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

The phenomenon of plasma renin activattion by acid dialysis and preincubation with trypsin was studied in normal human plasma. Activation of plasma renin by exposure to pH 3.3 was shown to require at least one dialysis step and could be inhibited by the presence of Trasylol, indicating the involvement of a protease in acid activation. Amniotic fluid exposed to pH 1.5 to destroy renin and renin substrate was also found to contain an enzyme capable of activating plasma renin. The Michaelis-Menten constant Km and the molecular weight of activated "renin" were found to be similar to those of normal plasma renin. Inactive renins or renin-like enzymes were partially purified from plasma by affinity chromatography on concanavalin A, precipitation with (NH4)2SO4 and isoelectric focusing. Trypsin and acid exposure gave similar results with regard to the activation of this zymogen, suggesting that trypsin and acid dialysis may increase plasma renin activity by the same mechanism.
Hypertension
PMID:Studies on renin activation in normal human plasma. 9 12

We investigated the role of arginine-vasopressin (AVP) in maintaining the blood pressure of spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats (stroke-prone strain) with established hypertension (22--28 weeks of age). In comparison with normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats, plasma AVP concentrations of SH rats with benign hypertension (BH) were elevated twofold and in rats with severe or malignant hypertension (S-MH), fourfold. The height of the blood pressure was quantitatively related to plasma AVP in both BH and S-MH rats, the overall correlation coefficient being 0.66 (p less than 0.001). The intravenous injection of a specific AVP antiserum into conscious and unrestrained rats lowered blood pressure in 4 BH rats by 48 +/- 14 mm Hg and in 4 S-MH rats by 78 +/- 10 mm Hg and had only a marginal effect in 4 normotensive WKY rats. Infusion of saralasin did not lower blood pressure in WKY and BH rats and reduced blood pressure in only 2 of 7 S-MH rats tetsted (by 15 and 20 mm Hg). During AVP infusion the blood pressure of SH rats increased more (p less than 0.001) and heart rate fell much less (p less than 0.001) than in WKY rats. It is concluded that in SH rats with established hypertension, plasma AVP plays an important role in the maintenance of high blood pressure, while the renin-angiotensin system plays a minor or no role.
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PMID:Studies on the role of vasopressin in blood pressure control of spontaneously hypertensive rats with established hypertension (SHR, stroke-prone strain). 9 26

Twenty-two chronic hemodialysis patients with hypertension were treated with prazosin. Eight patients had volume-responsive hypertension, 11 volume-indpendent, and 3 high-renin hypertension. Blood pressure fell in all volume-responsive patients from a predialysis level of 175 +/- 5/100 +/- 3 to 148 +/- 4/75 +/- 3 mm Hg (p less than 0.001) after 3 months of therapy. Prazosin alone was effective in volume responsive patients at a dose of 5 +/- 1.0 mg daily. The blood pressure fell in volume-indpendent patients from 192 +/- 7/105 +/- 2 mm Hg predialysis to 155 +/- 6/80 +/- 3 after 3 months (p less than 0.001). Two were controlled on prazosin alone at a dose of 12 +/- 2 mg daily. Nine required 27 +/- 5 mg of prazosin daily as well as additional antihypertensive treatment. The blood pressure fell from 183 +/- 3/109 +/- 6 mm Hg predialysis to 173 +/- 17/85 +/- 3 mm Hg in high-renin patients after 3 months. One patient was controlled on 40 mg of prazosin daily. Two required 40 mg of prazosin daily as well as additional antihypertensive medication. Eleven patients described transient dizziness within the first month of therapy. One patient had recurrent syncope necessitating prazosin withdrawal; Prazosin is an effective antihypertensive agent which can be used in all types of hypertensive dialysis patients either alone or in combination with minimal side effects.
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PMID:Effects of prazosin in the control of blood pressure in hypertensive dialysis patients. 9 39

