Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two patients with kidney transplants had hypertensive encephalopathy and rapidly progressive kidney failure 10 weeks and 18 months postoperatively. In one patient renal failure was associated with erythrocytosis. Absence of proteinuria, despite progressive renal insufficiency in both patients, suggested that these abnormalities were not due to rejection episodes. Subsequently, angiography proved that each of these patients had renal-artery stenosis. Surgical repair of this lesion increased creatinine clearance at least threefold, and the hypertension and erythrocytosis disappeared. Apparent "rejection" episodes in which there is no proteinuria should alert clinicians to the possiblity of renal-artery stenosis of the graft. Restoration of kidney function and amelioration of hypertension may follow revascularisation, even after many months of renal ischaemia producing severe uraemia.
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PMID:Hypertensive crisis, erythrocytosis, and uraemia due to renal-artery stenosis of kidney transplants. 4 23

To date, there is little information available on stroke risk factors in a major ethnic minority such as Mexican-Americans (M-A) in the USA. Forty-three M-A patients were admitted to The Methodist Hospital and Ben Taub General Hospital (Houston) for a 12-month period, with diagnosis of atherosclerotic stroke. Thrombosis was diagnosed in 31 patients (72%), embolism from atherosclerotic sources in seven (16.4%), and parenchymal hemorrhage in five (11.6%). Hypertension was a common risk factor in all groups, being higher in hemorrhage followed by thrombosis and embolism. Arteriosclerotic heart disease was a common risk to all stroke types. TIAs, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, associated atherosclerotic lesions, smoking, obesity, erythrocytosis and sedentary life were significantly associated with embolism; less so with thrombosis or hemorrhage. Gout was only associated with thrombosis. These results indicate similar risk factors for Anglo-saxons and M-A in the USA with some minor differences between the Mexican and the USA stroke series.
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PMID:Risk factors in stroke in a Mexican-American population (Houston). 61 32

Serum concentration of erythropoietin (EP) was measured with a hemagglutination inhibition technique and plasma renin activity (PRA) with a radioimmunoassay for angiotensin I in 26 renal transplant recipients 2-54 months after renal transplantation. In all patients, the EP values were significantly correlated with the levels of PRA (r = 0.76 p less than 0.001) and hematocrit values (r = 0.72, p less than 0.001). In one patient, erythrocytosis and high blood pressure associated with high EP and PRA levels disappeared after bilateral nephrectomy of his own kidneys. The results indicate an as yet unidentified relationship between the production of EP and renin.
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PMID:Erythropoietin and renin after renal transplantation. 78 10

In a study of 30 patients with hypernephromas, 23 patients manifested systemic effects of the tumor, and in 5 of these, the systemic effects were the presenting feature that led to the diagnosis. In contrast to this, only 17 patients had urologic complaints, and no single patient in this study had the classic triad of hematurial, loin pain, and mass. Weight loss (52 per cent), pyrexia, and elevated sedimentation rate (36 per cent) were seen most frequently. Anemia was seen in 25 per cent of patients. Other features seen in this group wer abnormalities in liver function, elevated alkaline phosphatase, hypertension, erythrocytosis, and hypercalcemia. In the majority of instances, removal of tumor was associated with remission of these effects. The effects were classified as those of a general toxic nature, those due to normal or abnormal production of hormones, and those due to production of abnormal substances by tumor cells. The evaluation of these effects was useful in making an early diagnosis and in follow-up care.
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PMID:Systemic effects of hypernephroma. 89 63

