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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
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Corrective vascular surgery was performed on 36 patients with renovascular hypertension and one patient with normal tension for 38 defective renal arteries, among them 58 per cent with arteriosclerosis and 35 per cent with fibromuscular dysplasia, in Jena, between 1969 and 1985. Follow-up checks were conducted six years from the operations (average) and revealed three major long-time results: Average blood pressure had declined from 211/121 mm Hg preoperatively to 152/95 mm Hg postoperatively. Renal functions were stabilised. Necessary antihypertensive medication could be reduced to 42 per cent of the preoperative values. Three revascularised kidneys had to be surgically removed in a second session. Four patients had died, the grey figure being one. Restenosation was recorded from three of 28 morphologically assessed arteries. Aneurysmal dilatation of a bridging graft was recorded in one case. Revascularisation proved necessary in another two. The point can be made that in cases of reno-arterial stenosis corrective vascular surgery has continued to be a valid therapeutic concept, adequate indication provided. It still is a real alternative to percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, nephrectomy or isolated therapeutic medication.
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PMID:[Surgical intervention in stenoses and aneurysms of the renal artery]. 258 42

Since 1981, we have evaluated and treated 22 children with renovascular hypertension (RVH). Seventeen patients had stenosis of their native renal arteries, and five had stenosis of the artery in a transplanted kidney. RVH was caused by fibromuscular dysplasia in 13 patients, by trauma in 2 patients, and by arteritis in 2 patients. Among the patients who had transplanted kidneys, three had technical causes for stenosis and two had stenosis due to rejection. The disease was unilateral in 10 patients, bilateral in 5, and present in a solitary kidney in 7, including the five renal transplants. Diagnostic studies that strongly suggested the presence of renovascular disease were an initial diastolic blood pressure greater than 100 mm Hg, an elevated peripheral vein renin activity level, and an abnormal renal scan if the patient's hypertension was being controlled with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI). Only the renal arteriogram was 100% accurate in confirming the presence of RVH. Percutaneous angiographic correction was attempted in 13 patients and resulted in lasting improvement of the hypertension in five (38%). Surgical revascularization was attempted in 17 children, including the 8 with failed angioplasty, with improvement or cure of the hypertension in 15 patients (88%). Combining percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) and surgical results gave 20 of 22 patients (91%) with cure or improvement of their hypertension. Four of 27 affected kidneys (15%) could not be revascularized and were removed. We conclude from this series of patients that despite improvements in noninvasive studies, renal arteriogram remains the only study that is 100% accurate in evaluating children for RVH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Renovascular hypertension in children: current concepts in evaluation and treatment. 259 53

Renal artery stenosis is an uncommon, but curable cause of systemic hypertension. The most common causes of stenosis are atherosclerosis, and fibromuscular dysplasia. Diagnosis may be difficult due to the lack of a suitable screening test, and a high index of suspicion needs to be maintained. Treatment may be with pharmacotherapy, renal angioplasty, or surgery and the choice of therapy needs to be tailored to the individual patient. Once a stenotic lesion is discovered in a hypertensive patient, the functional significance is not always clear cut. Fibromuscular dysplasia may be a systemic disease in some cases, and may affect the central nervous system.
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PMID:Renovascular hypertension and demyelimating disease in a young woman. 259 48

Chronic oral candidiasis is generally not considered a premalignant condition. We report on two patients with carcinoma in situ and carcinoma in the soft palate, probably preceded by long lasting chronic Candida infection. The first patient was a 56-year-old woman who suffered from disturbances in the calcium and potassium metabolism and high blood pressure due to a previous goiter operation during which the parathyroids had been removed. She also suffered from bronchitis and had been smoking 12 cigarettes a day for many decades. For several years she had had more or less constant symptoms from airway infections. Increasing symptoms from the throat had developed 2 years before referral and, in this period, she had been in constant antifungal therapy with no effect on the symptoms. Objectively, the entire soft palate, uvula and the palatoglossal arches were fiery red with whitish plaques which were not removable (Fig. 1). A biopsy revealed severe dysplasia and focal carcinoma in situ Subsequently, the lesion in the soft palate was partly removed by laser surgery followed by radiation therapy over a period of 2 month. One year later there was no signs of recurrence (Fig. 4). The second patient, a 53-year-old healthy woman, was referred because of difficulties in eating due to pain in the throat which had existed for 2 years. Without any effect on the symptoms, she had had antifungal therapy for 4 weeks. The patient had been smoking 15 cigarettes a day for many years. Objectively, an area with whitish plaques and nodules on an erythematous background was found (Fig. 5).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Carcinoma in situ and carcinoma in patients with chronic oral candidiasis]. 263 19

