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

Instrumental conditioning techniques were used to obtain objective evidence of differences in behavioral arousal between the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) and the normotensive ancestral Wistar Kyoto (WKY) strain. Subjective emotionality ratings previously indicated that the genetically hypertensive rats were more active and aggressive than their normotensive cousins. In a lengthy series of operant conditioning sessions using a small number of adult female SHR and WKY rats, hyperarousal in the SHR was confirmed by their significantly higher response outputs on either response contingent or time contingent schedules of reinforcement. Conditioned emotionality tests during this series of experiments also suggested hyperarousal and aggressiveness in the SHR, since the fear-conditioned stimulus suppressed bar-pressing in the SHR much less than in the WKY. Further experiments with young prehypertensive SHR rats provided the same evidence of hyperresponsivity in the SHR compared to the WKY strain. Furthermore, these young SHR failed to develop hypertension by the end of the study (14 weeks of age), while their nonconditioned SHR cousins had become clearly hypertensive by the same age. This suggests that factors related to the conditioning methods modified the development of high blood pressure in this animal model of essential hypertension.
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PMID:Lifelong hyperarousal in the spontaneously hypertensive rat indicated by operant behavior. 57 Oct 78

The hypertensive encephalopathy is a syndrome consisting of a sudden elevation of arterial pressure usually preceded by severe headache and followed by convulsions, coma or a variety of transitory cerebral phenomena. The syndrome may complicate acute glomerulonephritis, toxemia of pregnancy and essential or malignant hypertension. Two syndromes must be differentiated from true hypertensive encephalopathy: 1. acute anxiety state with labile hypertension and 2. acute pulmonary edema due to hypertensive heart disease. At least in patients with acute anxiety states, the use of antihypertensive agents is usually not indicated. Since encephalopathy is always accompanied by increased vascular resistance and since clinical experience has demonstrated clearing of the sensorium, cessation of convulsions and release of vasoconstriction following reduction of blood pressure, the primary aim of therapy should be prompt lowering of arterial pressure. The two agents of choice are diazoxide and sodium nitroprusside. Stroke is differentiated from encephalopathy by the persistence of lateralizing signs. The aggressiveness of antihypertensive therapy in this situation depends on the severity of the hypertensive process. Rapid reduction of blood pressure is indicated in patients found to have accelerated hypertension while a more gradual lowering of pressure appears warranted for patients with chronic arterial hypertension and evidence of generalized arteriosclerosis.
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PMID:Management of hypertensive encephalopathy. 72 Oct 56

Although survival after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is the most serious outcome information, the quality of life in living patients is largely determined by the freedom from ischemic events. The return of angina, acute myocardial infarct and sudden death were studied in a large (n = 5880) population of patients undergoing CABG between 1971 and 1987. The freedom from angina pectoris was 95%, 83% and 63% at 1, 5 and 10 years, respectively, after surgery. Early return of angina was related to both procedure incremental risk factors (incomplete revascularization and non-use of the internal mammary (thoracic) artery (IMA) as a conduit) and patient incremental risk factors (aggressiveness of the atherosclerotic process and severity of preCABG symptoms). Late angina return was related to patient risk factors including coexisting factors (hyperlipidemia and hypertension), preCABG symptom severity and gender (female). The freedom from an acute fatal or non-fatal postCABG myocardial infarct was 99%, 96% and 85% at 1, 5 and 10 years after surgery. The incremental risk factors for early infarction were related to incomplete revascularization, but late infarction was related to lipid levels, coexisting diseases (diabetes, positive family history) and non-use of IMA to LAD. The freedom from sudden death was 99.8%, 99% and 97% at 1, 5 and 10 years, respectively, after surgery. The incremental risk factors were dominated by the severity of the left ventricular dysfunction. The freedom from any ischemic event (any of the previous three) was 93%, 79% and 54% at 1, 5 and 10 years, respectively, after surgery. The incremental risk factors included all those cited above for the specific components. Patient-specific predictions validate the influences of these risk factors. They demonstrate that unlike the profound influence of the use of the IMA on survival, there is little benefit of the use of the IMA on return of ischemic events over and above the effect of revascularization per se. The study demonstrates that most patients will experience return of ischemic symptoms within a period of 15-20 years after surgery, but that this is most likely to be return of angina and rarely sudden death.
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PMID:The return of clinically evident ischemia after coronary artery bypass grafting. 168 34

