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

We report a 57-year-old male patient with adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH)-independent Cushing's syndrome and long-standing hypertension. Both abdominal computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging revealed bilateral adrenal enlargement with the presence of a tumour in the left adrenal. Marked uptake of 131I-6 beta-iodomethyl-19-norcholesterol was observed only in the left adrenal gland. Left adrenalectomy and biopsy of the right adrenal gland were subsequently performed. Histological examination revealed the presence of an adrenocortical adenoma in the left adrenal with multiple adrenocortical nodules in both left and right non-neoplastic adrenals. Peri- and intraadrenal arteries and arterioles demonstrated marked arteriosclerotic vascular changes. Immunoreactivity for several steroidogenic enzymes was present in the tumour and markedly diminished in the non-neoplastic adrenals. This patient with Cushing's adenoma is considered to have developed adrenocortical nodules in the nonneoplastic adrenal possibly as a result of localized compensatory overgrowth of adrenocortical cells in response to ischaemic changes due to arteriopathy. When examining patients with Cushing's syndrome and bilateral adrenal enlargement, the possibility of concomitant adenoma and adrenocortical nodule formation should also be considered in the differential diagnosis
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PMID:Adrenal adenoma with bilateral adrenocortical nodular change in a patient with Cushing's syndrome. 937 62

In this article, we describe pulmonary hypertension in two men (31 and 43 years of age) with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection who were examined at Mayo Clinic Rochester. Among 88 reported cases (including the two current ones) of HIV- or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)-associated pulmonary hypertension, 61% were male; the age range was 2 to 56 years (mean, 32). Dyspnea was the usual initial symptom. Of the 74 patients in whom pulmonary artery pressure was recorded or calculated by echocardiography, systolic pressures ranged from 49 to 118 mm Hg (mean, 68). Of the 33 cases in which lung tissue was evaluated microscopically, 28 (85%) were of the plexogenic variant of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Of the other five cases examined histologically, three consisted of thrombotic pulmonary arteriopathy (one was due to recurrent thromboembolism, and the other two were due to in situ thrombosis), and two were of pulmonary venoocclusive disease. No correlation existed between either CD4 counts or a history of pulmonary infections and the development of pulmonary hypertension. In 15 of the 88 patients (17%), confounding factors for hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease were present, including coexisting liver disease in 13 and coagulation abnormalities in 2. In 83% of the patients, the development of pulmonary hypertension seems to have been related primarily to the chronic HIV infection. Pulmonary hypertension was more rapidly progressive in patients with HIV or AIDS than in those with primary pulmonary hypertension; the reported time intervals between onset of symptoms and diagnosis were 6 months and 30 months, respectively. The 1-year survival rate for patients with HIV and pulmonary hypertension was 51%, based on the follow-up data compiled from the 63 patients in whom it was described; this compares with a 1-year survival rate of 68% for patients with primary pulmonary hypertension. Death was considered a direct consequence of pulmonary hypertension in 29 (76%) of the 38 fatal cases.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection and pulmonary hypertension: two new cases and a review of 86 reported cases. 944 76

Moyamoya disease is an occlusive intracranial arteriopathy with abnormal cerebral vascular collateral networks. Although this disease is known to be associated with stenosis of extracranial arteries, such as the renal artery, a case associated with stenoses of the coronary and renal arteries has not been reported. We described here a 23-year-old man who had effort angina, renovascular hypertension, and asymptomatic moyamoya disease. Arterioangiography revealed bilateral occlusion of the intracranial carotid arteries and stenoses in the left coronary artery and the left renal artery.
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PMID:Asymptomatic moyamoya disease associated with coronary and renal artery stenoses--a case report. 955 34

