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)
Acute pulmonary edema
has been reported in man and animals with intracranial disorders, head trauma or cerebral compression. In anesthetized rats, cerebral compression produced acute, fulminating and fatal lung injury. Intense activation of the sympathetic mechanism in the brain stem induced
systemic hypertension
and a series of hemodynamic changes. Pulmonary volume loading was the result of drastic decrease in aortic flow accompanying a decline in pulmonary arterial flow. The acute increase in pulmonary blood volume caused severe rises in pulmonary arterial and venous pressures leading to disruption of lung vessels.
...
PMID:[Neural and hemodynamic mechanisms of neurogenic pulmonary edema]. 1253 80
We describe a 66-year-old female who presented with recurrent
acute pulmonary edema
and uncontrolled
hypertension
. She was diagnosed with left renal artery stenosis and treated with angioplasty and stent placement. Her clinical status improved initially but symptoms recurred within 4 months. Further evaluation documented renal artery in-stent restenosis, which was successfully treated with cutting balloon angioplasty followed by brachytherapy. The feasibility of renal artery brachytherapy and short-term follow-up is presented.
...
PMID:Brachytherapy for renal artery in-stent restenosis. 1255 35
The cardiovascular continuum describes the way from risk factors to atherosclerosis, acute cardiovascular events (unstable angina and myocardial infarction), and development of terminal heart failure and its complications. Following this way, advances are reported in the therapy of acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, ventricular and supraventricular tachyarrhythmias, and stroke in patients with patent foramen ovale. The following issues are reported in detail: (1) significance of statins and statin withdrawal, glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor blocker, acute coronary interventions, aspirin and clopidogrel in unstable coronary syndromes, (2) pathogenesis of
acute pulmonary edema
associated with
hypertension
, (3) cardiac regeneration capability after transplantation and myocardial infarction, (4) beta-blocker therapy, efficacy of additional angiotensin receptor blocker therapy and multisite biventricular pacing in symptomatic (advanced) heart failure, (5) prognosis after ablation of the atrioventricular node in patients with atrial fibrillation, (6) primary prevention with an implantable defibrillator and resumption of driving after implantation, and (7) therapeutic options after cryptogenic stroke and patent foramen ovale.
...
PMID:[Update cardiology 2001/2002-part II. From unstable coronary syndrome to terminal heart failure]. 1281 17
Malaria requiring intensive care is characterized by failure of one or more organ systems and/or development of several metabolic disorders secondary to the presence of Plasmodium faliciparum in the blood. Severe imported malaria in non-immunized adults causes multiple organ failure with variable degrees of altered mental status.
Acute pulmonary edema
is frequent, jaundice associated with mild disturbance of liver function is consistent, arterial
hypertension
due to hypovolemia is usual, and acute renal insufficiency is uncommon. Coagulation disorders are generally low-grade, acidosis is an unfavorable prognostic factor, severe hypoglycemia can occur after the beginning of quinine treatment, and anemia is an consistent but discrete symptom. In endemic areas emphasis should be placed on the complications of severe malaria in pregnant women due to the high incidence of hypoglycemia and pulmonary edema. Severe malaria can develop early in children in endemic zones. Presenting signs include cerebral malaria in older children and severe anemia in young children. Quinine is the reference treatment with a bolus of 17 mg/kg followed by a daily maintenance dose of 24 mg/kg. Use of artemether should be restricted to quinine-resistant forms. Total blood exchange transfusion is not recommended. Supportive symptomatic treatment, e.g. mechanically assisted ventilation and kidney dialysis, is required. In endemic zones over 90% of deaths involve children without access to intensive care facilities. Mortality rates associated with management of severe imported malaria in intensive care range from 10 to 30%.
...
PMID:[Severe malaria in intensive care units in 2003]. 1457 63
Cardiac failure is the leading cause of hospital admission after 65 years of age. Several studies have confirmed the frequency of cardiac failure with normal systolic function ("diastolic" cardiac failure) in the elderly (nearly half the cases). The cause is commonly isolated systolic hypertension. The pulsed pressure depends on ventricular ejection, arterial rigidity and the precocity of reflected pulse waves. In the elderly, the pulse pressure is a powerful predictive factor for mortality and adverse cardiovascular events (acute coronary syndromes, cardiac failure and cerebrovascular accidents). Patients with isolated systolic hypertension or an increased pulsed pressure usually have left ventricular hypertrophy or concentric remodelling, abnormal relaxation, alteration of hypertrophied myocytes with increased myocardial oxygen consumption and subendocardial ischaemia, especially when the coronary reserve is reduced. The decrease of the diastolic blood pressure reduces the presence of coronary perfusion. Moreover, an increase in the pulsed pressure predisposes to coronary atherosclerosis. These patients are very symptomatic on exercise because they do not have a reserve of preload and easily develop
acute pulmonary oedema
after a volume overload (increased salt intake, postoperative rehydratation). A recent study showed that the left ventricular ejection fraction was preserved during
acute pulmonary oedema
of hypertensive patients. The diagnosis of "diastolic" cardiac failure is often suspected by elimination (clinical signs of cardiac failure with a normal left ventricular ejection fraction), and echographers have proposed many criteria to detect abnormal relaxation, filling or distensibility of the left ventricle. Mortality would seem to be half that of systolic cardiac failure. Treatment should normalise the
hypertension
, ischaemia, tachycardia, and maintain or reestablish sinus rhythm, but it remains empirical.
