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

The new onset of hypertension in pregnancy most often reflects preeclampsia, underlying chronic hypertension, chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia, or gestational hypertension, and less commonly is due to substance abuse or any of several rare conditions. The term "pregnancy-induced hypertension" applies to all of these categories, but because it does not adequately and specifically define the patient's condition, its use therefore is discouraged. Attention to accurate identification of the specific type of "pregnancy-induced hypertension" is important since treatment varies depending on the diagnosis and the stage of pregnancy from observation with gestational hypertension to active intervention in the patient with chronic hypertension and superimposed preeclampsia. Both perinatal and maternal outcomes are dependent also on the categorization of the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. Efforts to selectively identify, correctly diagnose, and optimally treat each hypertensive mother should help to achieve the best possible outcome with the least maternal risk.
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PMID:New-onset hypertension in the pregnant patient. 778 37

Objective of the paper was to determine the fetal heart rate (FHR) changes that occur in preterm fetuses whose mothers have suffered antepartum bleeding, versus uncomplicated controls. Over a 12-year span, 91 patients with significant antenatal bleeding (bleeding requiring inhospital observation) were examined and compared to 75 controls with uncomplicated normal pregnancies. None of the women were in labor and all were evaluated at 25-37 weeks' gestation. Excluded were: patients with any other complication (i.e., premature rupture of membranes, intrauterine growth retardation, diabetes, hypertension, collagen vascular disease, postuterine surgery, substance abuse and twins). Analysis of the FHR tracings included baseline heart rate, long-term FHR variability, and number and amplitude of FHR accelerations in 20-min segments. There was no difference in baseline heart rate in the preterm fetuses of pregnancies complicated by antepartum bleeding versus controls. However, the parameters associated with FHR reactivity (number of accelerations in 20 min, and amplitude of accelerations) were higher to a statistically significant degree in fetuses of pregnancies complicated by antenatal bleeding than in controls. Fetuses of mothers suffering antenatal bleeding exhibited significant higher rates of reactive FHR patterns at earlier gestational ages than did controls. In conclusion, there is a significant increase in FHR reactivity in pregnancies in which significant antenatal bleeding occurs, suggesting a probable acceleration in fetal central nervous system maturation in these fetuses.
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PMID:Antenatal bleeding and fetal heart rate. 789 Feb 47

The authors determined an unusual cause of renovascular hypertension in a 29-year-old man with the recent onset of hypertension and a history of intravenous substance abuse. Captopril renal scintigraphy (CRS) demonstrated bilateral renogram changes and a decrease in estimated global glomerular filtration rate. The abdominal aortogram failed to show renal artery or branch artery stenosis. Magnified selective views of the kidneys demonstrated extensive, bilateral, small vessel interlobar disease. Two major points are illustrated in this patient. First, in the presence of positive CRS results and a history of renovascular hypertension, bilateral, selective, magnified renal angiography should be performed in accordance with standard abdominal aortic views when large vessel disease is not detected. Second, although surgical intervention is not an option in such patients, finding the cause of hypertension is important for patient management.
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PMID:Positive captopril renal scintigraphy in a patient with extensive bilateral renal interlobar arterial disease. 795 56

The patient referred for liver transplantation typically has complications from a progressive, irreversible liver injury. Less traditional complications of end-stage liver disease, such as bone disease and some hepatobiliary malignancies, may also prompt referral. However, there are contraindications to liver transplantation, such as metastatic malignancy and persistent substance abuse. Each patient should be referred as early as possible. The evaluation process includes a complete physical examination and social and psychologic evaluations. If transplantation is agreed upon, the patient is listed by clinical status and enters a waiting period for a donor liver. Following transplantation, the patient is maintained on a regimen of immunosuppressive drugs to prevent allograft rejection. Each patient is also maintained on prophylactic medications, to decrease the risk of opportunistic infection. Many of the postoperative problems in liver transplantation are a result of immunosuppression, either as side effects of the medications used to prevent and control rejection or from the intensity of the resulting immunosuppression. These problems include headaches, systemic hypertension, acute and chronic allograft rejection, renal dysfunction, opportunistic infection with cytomegalovirus or Pneumocystis carinii, disease recurrence, and neoplasia. Routine, long-term care includes systematic clinical follow-up and repetitive blood tests. Communication among the transplant center, the patient, and the referring physician are essential to a successful outcome over the long term.
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PMID:Primary care management of the liver transplant patient. 810 82

The feasibility of on-site primary care services and their use by human immunodeficiency virus HIV-seropositive and seronegative injecting drug users within an outpatient methadone maintenance program are examined. A 16-month prospective study was conducted within an ongoing cohort study of HIV infection at a New York City methadone program with on-site primary care services. The study group consisted of 212 seropositive and 264 seronegative drug injectors. A computerized medical encounter data base, with frequencies of primary care visits and with diagnoses for each visit, was linked to the cohort study data base that contained information on patients' demographic characteristics, serologic status, and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts. Eighty-one percent of the drug injectors in the study voluntarily used on-site primary care services in the methadone program. Those who were HIV-seropositive made more frequent visits than those who were seronegative (mean annual visits 8.6 versus 4.1, P < .001), which increased with declining CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts; 79 percent of those who were seropositive with CD4 counts of less than 200 cells per cubic millimeter received on-site zidovudine therapy or prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, or both. Common primary care diagnoses for patients seropositive for HIV included not only conditions specific to the human immunodeficiency virus but also bacterial pneumonia, tuberculosis, genitourinary infections, asthma, dermatologic disease, psychiatric illness, and complications of substance abuse; those who were seronegative were most frequently seen for upper respiratory infection, psychiatric illness, complications of substance abuse, musculoskeletal disease, hypertension, asthma, and diabetes mellitus. Vaginitis and cervicitis,other gynecologic diseases, and pregnancy were frequent primary care diagnoses among both seropositive and seronegative women.
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PMID:Utilization of on-site primary care services by HIV-seropositive and seronegative drug users in a methadone maintenance program. 839 79

