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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Data and comments from a survey conducted in Atar town with 3.534 individuals controlled. In children, kwashiorkor is rare but malnutrition is observed mainly in female babies between 1 and 3 years. It is caused by on the one hand a too late and too rapid weaning, and on the other hand to ancestral habits giving priority care to male babies. In adult populations, the main fact observed is an over-weight in women, with subsequently, a higher rate of blood hypertension and cerebro-vascular accidents than in men. This over-weight is a symbol of wealthiness and resorts to a traditional pattern of feminine beauty. Public health service and nutrition education can promote the use of a larger variety of foods which has little possibility of changing quickly an esthetic mode. But this concept will slowly recess, according to new ways of life.
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PMID:[Malnutrition and weight excess: a paradoxical condition in Mauretanian Adrar (author's transl)]. 742 87

Diabetes mellitus is associated frequently with congestive heart failure in humans, even in the absence of associated coronary disease or hypertension. Nevertheless, the effects of the diabetic state on myocardial mechanics have not been studied. Accordingly, diabetes was induced in female Wistar rats by injection of streptozotocin (60 mg/kg). Left ventricular papillary muscles were studied 5, 10, and 30 weeks later and compared with controls. Relaxation was delayed significantly and velocity of shortening was depressed at all loads. However, the passive and active force-length curves, as well as the series elastic properties, were not altered. The changes in cardiac performance were found over a range of muscle lengths, stimulus frequencies, and bath concentrations of calcium, glucose, and norepinephrine. The duration of diabetes had no major effect on the mechanical changes observed. The possible influences of drug-induced cardiac toxicity, malnutrition, and altered thyroid hormone levels have been considered; the latter two factors could not be excluded completely from having some influence on the mechanical properties of diabetic cardiac muscle. Evidence is cited showing abnormalities in calcium uptake by sarcoplasmic reticulum and depressed actomyosin ATPase activity. Thus a cardiomyopathic state has been produced in the rat consequent to the induction of experimental diabetes mellitus. Various mechanisms for this entity have been suggested.
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PMID:Altered myocardial mechanics in diabetic rats. 743 39

Left ventricular hypertrophy in arterial hypertension is characterized by myocyte hypertrophy, myocardial fibrosis, and structural changes of the intramural coronary arteries. Hypertensives with or without left ventricular hypertrophy have a reduced coronary vasodilator reserve due to alterations of the coronary microcirculation. The impairment in coronary vasodilator reserve is likely to initiate a process of malperfusion and malnutrition concomitant with increased metabolic demands. Further, malperfusion is supported by an increase in diastolic filling pressure, which will enhance the extravascular component of coronary resistance. The sum of interactions of these structural alterations of myocardium, interstitium, and coronary vasculature are likely to initiate and maintain a process of myocardial malperfusion and malnutrition, which can provoke functional depression of the myocardial performance, a loss of contractile proteins, an increase in interstitial fibrosis, and, not least, an overall decrease in contractile function in long-standing cardiac hypertrophy. Finally, the reversal of these processes by adequate antihypertensive treatment may contribute to renormalization of cardiac function and to prevention of late cardiac failure in hypertensive heart disease.
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PMID:Systolic ventricular dysfunction and heart failure due to coronary microangiopathy in hypertensive heart disease. 749 18

Between 1975 and 1983 health care expenditures in Ghana dropped to a low point as a consequence of the structural readjustment program instituted by the World Bank. During 1975-76 only 15% of available funds were spent on primary health care (PHC), which was officially introduced in the late 1970s. PHC made up 20-25% of the health care expenditures by 1991 with about 25% of health personnel engaged in PHC. 2/3 of health care delivery covered urban areas when 60% of the population lived in the countryside. The district of Ejisu-Juaben in the Ashanti region had high morbidity. Tetanus, polio, whooping-cough, and diphtheria had been brought under control, but measles, diarrhea, and malnutrition were still widespread among children under 5 years old. Malaria, bilharzia, intestinal parasites, respiratory infections, hepatitis, anemia, hypertension, and vitamin A deficiency were also grave problems. AIDS was on the rise. Child mortality amounted to 130/1000 live births and maternal mortality to 1400/100,000 cases. The medical structure of the district comprises 10 health posts (6 governmental and 4 mission). Only 72 villages and 120,000 people are cared for. Each post has a mobile team. In 1993 a new community-based health care program began funded by Save the Children Netherlands. In 60 villages a village health committee existed but they were substandard. They were either reactivated or new committees were set up. Training activities were also started in prenatal care, delivery, care of malnutrition and diarrhea, hygiene, and sanitation. Two years later safe motherhood indicators had improved; postnatal care increased from 16% to 49%; medical deliveries increased from 27% to 37%; the share of families with contraceptive acceptance increased from 7% to 21%; and tetanus vaccination among mothers was estimated to have increased from 27% to 86%.
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PMID:[Primary health care in Ghana: no pay no cure?]. 750 Oct 68

