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

Essential hypertension in patients with the metabolic syndrome is regularly associated with other metabolic disorders. Thus, most hypertensives are overweight and have a glucose intolerance, while many have concomitant hyperproteinemia and dyslipoproteinemia. Up until fairly recently, it was not known that so-called insulin resistance is a common denominator both of metabolic risk factors and hypertension. In recent years, our knowledge about insulin resistance has spawned an equally convincing and fascinating multidimensional concept which reveals and plausibly explains complex relationships between metabolism, hypertension and the coronary risk.
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PMID:[Hypertension in metabolic syndrome. Etiology and consequences]. 148 16

Epidemiological studies have documented the association between cardiovascular disease and high blood pressure, dyslipidaemia, impaired glucose tolerance, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), and central obesity. In fact, several of these abnormalities, often all of them, can be identified in the very same individuals, constituting the entity of the multiple metabolic syndrome. Furthermore, many of these abnormalities seem to run in families. These findings raise important questions about the genetic epidemiology of the disease and about the molecular genetic background of the most likely common nominator of this syndrome, namely insulin resistance. Therapeutic actions must also be carefully considered to avoid the encouragement of some abnormalities while treating others.
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PMID:Multiple metabolic syndrome: aspects of genetic epidemiology and molecular genetics. 148 39

Data from several different studies are reviewed suggesting that a subset of hypertension is associated with metabolic abnormalities involving lipids, insulin, and often obesity, all aggregating strongly in families. Persons with 'familial dyslipidaemic hypertension (FDH)' have an especially high risk of early coronary disease. The clinical and biochemical features of FDH are compared with Reaven's Syndrome X, familial combined hyperlipidaemia, dense LDL subfractions, diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance, central and general obesity, pre-diabetes, pre-hypertension, and heterozygous lipoprotein lipase deficiency. Some contribution from major gene effects is suggested in specific subsets reported in several different genetic studies reviewed in this report. It seems likely that multiple metabolic abnormalities are genetically heterogeneous. The data also suggest significant contributions from environmental factors such as diet and physical activity.
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PMID:Familial dyslipidaemic hypertension and other multiple metabolic syndromes. 148 41

Hypertension is a powerful predisposing risk factor for cardiovascular disease at all ages and in both sexes. Epidemiological assessment indicates the largest risk ratios for stroke and congestive heart failure (CHF), but coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most common and most lethal sequela of hypertension. Examination of the risk of cardiovascular sequelae in the hypertensive population indicates that this is not uniform and varies over a 10-fold range, depending on the associated risk factors. Systolic pressure merits greater consideration than the diastole pressure because isolated systolic hypertension is a powerful cardiovascular risk at all ages. Furthermore, recent trials have indicated the benefit of therapy for systolic-based hypertension in the elderly, even using a diuretic, for coronary disease as well as stroke. Persons with hypertension have a high prevalence of associated cardiovascular risk factors, including elevated cholesterol, reduced HDL-C, diabetes, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), and obesity. About 9% under the age of 65 years have an associated overt cardiovascular disease; above age 65 about 30% are so afflicted. Each of these risk factors can double the risk associated with hypertension. Because they are so common, a large fraction of the disease sequelae of hypertension is attributable to these associated risk factors. The high risk of coronary disease in hypertensive patients is concentrated in those with a high total/HDL-cholesterol ratio, impaired glucose tolerance, high fibrinogen, ECG abnormalities, and cigarette smokers. Stroke risk in hypertensive persons is concentrated in those with cardiovascular disease, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, LVH and cigarette smoking.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Potency of vascular risk factors as the basis for antihypertensive therapy. 148 3

Hypertension, dyslipidaemia, glucose intolerance (associated with insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinaemia) and other abnormalities are complementary coronary risk factors which often occur in association. A familial trait for essential hypertension seems to coexist commonly with defects in carbohydrate and lipoprotein metabolism which can be detected before the appearance of hypertension. Diabetes mellitus as well as obesity promotes the development of hypertension and dyslipidaemia. Moreover, certain drugs used for antihypertensive therapy can further modify lipoprotein and glucose metabolism. Thiazides in high dosage and loop-diuretics can increase serum low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and/or very-LDL-C and the total C/high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) ratio, while HDL-C is largely unchanged; triglycerides (Tg) are also often elevated. Premenopausal women may be protected from this side effect. Whether diuretic-induced dyslipidaemia is dose-dependent and low thiazide doses (i.e. hydrochlorothiazide < or = 12.5 mg daily) are less active, awaits clarification. The diuretic-antihypertensive agent, indapamide, given at a dose of 2.5 mg.day-1, seems to exert no relevant effect on serum lipoprotein or glucose metabolism. The potassium-sparing diuretic, spironolactone, also may be largely neutral with regard to lipids. Moreover, potassium sparing diuretics may possibly counteract, at least in part, a dyslipidaemic influence of potassium-loosing diuretics in medium dose. Drug-induced dyslipidaemia, as well as glucose intolerance, represent potentially adverse influences. In the hypertensive population, effective blood pressure control with traditional drug therapy based on thiazide-type diuretics in high dosage led to a distinct decrease in cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality, but a lesser decrease in coronary events.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of diuretics on the plasma lipid profile. 148 8