Evidence from animal studies demonstrates that the renin-angiotensin (ANG II) system and sodium retention play major roles in experimental renovascular hypertension (RVH). Two basic models have been described. In the first, one-clip two-kidney Goldblatt hypertension, the ischemic kidney secretes renin, which leads to increased ANG II formation and hence elevation of blood pressure (BP). As BP rises, sodium excretion by the intact contralateral kidney increases (pressure natriuresis); therefore, there is no sodium retention. In the second, one-clip one-kidney Goldblatt hypertension, the contralateral kidney is removed. In this case the pressure natriuresis can no longer occur, and sodium retention occurs. The ensuing expansion of plasma volume inhibits renin secretion, so that in this model the renin level is normal or low. Following the clipping of the renal artery, renal blood flow and pressure are maintained distal to the stenosis by an ANG II-mediated vasoconstriction. This acts preferentially on the efferent glomerular arterioles, so that the ratio of preglomerular to postglomerular resistance is reduced, which helps to maintain glomerular filtration despite the reduced renal perfusion pressure. In the contralateral kidney the afferent arteriolar resistance is increased, probably as a direct result of exposure to the higher intrarenal arterial pressure. ANG II constricts the efferent arterioles in the same way as in the ischemic kidney, so that the ratio of preglomerular to postglomerular resistance is unchanged. When an angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor is given, the efferent arterioles vasodilate. In the ischemic kidney this may produce a reduction of glomerular filtration rate (GFR), which is not seen in the contralateral kidney. Unilateral RVH in humans corresponds closely to the animal model of one-clip two-kidney hypertension. Plasma renin activity is usually high, and converting enzyme inhibitors lower BP effectively. The increased renin is due exclusively to increased secretion of renin by the ischemic kidney, and is completely suppressed in the contralateral kidney. It is not clear whether bilateral RVH corresponds to the one-clip one-kidney model, but there is circumstantial evidence to suggest that both renin and volume factors may be involved. The majority of cases of human RVH are caused by atheroma, which is commonly bilateral, or by fibromuscular dysplasia. The former tends to be associated with atheroma elsewhere in the arterial tree, and often progresses to complete occlusion and renal failure. The latter occurs in younger patients, and almost never progresses to complete occlusion.
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PMID:Renovascular hypertension: etiology and pathophysiology. 265 13

During the period 1974-1986, 71 patients were operated on for renovascular hypertension. Forty-eight patients had atherosclerotic disease and 23 patients had fibromuscular dysplasia. There was no operative mortality. Fourteen patients died during the follow-up, 12 of them from cardiovascular causes. The 57 surviving patients were reexamined with a mean follow-up of 7 years. The relative cumulative 5- and 10-year survival rates in all patients were 79% and 55%, respectively. At follow-up, seven (19%) of the atherosclerotic patients were classified as cured, 22 (59%) as improved and eight (22%) as failures. In the patients with fibromuscular dysplasia, 12 (60%) were normotensive without medication, and six (30%) were improved. The relative 5-year survival rates in these aetiological groups were 73% and 90%, respectively. Only complete cure of hypertension by surgery predicted a good outcome, whereas very similar survival curves were found in the improved and failed groups. This could be due to a higher incidence of target organ changes before surgery in the latter groups. A positive blood pressure response to long-term converting-enzyme inhibition correlated well with the response to surgery. Renal venous renin studies correctly predicted long-term outcome of surgery in 78% of the patients studied, but require careful preparation of the patients and interpretation of results.
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PMID:Long-term prognosis of surgical treatment of renovascular hypertension. 265 19