...
PMID:["Diastolic" heart failure and pulsed pressure]. 1462 35
Atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (RAS) is an increasingly important cause of end-stage kidney disease, and may cause
hypertension
, progressive renal failure, and recurrent pulmonary edema. Herein, we report two episodes of anuria and
acute pulmonary edema
associated with losartan treatment in a hypertensive patient with preexisting severe renal artery stenosis in a solitary kidney. After successful percutaneous renal balloon angioplasty procedure, urine flow was started immediately, despite 10 days of anuria. Blood pressure measurements were still at acceptable levels with a low dose Beta blocker, and serum creatinine levels were normal even after eight months. PTRA should be done in such patients, even with prolonged anuria. Physicians who recommend angiotensin receptor blockers in patients with RAS, especially in patients wih hypovolemia or a solitary kidney, should be careful about this complication.
...
PMID:Two episodes of anuria and acute pulmonary edema in a losartan-treated patient with solitary kidney. 1468 57
A forty-one-year-old male, with no risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD) and with moderate alcohol intake, was admitted in 1992 to Portalegre Hospital with heart failure due to viral cardiomyopathy. He was re-admitted in 1998 with
acute pulmonary edema
and was put on mechanical ventilation for 48 hours, and transferred to Pulido Valente Hospital when stable. The physical exam was without abnormalities. ECG showed first degree AV block, left ventricular hypertrophy and 2 mm ST depression in the precordial leads. The echocardiogram revealed left ventricular dilatation and depressed systolic function. Coronary angiography showed single-vessel CAD and coronary artery anomaly. Dobutamine stress echocardiography was halted due to
hypertension
, making it impossible to evaluate ischemic response. Holter monitoring showed five-complex ventricular tachycardia. The patient was discharged medicated with amiodarone, with indication for cardiac scintigraphy and electrophysiological study.
...
PMID:Left main coronary artery originating in the right sinus of Valsalva. 1500 65
A 71-year-old man with bilateral renovascular disease was admitted to Hamamatsu University hospital because of appetite loss and acute shortness of breath due to
acute pulmonary edema
(
APE
) with accelerated
hypertension
and renal failure.
Hypertension
and
APE
were controlled by an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) and four sessions of hemodialysis with reduction of 1.8 kg bodyweight. Renal function was later stabilized and the patient required no ACEI or hemodialysis. A trial of right renal angioplasty 1 month after admission failed and renal function deteriorated (serum creatinine 7.1 mg/dL) with accelerated
hypertension
, gain of bodyweight and
APE
. Even after four sessions of hemodialysis with adequate reduction of bodyweight,
APE
was not controlled, but it rapidly improved after administration of an ACEI, without major bodyweight change. As no apparent cardiac dysfunction was evident,
APE
might have been caused by a direct action of angiotensin II on hyperpermeability in pulmonary capillaries. Blocking of angiotensin II should be considered in such patients even after introduction of hemodialysis.
...
PMID:Rapid improvement of acute pulmonary edema with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor under hemodialysis in a patient with renovascular disease. 1525 29
A case is described of an apparently healthy young woman in her first pregnancy who presented with
acute pulmonary edema
in the early postpartum period in the context of mild pregnancy-induced
hypertension
. After quick improvement in her condition, a Doppler followed by a transesophageal study revealed a left atrial septation with a small atrial septal defect secundum type and moderate mitral regurgitation strongly suggestive of a cor triatriatum sinistrum.
...
PMID:Acute pulmonary edema in the post partum and cor triatriatum sinistrum. 1563 89
A 12-year-old sexually intact male Vendee Griffon Basset was presented for
acute pulmonary oedema
. Severe systemic systolic arterial
hypertension
(SAH) was diagnosed (290 mmHg). Despite blood and abdominal ultrasound tests, the underlying cause of the
systemic hypertension
could not be determined, and primary SAH was therefore suspected. Conventional echocardiography showed eccentric left ventricular hypertrophy with normal fractional shortening. Despite this apparent normal systolic function, 2D colour tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) identified a marked longitudinal systolic left ventricular myocardial alteration, whereas radial function was still preserved. Three months later, the dog underwent euthanasia because of an acute episode of distal aortic thromboembolism. Necropsy revealed severe aortic and iliac arteriosclerosis. SAH related to arteriosclerosis is a common finding in humans, but has not been previously described in dogs. Moreover, its consequence on longitudinal myocardial function using TDI has never been documented before in this species.
...
PMID:Longitudinal left ventricular myocardial dysfunction assessed by 2D colour tissue Doppler imaging in a dog with systemic hypertension and severe arteriosclerosis. 1573 77
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>