Erythrocytosis and microcytosis have been described in strains of genetically hypertensive rats and in essentially hypertensive humans. Published discussion of these phenomena has centered around their relationship to observed alterations in ionic transport and the pathogenesis of hypertension. In presenting data for another strain of spontaneously hypertensive rats in which these findings are exhibited, we note that erythroid cell size decreases concurrently with the increase in cell numbers so that the hematocrit and the mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration remain constant. Data from the literature support the hypothesis that erythroid cell size is inversely proportional to cell count in a large number of species. Erythrocytosis, as it develops in the neonatal rat, is a consequence of the marked immaturity of this species at birth. Erythrocytosis in the spontaneously hypertensive rat is not due to a difference in the affinity of its hemoglobin for oxygen or to significant tissue anorexia. Microcytosis in the spontaneously hypertensive rat is the consequence of a continuation of the linear volume decrease with age of its erythroid cells seen in the normotensive animals and may be accounted for by the production of smaller cells with concomitant regulation of individual cell volume.
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PMID:Inverse changes in erythroid cell volume and number regulate the hematocrit in newborn genetically hypertensive rats. 194 11

Erythrocytosis after renal transplantation confers risks of thromboembolic complications and therefore necessitates repeated phlebotomies and/or anticoagulation therapy. Erythropoietin production from the retained native kidneys is one aetiological possibility for this condition. During 1982-1987, 22 patients with renal transplants underwent bilateral nephrectomy because of erythrocytosis with a median duration of 13 months. The median follow-up time was 36 months. After nephrectomy, blood counts returned to normal in all patients; these remained normal in all but two patients, who relapsed with erythrocytosis after 6 and 18 months respectively. Concomitant hypertension was cured or improved in most cases. One patient had a myocardial infarction postoperatively. No other per- or postoperative complications occurred. The mean duration of hospital stay was 7.5 days. We consider bilateral nephrectomy of the native kidneys a safe and effective alternative in the management of post-transplant erythrocytosis.
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PMID:Erythrocytosis after renal transplantation; treatment by removal of the native kidneys. 212 35

We report here a case of right-sided renal cell carcinoma who presented with hypertension and multi-organ metastases. Haematological manifestations noted were erythrocytosis, thrombocytosis and leukaemoid reaction. Of these leukemoid reaction and thrombocytosis are very rare. The patient had hepatosplenomegaly which was found to be congestive in origin due to the pressure of the tumour on the hepatic vein and the inferior vena cava. These rare features make it an unusual case.
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PMID:Renal cell carcinoma: presenting with congestive hepatosplenomegaly and rare haematological complications. 238 Jan 39

Juxtaglomerular cell tumor of the kidney is an uncommon neoplastic cause of surgically curable hypertension. We report a case of erythrocytosis due to elevated serum erythropoietin with a renin secreting juxtaglomerular cell tumor.
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PMID:Juxtaglomerular cell tumor with elevation of serum erythropoietin. 268 72

Theories that would propose to explain the increased vascular resistance that accompanies hypertension include the presence circulating vasoconstrictor substances (angiotensin II, vasopressin, epinephrine, etc.), a centrally mediated generalized increase in sympathetic tone, increased vascular smooth muscle tone due to increased calcium ion permeability, and perhaps others. While each of these may be valid in some circumstances there exists yet another mechanism, indirect and potent, that could account for much of the change in peripheral vascular resistance that accompanies hypertension. This is the erythrocytosis mechanism that is mainly controlled by the kidneys. This treatise concerns the manner in which the kidneys supposedly react to disturbances in oxygen transport coincident with the development of hypertension and the effect that this might have in modifying peripheral resistance to blood flow.
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PMID:Erythrocytosis: a key to understanding the hemodynamic changes in hypertension. 320 Jan 71

Post-transplant polycythemia is not uncommon in adult patients and is usually transient, responding to phlebotomy. Five pediatric patients developed erythrocytosis post-transplantation. Three patients had end-stage renal disease due to cystinosis, one had reflux glomerulopathy and one had focal glomerular sclerosis. The probable causes of the polycythemia were graft arterial stenosis in three patients. In one, polycythemia occurred with nephrosis. Polycythemia with hypertension may indicate the presence of arterial stenosis in children post-transplantation.
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PMID:Polycythemia in pediatric renal transplantation. 329 38


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