Cocaine use, frequently associated with other substance abuse, is becoming more common in the pregnant patient. These patients are more likely to experience peripartum complications. A case of hypertension and pulmonary oedema in such a patient, possibly triggered by ketamine, is reported. A tumultuous course in the intensive care unit was resolved when the patient's hypertension and sympathetic reactivity were successfully treated with barbiturates. A number of factors supported a diagnosis of barbiturate withdrawal in this patient, its onset also was related temporally to ketamine administration. Hypertension should be considered a sign of acute barbiturate withdrawal. If a history of cocaine use, particularly crack cocaine, is elicited, one should suspect multiple substance abuse and be especially cautious when administering ketamine.
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PMID:Hypertension and pulmonary oedema associated with ketamine administration in a patient with a history of substance abuse. 844 55

Explanations for racial/ethnic disparities in health are varied and complex. This paper reviews the literature to assess the extent to which current disparities are a consequence of racial differences in the social class composition of the US population. We focus this review on African Americans and examine studies that provide information on the effect of race on four outcome measures: infant mortality, hypertension, substance use, and mortality from all-causes. Twenty-three studies were identified that met criteria for inclusion in this review. As expected, most studies provide evidence that socioeconomic conditions are a major factor explaining racial differences in health. Findings, however, vary for the different health indices. Research in the area of substance abuse provides the most consistent evidence that socioeconomic conditions account for observed racial differences. In contrast, studies on infant mortality and hypertension provide a compelling case that the effects of socioeconomic status are important, but not sufficient to explain racial differences. Evidence on mortality from all-causes is equally divided between studies showing no significant race effect and those in which racial differences persist after adjusting for social class. The paper offers possible explanations for the seemingly divergent results and identifies conceptual and methodologic issues for future research seeking to disentangle the complex relations between race, social class, and health.
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PMID:Racial differences in health: not just black and white, but shades of gray. 872 34

Exaggerated intracellular calcium responses to challenges with serotonin (5-HT) have been reported in depression. In our studies, consistent with previous reports, patients with depression exhibited an exaggerated increase in 5-HT-stimulated intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca++]i). Basal cytosolic calcium was elevated in both calcium-free and 1 mM calcium media in depressed patients. the increased responsiveness to 5-HT was seen in both conditions. Patients with schizophrenia and substance abuse did not differ from normal controls. The 5-HT response was correlated with diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.33, p = 0.02): however, this association did not fully account for the exaggerated [Ca++]i responses in the depressed group. These findings suggest that exaggerated increases in [Ca++]i in response to serotonin are a characteristic of depressed patients not shared with schizophrenic and substance abuse patients. The relationship of depression to hypertension, two conditions that share abnormalities of calcium homeostasis, warrants further study.
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PMID:Serotonin-induced increases in platelet cytosolic calcium concentration in depressed, schizophrenic, and substance abuse patients. 873 58

This article examines the community process and data results of a health assessment conducted in an urban neighborhood of a middle-size city in Western Massachusetts. It describes the four-stage development process of the Health Assessment Project (HAP), a collaboration of the UMASS School of Public Health faculty and students, community based organizations and youth residents: (1) planning with a contemporary participatory approach, (2) implementing the data collection with traditional survey methodology, (3) tailoring the data analysis for a presentation at a community forum and report, and (4) incorporating the community's reaction to data results. In addition, it presents selected data results on health conditions of individual household members and perceived community health concerns and resources. Salient data results include high rates of chronic health conditions such as asthma and other respiratory problems among residents 0-18, back pain and other musculoskeletal among younger adults 19-54, and high blood pressure and other cardi-circulatory problems among older adults age 55 and older. The three most prevalent perceived community concerns are substance abuse, gangs and drug dealing. Identified community resources include sources of (1) providers of primary care, (2) health information as family/friends and Spanish media, (3) social activity such as churches and schools. Finally, this paper concludes by discussing implications for community health practice.
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PMID:Assessing health in an urban neighborhood: community process, data results and implications for practice. 961 96

The purpose of this study is to examine the correctness of the clinical data from the computerized perinatal database (PC-Log) at a Mayo Health System hospital. This computerized database is used for electronic transmission of birth certificates in Wisconsin. The paper medical record is chosen for the comparison. Random selection of 99 charts from a total of 893 births at a tertiary perinatal center during 1995. Of 310 fields in the database, 32 variables were compared to a hand abstraction of the paper medical record. PC-Log had 100% positive-predictive value (PPV) for eclampsia, prolonged rupture of membranes, pre-existing diabetes, cesarean section, and transports. The sensitivity, specificity, and PPV for other variables (abortion, congenital anomalies, gestational diabetes, maternal hypertension, and maternal employment) showed moderate to high agreement, but was poor for maternal ethanol use during pregnancy. Compared to hand abstraction, PC-Log had no recorded cases of substance abuse, antenatal steroids, hyaline membrane disease, circumcision, maternal and infant length of stay. Means for birth weight 5 minute Apgar scores did not differ, and the correlations were r = 0.982 and r = 0.960. The PC-Log showed good agreement for many but not all the variables of clinical interest.
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PMID:The computerized perinatal database: are the data reliable? 975 14


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