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

A case of panarteritis nodosa with positive Australia antigen is presented. Panarteritis appeared following serum hepatitis and caused arthromyalgia, abdominal pain, prolonged fever of unknown origin, peripheral polyneuropathy, blood hypertension, and renal insufficiency. A muscular biopsy showed atrophy due to denervation and necrotizing arteritis in various stages causing serious damage to the arteries. Abdominal arteriography clearly demonstrated the existence of aneurismal dilations in the liver, pancreas, and kidneys. The angiographic findings in panarteritis nodose are discussed with special reference to the aneurysms localized in several organs. Their situation is described in detail; it is usually abdominal and more specifically intrarenal. The fact that they occur in a high percentage of cases is helpful when establishing the diagnosis. Lastly, the role of Australia antigen in the development of panarteritis nodose is discussed. It stimulates an immune response and the production of circulating immunocomplexes which are depostied on the vascular walls with complement fixation and damage to the blood vessels. The possibility that other viral agents may be present in the various types of necrotizing vasculitis in humans is commented on.
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PMID:[Panarteritis nodosa with positive Australia antigen (author's transl)]. 3 58

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

Analysis is carried out of the clinical, pathomorphological and immunological characteristic of lupus nephropathy in 62 patients, 56 females and 6 males. A series of new investigation methods were used for that purpose. An early tendency towards kidney involvement in the course of LED is established and in 22 of the patients (36%) the renal symptoms have been the first clinical manifestations of the basic illness. Lupus nephropathy progresses most often with a nephrosis syndrome (in 66.1% of the patients), rarely pure and not combined with hypertension and/or with renal insufficiency. The pathomorphological changes are rather multiform but in the majority of the cases almost all structural elements of glomerules and the rest of the renal tissue are affected. The clinical picture severity, histopathological changes and nephropathy evolution course were established to be distinctly dependent on the course acuteness of the basic morbid process. The importance of the detailed study of the clinico-morphological and immune characteristic of lupus nephropathy upon the timely diagnosis. Proper treatment and the prognosis assessment of the illness is stressed upon.
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PMID:[Clinical morphological and immunological characteristics of lupus nephropathy]. 7 Aug 87

A 57-year-old woman with hypertension and moderate renal insufficiency had chronic unexplained hyperkalaemia. Metabolic balance studies confirmed a diagnosis of hyporeninaemic hypoaldosteronism. Two observations suggested that impaired renal prostaglandin production contributed to the pathogenesis of the patient's disorder. Baseline renal-prostaglandin synthesis (as determined by urinary excretion of P.G.E and P.G.F) was was substantially depressed when compared with that in nine normal females. Infusion of low doses of P.G.A1 produced a significant increase in serum-aldosterone and urinary potassium excretion; it also led to a dramatic fall in blood-pressure and serum-potassium. It appears from these studies that a defect in renal prostaglandin synthesis has an important role in the pathogenesis of hyporeninaemic hypoaldosteronism.
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PMID:Possible role for impaired renal prostaglandin production in pathogenesis of hyporeninaemic hypoaldosteronism. 8 82

A variety of renal structural and functional abnormalities have been associated with sickle cell disease. To define the relationship between the hemoglobinopathy and glomerular disease, clinicopathologic correlations, renal morphologic, ultrastructural immunohistologic and functional studies were performed on seven patients with clinical and laboratory evidence of glomerular disease. In addition, immunologic studies including isolation and characterization of cryoprecipitable immune complexes, and determination of immunoglobulin, total complement and complement component levels, and antibody titers to several antigens were performed in an attempt to define the etiologic and pathogenic mechanisms of the renal disease and its relationship to sickle cell anemia. Proteinuria was presnet in all patients. The nephrotic syndrome, hypertension, hematuria and renal insufficiency were found in more than one half the patients. All patients had membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis of varying degree; glomerular basement membrane splitting, electron dense deposits in the glomerulus; interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy and hemosiderin deposits were frequent. Immunoglobulin complement components (classif complement pathway) and renal tubular epithelial antigen were distributed in a granular pattern along the glomerular basement membranes of all patients studied by these methods. Cyroprecipitable complexes of renal tubular epithelial antigen-antibody to renal tubular epithelial antigen as well as antibody to renal epithelial antigen were detected in the circulation of some patients. There was no serologic evidence of activation of the alternate complement pathway. These studies demonstrated an immune deposit normocomplementemic nephritis associated with sickle cell anemia; they further support our hypothesis that the relationship is more then coincidental, and is mediated by glomerular deposition of immune complexes of renal tubular epithelial antigen-antibody to renal tubular epithelial antigen, the antigen possibly released after tubular damage secondary to oxygenation and hemodynamic alterations related to sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Nephropathy associated with sickle cell anemia: an autologous immune complex nephritis. II. Clinicopathologic study of seven patients. 12 92

