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

The general features and problems of renal vein thrombosis in children are first discussed. The records of 11 children with this condition, 7 ill neonates and 4 older children with burns, are then reviewed, indicating the clinical course of the disease, how they were treated, the results, and pathological findings. From this study, the natural history is assembled and a protocol for treatment is proposed. Supportive therapy is necessary in all cases to correct dehydration and sepsis. Many children will develop a consumptive coagulopathy. Others will develop pulmonary emboli associated with thrombosis of the inferior vena cava. Anticoagulation should be achieved for these two conditions. Nonvisualization of affected renal units upon initial urographic examination virtually assures an atrophic, functionless kidney later. Nephrectomy will be required because of hypertension, persistent infection, and scarring. Thrombectomy may be attempted when bilateral nonvisualization on urography is associated with a positive venacavogram.
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PMID:Natural history and treatment of renal vein thrombosis in children. 91 51

Routine bilateral nephrectomy and splenectomy (BNS) in uremic patients before transplantation are relatively safe procedures except when there is pre-existing sepsis, diabetes, or severe hypertension. A review of 421 patients undergoing routine pretransplantation BNS reveals that death before transplantation occurs in two definable groups of patients. In our series, the first group, those with juvenile onset diabetes, have a 15.4 per cent pretransplantation mortality (9.6 per cent operative and 5.8 per cent nonoperative) while being maintained on hemodialysis and awaiting transplantation. The second group, nondiabetic patients with other preoperatively definable risk factors such as severe hypertension and infected kidneys, had a 3.25 per cent pretransplantation mortality (1.9 per cent operative and 1.25 per cent nonoperative) while on hemodialysis. Paradoxically, these same factors are used as absolute criteria for pretransplantation nephrectomy at institutions where this operation is not a routine part of the pretransplantation regimen.
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PMID:Lethal complications of bilateral nephrectomy and splenectomy in hemodialyzed patients. 109 22

In conclusion, patients on chronic maintenance dialysis have an increased incidence of death from cardiovascular disease. Hypertension plays a major role, and these patients must be carefully monitored for complete control of blood pressure. Adequacy of ultrafiltration to maintain normal extracellular volume is an essential part of the dialytic treatment. Hypertensive patients should be screened for excessive renin secretion because of its possible role in unresponsive hypertension in patients on dialysis. Nephrectomy should be used when necessary, where dialysis and antihypertensive medication have not adequately controlled blood pressure. Patients must be monitored for the presence of pericardial disease to avoid subsequent pericardial effusion and the development of constrictive pericarditis with its adverse effect on myocardial function. When constrictive pericarditis is present, it obviously should be relieved by appropriate surgery. Efforts should be made to minimize cardiac output in hemodialysis patients. Whether or not routine transfusions to maintain a higher hematocrit are indicated is a question that cannot yet be answered. However, patients with marginal cardiovascular function who are accepted on hemodialysis and must have an arteriovenous shunt should be supported in any manner to minimize an increase in cardiac output. Early and aggressive treatment of known episodes of sepsis is important in the elimination of valvular endocarditis in this patient population. Perhaps one of the finer indicators of adequacy of hemodialysis will be K rate and peak immunoreactive insulin levels. Continued abnormality of these parameters may contribute to cardiovascular disease. Clearly, further study of the effect of abnormal carbohydrate metabolism on lipid metabolism is in order. Serum triglyceride, serum cholesterol and lipid electrophoretic pattern should be followed to evaluate the beneficial effects of drug therapy and changes in dialytic technique on the development of cardiovascular disease. Careful monitoring of calcium, phosphorus, bone films and parathyroid hormone levels is indicated to assess parathyroid status. The use of aluminum binders and parathyroidectomy to prevent vascular and myocardial calcification is important in the therapy of these patients. The use of cardiac catheterization, coronary artery arteriography, and possibly cardiac vascular repair, should be considered in the chronic hemodialysis patient with coronary artery disease if he is otherwise well. Adequacy of hemodialysis perhaps can be evaluated through its effect on all of the above parameters. Whether or not changes in artificial kidney treatments can correct the final vascular disease remains to be seen.
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PMID:Cardiovascular disease in uremic patients on hemodialysis. 109 1

The significant arterial complications of renal transplantation are hemorrhage, infarction, stenosis and aneurysm formation. Hemorrhage is often associated with sepsis and may be lifethreatening. Large infarcts may be secondary to multiple small vessels or intraoperative hypotension with inadequate perfusion of the organ. Nephrectomy is invariably indicated in these situations. Renal artery stenosis with resultant hypertension may occur secondary to stenosis at the anastomosis, atherosclerotic plaque formation or intimal fibrosis of the renal artery. Operative reconstruction if the anastomotic site may relieve hypertension is selected patients but places the transplanted kidney greatly at risk. Aneurysm formation is often mycotic and is associated with multiple operations and wound sepsis. The iliac artery may be ligated without loss of limb, while the resultant claudication may be relieved by a surgical bypass procedure.
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PMID:A twenty year survey of arterial complications of renal transplantation. 110 38

Hemodynamic data were collected in 42 patients with pulmonary edema (P.E.) due to altered permeability of various causes. Pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PWP) was normal, whatever the time of the study and the severity of the P.E. Pulmonary artery hypertension was present in the cases with severe hypoxemia, but disappeared with hypoxemia correction. In some cases, a hyperkinetic or a hypovolemic syndrome was found, being induced by the cause of P.E. Although within normal limits, PWP was significantly higher at the first hours of P.E. than after the 6th hour. Perfusion of colloid solutes worsened P.E., although increasing PWP by only a few mmHg. Dehydration using diuretics markedly improved the venous admixture, although PWP was previously normal. These data document the production of P.E. in many causes-such as severe sepsis, drowning, fat embolism, barbiturate overdose-by impaired alveolo-capillary permeability, PWP and blood protein content remaining within normal limits. They also demonstrate the noxious effects of overperfusion and the efficiency of dehydration in such pulmonary edemas.
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PMID:[Hemodynamic study of pulmonary edemas due to the increase of alveolo-capillary permeability]. 119 58