Epidemiologic and clinical evidence derived from studies of human beings suggests that psychosocial phenomena may account for much of the variability in atherosclerosis extent and severity that is unexplained by the "traditional" risk factors (serum lipids, hypertension, and smoking). Animal preparations provide an opportunity to test hypotheses concerning the role of psychosocial phenomena in atherogenesis and to explore the mechanisms by which the effects of such phenomena are mediated. Here we review a relatively large series of studies of cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis), a 5 kg animal having a complex social organization. The data indicate that, among male animals, individual behavior characteristics (social status and aggressiveness), physiologic responsiveness to psychological challenge, and stability of the social environment all interact to affect atherogenesis. Among female animals, individual patterns of aggressiveness appear to influence ovarian function, which in turn affects atherosclerosis. Future advances in the behavioral medicine aspects of atherogenesis are likely to arise through elucidation of the pathophysiologic pathways by which these behavioral responses and characteristics contribute to the events (endothelial injury, smooth muscle cell proliferation, lipid accumulation, calcification, and necrosis) associated with plaque pathogenesis. Such research can be pursued in studies utilizing nonhuman primates as well as in complementary studies involving human subjects.
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PMID:Psychosocial influences on the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis among nonhuman primates. 329 7

As part of the Edgecombe County High Blood Pressure Control Program, we conducted a medical record review within a private group practice to assess the interrelationships between patient characteristics, the process of medical care, and dropping out of care by hypertensive patients. Twenty-one percent of 641 randomly selected hypertensive patients did not have a clinic visit in the year before their record review date. Loss to follow-up varied from 31% for black men to 13% for white women. More intense prior contact with the medical care system was associated with remaining under medical care for all groups by race and sex. Black men were much less likely to have intense contact with the medical care system than the other groups. Physician aggressiveness in the use of drug therapy was associated with a nearly 40% reduction in the risk of being lost to follow-up. These findings suggest that patient characteristics and several factors that reflect the process of medical care are associated with dropping out of medical care by hypertensive patients.
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PMID:Hypertension control in a rural southern community: medical care process and dropping out. 339 99

As part of the Edgecombe County High Blood Pressure Control Program, a medical record review was conducted within a multispecialty private group practice in the county. The purposes of the review were to assess the relationship between the process of medical care and blood pressure control and to explore the variation in level and impact of medical care by race and sex. At the end of a three-year period, 41 percent of 628 hypertensive patients from the practice had uncontrolled diastolic blood pressure (DBP), as defined by Hypertension Detection and Follow-up Program criteria. The percentage of uncontrolled hypertensives ranged from 53 percent for black men to 34 percent for white women. Hypertensive patients whose physicians were more aggressive in their use of antihypertensive drug therapy were more likely to be controlled. The effect of the level of physician drug aggressiveness tended to be more pronounced for blacks than for whites. Differences by race in exposure to and efficacy of aggressive drug treatment may influence racial variation in blood pressure control.
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PMID:The Edgecombe County High Blood Pressure Control Program: the process of medical care and blood pressure control. 345 92

Starting from projective situations--thematic apperception test (TAT) we have researched personality characteristics liable to be found in hypertensive subjects. With reference to a control group of 59 subjects we have studied 41 essential hypertensive subjects. They undergo a preliminary interview structured on the questionnaire type, are classically tested with the TAT, have one or several free interviews. These data are exploited on three levels and contents = manifest, latent, adaptive. It emerges that there are permanent biographical elements (elements of reactivation. Difficulty to put up with aggressiveness, object loss anxiety, use of operative thought back of adaptation = absence of solution to conflicts and possibilities of passage ?), personality patterns in between obsessional pole neurosis and limit state (Bergeret's nosography). These data partly overlap other research, they encompass a wider field than hypertension, given the structures involved (limit state, psychosomatic component). The lack of mentalization justifies the use of therapeutic techniques such as relaxation, biofeedback...
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PMID:[Personality characteristics of hypertensive patients. Study of subjects with essential hypertension compared to a control population]. 393 32

