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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To study the possible impairment of 11 beta-hydroxysteroid-dehydrogenase in patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
, urinary excretion rates of the four main glucocorticoid-metabolites, tetrahydrocortisol, tetrahydrocortisone, allotetrahydrocortisol and allotetrahydrocortisone were determined by capillary gas chromatography in 22 patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
with (N = 15) and without (N = 7)
hypertension
, but without hemodialysis treatment. Whereas the sum of all 41 steroid metabolites determined by capillary gas chromatography was reduced (p less than 0.001) in patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
as compared with 22 healthy individuals, the relative contribution of the four glucocorticoid metabolites to total steroid excretion was similar in patients with renal insufficiency (22 +/- 12%) and in healthy subjects (20 +/- 5%). However, the excreted amount of tetrahydrocortisol exceeded that of tetrahydrocortisone in all but 3 (normotensive) patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
, but only in one healthy subject resulting, in patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
, in a ratio of tetrahydrocortisone vs tetrahydrocortisone of 0.7 +/- 0.4 (hypertensive patients 0.5 +/- 0.2; normotensive patients 1.1 +/- 0.4; controls 1.9 +/- 0.9, p less than 0.001 vs patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
). This ratio of tetrahydrocortisone/tetrahydrocortisol showed a correlation with serum concentrations of creatinine (p less than 0.001). These results provide indirect proof of an impaired conversion of cortisol to cortisone in moderate renal insufficiency and may suggest a relationship with the
hypertension
frequently seen in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Impaired conversion of cortisol to cortisone in chronic renal insufficiency--a cause of hypertension or an epiphenomenon? 189 33
Changes in renal function induced by protein intake are thought to reflect evolutionary adaptation of the kidney. Excess dietary proteins over long periods may increase normal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate, requiring the continuous use of outer cortex's reserve glomeruli. According to the hyperfiltration theory, pressures and flows in outer cortical glomeruli contribute to continuous intrarenal capillary
hypertension
and predispose healthy people to progressive glomerular sclerosis and deterioration of renal function. Pressures and flows associated with the response to renal disease in turn may accelerate the development of sclerosis, leading to even more rapid loss of renal function. Restriction of dietary protein (less than or equal to 0.6 g/kg per day) and/or phosphorus seems to slow the rate of loss of renal function in patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
. Evidence for the role of lipids in the progression of renal disease is not clear. All of these dietary factors possibly play a role in the progression of renal disease; the relative importance of each factor varies, depending on the pathogenesis, stage, and mechanism of progression of the disease. Findings indicate that nutrition therapy can decrease rate of deterioration of renal function in patients with chronic renal diseases.
...
PMID:Effect of diet on progression of chronic renal disease. 191 49
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system appears to play an important initiating role in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
in patients with autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). Therefore, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors would appear to be appropriate therapy for
hypertension
in such patients. However, because ADPKD is a bilateral disorder, ACE-inhibitor therapy may worsen renal function, as occurs in patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis. We describe eight episodes of reversible acute renal deterioration in five patients with ADPKD, massive renal involvement, and
chronic renal insufficiency
. In all cases, ACE-inhibitor therapy either predisposed the patient to or precipitated the acute event. Two of the patients who had acute renal failure while receiving ACE-inhibitor therapy experienced a recurrence when rechallenged with such therapy. Furthermore, patients receiving combined therapy with an ACE inhibitor and a diuretic and patients who experience a cyst hemorrhage while receiving ACE inhibitor therapy are also at risk for reversible renal dysfunction. Caution is therefore recommended in using ACE inhibitors to treat
hypertension
in patients with ADPKD who are at high risk because of compromised renal function and massive cystic involvement.
...
