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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ninety postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer were randomly assigned to be treated with HD-MPA administered either by oral route (daily dose 900 mg) or by intramuscular injections (1 g IM daily X 5 q w during 4 consecutive weeks followed by maintenance with 1 g twice weekly). Among 78 evaluable cases, most heavily pretreated, remissions, lasting for a median duration of 11 months, were more frequent on oral (8/37 = 22%) than on IM therapy (5/41 = 12%). In both arms, high
estrogen receptor
levels and various clinical factors were associated with higher response rates i.e., age greater than 60, Karnofsky greater than 70, light prior systemic treatment. Side-effects, consisting mainly of weight gain,
hypertension
and tremor occurred with equal frequency on oral or IM treatment. Five patients complained of pain at the sites of IM injections. Thus, we recommended that, whenever possible, the oral route should be preferred. During the same study, in 20 patients (11 on oral and 9 on IM therapy), blood was drawn at 0, 30, and 60 days of treatment for the assessment of MPA and hormone levels. In both arms, at 60 days, comparable levels of circulating MPA were obtained, with a very significant drop of cortisol, androstenedione, and estrone. These endocrine results, together with our clinical data, indicate that HD-MPA therapy is active on estrogen-dependent tumors with the same specificity as that of other modalities aiming to suppress the adrenal function. Its antineoplastic action in humans could be ascribed at least in part to its suppressive action on the adrenals, resulting in a severe estrogenic deprivation in postmenopausal women.
...
PMID:Oral versus intramuscular high-dose medroxyprogesterone acetate (HD-MPA) in advanced breast cancer. A randomized study of the Belgian Society of Medical Oncology. 294 41
The relationship of clinically defined menstrual categories and an independent measure of hormonal stimulation, maturation index of vaginal smear cytology, was studied. Analysis of 596 smears obtained at the time of breast cancer diagnosis revealed a statistically significant association between menstrual status and maturation index. However, within each menstrual group varying levels of maturation were noted. Estrogenic effect in the absence of exogenous hormone administration was found in 11% of patients following bilateral oophorectomy and among 24% of women whose natural menopause occurred 20 years or longer prior to diagnosis. Endogenous estrogen production appears to continue for many years among some women. Clinical factors such as obesity, diabetes and/or
hypertension
may stimulate high squamous maturation in some patients. Others of the same age and with similar clinical histories were found to have atrophic smears. The differences in maturation index may be due to individual variations in: endogenous hormone levels; sensitivity of the vaginal mucosa to similar hormonal stimuli; use of certain medications; or unidentified exogenous factors. The maturation index was found to be significantly associated with the following prognostic factors: weight relative to height, tumor size and
estrogen receptor
content of the primary tumor. These findings indicate that vaginal smear cytology may define specific subsets within menstrual categories which may be relevant to therapy and prognosis in breast cancer.
...
PMID:Association of vaginal smear cytology with menstrual status in breast cancer. 402 97
Aminoglutethimide blocks several cytochrome P-450 mediated steroid hydroxylation steps, including those required for conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone and for the aromatization of androgens to estrogens. Through these actions it blocks adrenal steroidogenesis and the production of estrogens in extraglandular tissues. Aminoglutethimide is indicated for treatment of certain patients with Cushing's syndrome and breast cancer. Other potential uses (prostate carcinoma, low renin
hypertension
, etc.) remain investigational. For treatment of Cushing's syndrome, aminoglutethimide is usually given alone or in combination with metyrapone. In women with breast carcinoma, replacement hydrocortisone must be administered with aminoglutethimide to prevent reflex ACTH hypersecretion from overcoming adrenal inhibition. Administration of aminoglutethimide to patients with Cushing's syndrome results in improvement in clinical status in 56% of cases. Results are most favorable in patients with adrenal tumors and patients with ectopic ACTH production. Aminoglutethimide and replacement glucocorticoid produce objective disease regression in 32% of unselected postmenopausal patients with metastatic breast carcinoma and in 52% of women whose tumors are
estrogen receptor
positive. Responses are similar in duration and frequency to those produced by surgical adrenalectomy and hypophysectomy and the antiestrogen, tamoxifen.
...
PMID:Aminoglutethimide: review of pharmacology and clinical use. 676 87
Eighty-eight women visiting a gynecologist were tested for an
estrogen receptor
B-variant allele. The women were ethnically and racially homogeneous to a large degree. They were from a suburb of Long Island, and most were white. The 12% incidence of
hypertension
in women with the
estrogen receptor
wild-type allele is comparable to the 13-32% incidence in the general population of women aged 55-64 years. However, the 48% incidence of
hypertension
in women with the
estrogen receptor
B-variant allele is considerably higher than in the general population of women in this age group. We conclude that the presence of the
estrogen receptor
B-variant allele might have increased the prevalence of
hypertension
in the women in this study.