Clinical, experimental and pathologic studies strongly indicate that hypertension is a major factor in coronary heart disease, sudden death, stroke congestive heart failure and renal insufficiency. The deleterious effect of the elevated blood pressure on the cardiovascular system appears to be due mainly to the mechanical stress placed on the heart and blood vessels. Humoral factors and vasoactive hormones such as angiotensin, catecholamines and prostaglandins may play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertensive cardiovascular disease but this role has not yet been defined and is probably secondary. Hypertension and the resulting increase in tangential tension on the myocardial and arterial walls, leads to the development of hypertensive heart disease and congestive heart failure as well as hypertensive vascular disease that affects not only the kidneys but also the heart and brain. Hypertensive vascular disease involves both large and small arteries as well as arterioles and is characterized by fibromuscular thickening of the intima and media with luminal narrowing of the small arteries and arterioles. The physical stress of hypertension on the arterial wall also results in the aggravation and acceleration of atherosclerosis, particularly of the coronary and cerebral vessels. Moreover, hypertension appears to increase the susceptibility of the small and large arteries to atherosclerosis. Thus the patient with hypertension is a candidate for both hypertensive and atherosclerotic vascular disease of the coronary and cerebral vessels leading to occlusive disease of both the large and small arteries and resulting in myocardial infarction and stroke. Other major complications of hypertensive vascular disease include rupture and thrombotic occlusion of blood vessels, especially in the brain. Disease of the arterial media, which begins in childhood with the deposition of calcium in the vessels, may be an important cause of arterial hypertension. This form of hypertension may manifest itself in adults as arteriosclerotic hypertension and lead to cardiovascular complications very similar to those of essential hypertension. The relation of arteriosclerotic hypertension to nutritional factors, including dietary salt intake, deserves study.
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PMID:Role of hypertension in atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. 13 91

Histologic evidence of intrarenal vasomotor changes were observed in the rat in the course of acute renal failure caused by the injection of HgCl2. Male Wistar rats injected s.c. with 2.5 or 4.7 mg HgCl2 per kg b. wt. developed fibrinoid damage in the media segments of preglomerular renal vessels, mostly in the arcuate and interlobular arteries. The lesions were patchy and irregularly scattered throughout the kidneys. 24 h post-injection the lesions were very rare and of only mild degree, whereas they were fully developed and regularly seen 48 h post-injection. A high percentage of similar changes was found in certain extrarenal vascular areas especially in the mesentery and pancreas. The damaged vascular segments were usually dilated. The results of various thichrome stains and histochemical reactions suggested edema of vascular smooth muscle cells and imbibition of the media by blood plasma substances, sometimes reaching the degree of fibrinoid necrosis. These findings were confirmed by electron microscopy. The imbibition of the smooth muscle cells by blood plasma material was clearly evidenced by the demonstration of intracellular fibrin precipitations. In connection with the degeneration of smooth muscle cells, accumulations of crystal-like fibrin formations could often be shown. Subendothelial fibrin formations were not observed. 96 h after the 2.5 mg injection the changes were already regressing, but edema of the vascular wall and signs of disturbed vasotonia persisted for several days. The maximum of the vascular changes usually coincided with the maximum of azotemia and the formation of debris cylinders in the renal tubules. However, no clear relationship was recognizable in individual cases between vascular damage, extent of tubular necrosis and renal function. The pathogenesis of the vascular changes is obscure, but neurogenic factors, increased release of catecholamines and/or vasoactive agents of renal origin in connection with other factors might play a decisive role. Arterial hypertension was absent. It is assumed that the structural damage of the vascular media is mainly brought about by prolonged or recurring vasospasms, or by alternating spasm and vasodilatation with local ischemia and increased tension of the vascular wall in the dilated segments. The altered function and structure of the vascular wall might, to a certain extent, contribute to renal insufficiency.
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PMID:Intra- and extrarenal vascular changes in the acute renal failure of the rat caused by mercury chloride. 13 13

Focal glomerular sclerosis was diagnosed in nine patients by renal biopsy. Proteinuria, hematuria, hypertension, and slowly progressive renal insufficiency unresponsive to corticosteroid and immunosuppressive therapy were consistent clinical findings. Focal, segmental, and global glomerular sclerosis with intraluminal deposits of hypereosinophilic and strongly PAS-positive material, intracapillary foam cells, and moderate interstitial involvement were consistent morphologic findings. The importance of this clinicopathologic entity in the spectrum of renal diseases has only recently been appreciated.
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PMID:Focal glomerular sclerosis. 18 92

Motor nerve conduction velocity was studied in a group of 44 hypertensive patients; velocity was measured at the level of the median and external popliteal sciatic nerves. From the series were excluded those hypertensive subjects with renal insufficiency, diabetes mellitus and peripheral arterial disease. No significant differences were observed in MNCV values compared to controls. Within the hypertense group, no appreciable variations were observed depending on the duration and degree of hypertension, and signs of visceral damage (assessed at myocardial and retinic levels). The results do not confirm previous published data suggesting the existence of MNCV reduction during arterial hypertension, the reduction being considered an subclinical expression of peripheral neuropathy and an index of the gravity of visceral damage during hypertensive disease.
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PMID:[Motor nerve conduction velocity in arterial hypertension]. 18 27

A total of 150 patients with renal pathology (chronic glomerulonephritis, pyelonephritis, urolithiasis, etc.) accompanied by the development of psychoneurological disturbances were examined. In the initial stage of the renal insufficiency the authors observed neurasthenic, radicular, polyneuritic, renovisceral syndromes, in a more remote stage--encephalopathies and disturbances of the brain circulation. The important part in the above-mentioned disturbances is played by azotemia, metabolic acidosis, disturbances of fluid-electrolyte and albumine balance, as well as arterial hypertension.
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PMID:[Changes in the nervous system in kidney diseases]. 20 20


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