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

Hypertensin occurred 24 to 48 hours after resuscitation in 35 of 86 injured patients, who had combined systolic and diastolic hypertensin (150/100 mmHg) for six or more consecutive hours. Plasma volume (PV), RBC volume, extracellular fluid (ECF) volume by the inulin dilution technique, renal plasma flow, glomerular filtration rate, and peripheral renin levels were measured in hypertensive and nonhypertensive patients an average of 40 hours after injury. The hypertensive patients had an average mean arterial pressure (MAP) of 114 mmHg, compared with 95 mmHg in the nonhypertensive patients. The RBC volume and ECF were comparable for both groups, whereas PV was increased in the hypertensive patients (3.6 L vs 3.3 L). Calculated interstitial fluid space (IFS) volume was greater in the nonhypertensive patients, as was the ratio PV/IFS. The MAP in both groups correlated directly with PV/IFS and serum albumin concentrations, and inversely with peripheral renin concentrations. This suggests that postresuscitative hypertension is not due to fluid overload but rather to the fluid maldistribution related to altered IFS compliance as reflected by the increased PV/IFS.
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PMID:Altered interstitial fluid space dynamics and postresuscitation hypertension. 701 68

Measurements of cardiac output, blood volume, plasma renin activity (PRA), serum aldosterone, plasma and urinary catecholamine levels, serum and urinary electrolyte levels, and of transfusion and fluid therapy have been made in eight hypertensive and seven normotensive burned children. Studies were conducted during the acute phase of burn injury when hypertension was first diagnosed and were repeated just before discharge from the hospital. Hypertensive patients perfused at an inappropriately high total peripheral resistance and hypervolemia was demonstrated in the hypertensive patients. No differences could be demonstrated between hypertensive or normotensive patients in PRA, aldosterone, catecholamine, or electrolyte levels. These data indicate that both the hypervolemia and the vasoconstrictor activity of PRA and/or catecholamines are present when hypertension develops in these patients. These data suggest that the renin-angiotension-aldosterone system is directly stimulated as part of the neuroendocrine response to trauma.
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PMID:A pathophysiologic study of the hypertension associated with burn injury in children. 701 27

We studied the effects of systemic venous hypertension (SVH) of 25 cmH2O, with and without fluid overload (100 ml.kg-1.h-1 x 4 h), on the lung water content and pulmonary function of anesthetized dogs. SVH was produced by inflating a balloon in the right atrium. Pulmonary extravascular water (PEW) was measured by gravimetric techniques taking the water content of trapped blood into consideration. Subdivisions of lung volume, pulmonary resistance, dynamic compliance, and the single-breath nitrogen washout curve were performed in a body plethysmograph. Vascular pressures, serum oncotic pressure, and arterial blood gases were also measured. Systemic venous hypertension alone produced no change in lung water content (control PEW = 3.46 +/- 0.16; SVH PEW = 3.44 +/- 0.18 g H2O/g dry tissue, mean +/- SD) or alterations in pulmonary function. Fluid overload alone produced an insignificant increase in PEW (4.24 +/- 0.72 g H2O/g dry tissue) and decreases in vital capacity and functional residual capacity. SVH in combination with fluid overload resulted in a significant increase in lung water (4.78 +/- 1.03 g H2O/g dry tissue) and decreases in functional residual capacity, vital capacity, dynamic compliance, and arterial blood oxygen tension as well as increased pulmonary resistance. We conclude that SVH favors the formation of pulmonary edema under conditions of increased pulmonary transcapillary fluid exchange and may particularly augment airway edema.
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PMID:Effect of systemic venous hypertension on pulmonary function and lung water. 732 59

The work deals with the results of examination of 108 patients in whom venous hypertension was revealed in the absence of organic pathology and who had normal arterial pressure. The clinical picture is described. The authors distinguish a form of primary venous hypertension with or without hypervolemia. Some problems concerning the pathogenesis and treatment are discussed.
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PMID:[Primary venous hypertension as a form of neurocirculatory dystonia (clinical aspects and pathogenetic and treatment problems]. 744 75

The blood pressure is the resultant of the relationship of three different factors: cardiac output, peripheral vascular resistance and blood volume. The etiology of hypertension in children is variable; however increased peripheral vascular resistance (renin dependent) and increased blood volume (sodium dependent), play a role in a variable degree in most cases of hypertension. Increased blood volume is the predominant factor in some cases of (acute glomerulonephritis), whereas vasoconstriction is the most important mechanism in others (renal segmental hypoplasia). Therefore, it becomes important to evaluate each individual case in order to approach therapy. Diuretics are indicated in patients with hypertension secondary to hypervolemia, while antihypertensives are more useful in cases with vasoconstriction. The scheme of treatment for acute hypertensive crises followed in the Department of Nephrology of the Hospital Infantil de Mexico is presented by the authors. A review of the most commonly antihypertensives used in Pediatrics is made, regarding mainly mechanisms of action, indications, recommended doses and side effects.
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PMID:[Treatment of arterial hypertension in children]. 747 Feb 63

Eleven DCM patients who were found to have significant background hypertension from an echocardiographic assessment of the role of hypertension in DCM form the subject of this follow-up study. This was to test the reliability or otherwise of this investigative method which is supposed to identify DCM patients who would be expected to manifest hypertension with traditional anti-heart failure treatment. Results suggest a sensitivity of about 73% and specificity of 36%. It has a false positive potential in young females with the "Zaria-type" peripartum cardiomyopathy where fluid overload and not intrinsic myocardial failure is responsible.
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PMID:Behaviour of blood pressure in dilated cardiomyopathy patients suspected significantly hypertensive at echocardiography. 767 59

