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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relationship of plasma aldosterone concentration to its identified stimuli was examined in three patients with
hypertension
, hyperaldosteronism, and idiopathic
adrenal hyperplasia
. Four patients with hyperaldosteronism due to adrenal adenomas served as controls. Plasma aldosterone, cortisol, sodium, and potassium concentrations and renin activity were measured in blood samples taken at 20 minute intervals from 2 A.M. to 8 A.M. during recumbency and sleep. The tests were performed on all patients following a regular sodium diet both before and after short-term treatment with dexamethasone. Two of the three subjects with
adrenal hyperplasia
were re-examined after 2 weeks of dexamethasone therapy. All four control patients with adenomas had episodic increases of plasma aldosterone which were significantly correlated with those of plasma cortisol (r = +0.48 to +0.90). This confirms the previously reported relationship between aldosterone and ACTH in such patients. Two patients with idiopathic
adrenal hyperplasia
had a similar secretion pattern and a highly significant correlation of the two hormones (r = +0.76 and +0.77); one did not (r = 0.13). Short-term dexamethasone pretreatment attenuated the episodic release pattern and partially suppressed the mean plasma concentrations of aldosterone in the four patients with an adenoma and in the two patients with idiopathic hyperplasia whose plasma aldosterone and cortisol concentrations were positively correlated. There was no such effect in the third patient. The first two patients with idiopathic hyperplasia were subsequently retested following 2 weeks of dexamethasone treatment to determine if the episodic secretion pattern of plasma aldosterone would correlated with other stimuli following this period of ACTH suppression. One showed little change from the pattern observed after short-term glucocorticoid treatment. The second had a similarly blunted aldosterone response until ACTH secretion led to a resumption of episodic changes in plasma aldosteerone concentrations. These data indicate that ACTH frequently is the dominant stimulus of the episodic secretion of aldosterone in patients with either adrenal adenomas or hyperplasia. When ACTH is suppressed, the hypersecretion of aldosterone is presumably sustained by an intrinsic adrenal abnormality or by an as yet unidentified stimulus.
...
PMID:The role of ACTH in the episodic release of aldosterone in patients with idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia, hypertension, and hyperaldosteronism. 18 90
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system has been evaluated in 19 patients with Cushing's syndrome due to bilateral
adrenal hyperplasia
and in 2 patients with unilateral adenoma. In the first group urinary aldosterone was within the normal limits with a mean of 8.3 +/- 1.86 microgram/24 h. Aldosterone excretion did not change significantly after furosemide administration, ACTH infusion or dexamethasone. Upright PRA was suppressed in 9/16 patients with a mean of 4.9 +/- 1.85 ng/ml/3 h and showed only a slight response to furosemide. Dexamethasone alone did not produce any change. Both aldosterone and PRA were to some extent stimulated by an association of dexamethasone and furosemide. In the 2 patients with adenoma, aldosterone excretion was also normal, but PRA was very elevated. From our data it is concluded that in Cushing's syndrome due to bilateral hyperplasia, PRA and aldosterone excretion are partially suppressed. From our results on plasma deoxycorticosterone and corticosterone concentration it seems unlikely that these mineralocorticoids are the major cause of this phenomenon. However, it may not be excluded that other yet unidentified hormones could play some role in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
and renin suppression in Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:Plasma renin activity and urinary aldosterone in Cushing's syndrome. 20 67
During a protocol study for the evaluation of patients with primary aldosteronism, a variety of diagnostic studies were employed in an attempt to identify patients with primary aldosteronism and to differentiate patients with adrenal adenoma from patients with idiopathic
adrenal hyperplasia
. In this study, we are able to demonstrate the utility of (1) absent postural increase in plasma aldosterone concentration, (2) adrenal scanning and (3) normalization of blood pressure with spironolactone therapy in identifying patients with primary aldosterone excess who have an adrenal adenoma, surgical removal of which results in eliminating their
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Identification and differentiation of surgically correctable hypertension due to primary aldosteronism. 47 85
In order to investigate the combined effects of diabetes and
hypertension
on the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease, adult male and female SHR rats which develop
hypertension
spontaneously were given a single, 10 mg or 15 mg/100 g body wt. injection of alloxan s.c. to induce moderate or severe diabetes. Insulin was deliberately withheld. Animals were examined by autopsy daily for 7 days post-alloxan and after 4 and 8 weeks. Mortality was high--only 52% of the males survived as against 80% of the females. Most deaths occurred on Day 5 and were associated with adrenal haemorrhage and hyperplasia, thymus galnd involution, fatty liver and marked hypotension despite elevated aldosterone levels. During the first week, corticosterone levels increased significantly in the male; in females they showed little change. After 4 weeks, the severly diabetic animals became emaciated and moribund; corticosterone and aldosterone levels fell to very low levels despite
adrenal hyperplasia
. The beta cells of the moderately diabetic animals eventually lost their ability to secrete insulin and these animals too became cachetic and moribund with concomitant elevation of lipid, glucose and BUN levels, as well as myocardial infarction, fatty liver, and generalized hyalin arteriolo-, arterio-, and nephrosclerosis. It is suggested that the combined hormonal and metabolic alterations of diabetes and
hypertension
reinforced one another in these spontaneously hypertensive rats, leading to intense stimulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system, the exacerbation of those cardiovascular degenerative changes known to be associated with uncontrolled diabetes or
hypertension
, eventual impaired adrenocortical steroidogenesis, hypotension and death.