Hypertension
1993 Apr
PMID:Estrogen receptor variant and hypertension in women. 845 45
Estrogen treatment affects the hepatic synthesis and/or secretion of several proteins involved in clinically important pathological processes such as atherosclerosis,
hypertension
, and thrombosis. The endocrine regulation of the
estrogen receptor
(ER) concentration in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes was studied. Human growth hormone (hGH) and dexamethasone (DEX) in combination increased ER concentration 6-fold and ER mRNA levels 2.5-fold. These effects were not significantly different from those observed after treatment with the purely somatogenic bovine growth hormone (GH) in combination with DEX. Treatment with the lactogen ovine prolactin in the presence or absence of DEX did not significantly affect ER or ER mRNA concentrations. Triiodothyronine treatment at the most effective concentration (50 nM) increased ER and ER mRNA levels twofold. Medium supplementation with estradiol (0.1 nM) throughout the experiment did not affect the response to treatment with hGH and DEX. Treatment with high concentrations of ethinylestradiol in combination with hGH and DEX, however, increased the ER level twice as much as hGH and DEX without addition of estradiol or ethinylestradiol, whereas the ER mRNA concentration was the same in both the GH+DEX group and GH+ DEX+ (estradiol or ethinylestradiol) groups. These data indicate the importance of GH in combination with glucocorticoids for the maintenance of ER concentrations in the rat liver. Thyroid hormones may be of some, although minor importance, whereas the data suggest that prolactin is not directly involved in hepatic ER regulation.
...
PMID:Hormonal regulation of the estrogen receptor in primary cultures of hepatocytes from female rats. 938 11
The cardiovascular protective effects of estrogen are known to be mediated by its beneficial effects on lipid metabolism and its direct actions on the vessel wall. The latter can be mediated by a specific receptor for estrogen present on smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells. The gene for the receptor (the classic
estrogen receptor
[ER]) has three known polymorphisms, Pvu II, Xba I, and B-variant polymorphisms, which are reportedly associated with receptor expression and altered receptor function and with some disorders including breast cancer,
hypertension
, and spontaneous abortion. However, the significance of genetic variations of the ER in vascular diseases has not been reported. We have examined the association between coronary artery disease (CAD) and the three polymorphisms in ER. Genotypes (P1/P2, X1/X2, and B-wild type/B-variant type) were determined in 87 men and postmenopausal women with myocardial infarction or angina pectoris whose lesions were confirmed by coronary angiography, as well as from 94 control individuals from the general population with no coronary heart disease and normal resting ECG. For B-variant polymorphism, all individuals examined had B-wild type, which contrasts with the reported allele frequency for B-variant type (0.1) in the white population. Genotype distributions and allele frequencies of Pvu II or Xba I polymorphisms were not significantly different between control subjects and patients (P > .05 for Pvu II or Xba I genotypes; P > .05 for Pvu II or Xba I allele frequencies). When the allele frequencies were analyzed separately by sex, there was still no statistically significant difference for both polymorphisms (P > .05 for men; P > .05 for women). No association was found between the polymorphisms and the angiographic severity of CAD. Total cholesterol, triglyceride, or HDL-cholesterol levels were not significantly different among ER genotypes. These findings suggest that the three polymorphisms in ER are not associated with the prevalence and severity of CAD and that the polymorphisms are unrelated to the serum lipid levels in control subjects and patients.
...
PMID:Genotype distribution of estrogen receptor polymorphisms in men and postmenopausal women from healthy and coronary populations and its relation to serum lipid levels. 940 87
Postmenopausal women (PMW) have increased incidence of cardiovascular disease, and estrogen substitution therapy has been shown to have cardioprotective effects. Since abnormal growth of cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) is associated with
hypertension
and myocardial infarction and estrogen inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) growth, it is feasible that estrogen may attenuate cardiac remodeling by inhibiting CF growth, and this possibility was investigated by using cultured CFs. 17Beta-estradiol and progesterone, but not 17alpha-estradiol, estrone, or estriol, inhibited 2.5% FCS-induced proliferation (DNA synthesis and cell number) and collagen synthesis (3H-proline incorporation) in a concentration-dependent manner and to a similar extent in male and female CFs. Compared to 17beta-estradiol, its metabolites 2-hydroxyestradiol and 2-methoxyestradiol were more potent in inhibiting FCS-induced DNA synthesis, collagen synthesis, and cell proliferation. The inhibitory effects of 17beta-estradiol and its metabolites were enhanced in presence of progesterone and 4-hydroxytamoxifen (high-affinity
estrogen receptor
ligand). Moreover, like estrogens, the dietary phytoestrogens biochanin A and daidzein inhibited FCS-induced growth of CFs. In conclusion, 17beta-estradiol, its metabolites, and progesterone inhibit CF growth in a gender-independent fashion. Moreover, hormone replacement therapy using 17beta-estradiol and progesterone may protect PMW against cardiovascular disease by inhibiting CF growth and cardiac remodeling; whereas estrogens that do not inhibit CF growth may be less effective in protecting PMW against cardiovascular disease. Finally, our studies provide evidence that phytoestrogens inhibit CF growth and may be clinically useful as a substitute for feminizing estrogens in preventing cardiovascular disease in both women and men.
