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

This study was carried out to determine the evolution of atherosclerotic lesions during a therapeutic period during which regression might be appreciated. We produced aortic and coronary atherosclerosis in 27 young adult stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides) by feeding a diet supplemented with 2% cholesterol and 25% fat. Hypertension was produced by bilateral or unilateral narrowing of the renal artery. After six months of this regimen, four monkeys were killed (group 1) and 23 monkeys were divided into three groups: group 2 received unsupplemented diet; group 3 received the same diet as group 2 and drug treatment for hypertension; group 4 was continued on the atherogenic diet and received antihypertensive drug treatment. The results indicate that deleting the atherogenic diet leads to a decrease in the lipid content of the lesions and a transformation of the lipid laden atherosclerotic plaques into lipid-poor, fibro-collagenous lesions, with a decrease in the amount of coronary luminal narrowing. Partial control of systolic hypertension by antihypertensive drugs did not accelerate the involution of the atherosclerotic lesions over the relatively short period of this study. No statistically significant correlation by regression analysis was observed between the level of blood pressure elevation, the plasma renin activity, or the degree of the drug response, and the severity and extent of the atherosclerotic lesions. Furthermore, severe arterial hypertension without an atherogenic diet (group 5) produced arteriosclerosis of the aorta, and intensified branch cushions in the coronary arteries, without inducing lipid deposition in either vascular bed.
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PMID:Diet-induced atherosclerosis and experimental hypertension in stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides). Effects of antihypertensive drugs and a non-atherogenic diet in the evolution of lesions. 9 44

The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of persistent blood pressure elevations in an eighth-grade population composed of three ethnic groups, and to determine the feasibility of using school health facilities for hypertension screening. Blood pressure was recorded in 10,641 subjects (90% of the total eighth-grade population) in the Dallas Independent School District. Blacks made up 46% of the population; non-Latin whites, 40.1%; and Latin-Americans, 13.9%. On the first blood pressure screening, 8.9% had systolic or diastolic pressures or both at or above the 95th percentile. Of those whose blood pressures were elevated on the first examination, 98.3% were reexamined. After the third examination, 1.2% continued to have systolic hypertension, and 0.37% diastolic hypertension. No student had diastolic pressure above 90 mm Hg on all three examinations. The prevalence of persistent hypertension was similar for the three ethnic groups. Analysis of variation in blood pressure measurements revealed that the school nurses introduced a relatively small increase in variability. These data indicate that although school screening initially identifies large numbers of students as having inconstant pressure elevations, subsequent follow-up examinations show that less than 2% have persistent hypertension.
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PMID:Hypertension screening in schools: results of the Dallas study. 44 Aug

Follow-up studies averaging 12 years postcorrective surgery of 343 patients with coarctation of the aorta disclosed 38 late deaths, 15 of which were sudden, unexpected and probably cardiovascular. All but two patients were normotensive postoperatively, and in 4 of these the cause of death was proven dissecting aneurysm of ascending aorta. In another patient this aneurysm was repaired surgically and in 3 other patients chest X-ray had shown a dilated ascending aorta before death. At follow-up the ascending aorta was dilated angiographically in 4 survivors, who had moderate systolic hypertension and aortic valve disease. The high incidence of aneurysm of ascending aorta in patients with coarctation is probably due to hypertension during the growth period, possibly in combination with congenital weakness of the aortic wall, and to concomitant aortic valve lesion.
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PMID:Late sudden death after surgical correction of coarctation of the aorta. Importance of aneurysm of the ascending aorta. 52 37

Blood pressure measurements were obtained among 92,074 persons in Milwaukee between 1974 and 1976 by the Milwaukee Blood Pressure Program. Systolic hypertension was more prevalent in young white men than blacks below 25 years of age, was more common in middle-aged blacks than whites, and was equally prevalent among all persons past 65 years. Diastolic hypertension was more prevalent in blacks than whites of all ages. Whereas the prevalence of systolic hypertension in the population increased with age and was present in a majority or near majority of persons past 65 years, the prevalence of diastolic hypertension rose until the sixth decade, after which it declined. Hypertension was primarily of a diastolic variety in young blacks, whereas systolic hypertension was a prominent feature in young whites.
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PMID:Patterns of blood pressure in Milwaukee. 57 74

Amongst a group of 819 children and adolescents aged between 10 and 18 years and attending a public school, the distribution of blood pressure was determined in relation to age, sex, height-weight ratio and family history. Mean blood pressure values increased with age both sexes for both systolic and diastolic levels. Children outside the norms, blood pressure 2SD, should be considered to be hypertensive and be followed up. The prevalence of systolic hypertension was 3.95 per cent amongst the boys and 3,83 per cent amongst girls. That for diastolic hypertension was 7.33 per cent for boys and 6.97 per cent for girls. Obesity appeared to be the major factor associated with hypertension since half of the hypertensive individuals were overweight. Individual prevention is thus possible. The existence of a family history of hypertension and of obesity more particularly in obese hypertensive children should lead to steps aimed at the familial prevention of hypertension.
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PMID:[Essential hypertension in the child and the adolescent. Epidemiological study in schools (author's transl)]. 66 41