...
PMID:Alloxan diabetes in spontaneously hypertensive rats: gravimetric, metabolic and histopathological alterations. 86 Nov 67
Repeatedly bred male rats which develop arteriosclerosis spontaneously were subjected to unilateral nephrectomy, 1% saline drinking water, and 2 mg subcutaneous injections of deoxycorticosterone acetate per animal weekly for 7 weeks to induce severe
hypertension
(+/- 175 mmHg systolic). Acute cerebral ischemia was induced by ligating one carotid artery. Two days later, experimental animals were subjected to acute myocardial ischemia by injecting them subcutaneously with a single dose of isoproterenol (25 mg/100 g body weight). All of the experimental animals died within 4 hours of the injection of isoproterenol. During this same period, blood pressure, body weight, thymus, kidney, and testicular weights were reduced, whereas heart and adrenal gland weights increased markedly. Serum enzymes (CPK, SGOT, and LDH), lipids (triglycerides and free fatty acids), glucose, BUN, and corticosterone rose progressively. Fatty infiltration of the liver,
adrenal hyperplasia
, myocardial thrombi, renal degenerative changes, and cerebral edema became progressively more severe. A hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis component may be involved in the reaction to the stress of acute cerebral or myocardial ischemia, which is intensified when the two ischemias are combined, and chronic
hypertension
may exacerbate both.
...
PMID:Acute cerebrovascular and myocardial ischemia superimposed upon chronically hypertensive and arteriosclerotic male Sprague-Dawley rats. 90 14
Mineralocorticoids are out of the causes of secondary hypertension. Excess production of mineralocorticoids induces sodium and fluid retention, loss of potassium and metabolic alcalosis. The diagnosis of mineralocorticoid syndromes depends on the interpretation of the functional status of the renin-mineralocorticoid-system, which is in part responsible for the maintenance of normal blood pressure. The classical representative of this group is the syndrome of primary aldosteronism. Causes of mineralocorticoid syndromes associated with
hypertension
are: 1. autonomous production of mineralo-corticoids by an adrenal adenoma or by idiopathic bilateral
adrenal hyperplasia
; 2. deficiency of adrenal 17-alpha-hydroxylase or of 11-beta-hydroxylase; 3. secondary aldosteronism associated with primary reninism, or renal arterial stenosis; and 4. pseudo aldosteronism due to excessive ingestion of licorice. Malign or essential hypertension may also often be followed by secondary aldosteronism.
...
PMID:[Mineralocorticoid syndromes and hypertension]. 96 85
Adrenal vein catheterizations were done in SHR and control rats at different ages during the development of
hypertension
. All SHR became hypertensive by 15 weeks of age. The secretion rate of aldosterone was significantly reduced at 8 weeks of age, 18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone (18-OH-DOC) at 12 weeks of age, deoxycorticosterone (DOC) at twenty weeks of age, and corticosterone (B) at 12 and 20 weeks of age. Secretion data suggest either an enzyme block, or increased conversion of known steroids to an unknown steroid product. Reduced secretion of corticosterone could explain the
adrenal hyperplasia
observed in SHR which may be important to the development of
hypertension
in these animals.
