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

The removal of uremic substances in hemofiltration, in contrast to hemodialysis, is achieved by means of a convective transport across membranes of high porosity. Since 1974, more than 30 patients with chronic renal insufficiency have been treated with regular hemofiltration three times weekly for four to five hours each. After completing a pilot study, a controlled study to compare hemodialysis and hemofiltration was initiated during January, 1978. A normalization of blood pressure in patients with severe hypertension, and remarkable stability of the circulatory system, even after dehydration in patients who had hypotension in spite of fluid overload, could be demonstrated. Hemofiltration is preferred, especially in older patients with cardiovascular or cerebrovascular problems, because of its lower frequency of hypotensive episodes compared to dialysis. An important aim--the miniaturization of the artificial kidney--has not yet been achieved, however, because of the necessity for an extensive monitoring system for the exact proportioning of the sterile substitution fluid. First results in the application of a fluid regeneration system consising of a charcoal cartridge and a bioelectric cell, for degradation of urea, are presented.
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PMID:Clinical and technical aspects of hemofiltration. 3 39

Under study were changes of intraorganic blood vessels of the heart and lungs in some experimental defects (open arterial defect, coarctation of the aorta, simultaneous existence of these two defects, stenosis of the pulmonary trunk, defect of the interatrial septum, triad of Fallot, syndrom of Lutembachet). Morphological data correlated with blood pressure in the pulmonary circulation and cardiac chambers. The complex of compensatory-adaptational mechanisms consisting of comparatively active and passive zones is formed in the heart and lungs. In most cases the changes develop in the vessels already existing. In hypertrophy of the myocardium when there is hypertension and hypervolemia in coronary vessels, sinusoids perform the function of blood reservoir, to a certain degree balancing the blood pressure, and luminar ducts relieve the muscle from excessive blood. The changes in the vascular system of the lung are directly dependent upon the pressure in the pulmonary circulation and the duration of observation. The closing arteries are the most active link in the chain of compensatory-adaptational mechanisms.
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PMID:[Vessels of the heart and lung in some experimental defects]. 12 46

Evidence suggests the following pathogenesis for neurogenic pulmonary edema. The initial phase results from a centrally mediated, massive, sympathetic discharge. This produces intense, generalized, but transient, vasoconstriction with a resultant shift of blood from the high-resistance systemic circulation to the lowresistance pulmonary circulation. Marked increases in pulmonary vascular pressures and marked increases in pulmonary blood volume then produce pulmonary edema because of the hydrostatic effect of increased pulmonary capillary pressure. In addition, pulmonary hypertension and hypervolemia injure pulmonary blood vessels, altering pulmonary capillary permeability and producing lung hemorrhage. After the transient systemic and pulmonary vascular hypertension subside, the patient is left with abnormal pulmonary capillary permeability, so that pulmonary edema persists in the face of normal hemodynamics and normal cardia function.
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PMID:Speculations on neurogenic pulmonary edema (NPE). 17 54

We measured indices of the renin-aldosterone system and body-fluid spaces in 11 adolescents who had received a renal transplant after removal of their own diseased kidneys. None had hypervolemia but 6 had hypertension. Renal angiography revealed greater than 50% luminal occlusion by allograft renal-artery stenosis (RAS) in only the 3 patients who had severe hypertension refractory to conventional medical therapy. Excessive peripheral plasma renin activity (PRA) distinguished these patients from those who had less severe stenosis or normal angiogram, and diuretic stimulation heightened the PRA differences. We conclude that significant allograft RAS does not necessarily act like a typical single-kidney Goldblatt model until after volume depletion. Our findings indicate that peripheral PRA values can be used to assess the degree of graft ischemia clinically. This permits early identification of patients who have severe RAS that probably will be difficult to control medically, and, therefore, should be followed closely with a view of reconstructive vascular surgery before further deterioration of renal function.
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PMID:Allograft renal-artery stenosis: increased peripheral plasma renin activity as an early indicator of uncontrollable hypertension. 36 8

