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

An extensive review of the literature, supplemented by experimentation on progestagen-only minipills taken continuously finds the 4 most effective progestagens. They were tested for 4358 cycles in 483 women. In general lynestrenol and norethisterone acetate give fairly regular cycles with a longer menstrual period. Intermenstrual bleeding is frequent at the beginning but tends to regulate itself. D-norgestrel seems to give shorter cycles with less intermenstrual bleeding. NOrgestrienone gives longer cycles with less bleeding. Problems include spotting or amenorrhea which are often worrisome for the patient. The advantage of the minidose progestagen-only pill is that it has no estrogen and therefore can be used when estrogen is contraindicated: in the case of tumors, history of thromboembolism, disorders of lipid metabolism, fibromatosis, mastitis, prediabetes, and arterial hypertension.
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PMID:[Oral contraception by means of progestagen-only micropills taken continuously in the light of four recent trials (author's transl)]. 102 28

The elderly constitute a high-risk group in which the benefit of treatment of hypertension is now obvious. The initial drug should be a low-dose diuretic, followed by a beta-blocker. At present there are no data favoring the use of an ultra low-dose diuretic, such as 12.5 mg hydrochlorothiazide, unless there is coexisting prediabetes or gout.
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PMID:Treatment of hypertension in the elderly--the end of the story? 129 73

Occlusion of the internal carotid or middle cerebral artery was seen in 44 young adults of both sexes from a rural population in Ceylon over a period of four years. None had hypertension, diabetes, prediabetes, or hypercholesterolaemia. There were 19 men with internal carotid occlusions, most being due to atherosclerotic thrombosis. The high incidence of atherosclerosis in these patients on a marginal diet remains an enigma, and we suggest that carbohydrate-induced hyperlipidaemia might be an important aetiological factor. There were 13 men with middle cerebral occlusions, the aetiology of which remains obscure. Occult embolism or atherothrombosis are suggested as possible causative factors. Of the 12 women five had middle cerebral artery occlusions in the last trimester of pregnancy and two had internal carotid artery occlusions in the puerperium. The pattern of ischaemic strokes in women aged 15-45 was similar to that observed in Western countries, though our patients differed ethnologically and in dietary habits.
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PMID:Strokes in young adults. 507 49

The rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta), which has been found to develop spontaneous obesity, non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM; Type 2), and hypertension, was used to evaluate the potential blood pressure-lowering effects of captopril as well as the specific effects, if any, on the prediabetic state. Intravenous and oral glucose tolerance testing was carried out with oral captopril dosing. Results showed that captopril significantly decreased both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in all monkeys and significantly decreased fasting plasma glucose levels. Based on these preliminary studies in monkeys, we conclude that captopril exerted antihypertensive effects without adverse effects on glucose metabolism.
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PMID:Antihypertensive effects of captopril without adverse effects on glucose tolerance in hyperinsulinemic rhesus monkeys. 756 5

Despite recent progress in therapy and management of diabetes mellitus, diabetes remains a serious disease with life-threatening complications. It is by far the most common metabolic disease and affects 5% of the population in industrialized countries. Noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) is a complex disorder characterized by insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion and is associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, arterial hypertension and dyslipidemia. Predisposing factors for NIDDM are obesity and a family history of diabetes. Greater physical activity has been associated inversely with the prevalence of NIDDM in several cross-sectional studies. Physical activity increases the sensitivity to insulin, and regular endurance exercise can induce and maintain weight loss, improve glucose tolerance and ameliorate most of the abnormalities in the metabolic syndrome. Type I diabetes mellitus arises as a consequence of immunologically mediated pancreatic islet beta-cell destruction in genetically susceptible individuals. It is an insidious process that may occur over years. During the stage of disease evolution (prediabetes), individuals may be identified by the presence of immunological markers and a decline of beta-cell function. The autoimmune nature of the disease process has led to attempts to stop this process by immune intervention strategies. A variety of immune interventions has been used, some immunosuppressive and some immunomodulatory. Several screening programs are used in order to identify high-risk subjects (i.e. first-degree relatives of individuals with type I diabetes) who may benefit from an early intervention. The ultimate goal of all these efforts is to prevent the development of overt type I diabetes mellitus in those at risk for the disease, using strategies that are both safe and specific. This review summarizes the results of the various studies conducted to date and outlines the approaches currently being tested.
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PMID:[Is prevention of diabetes mellitus possible?]. 783 27