...
PMID:Adrenal steroidogenesis in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). 111 74
1. In 7 patients with
hypertension
, aldosteronism, and low plasma renin (6 patients with a solitary adrenal adenoma, 1 patient with bilateral
adrenal hyperplasia
) circulatory reflexes (Valsalva's maneuver, head-up tilt and cold pressure test) were examined. Furthermore, the reactivity to the pressor action of tyramine and norepinephrine was determined. For comparison 10 patients with essential hypertension were studied. 2. In 4 of the 7 patients with primary aldosteronism no overshoot following Valsalva's maneuver could be observed. Compared to the patients with essential hypertension the mean overshoot in the patients with primary aldosteronism was significantly reduced. The decrease in blood pressure during head-up tilt was significantly more pronounced in the patients with primary aldosteronism. However, both groups did not differ in their reaction to the cold pressure test. In the patients with primary aldosteronism responsiveness to tyramine was significantly reduced compared to the patients with essential hypertension. No significant difference was observed in the reactivity to norepinephrine between both groups studied. 3. The results point towards a disturbance of the sympathetic nervous system in patients with primary aldosteronism.
...
PMID:[Circulatory reflexes in primary aldosteronism (author's transl)]. 121 78
The syndrome of primary aldosteronism is caused either by an aldosterone-producing adenoma or by idiopathic bilateral
adrenal hyperplasia
. Hypokalemic
hypertension
is the leading symptome of the disease. Diagnosis is by the combination of abnormally high and non-suppressible aldosterone values with undetectable or low renin values unresponsive to postural changes or salt restriction. Patients with aldosterone-producing adenoma normally show a fall in plasma aldosterone in response to posture and ACTH-dependent circadian rhythm of aldosterone, whereas bilateral hyperplasia is characterized by postural increases in plasma aldosterone and an ACTH-independent diurnal aldosterone rhythm. These creteria serve to differentiate between adenoma and hyperplasia. An aldosterone-producing adenoma can be localized by veinography, determination of aldosterone concentration in both adrenal veins and by 131I-cholesterol scintigraphy. In our hands the determination of aldosterone in blood from both adrenal veins is the most efficient procedure. In interpreting the results, however, rhythmic and sudden changes in adrenal hormone secretion should be considered. In cases where no adrenal venous blood is obtained, 131I-cholesterol scintigraphy may be used to localize adenoma. In patients with aldosterone-producing adenomas unilateral adrenalectomy should be performed, whereas patients with idiopathic bilateral hyperplasia should receive antihypertensive therapy. As rare instances of primary aldosteronism, a case of aldosterone-producing carcinoma of the adrenal cortex and a case of presumably unilateral
adrenal hyperplasia
are reported.
...
PMID:[Primary aldosteronism]. 126 63
Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors act by lowering the level of angiotensin II. The therapeutic benefits of these drugs and their potential side-effects therefore result from suppression of the physiological effects of angiotensin II. It is rational to prescribe an ACE inhibitor when the renin-angiotensin system is activated, as in renin-dependent essential hypertension, malignant hypertension and
hypertension
associated with heart failure. The beneficial effects of ACE inhibitor must be weighed against the special risks of renovascular
hypertension
: risk of renal artery thrombosis in case of unilateral stenosis and risk of renal failure if the stenosis is bilateral or affects a solitary kidney. In some situations the renin-angiotensin system is not directly involved in
hypertension
but may play a local haemodynamic role, as in some cases of primary or diabetic nephropathy. In such case the ACE inhibitors are thought to exert a protective effect. ACE inhibitors were reputed to be less effective in the elderly than in younger patients, but we now know that they can be prescribed with equal success in both instances to reduce peripheral resistance and improve regional blood flow as well as arterial compliance. Finally, ACE inhibitors can be prescribed, albeit with limited effectiveness, when the renin-angiotensin system is not activated, as in low renin
hypertension
and idiopathic hyperaldosteronism due to
adrenal hyperplasia
. They are ineffective in case of Conn's adenoma and contra-indicated in pregnant women.
...
PMID:[For which hypertensive patient should angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor be prescribed or forbidden?]. 129 38
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