We compared plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and cGMP levels during normal pregnancy--a condition characterized by hypervolemia, high cardiac output, and decreased vascular resistance--with postpartum levels and assessed their relation to pregnancy-induced hemodynamic changes. Humoral and hemodynamic variables were measured in healthy women subjects in the supine and upright postures at each trimester of pregnancy and postpartum. Supine plasma ANP was increased throughout pregnancy (32 +/- 5, 21 +/- 3, and 19 +/- 2 versus 15 +/- 1 pmol.L-1, respectively, at each trimester versus postpartum), as was cGMP (8.6 +/- 1, 7.1 +/- 1, and 6.6 +/- 1 versus 5.6 +/- 1 nmol.L-1), and their increments were directly related (r = .68, P < .01). Both ANP and cGMP levels did not differ from postpartum levels after subjects stood. Supine stroke volume was initially increased but declined below postpartum levels in late pregnancy (69 +/- 4, 60 +/- 3, and 44 +/- 3 versus 58 +/- 4 mL.m-2), whereas after subjects stood it was always higher (56 +/- 3, 58 +/- 3, and 49 +/- 2 versus 44 +/- 2 mL.m-2); thus, stroke volume tended to increase in response to standing in late pregnancy. Supine cardiac index had a similar trend, which was opposite to that of total peripheral resistance (1213 +/- 62, 1265 +/- 79, and 1729 +/- 89 versus 1654 +/- 92 dyne.s-1.cm-5.m-2).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hypertension 1995 Apr
PMID:Atrial natriuretic peptide and hemodynamic changes during normal human pregnancy. 772 8

The role of fluid overload in the pathogenesis of hypertension in hemodialysis patients is not clear. One problem is the lack of techniques to determine the fluid state. Recent new noninvasive techniques have become available which make it possible to accurately determine the dry weight in these patients. Therefore, we studied the influence of interdialytic weight gain on interdialytic blood pressure in 10 normotensive and 10 hypertensive hemodialysis patients without antihypertensive medication. The dry weight was determined with echography of the vena cava. The blood pressure was measured during 2-day and 3-day interdialytic periods using Spacelabs 90207 ambulatory blood pressure monitors. Mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures of the last day of the interdialytic period were compared with mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures of the 1st day of the interdialytic period. Although the interdialytic weight gain in the normotensive and hypertensive patients was greater during the 3-day than during the 2-day interdialytic period, the interdialytic systolic and diastolic blood pressure changes were not greater during the 3-day period. Also, the interdialytic blood pressure rise did not correlate significantly with weight gain, neither in the normotensive nor in hypertensive patients. No significant interdialytic blood pressure changes were found between the normotensive and the hypertensive patients. We conclude that fluid overload does not seem to play a major role in interdialytic blood pressure control in normotensive and hypertensive hemodialysis patients.
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PMID:Influence of interdialytic weight gain on blood pressure in hemodialysis patients. 786 85

A prospective study over two and a half years analysed 48 children of acute renal failure requiring dialysis therapy. The mean age was 3 years 9 months and M:F ratio was 1.8:1. Renal causes predominated, accounting for 65%, with prerenal and postrenal causes responsible for 19% and 16%. Acute glomerulonephritis was seen in 13 cases, hypovolemia secondary to gastroenteritis in 9, tubular necrosis in 6, and hemolytic uremic syndrome in 5. A delay in seeking medical attention was present in as many as 48%, and was especially common with female children. All had oligo-anuria, with fluid overload present in 18.7%, hypertension in 23%, hypotension in 16.6%, neuropsychiatric manifestations in 20%, and infections in 47%. Peritoneal dialysis was carried out in 95%, and hemodialysis in 6.2%. Urine output and renal function returned to normal within 1.5 to 16 days (mean 5.9) in the survivors. Of the 28 who survived, 19 were followed up regularly for a mean of 4.25 months and all except one had normal renal function. Factors associated with a poor prognosis included female sex, age < 1 year, neurological manifestations, and hypotension, though these were not statistically significant. Mortality in our series was 41.5%. While etiological factors have shown changing trends, mortality still remains high inspite of dialysis.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in children requiring dialysis therapy. 789 66

The majority of hemodialysis patients die from cardiovascular disease. However, the contribution of myocardial infarction to mortality is relatively minor, despite the fact that coronary artery disease is common in uremic patients. Hypertension seems to be the major risk factor for the development of atherosclerosis in hemodialysis patients, although abnormalities of the lipid spectrum, characterized by an increase in triglycerides and very low density lipoprotein levels and a decrease in high-density lipoprotein levels, are frequent in hemodialysis patients. The existence of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy is a serious risk factor for morbidity and mortality in hemodialysis patients. LV hypertrophy can present as a dilated cardiomyopathy or as concentric or asymmetric septal hypertrophy. Loss of myocardial contractility by coronary artery disease or carnitine deficiency can lead to systolic LV dysfunction with a compensatory dilated cardiomyopathy. Furthermore, the presence of a hypercirculation in uremic patients, resulting from anemia, the arteriovenous fistula, or fluid overload, can also lead to a dilated cardiomyopathy. Systolic LV dysfunction occurs when the increase in LV wall thickness is inadequate for the increase in LV radius, which might be caused by increased levels of parathyroid hormone. LV diastolic dysfunction, resulting from an increase in LV mass due to the effects of hypertension or to uremic interstitial fibrosis, can both lead to pulmonary edema and hypotensive periods during hemodialysis and is a severe risk factor for mortality in hemodialysis patients. Therefore, in uremic patients, anemia should be corrected and hypertension adequately treated early in the development of renal failure. Chronic fluid overload should be prevented by adequate estimation of optimal dry weight.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cardiovascular aspects in renal disease. 792 20


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