Microalbuminuria is associated with increased cardiovascular mortality in both diabetic and non-diabetic subjects. A number of studies have indicated that insulin resistance, increased blood pressure and dyslipidaemia precede the onset of clinical diabetes. We examined various correlates of microalbuminuria in 1,298 non-diabetic subjects who participated in the Mexico City Diabetes Study, a population-based study of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors. Both parental history of diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance were significantly associated with microalbuminuria. These results were not explained by differences in age or blood pressure between subjects with or without a parental history of diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance. In addition, subjects with microalbuminuria had increased 2-h insulin and triglyceride concentrations, a higher prevalence of hypertension, and decreased high density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations relative to subjects without microalbuminuria. These results that microalbuminuria may be a feature of the prediabetic state.
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PMID:Is microalbuminuria part of the prediabetic state? The Mexico City Diabetes Study. 824 47

First degree relatives of patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) have a 40% risk of developing NIDDM during their lifetime and the risk seems to be greater if the disease is inherited from the mother than from the father. It has also become clear that metabolic abnormalities are demonstrable long before the disease becomes manifest. The prediabetic state is associated with a predisposition to abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, lipid disorders, high blood pressure, and microalbuminuria, ie, the metabolic or insulin resistance syndrome. It is, however, not yet known whether treatment of these abnormalities is able to prevent progression to manifest NIDDM.
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PMID:Characterization of the prediabetic state. 932 18

Obesity and Type 2 diabetes are now major public health issues in developed nations and have reached epidemic proportions in many developing nations, as well as disadvantaged groups in developed countries, e.g., Mexican-Americans, African-Americans, and Australian Aborigines. These groups all show hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, which have been demonstrated to be future predictors of Type 2 diabetes and have also been suggested as key factors in the etiology of the Metabolic Syndrome. It is now increasingly recognized that Type 2 diabetes is part of a cluster of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors comprising the Metabolic Syndrome. This group is at very high risk of atherosclerosis because each of the risk factors in the Metabolic Syndrome cluster in its own right is an important CVD risk factor. They also contribute cumulatively to atherosclerosis. A key strategy in reducing macrovascular disease lies in the better understanding of the Metabolic Syndrome--glucose intolerance, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and central obesity. Although it has been suggested that hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance is the central etiological factor for the Metabolic Syndrome, epidemiological data do not support the idea that this can account for all of the cluster abnormalities. We have animal and human data suggesting that hyperleptinemia rather than, or synergistically with, hyperinsulinemia may play a central role in the genesis of the CVD risk factor cluster that constitutes the syndrome. Studies in Psammomys obesus (the Israeli sand rat) suggest hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance is an early metabolic lesion in the development of obesity and Type 2 diabetes. This animal also develops other features of the Metabolic Syndrome, making it an excellent model to investigate etiology. Psammomys, when placed on an ad libitum laboratory diet, develops hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance, diabetes, and dyslipidemia. It also develops hyperleptinemia and leptin insensitivity, and hyperleptinemia is correlated with insulin resistance independent of changes in body weight. It is likely that a similar sequence occurs in the transition from the prediabetic state to Type 2 diabetes in humans. More recently, other potential players in the etiology of the Metabolic Syndrome have been suggested including endothelial dysfunction and acetylation-stimulating protein (ASP). It has been suggested that endothelial dysfunction may be an antecedent for both Type 2 diabetes and the Metabolic Syndrome. In addition, ASP is a serious new candidate for an important role in insulin resistance. The ASP pathway plays a critical role in fatty acid metabolism and storage, and it has been suggested that ineffective storage of fatty acids by adipocytes due to a defect in the ASP pathway may lead to insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:Etiology of the metabolic syndrome: potential role of insulin resistance, leptin resistance, and other players. 1084 50

Obesity, especially visceral adiposity, is a major determinant of the development of type 2 diabetes. Both visceral adiposity and insulin resistance are strongly related to cardiovascular risk factors in diabetic and non-diabetic subjects. One of the areas where the correlation between visceral fat (upper body adiposity) and cardiovascular risk is most apparent is the prediabetic state. We have recently shown that only prediabetic subjects (those who later develop type 2 diabetes) who are insulin resistant and with upper body adiposity have increased triglycerides, decreased HDL cholesterol and high blood pressure.
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PMID:Obesity and the metabolic syndrome: the San Antonio Heart Study. 1088 94

Both diabetic and prediabetic patients have abnormal vascular reactivity and should be considered to have occult cardiovascular disease. Angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are particularly beneficial in diabetes because they reduce the incidence of both cardiovascular events and diabetes-related complications. In prediabetic patients, ACE inhibitors also reduce the risk of a new diagnosis of type 2 diabetes. Managing hypertension is even more beneficial for diabetic patients than for nondiabetic patients. To further reduce the risk of heart disease in patients with diabetes or prediabetes, dyslipidemia should also be treated aggressively.
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PMID:In diabetes, treat hidden heart disease. 1110 30


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