diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, more than 50% of patients have pre-existing coronary heart disease, probably related to painless ischemia, caused by an autonomic denervation of the heart in diabetic patients. International recommendations suggest that all diabetic patients should be evaluated at least annually for the development or progression of risk factors that would prompt cardiac testing. The standard bicycle exercise test should be chosen in an asymptomatic patient with only one other risk factor and with a normal resting ECG. For all other diabetic patients, stress echocardiography or stress myocardial perfusion imaging should be preferably chosen.
...
PMID:[Cardiac complications of type 2 diabetes]. 1092 96
Acute embolic renal artery occlusion is usually clinically typical. In case of early diagnosis, an in situ thrombolysis may be effective. As thrombosis often progressively completes a severe renal artery stenosis, the classical clinical description of renal infarction (lumbar pain, hematuria) is frequently not present. The kidney parenchyma downstream from the renal arterial occlusion is not always irreparably lost: collateral circulation may preserve nephron viability, which requires a lower perfusion pressure than glomerular filtration. An iodine, isotopic, or MR gadolinium nephrogram may prove this viability. Over the last 10 years, we attempted 21 percutaneous recanalizations of renal artery occlusion. Mean patient age was 62 years (44-85). All were hypertensive. Serum creatinin level of 17 patients was above 130 micromoles/ml. Three patients were previously hemodialysed. We observed 8 failures, without any complication. Thirteen immediate technical successes occurred, but one rethrombosis occurred at Day 1. Immediate complications were seen in 2 patients: 1
acute pulmonary edema
, 1 puncture site false aneurysm. The mean follow up of the 12 technical successes was 26 months (18-60). One rethrombosis occurred at 6 months.
Hypertension
was unchanged in 4 patients and improved in 8. In all patients with renal insufficiency, a significative improvement of serum creatinine level was observed. It was possible to discontinue hemodialysis in the 3 patients previously hemodialysed. One predictive factor of success was recognized: a short delay (shorter than 90 days) between occlusion and recanalization. Percutaneous recanalization must be proposed in case of renal artery occlusion, especially to avoid vascular azotemia and dialysis, even if the kidney fed by the occluded artery is small.
...
PMID:[Percutaneous recanalization of occluded renal arteries]. 1114 1
A primiparous, full-term, 28-year-old woman underwent an emergency lower segment Caesarean section under epidural anaesthesia for failure to progress in the first stage. Despite an uneventful pregnancy and delivery, she developed a hypertensive crisis in the postoperative period complicated by
acute pulmonary oedema
requiring ventilation for 48 h in the intensive care unit. Intravenous magnesium sulphate infusions and hydralazine boluses were used to control the blood pressure, which was associated with clonus, hyperreflexia, tachycardia and profuse sweating. The patient made a good recovery. Later measurement of urinary catecholamines in the recovery phase showed greatly elevated levels of norepinephrine, dopamine and vanillyl mandelic acid. Further investigations included a normal abdominal computed tomography scan and a I-123 meta-iodo-benzyl-guanidine scintigraphy scan which revealed a 3- to 4-cm irregular tumour located at the level of the lower pole of the right kidney and further liver hot spots. Intravenous magnesium sulphate infusion proved successful in controlling
hypertension
caused by a phaeochromocytoma in the postpartum period.
...
PMID:Phaeochromocytoma: an unusual cause of hypertension in pregnancy. 1143 77
We report a 18 years old woman that was admitted with a history of four days of cardiac failure with
acute pulmonary edema
,
high blood pressure
, left ventricular dilatation and moderate to severe systolic dysfunction. Twenty four hours after admission she had a miscarriage, expelling a mole. The diagnosis of hyperthyroidism caused by a mole and early pre eclampsia was confirmed and the patient was managed with diuretics and dopamine. Symptoms abated, thyroid function tests, cardiac function and size returned to normal values and the patient was discharged asymptomatic, ten days after admission.
...
PMID:[Gestational hyperthyroidism: a case associated to molar pregnancy]. 1137 99
Acute renal failure is a well recognized complication from the use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in patients with severe bilateral renovascular disease. A 54-year-old woman presented with
acute pulmonary edema
with intractable
hypertension
and a history of lower limb claudication. The addition of lisinopril to her antihypertensive regimen resulted, within 48 h, in the development of acute renal failure that remitted with cessation of the drug. She was found to have a heavily calcified occlusion of her aortic arch and another occlusion of the aorta below the renal arteries. Angiography and Doppler ultrasonography showed normal renal arteries. This is the first reported case of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor-induced renal failure occurring in a patient with atherosclerotic occlusion of the aorta. The literature on suprarenal aortic occlusion is reviewed to determine the manner of presentation, prevalent risk factors and physical findings that typify this unique clinical entity.
...
PMID:Trapped renal arteries: functional renal artery stenosis due to occlusion of the aorta in the arch and below the kidneys. 1138 Dec 82
A myocardial infarction is a rare complication of a pheochromocytoma. A pheochromo-cytoma crisis may occur spontaneously, during pregnancy, or may be induced by a local trauma of the tumor or by drugs. We present a case report of a 41-year-old woman without anamnestic episodes of
hypertension
or angina pectoris. During angiography of the mesenteric arteries for further diagnostics of a sonographically suspected liver tumor, she developed an
acute pulmonary edema
and a cardiogenic shock with the electro- and echocardiographic findings of a large anterolateral-apical-diaphragmal myocardial infarction. The immediate coronary angiography 90 min after the onset of the myocardial infarction showed normal coronary arteries with normal coronary blood flow of the arteries supplying myocardial areas with akinetic segments and those arteries supplying hyperkinetic segments. The blood catecholamine levels at this time were excessively elevated. The left ventricular function improved to almost normal within the next 4 weeks with the beginning of the improvement already before the abdominal tumor was surgically removed at day five. The histology documented a pheochromocytoma with acute necrosis. The early invasive findings support the hypothesis that a reversible spasm of several epicardial arteries and not a direct toxic effect of catecholamines could have been the cause of the small myocardial infarction and the observed large myocardial stunning.