Pulmonary arterial hypertension, defined as a mean pulmonary artery pressure exceeding 20 mmHg has been observed both in experimental animal and human sepsis, even before development of the adult respiratory distress syndrome. In this article we review several mechanisms that have been invoked for the pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with sepsis (and the adult respiratory distress syndrome): obstruction of the pulmonary microcirculation with microthrombi composed of platelets and leukocytes, and active pulmonary vasoconstriction induced by the autonomous nervous system, hypoxia or vasoactive humoral factors ("mediators"). Some of these mediators, in particular serotonin and arachidonic acid metabolites have been the subject of substantial research and therapeutic manipulation. Since pulmonary arterial hypertension imposes an increased afterload to the right ventricle and because right ventricular dysfunction appears to be a major determinant of the outcome of sepsis, the study of the mechanisms involved in pulmonary arterial hypertension may lead to improved management of sepsis and septic shock.
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PMID:Pulmonary arterial hypertension in sepsis and the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 131 81

Mechanisms of progression of chronic renal failure (CRF) have been well documented in the rat but may not be relevant in man. Factors which may modify clinical CRF include underlying disease, diet, hypertension, intercurrent events, and adverse or beneficial effects of drug therapy. It has been argued that progression in many forms of renal disease is inexorable below a certain level of renal function. In other diseases, eg primary malignant hypertension, analgesic nephropathy, function frequently improves in both the short and long term with appropriate management. Thus knowledge of the nature of the underlying disease is essential in assessing progression. The value of diet in preserving renal function has been debated, particularly the relative roles of protein and phosphate control. In our own unit, a prospective randomized study showed a benefit of protein restriction. Development of accelerated hypertension is an important cause of progression of renal disease and clinical and experimental evidence supports the view that non-accelerated hypertension is also a factor in progression, amenable to treatment. Various intercurrent events may accelerate progression and function may be lost permanently following sepsis, urinary tract obstruction, renal arterial or venous obstruction, hypotension and in some cases pregnancy. Numerous drugs can have deleterious effects on the kidney. The possibility that converting enzyme inhibitors might preserve renal function is attracting attention but in view of their side effects their place in therapy should be determined by prospective controlled studies in which the above factors are carefully considered.
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PMID:Preservation of renal function in chronic renal failure. 141 42

The neutropenia often seen in infants of hypertensive mothers (IHMs) at < 12 hours of age has been associated with nosocomial infection in the first 18 days of life. To assess maternal hypertension as an independent factor for nosocomial infection, we compared 101 low birth weight (< or = 2.00 kg) IHMs to a concurrent birth weight-matched group of infants of normotensive mothers (INMs). Infants without differential leukocyte counts at < 12 hours of age were excluded, leaving 93 IHMs and 98 INMs. The incidence of neutropenia at < 12 hours among IHMs was not significantly different from that among INMs (42/92 (45%) vs 37/98 (38%)). Nosocomial infection was more frequent in neutropenic IHMs than in neutropenic INMs (12/42 vs 2/37; p = 0.007). Infection in IHMs included omphalitis (2 infants), pneumonia (4), and sepsis with or without meningitis (6); INMs had cellulitis (1) and sepsis (1). The underlying mechanism(s) for this predisposition remains to be elucidated, although limited data suggest that neutropenia may be more severe and prolonged among IHMs.
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PMID:Increased nosocomial infection in neutropenic low birth weight (2000 grams or less) infants of hypertensive mothers. 144 66

A series of 23 confirmed cases of pyonephrosis initially treated by percutaneous nephrostomy drainage were reviewed. Presentation was extremely variable, ranging from sepsis to asymptomatic bacteriuria. Fever, flank pain and leukocytosis were often absent. Ultrasonography was diagnostic in only 3 of 12 patients. In all, 17 patients had associated nephrolithiasis, and 5 patients ultimately required nephrectomy. Renal urine cultures were positive in 16 of 21 instances, with multiple organisms found in 8 of 21, and added bacteriological data not provided by bladder urine cultures in 11 cases. A pre-existing history of urinary tract infection, hypertension and malignancy was common. Percutaneous drainage was a safe, quick and effective diagnostic and therapeutic method.
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PMID:Pyonephrosis: diagnosis and treatment. 145 Aug 41

The mechanisms of action of monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) suggest that patients taking them may respond with hyper- or hypotension when undergoing coronary artery surgery. We describe a case where MAOIs were present and fentanyl and midazolam were the anaesthetic agents used. The anaesthesia and surgery were performed without incident. Postoperative ICU care was complicated by hypertension, hyperthermia, and severe shivering followed by hypotension resistant to therapy and finally death. Diagnoses of pulmonary embolism and sepsis were unproven and may have played a role. The MAOIs may also have played a role. Reactions in patients while taking both meperidine and MAOIs are unusual and animals react differently from humans to a combination of MAOIs and narcotics. There are only five reported cases where fentanyl was given to patients on MAOIs. We conclude that, until there is more information, MAOIs should be discontinued, if possible, before surgery in which catecholamines may be needed.
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PMID:MAO inhibitors and coronary artery surgery: a patient death. 146 33


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