Stenotic aorto-arteriopathy is an uncommon vascular lesion characterized by segmental arterial stenoses. We reviewed the experience with several management algorithms to define the most effective management course. The clinical records of 14 pediatric patients with acquired SAA who presented over a 16-year period were reviewed. Most patients presented with a mid-thoracoabdominal coarctation and were diagnosed with Takayasu arteritis. Differentiating between Takayasu arteritis and fibromuscular dysplasia was difficult on clinical grounds or by angiography. Medical management of the end-organ disease and renovascular hypertension was only palliative. Selective percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty of the stenotic renal arteries had only transient benefits; renal autotransplantation had slightly better success. Dilation of stenosed aortic segments with balloon-expandable endovascular stents and subsequent renal autotransplantation proved useful. Distinguishing SAA resulting from fibromuscular dysplasia caused by Takayasu arteritis in the chronic vaso-occlusive phase may be unnecessary for effective treatment. Therapy should focus on interventions to minimize the end-organ damage caused by the vaso-occlusive manifestations of the disorders.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of stenotic aorto-arteriopathy in childhood. 962 96

Postmortem examination of the lungs of a patient with advanced AIDS who had developed pulmonary arterial hypertension late in the course of the illness demonstrated extensive cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in endothelial cells of the lung microvasculature. Enlarged CMV-infected endothelial cells were present in virtually all histologic sections of the lungs, protruded into and compromised the lumens of the small vessels they lined, and were estimated by image cytometry of immunohistochemically stained sections to comprise 0.8% of the total lung tissue volume. Comparison with experimental microvascular embolization studies suggests that this amount of compromise of the microvascular luminal area of the lung is sufficient to elevate pulmonary arterial pressure significantly. Pathologic features in this case differed from both the plexogenic arteriopathy seen in previously reported cases of AIDS-associated primary pulmonary hypertension and the usual form of CMV pneumonitis in AIDS in which alveolar epithelial cells are the predominant site of infection.
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PMID:Microvascular cytomegalovirus endothelialitis of the lung: a possible cause of secondary pulmonary hypertension in a patient with AIDS. 967 94

Sneddon syndrome is a systemic non inflammatory arteriopathy characterized by the association of livedo reticularis, thrombotic cerebrovascular disease, coronary artery disease and hypertension. Middle age females are usually affected. It should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute ischemic attacks in younger patients. It has been related to the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Treatment is based on control of hypertension and cardiovascular risk factors along with antiplatelet agents. Two cases meeting the clinical criteria outlined above are reported.
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PMID:[Sneddon syndrome. Presentation of 2 cases]. 972 83

The emergence of sensitive techniques for brain imaging has drawn attention to the occurrence of diffuse or multifocal changes affecting the cerebral white matter. The white matter changes are usually termed periventricular leukoencephalopathy, or leukoaraiosis. Microscopic studies of affected areas in the deep white matter have shown mostly demyelination, reactive gliosis, and arteriolosclerosis, proportional to the degree of radiologic changes. Yet, many other disease conditions need to be ruled out. Risk factors for ischemic leukoaraiosis include arterial hypertension, a history of stroke, and age. In the hereditary disorder CADASIL (cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy), severe white matter changes occur in the absence of hypertension. In "ordinary" cases of leukoaraiosis, genetic factors might similarly determine the effect of risk factors on the aging brain and might explain, for example, why not all patients with severe hypertension develop leukoaraiosis. Not surprisingly, diffuse demyelination affects cognitive function. Although reduced speed of mental processes is the most characteristic sign, attention, concentration, and verbal and visual memory are also affected. Most importantly, less severe forms of cognitive impairment represent a silent and perhaps largely preventable epidemic among aged or even middle-aged subjects. They live independently, but mentally they perform on a level well below their previous capacities. Although being "a bit odd" does not lead to hospital admissions, it seriously affects quality of life of a large part of the community. Moderate grades of leukoaraiosis constitute a major public health problem and deserve the attention of the scientific community.
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PMID:Leukoaraiosis and vascular dementia. 974 23

One of the major targets of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) is the placenta, the evolution of which during pregnancy has been well documented. Histopathological findings are related to gestational age, and several physiologic and pathologic alterations that occur during its development. The major findings in placentae from aPL positive patients are thrombosis, acute atherosis, a decreased number of syncytio-vascular membranes, increased number of syncytial knots and obliterative arteriopathy. These findings are not specific to the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and sometimes do not correlate with the fetal outcome. Histopathological study of placentae may elucidate mechanisms of action of aPL in fetal loss and other obstetric complications. In addition, it may assist in the investigation of the differential diagnosis between APS and pregnancy-induced hypertension. Immunohistochemical studies of local placental proteins contribute to this differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Placental pathology in antiphospholipid syndrome. 981 79