PMID:Reversible renal failure associated with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in polycystic kidney disease. 159 54
The long-term effects of converting enzyme inhibitors and calcium channel blockers on proteinuria and the progression of renal disease in patients with
hypertension
and
chronic renal insufficiency
are not well established. We have studied the long-term effects of treating
hypertension
with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, enalapril, and a calcium channel blocker, nicardipine, on urinary albumin excretion (UAE) and on renal function in 16 patients with
hypertension
and
chronic renal insufficiency
(creatinine clearance ranging between 17 and 62 ml/min). After 1 year of treatment, these agents caused a similar decrease in blood pressure. Only enalapril, however, caused a significant decrease in UAE (from 641 +/- 98 to 292 +/- 47 mg/24 h, p less than 0.01), whereas UAE did not change in the group treated with nicardipine (675 +/- 78 vs. 601 +/- 75 mg/24 h). Creatinine clearance at the beginning of the study was similar in the group treated with enalapril and in the group treated with nicardipine (35 +/- 3.6 vs. 40 +/- 4.1 ml/min). After 1 year of follow-up, creatinine clearance remained unchanged in both groups of patients. These studies demonstrate that both enalapril and nicardipine can effectively reduce blood pressure in patients with
hypertension
and
chronic renal insufficiency
. Enalapril but not nicardipine, however, appears to reduce urinary albumin excretion in these patients. Whether the reduction in UAE has any significant impact on the progression of renal disease remains to be established.
...
PMID:Long-term effects of enalapril and nicardipine on urinary albumin excretion in patients with chronic renal insufficiency: a 1-year follow-up. 195 74
Renal injury associated with the intrarenal reflux (IRR) of urine that is either infected, under high pressure, or both, is a major cause of severe
hypertension
during childhood and adolescence and of
chronic renal insufficiency
in patients less than 30 years of age. Many, but not all, adolescent and adult patients with reflux nephropathy (RN) give a history of urinary tract infection (UTI) or unexplained fevers in infancy or early childhood, when the kidney is thought to be at greatest risk of injury. Although vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) is observed more commonly in infants than children with UTI, it is rare in uninfected patients at any age and should never be considered a normal finding during human development. Renal scarring may not be obvious in radiographic or radionuclear studies to medical management alone, no definite benefit of one over the other was observed, regardless of the grade of VUR. Moreover, progressive renal injury in scarred kidneys has been noted even after VUR had been corrected, when infection had been prevented, and while
hypertension
had been controlled satisfactorily. Focal glomerular sclerosis, a lesion found in patients with proteinuria and RN, has been identified not only in scarred kidneys, but also may be seen in contralateral, unscarred kidneys without VUR, which might suggest a humoral factor or, perhaps, a hyperfiltration phenomenon. RN is one of the most frequent causes of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in children, adolescents, and young adults, which is potentially preventable. However, prevention will depend on early identification of patients at risk--infants and young children after the first UTI and siblings of patients with VUR--aggressive and effective treatment of UTI, minimizing intravesical pressure, and education of patients, parents, and physicians.
...
PMID:Vesicoureteric reflux and renal injury. 202 50
The index of corticomedullary differentiation (CMD) was investigated for the first time in 109 patients with different forms of arterial
hypertension
(AH). Impairments of CMD were related to AH duration, malignancy and to the severity of renal pathology. CMD was disturbed in all the patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
, renal artery occlusion, small kidney, and with combined vascular parenchymatous pathologies. The data obtained have demonstrated a possibility of early preclinical detection of renal structural and functional impairments. The index of CMD may be of prognostic value.
...
PMID:[The clinical evaluation of corticomedullary differentiation disorders on magnetic resonance tomograms of the kidneys in patients with arterial hypertension]. 206 78
Measurement of exchangeable sodium by isotope dilution is a relatively simple, reliable method for the determination of body sodium contents, which can be used in the clinical practice without significant health hazard to the patient. When computed to body surface area, the values for exchangeable sodium can be compared in patients of different body build. Exchangeable sodium may be variably increased in different clinical conditions associated with
hypertension
, thus increased sodium contents of the body is of major importance in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
caused by all forms of mineralocorticoid excess, and in the majority of patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
. In several endocrine disorders, e. g., acromegaly, hypothyroidism, increased sodium space does not play any significant part in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
. In diabetes mellitus, exchangeable sodium may be increased already prior to the development of
hypertension
, however it is still a matter of debate whether this abnormality is involved in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
in these patients. It seems now beyond any doubt that body sodium is normal in patients with essential hypertension, including those with the low renin form of the disease; nevertheless, some data indicate that blood pressure may be volume dependent in elderly patients with essential hypertension.