Surgical procedures can be accomplished successfully in patients with uremia provided certain principles of perioperative management are observed. Preoperative dialysis minimizes the biochemical derangements and improves fluid balance, hypertension and hemostasis. Drug schedules are adjusted in consideration of abnormal metabolism in renal disease. Anesthetic management is modified in recognition of potentially adverse or altered activity of anesthetic agents and neuromuscular relaxants. The lightest plane of anesthesia consistent with expeditious operative technique is maintained, since adequate tissue oxygenation is dependent upon increased cardiac output in these invariably anemic patients. Intraoperative hyperventilation sustains the usual compensatory mechanism for uremic metabolic acidosis in the conscious patient, thereby averting increments in serum potassium levels associated with increasing acidosis. Postoperative morbidity may include shunt thrombosis, infection, impaired wound healing, bleeding, pericarditis, pleuritis and pancreatitis. Hypervolemia and hyperkalemia are best managed by early postoperative dialysis. A period of nutritional support using intravenous essential L-amino acids and hypertonic glucose appears promising, especially when gastrointestinal dysfunction exists.
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PMID:Renal failure and the surgeon. 40 28

A case characterized by a dark pigmentation of the skin with an initial hypotension and a lung tuberculosis in the remote anamnesis is described. The skin pigment was formed by lipofuscin and emosiderin, but only the former was found in the liver biopsy. Anyway, the pigment was not melanine and the surrenalic function of the patient was completely normal; therefore, an Addisonism syndrome is excluded. The patient was treated for a very long time with DOCA: this caused hypertension, probably supported by the hypervolemia triggered by the DOCA depending retenction of sodium and water. A sure diagnosis of the case was not made, but an Addisonism syndrome was certainly excluded.
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PMID:[A case of melanoderma erroneously considered to be addisonian]. 43 70

Early experience with the treatment of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes and renal failure by chronic hemodialysis indicated a high mortality and increased incidence of medical complications. Since 1972, a marked improvement in survival and reduction in incidence of complications has been attributed to more rigorous control of fluid overload, hypertension, and blood sugar levels by insulin therapy and careful dietary management. A diet has been developed which combines the diet used by dialysis patients with suitable modifications for the insulin-dependent patient with diabetes. The importance of patient education is stressed in an attempt to improve patient compliance.
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PMID:Dietary management of patients with diabetes treated by hemodialysis. 46 38

Studies of 16 adults with nephrotic edema reveal a spectrum of disease, the extremes of which suggest two different pathophysiologic forms. Patients with the "classic" form--vasoconstriction or hypovolemic nephrosis--have high renin and aldosterone levels that are stimulated rather than suppressed by salt-loading but become lower before steroid diuresis. These patients have minimal lesion disease and, perhaps from diffuse capillary damage, tend to have hypovolemia with renin-induced vasoconstriction. Patients with the second, and heretofore undescribed, form--hypervolemic or overfilling nephrosis--have low renin and aldosterone values that rise normally after sodium depletion. Hypertension, mild renal insufficiency, hypervolemia, and steroid resistance with chronic glomerulonephritis are seen histologically. This form appears volume overloaded from impaired renal sodium excretion. In remission of either type, renin system deviations tend towards normal, but one form does not convert to the other. Renin-sodium profiling may help reveal the two forms and predict steroid responsiveness.
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PMID:Nephrotic syndrome: vasoconstriction and hypervolemic types indicated by renin-sodium profiling. 49 1

In a retrospective survey of renal amyloidosis in a large general hospital, only 7 cases were found. Patients generally presented with nephrotic syndrome and symptoms of fluid overload; hypertension on presentation was unusual. Renal failure was present in 5 out of 7 patients, and uraemia in 3. The disease was secondary in 5 patients and primary in 2, and the prognosis was uniformly bad.
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PMID:Renal amyloidosis in blacks. 50 98

In 25 patients, considered high surgical risks according to clinical criteria, systemic and pulmonary hemodynamic parameters were monitored using a flow-directed pulmonary arterial thermodilution catheter before, during and after major vascular surgery. During and after the operation, hemodynamic complications were observed in 13 patients. The following conditions were dealt with: hypovolemia, increased systemic vascular resistance, and left ventricular failure in hypervolemia and in normovolemia. Tachy-arrhythmias seen in six of the patients were associated with left ventricular failure, hypovolemia or normal hemodynamics. Operation for renovascular hypertension and thoracolaparotomy carried the highest risk. Two of the patients died from primarily surgical complications.
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PMID:Hemodynamic observation in relation to extensive surgical treatment of patients with increased operative risk. 67 47


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