Eighty patients with hypertensive disease and sixty patients with atherosclerotic (systolic) hypertension of the elderly (60--70 years old) and old (78--89 years old) age groups were examined. Skin capillary circulation and the indices of central hemodynamics were studied. It was found that changes in capillary circulation in elderly and old patients with hypertensive disease or systolic hypertension had no specific features and were of the same character as those in healthy individuals of the same age. In decrease of arterial pressure as the result of diminished cardiac output deterioration of capillary circulation was quite frequently encountered. A hypotensive effect, which is attended with reduction of total peripheral resistance, leads as a rule to improvement of capillary circulation.
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PMID:[Capillary blood circulation in middle-aged and elderly arterial hypertension patients]. 73 77

Systolic arterial hypertension in subjects with regional cerebral ischemia is considered and discussed as regards its frequency and its pathogenetic meaning, and criteria concerning the way of treating it. Systolic arterial hypertension presents a very high frequency in these subjects. At times it is accompanied by moderate diastolic hypertension, to which may be attributed, by way of hypothesis, a compensatory meaning. Considering the pathogenesis of systolic hypertension, the antihypertensive drugs at our disposal do not offer any valid and rational indication. We advance the opinion that a lowering of blood pressure in these subjects may be more harmful than helpful.
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PMID:Systolic arterial hypertension and cerebral ischemia. 75 39

The available data indicate that classical hypertension, defined here as a diastolic blood pressure greater than or equal to 95 mm Hg, is a widely prevalent and as important a risk factor for the cardiovascular diseases in those aged 65 and over as it is in those under 65. The limited available data also indicate that pure systolic hypertension, defined here as a systolic blood pressure exceeding 160 mm Hg with a diastolic pressure under 95 mm Hg, also very common at age 65 and over, is also related to excess cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in the elderly. However, it is not clear whether this latter relationship is indicative of cause and effect, or merely reflects the fact that in the elderly pure systolic hypertension is a sign of extensive sclerosis of large arteries. The results of Veterans Administration studies on antihypertensive therapy indicate that the elderly patient with classical hypertension is amenable to effective treatment, and that the benefits of such treatment significantly outweigh the risks. Great care is needed in the use of drugs for the management of hypertension in elderly patients, especially to minimize risk of hypotensive episodes and their possible harmful consequences; but with judicious and careful therapy, hypertension of this type can be controlled with reduction in excess risk of morbidity and mortality, at least for those with average diastolic pressures greater than or equal to 105 mm Hg. The lack of data on the benefits of treatment for those with pure systolic hypertension precludes any recommendations in regard to pharmacologic treatment of this condition.
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PMID:Hypertension in the elderly. 85 5

In order to study the prevalence of hypertension and some of the factors relevant to its natural history, cross-sectional surveys were performed during the period 1967 to 1973 in five small Peruvian communities, two located at sea level and three above 13,000 feet of altitude. In total, 4,359 persons were studied at sea level (1,970 males and 2,389 females) and 3,055 at high altitude 2,189 males and 866 females). At high altitude, the age-adjusted prevalence of hypertension (particularly systolic) was definitely low; diastolic hypertension was more frequent in men than in women, and it was commoner than systolic hypertension. The reverse was observed in communities at sea level. Long-term blood pressure changes observed in natives accustomed to high altitudes but living at sea level, as well as in white persons usually living at sea level but residing at high altitude, appear to indicate that environmental forces are more important than genetic predispositions in determing the rarity of hypertension in the highlands. Among the environmental forces, chronic hypoxia seems to play an important causal role.
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PMID:Altitude and hypertension. 87 68

Fifty-three of 4,369 patients with acute myocardial infarction died of myocardial rupture. The incidence of rupture varied directly, among men, with the systolic blood pressure on admission to the coronary care unit (CCU), and the highest systolic pressure while in the CCU. Rupture occurred in 0.3% of the men with systolic pressures on admission to the CCU between 110-129 mm Hg, increasing to 2.0% of men with pressures between 170-189 mm Hg. Similarly, 0.3% of the men with a highest systolic pressure less than 150 mm Hg had a rupture, while 1.6% of those with pressures between 170-189 mm Hg ruptured. Diastolic blood pressure, past history of hypertension, and sustained hypertension after infarction were not related to the occurrence of rupture. Eighteen of the 53 patients who sustained rupture had systolic hypertension (greater than or equal to 150 mm Hg) sometime during the 24 hours before rupture, and 14 had diastolic hypertension (greater than or equal to 95 mm Hg). Hypertension appears to be one of several variables interacting to influence the occurrence of myocardial rupture.
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PMID:Effect of hypertension on myocardial rupture after acute myocardial infarction. 91 41


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