...
PMID:[The role of exchangeable sodium content of the body in cases of hypertension of various etiology]. 219 11
Seventy patients, aged 1-20 years, were seen at Jordan University Hospital with
high blood pressure
(BP) over a 3-year period. BP values ranged from 140 to 230 mmHg for systolic pressure and from 90 to 130 mmHg for diastolic pressure. Essential hypertension was seen in only 6 patients (8.6%); secondary hypertension (n = 64 or 91.4%) was due to renal parenchymal diseases (RPD) in 46 patients (65.7%), reno-vascular lesions in 8 (11.4%), renal transplantation in 5 (7.2%), teenage pregnancy in 4 (5.7%), and phaeochromocytoma in 1 patient (1.4%). The aetiologies of RPD were as follows: end-stage renal disease requiring dialysis in 14 patients, acute glomerulonephritis in 14, idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in 10,
chronic renal insufficiency
in 5, and polycystic kidney in 3 patients. Surgical cure of
hypertension
was achieved in 5 of the children with reno-vascular lesions and in the patient with phaeochromocytoma.
...
PMID:Hypertension in Jordanian children: a retrospective analysis of 70 cases. 224 23
We describe 3 patients with painful intraarticular knee effusions composed of a viscous milky white suspension of monosodium urate crystals, in the absence of any cellular component. Two patients presented with acute bilateral knee pain. One patient presented with unilateral knee pain of gradual onset. All 3 patients had a history of ethanol abuse. Two patients had a history of gout. Two patients had
chronic renal insufficiency
,
hypertension
, and congestive heart failure. One patient had alcoholic cirrhosis. Two patients' pain responded to colchicine. One patient's discomfort was relieved only by repeated arthrocentesis. We conclude that intraarticular free urate can cause painful joints in the absence of an apparent inflammatory response.
...
PMID:Intraarticular noninflammatory free urate suspension (urate milk) in 3 patients with painful joints. 235 87
Antihypertensive drugs have disparate effects on renal haemodynamics, tubular function, plasma electrolytes, and hormonal responses. Calcium entry blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are unique in that they may increase glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal blood flow in patients with
hypertension
. Both classes of drugs are distinctive in that they prevent salt retention because of their inhibitory effect on tubular sodium reabsorption. In addition to these attributes, which are desirable in terms of lowering systemic blood pressure, these 2 classes of drugs exert important intrarenal effects which may participate in limiting the progression of renal disease. ACE inhibitors have been shown to protect against the development of glomerulosclerosis in various experimental models of renal insufficiency. Importantly, there is emerging evidence from human studies supporting a distinctive beneficial effect of these agents on renal function in patients with
hypertension
, mild
chronic renal insufficiency
and diabetes mellitus. Calcium entry blockers have also been shown to exert some beneficial effect in limiting the progression of experimental kidney disease but neither an improvement in glomerular sclerosis nor a decrease in proteinuria have been clearly documented. At present ACE inhibitors appear the most attractive agents in terms of arresting the progression of renal disease. Acute deterioration in renal function may occur following the administration of ACE inhibitors, calcium entry blockers, and beta-blockers. This complication should be considered in every patient on antihypertensive therapy who suffers an unexplained deterioration in renal function. In particular, the sudden deterioration in renal function following initiation of therapy with an ACE inhibitor is a clue to the possible presence of bilateral renal artery stenosis or stenosis of a solitary functioning kidney. Renal damage may also occur in patients with unilateral renal artery stenosis even though total (2-kidney) GFR may not be appreciably reduced. In this setting, a captopril renal scan with hippuran and diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) provides physiological information regarding the renal blood flow and GFR of each kidney. In patients with unilateral renal artery stenosis the impact of ACE inhibitor therapy on GFR may be discerned by the use of the DTPA scan, which may demonstrate a reduction in GFR in the stenotic kidney that is not apparent by evaluation of total kidney GFR. This suggests that despite adequate control of systemic blood pressure and unchanged plasma creatinine progressive kidney damage in the stenotic kidney ensues.
...
PMID:Renal effects of antihypertensive drugs. 266 38
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