The clinical natural history of renal arterial fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) in patients with normal blood pressure is unknown, to the authors' knowledge. The authors reviewed the results of 1,862 renal angiograms obtained in potential renal donors. FMD was present in 71 patients (3.8%). The average age at which FMD was discovered was 50.8 years. Seventy-five percent of the patients with FMD were female. Of 30 patients who did not undergo nephrectomy, eight (26.6%) developed hypertension over a mean followup interval of 7.5 years. Of 19 patients who underwent nephrectomy, despite the presence of FMD, five (26.3%) developed hypertension over a mean follow-up interval of 4.4 years. In comparison, three subjects (6.1%) (from a randomized control group of 49 age- and sex-matched healthy individuals) developed hypertension over a mean follow-up period of 7.1 years. The authors conclude that asymptomatic middle-aged individuals with renal FMD develop hypertension at a rate greater than that of age-matched control subjects with normal blood pressure.
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PMID:Incidental fibromuscular dysplasia in potential renal donors: long-term clinical follow-up. 266 48

The role of several factors that have been suggested as being of etiologic importance in renovascular fibromuscular dysplasia was examined in a case-control study of 33 patients with angiographically demonstrated fibromuscular dysplasia and 61 renal transplant donor control subjects with normal renal arteries. The factors studied included use of oral contraceptive agents or markers of sex hormone dysfunction, mechanical stress to the renal artery wall, human lymphocytic antigen (HLA) type, cigarette smoking, history of hypertension for more than 5 years, and family history of cardiovascular disease. The risk of fibromuscular dysplasia was significantly (p = 0.003) increased (odds ratio = 4.1, 95% confidence interval = 1.5-10.9) among cigarette smokers. A significant (p less than 0.001) dose-response relation was noted between cigarette use and the risk of fibromuscular dysplasia developing (odds ratio = 8.6 for those who had smoked more than 10 pack-years). Personal history of hypertension more than 5 years was also associated (odds ratio = 5.0, 95% confidence interval = 1.1-22.8) with a significantly (p = 0.036) increased risk for the development of fibromuscular dysplasia. HLA-DRw6 antigen was more common in the 33 fibromuscular dysplasia patients than in the 61 renal transplant donor control subjects (odds ratio = 3.00, p = 0.067) or a second group of 934 ambulatory control subjects (odds ratio = 2.51, p = 0.031). Adjustment for cigarette smoking increased the odds ratio to 5.0 (95% confidence interval = 1.3-19.6). There was a positive though not statistically significant (odds ratio = 1.7, p = 0.175) association noted between family history of cardiovascular disease and fibromuscular dysplasia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hypertension 1989 Nov
PMID:Etiologic factors in renovascular fibromuscular dysplasia. A case-control study. 268 Sep 61

Two cases, in siblings, of renovascular hypertension caused by fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) of the renal artery associated with cerebral aneurysms are reported. Both of the cases were found to have cerebral aneurysm, as well as multiple stenotic or occluded lesions in arteries such as renal, mesenteric, celiac, and internal carotid arteries. One case died of subarachnoid hemorrhage and the other case was successfully operated on for the aneurysm. This report suggests that FMD should be considered to be a systemic angiopathy including the cerebral artery, as well as the renal artery. Thus, cerebral angiography is recommended to detect the association with cerebral aneurysm, at least, in cases with multiple lesions of FMD. Occurrence of FMD in siblings also indicates that a genetic factor might be involved in the pathogenesis of FMD.
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PMID:Clinical significance of cerebral aneurysm in renovascular hypertension due to fibromuscular dysplasia: two cases in siblings. 271 43

Renal atherosclerosis and fibromuscular dysplasia are the most common causes of curable human renovascular hypertension and renal failure. Vascular reconstruction often preserves renal function, but renal failure is rarely reversed, especially after days of anuria. We report a case of a 23-year-old woman who as a child underwent a nephrectomy for congenital hydroureter and renal hypoplasia. She later experienced fibromuscular dysplasia of the remaining renal artery, which ultimately progressed to a complete occlusion and 31 days of total anuria. The patient was revascularized, and within 2 months renal function returned with a blood urea nitrogen and creatinine of 9.0 and 1.0 mg/dl, respectively. After a follow-up of 6 months the patient's blood pressure remained 120/80 to 130/80 mm Hg without administration of hypertension medication. In this report we emphasize that under selected circumstances a kidney can survive prolonged ischemia and that delayed revascularization may reestablish renal function.
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PMID:Successful revascularization of an occluded renal artery after prolonged anuria. 272 67


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