The aging process alone has no significant adverse consequences for the caloric intake and the nutritional status of healthy elderly individuals. Epidemiological data suggest that in humans, in contrast to rodents, undernutrition reduces the life span. In the Western World, malnutrition in old age has become uncommon and is, for the most part, the result of physical illness and/or of psychological and socio-economic factors, such as depressive disorders, social isolation, smoking, alcohol abuse, and poverty. Body weight shows a U- or J-shaped relationship to mortality risk with the highest survival rates found at normal to moderate overweight. However, studies that have controlled for disease already present, smoking status, serum cholesterol level, or hypertension, suggest an increased mortality risk for lower and upper extremes of body weight, only. Populations with healthy lifestyles have significantly greater life expectancy that the average normal population. Even in the very old, exercise has been shown to improve muscle strength and function. The studies suggest that nutritional intake and nutritional status in old age is multifactorial and dependent not only on appetite and availability of diverse food, but also on physical activity, body mass, education, and an involved social lifestyle.
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PMID:Nutrition and its relationship to aging. 755 9

Overnutrition and undernutrition can contribute to many common diseases or disorders in the elderly. Some conditions may take years to develop, while others can occur within weeks. Protein energy malnutrition may be the direct result of poor diet, or it may develop indirectly when other illnesses increase nutritional requirements beyond usual needs. One of the most easily recognised consequences of overnutrition is obesity, which is a risk factor for other diseases such as non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease and hypertension. If nutritional disorders are identified and managed appropriately, the health of many elderly people can be significantly improved.
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PMID:Nutritional disorders in the elderly. 756 65

Despite having normal height and weight, a 6-year-old girl had frequent bowel movements and slight recurrent chest infections since the age of 4 years and headache for 1 year. The patient appeared healthy, but examination of the ocular fundus revealed papilledema. Cranial computed tomography appeared normal. Lumbar puncture disclosed an elevated opening cerebrospinal fluid pressure, with normal biochemical, cellular, and bacteriologic findings. Laboratory investigations indicated pathologic steatorrhea, elevated electrolytes in 3 sweat tests, and low serum levels of vitamins A and E. The diagnosis of pseudotumor cerebri in a patient with cystic fibrosis was made. After treatment with prednisone (1 mg/kg/day), pancreatic extracts, and vitamin supplements, headache and papilledema resolved and serum vitamin A and E levels subsequently became normal. Older children with cystic fibrosis rarely have benign intracranial hypertension, but when present it is often due to hypervitaminosis during correction of malnutrition. In this child, pseudotumor cerebri and associated hypovitaminosis improved after combined corticosteroid and vitamin treatment.
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PMID:Benign intracranial hypertension in an older child with cystic fibrosis. 760 62

Deficiency of 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase causes hypertension and hypokalemia. To test whether hypertensive patients who develop hypokalemia when treated with diuretics have low levels of activity of this enzyme as a metabolic predisposition to the development of hypokalemia, we measured urinary cortisone, cortisol, tetrahydrocortisol, tetrahydrocortisone, and creatinine in 42 hypertensive patients who either did or did not become hypokalemic on hydrochlorothiazide. The mean ratios of cortisone to cortisol, tetrahydrocortisone to tetrahydrocortisol, tetrahydrocortisol to cortisol, and cortisol to creatinine did not differ between the two groups. We conclude that hypertensives who develop hypokalemia on diuretics do not have low activity of this enzyme. They also do not appear to have low ring A reduction or higher cortisol secretion rates compared with hypertensives who do not develop hypokalemia. We failed to find a metabolic predisposition to the development of hypokalemia by diuretic treatment.
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PMID:Cortisol metabolism in hypertensive patients who do and do not develop hypokalemia from diuretics. 766 29

In the attempt to prevent malnutrition, a seven year longitudinal evaluation was carried out in 24 RDT patients in order to assess the efficacy of the following strategy: 1) Counseling for an adequate physical activity and a high caloric intake limiting dietary restrictions to fluids, salt and fruit. 2) Improvement of anemia by increasing dialysis dose and/or by administering EPO. 3) The use of high UF HDF in order to employ more biocompatible membranes and to improve small and middle molecules removal. Nutritional status was assessed by a biochemical screening and by evaluating the variations of dry body weight (BW), which had to be also confirmed by a normal cardiac volume. Moreover in all patients a 4 consecutive days dietary record was obtained one year before the end of the observation period. During this period the mean dry BW increased significantly except in the two last years, when it remained stable. The increase of BW was associated with a reduced incidence of hypertension, a significant increase of Hb and reduction of BUN and sCr. The remaining biochemical parameters were constantly in the normal range. The dietary record showed a mean caloric-proteic intake similar to that recommended for the general population. These data point out that the above strategy can prevent malnutrition in patients on RDT. It must be confirmed whether the use of more biocompatible membranes and the removal of the middle molecules can play an important role in this setting.
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PMID:[Can malnutrition be prevented in patients on chronic extracorporeal dialysis?]. 770 10

A high rate of cardiovascular death in renal patients, particularly patients with endstage renal failure, has not been well appreciated in the past. It is obvious that cardiovascular lesions are more severe than can be explained by the classical risk factors of elevated blood pressure and dyslipidemia. In renal failure, a number of pathomechanisms are operative which may be paradigms of more general relevance, e.g. activation of the renin and sympathetic system, inhibition of the vasoconstrictor NO system, left ventricular hypertrophy in excess of what is expected for high blood pressure. A paradox inverse relation between lipid concentrations and cardiovascular death, i.e. a protective effect of hyperlipidemia, in dialysed patients, presumably results from the confounding effect of malnutrition, high lipid levels being a substitute marker of adequate nutrition.
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PMID:Excess cardiovascular mortality in the uremic patient--what does it teach for other risk factors in the non-renal patient? 773 91


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