...
PMID:[Acute myocardial infarct in pheochromocytoma crisis. Early coronary angiography findings and echocardiography follow-up]. 1138 79
The spectrum of disorders associated with an elevated blood pressure (BP) encompasses chronic uncomplicated hypertension and the hypertensive crises, including hypertensive urgencies and emergencies. Although these syndromes vary widely in their presentations, clinical courses, and outcomes they share pathophysiologic mechanisms and, consequently, therapeutic responses to specifically targeted antihypertensive drug types. Nevertheless, hypertensive crises are often treated with drugs which, in that setting are either unsafe or are of unsubstantiated efficacy. The purpose of this review is to examine the pathophysiology of commonly encountered hypertensive crises, including stroke, hypertensive encephalopathy, aortic dissection,
acute pulmonary edema
, and preeclampsia-eclampsia and to provide a rational approach to their treatment based upon relevant pathophysiologic and pharmacologic principles. Measurement of plasma renin activity (PRA) level often provides insight regarding pathophysiology and predicts efficacy of antihypertensive treatments in the individual patient. However, in hypertensive crises, drug therapy is initiated before the PRA level is known. Nevertheless, the renin-angiotensin dependence (R-type) or volume dependence (V-type) of
hypertension
can often be deduced by the BP response to drugs that interrupt the renin system (R-drugs) or that decrease body volume (V-drugs). Based upon these considerations, a treatment algorithm is provided to guide drug selection in patients presenting with a hypertensive crisis.
...
PMID:Management of hypertensive crises: the scientific basis for treatment decisions. 1172 16
Pre-eclampsia is a pregnancy-specific hypertensive syndrome associated with significant morbidity and mortality in mother and baby. With the increasing understanding of the disease process, the number of complications, and the maternal and perinatal deaths have fallen over the last few decades in the developed countries. In other parts of the world, the rates of mortality and morbidity remain high. We present eight cases of pre-eclamptic women with severe complications (eclampsia, HELLP syndrome,
acute pulmonary edema
, acute renal failure...) that were treated at our hospital in only a year, when we had not seen these pathologies in the last nine years. There was fetal death in three of the cases, related to abruptio placentae. There were no maternal deaths, but four mothers needed to be transferred to the intensive care unit, and required life-support techniques. The causes of these new events remain unclear. Can they be due to increase in maternal age or to the high incidence of abruptio placentae? Or maybe can they occur only by chance? These women with pre-eclampsia and severe complications that can have potentially devastating consequences are not an easily identified group. We concluded that women with pregnancy hypertension must be carefully managed by expert physicians, particularly if they are more than 30-35 years old, overweight, with previous history of
hypertension
or nulliparous, in order to decrease these several complications.
...
PMID:[Severe maternal complications associated with pre-eclampsia: an almost forgotten pathology?]. 1188 26
In patients who experience sudden death from spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, more than 90% present with
acute pulmonary edema
. The underlying pathogenesis of this complication is poorly understood. In addition, the specific role of the extravasated blood products and the associated elevation in intracranial pressure leading to the systemic and pulmonary effects during subarachnoid hemorrhage are not well established. The authors tested a new model of acute and severe subarachnoid hemorrhage comparing fresh whole autologous blood (n = 20) with 5% albumin (n = 19) injected at two different rates (35 seconds versus 24 minutes) into the cisterna magna of anesthetized, mechanically ventilated rats. Cerebral and systemic hemodynamics and the corresponding pulmonary function were evaluated. The type of fluid injected had no influence on survival or hemodynamic and respiratory parameters. Rapid infusion of either blood or albumin (n = 14) produced an acute and transient rise in intracranial pressure (37.9 +/- 3.5 mm Hg) associated with
systemic hypertension
and increased cerebral perfusion pressure that was sustained in survivors but not in nonsurvivors. Slow infusion (n = 23) produced a more progressive increase in intracranial pressure to 31.2 +/- 7.1 mm Hg with a parallel and sustained increase of systemic blood pressure and preserved cerebral perfusion pressure in survivors, but produced a pattern of more severe
hypertension
followed by hypotension in nonsurvivors. Sixty-four percent of animals (rapid infusion) and 48% of animals (slow infusion) survived the challenge and presented no pulmonary alterations. In contrast, nonsurviving rats developed reduced lung compliance and gas exchange, an increased alveolar-arterial protein concentration ratio (0.36 +/- 0.02 versus 0.17 +/- 0.03 in survivors; P <.0001), and increased lung weight (5.7 +/- 0.3 g versus 2.0 +/- 0.1 g; P <.0001), demonstrating a fulminant increased permeability pulmonary edema, leading to death within one hour. These results indicate that the chosen rapid- and slow-injection rates resulted in a similar death rate of 50%. Mortality was similar for blood and albumin administration, pulmonary edema occurred in nonsurvivors in both the rapid- and slow-injection groups, and pulmonary edema is associated with more severe
hypertension
in the slow-injection group. Furthermore, these results suggest that the development of neurogenic pulmonary edema that is characterized by an acutely increased capillary permeability to proteins is independent of the degree of intracranial pressure increase or the type of fluid administrated.
...
PMID:Influence of the type and rate of subarachnoid fluid infusion on lethal neurogenic pulmonary edema in rats. 1217 91
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