Blood pressure; extracellular fluid volume; renal plasma flow; glomerular filtration rate; plasma concentrations of renin, angiotensin, aldosterone, desoxycorticosterone, and prostaglandins; responses to infused angiotensin; and many other factors are altered during normal and hypertensive gestation. The diagnosis of the exact disease process responsible for hypertension in pregnancy in an individual patient is extremely difficult if based solely on clinical criteria. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has suggested the following clinical classifications: (1) preeclampsia-eclampsia, (2) chronic hypertension of whatever cause, (3) chronic hypertension with superimposed preeclampsia, and (4) late or transient hypertension. The three broad categories of renal disease responsible for these clinical syndromes are: (1) preeclampsia-eclampsia, (2) hypertensive changes, and (3) various primary renal diseases. Controversy abounds regarding the aggressiveness of therapy in this syndrome. We prefer a middle-of-the-road approach, bringing blood pressure down to the range of 95 to 100 mm Hg. Hydralazine and Aldomet are the usual drugs of choice. Any intervening nervous system hyperexcitability suggests impending eclampsia and should be immediately treated with magnesium sulfate. The long-term prognosis for the mother with pure preeclampsia appears to be excellent. Most infants born of hypertensive gestations are small for date, with a prognosis that is also affected by the underlying disease of the mother.
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PMID:Hypertension in pregnancy. 655 34

Eight month-old SHRSP were treated s.c. with lisuride (50 micrograms/kg per day) for 5 weeks to examine the effect of the central dopaminergic agonist on the deterioration of swimming ability that occurred and progressed under persistent hypertension. General observations on signs and symptoms and histopathological examinations were also carried out with the same rats to evaluate the drug effect on the deterioration of hypertensive symptoms. The poor swimming performance of hypertensive SHRSP was improved significantly by the direct action of lisuride with a maximal effect at the 2nd week of the treatment, although the progress of the deterioration itself was not prevented by the chronic treatment. One week after the drug treatment, 2 out of 8 rats in the control group but none in the lisuride-treated group exhibited the abnormal behavior with aggressiveness, a typical sign of the occurrence of cerebrovascular lesions. Furthermore, macroscopic and histopathological examinations carried out 2 weeks after the drug treatment revealed that severities of the histopathological lesions such as myocardiac necrosis and arteriolosclerosis in the kidney, adrenal and testis were significantly lower in the lisuride-treated group than in the control.
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PMID:[Central dopaminergic function in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP): II. Effects of chronic treatment with lisuride on the impaired swimming ability]. 716 83

Although an association between oral contraceptives (OCs) and arterial hypertension has been well-documented, most studies have found only mild or moderate hypertension with reversal to normal levels 3 months after OC discontinuation. This paper presents two cases in which young women developed severe left ventricular hypertrophy and renal failure due to OC-induced malignization of hypertension. The first patient, a 23-year-old, was admitted to the hospital with a 3-day history of headache, mental confusion, and aggressiveness. 6 months before presentation, severe arterial hypertension had been diagnosed. At that time, she was advised to discontinue OCs (30 mcg of ethinyl estradiol and 150 mcg of levonorgestrel), which she had been taking for a year; she did not comply with this directive. The second patient, 21 years old, was admitted with accelerating hypertension. She had initiated OC use (30 mg of ethinyl estradiol and 150 mcg of levonorgestrel) 6 months earlier. 3 months after starting OC use, she developed headache and fatigue. Both women had a hemorrhagic cerebral accident as a complication of malignant hypertension. All neurologic, renal, and cardiovascular complications were reversible after OC discontinuation. OC-related malignant hypertension can be averted through effective control of blood pressure in OC users.
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PMID:Cardiac and neurologic complications in malignant hypertension due to oral contraceptive use. 786 96


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