Hypertension
1998 Jan
PMID:17Beta-estradiol, its metabolites, and progesterone inhibit cardiac fibroblast growth. 945 56
-Angiotensinogen is the glycoprotein precursor of 1 of the most potent vasoactive hormones, angiotensin II. Human angiotensinogen gene contains a C/A polymorphism at -20 located between the TATA box and transcriptional initiation site. We show here that when nucleoside A is present at -20, this sequence binds to the
estrogen receptor
. We also show that transcriptional activity of reporter constructs containing human angiotensinogen gene promoter with nucleoside A at -20 is increased on cotransfection of an expression vector containing human
estrogen receptor
-alpha coding sequence in human hepatoma cells (HepG2) followed by estrogen treatment. On the other hand, adenoviral major late transcription factor binds preferentially to this region of the promoter when nucleoside C is present at -20. We also show that reporter constructs containing human angiotensinogen gene promoter with nucleoside C at -20 have increased basal promoter activity on transient transfection in HepG2 cells as compared with reporter constructs with nucleoside A at -20. Our data suggest that C/A polymorphism at -20 may modulate the expression of human angiotensinogen gene in a sex-specific manner.
Hypertension
1999 Jan
PMID:Role of C/A polymorphism at -20 on the expression of human angiotensinogen gene. 993 Oct 90
Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT, EC 2.1.1.6) is a ubiquitous enzyme that is crucial to the metabolism of carcinogenic catechols and catecholamines. Regulation of human COMT gene expression may be important in the pathophysiology of various human disorders including estrogen-induced cancers, Parkinson's disease, depression, and
hypertension
. The gender difference in human COMT activity and variations in rat COMT activity during the estrous cycle led us to explore whether estrogen can regulate human COMT gene transcription. Our Northern analyses showed that physiological concentrations of 17-beta-estradiol (10(-9)-10(-7) M) could decrease human 1. 3-kilobase COMT mRNA levels in MCF-7 cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner through an
estrogen receptor
-dependent mechanism. Two DNA fragments immediately 5' to the published human COMT gene proximal and distal promoters were cloned. Sequence analyses revealed several half-palindromic estrogen response elements and CCAAT/enhancer binding protein sites. By cotransfecting COMT promoter-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter genes with human
estrogen receptor
cDNA and pSV-beta-galactosidase plasmids into COS-7 cells, we showed that 17-beta-estradiol could down-regulate chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activities, and COMT promoter activities dose-dependently. Functional deletion analyses of COMT promoters also showed that this estrogenic effect was mediated by a 280 base pair fragment with two putative half-palindromic estrogen response elements in the proximal promoter and a 323-base pair fragment with two putative CCAAT/enhancer binding protein sites in the distal promoter. Our findings provide the first evidence and molecular mechanism for estrogen to inhibit COMT gene transcription, which may shed new insight into the role of estrogen in the pathophysiology of different human disorders.
...
PMID:Characterization and implications of estrogenic down-regulation of human catechol-O-methyltransferase gene transcription. 1038 81
Captopril (D-3-mercapto-2-methylpropanoyl-L-proline) is an angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, used widely in the treatment of
hypertension
and congestive heart failure. Captopril also inhibits proliferation of a variety of cell types, including several lacking ACE and renin acitvity. We have previously demonstrated that human mammary ductal carcinoma cells are among the cell types whose mitotic activity is inhibited by captopril. In those cells, captopril also reduces
estrogen receptor
(ER) and increases progesterone receptor (PR) concentrations. The present study evaluated the mechanism of captopril's antiproliferative action in an ER/PR-negative human mammary ductal carcinoma cell line, Hs578T. Cells grown in a 10% serum medium showed negligible changes in the presence of captopril alone. However, in the presence of subphysiologic concentrations of copper salts or copper-loaded ceruloplasmin, captopril caused a dose-dependent reduction in cell number, thymidine incorporation and mitochondrial dehydrogenase activity. In contrast, iron salts and iron-saturated transferrin had no effect on captopril activity. Catalase and horseradish peroxidase nullified the cytotoxic effects of captopril/Cu++, whereas H2O2 mimicked those effects. These data are consistent with the notion of a copper-catalyzed oxidation of captopril, leading to the generation of H2O2 as the cytotoxin to this clinically important cell type.
...
PMID:Mechanism of captopril toxicity to a human mammary ductal carcinoma cell line in the presence of copper. 1051 67
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