Diuretics have long been used in the treatment of hypertension and are outstandingly efficacious when used either alone or in combination with other antihypertensive compounds. Blood pressure is controlled with diuretics alone in over 50% of patients and in over 80% in combination with other drugs. Thiazide diuretics were used singly and in combination in the early VA Co-operative studies that demonstrated decrease in cardiovascular morbidity with blood pressure control. Subsequent studies have confirmed these early findings and clearly demonstrated that the thiazide diuretics are as effective in lowering blood pressure as other currently available antihypertensive compounds. Diuretics, like all other antihypertensives, have side effects, of which the most important ones are hypokalaemia, alterations of the plasma lipid profile, hyperuricaemia and glucose intolerance. Diuretic-induced hypokalaemia may be hazardous in the presence of digitalis, but does not appear to have any inherent propensity to induce life-threatening arrhythmias. Diuretics remain amongst first-line drugs in the treatment of high blood pressure due to their efficacy, especially in blacks and the elderly, the potentiation of the antihypertensive efficacy of other compounds, their low side effect profile and their low cost.
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PMID:Diuretics in hypertension: clinical experiences. 148 13

In one third of patients who suffered an infarction NIDDM and arterial hypertension are present. In the absolute majority of patients with IHD, as apparent from the IRI and C-peptide response after a glucose load, hyperinsulinism is present. The blood sugar response can have the character of diabetes or of impaired glucose tolerance, the curve may be very flat or normal while the IRI and C-peptide response are excessive. Hyperinsulinism has a hypersecretory origin as suggested by the concurrently elevated C-peptide level but also reduced insulin utilization in the liver and peripheral target organs. Hyperinsulinism is thus a regular associated phenomenon of IHD and is a special risk factor independent on hyperglycaemia and associates with the other main risk factors of IHD such as arterial hypertension, HPLP (android obesity), hyperglycaemia (NIDDM) and hirsutism as a manifestation of a hyperandrogenic state in the female organism with the syndrome of polycystic ovaries. Hyperinsulinism plays an indirect role in the pathogenesis of coronary syndrome via the main risk factors (5H syndrome--hyperinsulinism, hypertension, HPLP, hyperglycaemia, hirsutism) and also directly by its action on endothelial paracrine mechanism of the coronary circulation where in the early stage vasoconstrictor factors predominate (endothelin-1, PGF2-alpha) over physiological vasodilatating factors (EDRF-NO, PGE2, PGI2) and this leads then to functional spasms. It seems that also the coronary X syndrome develops very frequently on the background of the hormonal metabolic X syndrome or the 5H syndrome.
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PMID:[Hyperinsulinism and the coronary syndrome]. 149 68

The authors revealed during dispensarization of pregnant women suffering from essential hypertension that the disease is relatively frequently associated with some metabolic disorders, i. e. obesity, gestational diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance. They draw attention to a similarity with Reaven's syndrome in non-pregnant women. The authors recommend to screen for diabetes all obese pregnant women and those with hypertension to detect an impaired glucose metabolism and prevent foetopathies in neonates of thus affected mothers. The authors consider obesity one of the subsidiary criteria in the differential diagnosis of essential hypertension and preeclampsia.
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PMID:[Gestational diabetes mellitus and disorders of glucose tolerance in pregnant women with essential hypertension]. 149 70

Cigarette smoking is the most preventable cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Smoking has been associated with a two-to fourfold increased risk of coronary heart disease, a greater than 70% excess rate of death from coronary heart disease, and an elevated risk of sudden death. These risks are compounded in the presence of hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, glucose intolerance, and diabetes, all of which exhibit a synergistic effect with smoking. The relationship between smoking and the risk of peripheral vascular disease has also been well documented. Smokers account for approximately 70% of patients with atherosclerosis obliterans and virtually all those with thromboangiitis obliterans. An association between smoking and cerebrovascular disease remains a matter of debate, although a higher risk of stoke and stroke-related mortality has been observed in smokers than in nonsmokers. Smoking has also been implicated in the development of cor pulmonale, but a direct association with congestive heart failure has not been established. Nicotine and carbon monoxide appear to play major roles in the cardiovascular effects of smoking. Both components adversely alter the myocardial oxygen supply/demand ratio and have been shown to produce endothelial injury, leading to the development of atherosclerotic plaque. Adverse effects on the lipid profile have been noted as well, but the relationship between these changes and the risk of cardiovascular disease remains to be confirmed. Notably, smoking cessation results in a dramatic reduction in the risk of mortality from both coronary heart disease and stroke. In light of the fact that the incidence of smoking has declined primarily among educated sectors of the U.S. population, future efforts must focus on providing effective education, including smoking cessation techniques, to the less-educated groups.
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PMID:Smoking and cardiovascular disease. 149 5

Insulin resistance (prereceptor, receptor, postreceptor) is a complex phenomenon. It penetrates into the clinical picture via hyperinsulinism as impaired glucose tolerance, or NIDDM, as hyperlipoproteinaemia, arterial hypertension and hirsutism in women (syndrome 5H) associated with the polycystic ovary syndrome or the HAIR-AN syndrome. Based on a group of their 480 patients with NIDDM, 108 women with hirsutism, 320 patients with myocardial infarction and the results of the national cardiovascular programme the authors estimate the prevalence of the 5H syndrome as follows: in the general population 5-10%, in patients with arterial hypertension 15-30%, in NDDM 65-90%, in hirsutic women 10-20% and in patients with myocardial infarction 30-50%. These figures could be, however, substantially higher if as the criterion the IRI response was taken or that of C-peptide in OGTT or the results of the hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp. The clinical 5H syndrome is a phenomenon of latent insulin resistance perceived late by doctors and patients.
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PMID:[Clinical manifestations of insulin resistance. The hormonal-metabolic syndrome X (5H), its prevalence and impact on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. I]. 150 12


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