Epidemiologic studies indicate that hyperglycaemia is responsible for microangiopathy, but that its role in macroangiopathy is more controversial. The relative risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) is 2- to 3-fold greater for diabetic men and 3- to 5-fold greater for diabetic women. It is greater for lower limb arteriopathy (4- to 6-fold) and amputations (10- to 20-fold). Although relative risk is rather constant for different populations, absolute CHD risk depends on other risk factors and the rate of risk in the non-diabetic population. Yet hyperglycaemia is also a causal factor for CHD risk, as demonstrated in cohort studies of Type 1 diabetic patients without diabetic glomerulopathy or any associated CHD risk factors, and especially in diabetic Pima Indians who are genetically protected against hypercholesterolaemia and hypertension. Finally, according to WESDR and UKPDS data, the 10-year risk of cardiovascular mortality increases by 10% for every 1% increase in HbA1c value. Hyperglycaemia can be linked to atherogenesis through several pathways: gluco-oxidation of the extracellular matrix inducing accelerated atherosclerosis, endothelial dysfunction, with a decreased production or inactivation of NO, a thrombogenic tendency, with increase in PAI1, Willebrandt factor and platelet aggregation, and last (but not least) dyslipidaemia subsequent to lipoprotein glycooxidation and increased production of VLDL. Hyperglycaemia was associated with hyperlipoproteinaemia and high plasma triglyceride levels, low plasma HDL levels and high plasma levels of small and dense LDL in three high risk populations: diabetic women, Asian migrants, and the Finnish population of Kupsio. Moreover, impaired glucose tolerance appears to be a CHD risk marker indicative of insulin resistance apparently responsible for atherosclerosis related to an association of CHD risk factors rather than to hyperinsulinaemia. The precedence of insulin resistance over onset of Type 2 diabetes is consistent with the existence, at diagnosis, of clinical complications of atherosclerosis in 20% of cases, as confirmed in the UKPDS study. Finally, though blood glucose control by sulphonylureas and insulin does not appear to be deleterious, these drugs have not shown their efficacy in reducing macrovascular adverse events in Type 2 diabetes, either because the cumulative incidence of events is inadequate (DCCT) or the efficacy of long-term hypoglycaemic effects is not apparent (UKPDS). Moreover, these studies have shown that exogenous as well as endogenous hyperinsulinaemia can lead to increase in weight, with potentially atherogenic android fat distribution. In conclusion, though the correlation between hyperglycaemia and microangiopathy is linear and well-established worldwide (with every 1% increase or decrease in HbA1c resulting in a 30% increase or decrease in microangiopathic events), the same is not true for macroangiopathy, whose prevalence is variable among populations. Thus, CHD mortality due to diabetes is 5-fold lower in France than in Finland, though the Monica study indicates a disparity within the French community.
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PMID:[Epidemiology of cardio-vascular complications of diabetes]. 1042 88

Color Doppler sonography is a performant method to detect direct signs of renal artery stenosis with a feasibility rate superior to 90%. The reliability of the method, evaluated with regard to the angiography as reference method, varies, according to the authors, between 80 and 90% with a sensitivity and a specificity between 85-90%. The investigation is above all dedicated to a population where prevalence of renal artery stenosis is high: hypertensive patient with lower limb arteriopathy, or with impairing of the renal function under angiotensin convertase inhibitor, or with hypertension resistant to a multi-therapy, young woman hypertension. The success of the method requires a trained operator, a modern equipment and a precise methodology: a fasting patient, patient positioning adapted to the spectral signal recording, peak velocity measurements at the anatomical sites of stenosis (ostium, first centimeters). Investigation length does not exceed 20 minutes. The exploration is totally atraumatic and does not require any contrast injection.
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PMID:[Arterial hypertension of renovascular origin. The value of color Doppler ultrasonography in the detection of stenosis of the renal artery]. 1052 18


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