In gravid women who are destined to develop pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), normal pregnancy-associated refractoriness to the pressor effects of administered angiotensin II (A-II) is lost several weeks before the onset of hypertension. From a study of the determinants of A-II pressor responsiveness in normal gravid women, it appears likely that the loss of resistance to A-II is principally unrelated to plasma renin activity or to plasma A-II levels. However, it recently has been shown that the vascular refractoriness to A-II in normal women can be reduced significantly by the administration of the prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors, indomethacin or aspirin. In seven women who had developed PIH and who had lost their refractoriness to A-II, the infusion of 5alpha-pregnan-3,20-dione (5alpha-DHP) was associated with restoration of refractoriness to the pressor effects of A-II. Moreover, in five normotensive gravid women beyond 28 weeks' gestation in whom the refractoriness to A-II was reduced by the administration of indomethacin, the intravenous infusion of 5alpha-DPH was associated with restoration of refractoriness to the pressor effects of A-II. These observations are consistent with the view that a progesterone metabolite(s) may be important in the maintenance of normal blood pressure during human pregnancy.
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PMID:Modification of vascular responsiveness to angiotensin II in pregnant women by intravenously infused 5alpha-dihydroprogesterone. 9 97

This study was carried out to determine the evolution of atherosclerotic lesions during a therapeutic period during which regression might be appreciated. We produced aortic and coronary atherosclerosis in 27 young adult stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides) by feeding a diet supplemented with 2% cholesterol and 25% fat. Hypertension was produced by bilateral or unilateral narrowing of the renal artery. After six months of this regimen, four monkeys were killed (group 1) and 23 monkeys were divided into three groups: group 2 received unsupplemented diet; group 3 received the same diet as group 2 and drug treatment for hypertension; group 4 was continued on the atherogenic diet and received antihypertensive drug treatment. The results indicate that deleting the atherogenic diet leads to a decrease in the lipid content of the lesions and a transformation of the lipid laden atherosclerotic plaques into lipid-poor, fibro-collagenous lesions, with a decrease in the amount of coronary luminal narrowing. Partial control of systolic hypertension by antihypertensive drugs did not accelerate the involution of the atherosclerotic lesions over the relatively short period of this study. No statistically significant correlation by regression analysis was observed between the level of blood pressure elevation, the plasma renin activity, or the degree of the drug response, and the severity and extent of the atherosclerotic lesions. Furthermore, severe arterial hypertension without an atherogenic diet (group 5) produced arteriosclerosis of the aorta, and intensified branch cushions in the coronary arteries, without inducing lipid deposition in either vascular bed.
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PMID:Diet-induced atherosclerosis and experimental hypertension in stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides). Effects of antihypertensive drugs and a non-atherogenic diet in the evolution of lesions. 9 44

The "effective" contribution of angiotensin II in blood pressure regulation was investigated in 6 patients on maintenance hemodialysis who were hypertensive at the time of the study (MAP 133 +/- 5 mmHg). Saralasin, a specific angiotensin II inhibitor, was infused at 0.5 and 2.5 microgram/kg/mn three hours before andone hour after hemodialysis. Before hemodialysis, a mean arterial pressure decrease of 13.2 to 19 p. 100 was obtained in 5 patients, arterial pressure being normalized in three of them. After hemodialysis, saralasin induced a normalization of arterial pressure in these 5 subjects. One patient, who was resistant to the saralasin infusion before and after the hemodialysis procedure, can be considered as purely volume-dependent. The renin-angiotensin system is probably one of the primary determinant of dialysis-resistant hypertension. However, a negative response to saralasin should encourage to control hypertension by more vigorous ultrafiltration during dialysis.
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PMID:[Arterial hypertension and maintenance hemodialysis: effects of specific inhibition of angiotensin II by saralasin acetate]. 10 Nov 76

Prostaglandins (PG) are highly unsaturated, cyclic fatty acids with 20 carbon atoms which are biosynthesized from dihomo-gamma-linolenic, arachidonic and eicosapentaenoic acids. These fatty acids are either ingested or are biosynthesized from linoleic and linolenic acids, respectively. The PG-precursor fatty acids are liberated from membrane phospholipids by phospholipase A and are converted to prostaglandins by the multienzyme complex PG-synthetase. The activity of the PG-system is influenced by extracellular hormonal, neural and mechanical stimuli and by intracellular factors such as ion-concentration and activity of the enzymes adenyl- and guanylcyclase. Prostaglandins are tissue hormones or autacoids which act on their receptors near their site of synthesis and degradation. The prostaglandin family constitutes a group of more than 10 natural occurring compounds showing a variety of biological actions. In arteries and veins the different PG:s have vasodilating as well as vasoconstricting effects. In addition, they are involved in the regulation of vascular smooth muscle proliferation. Within the kidney PG:s have vascular and tubular actions. They antagonize the effect of ADH, mediate renin secretion and are involved in the control of electrolyte balance. In the regulation of platelet aggregation and platelet adhesion PG:s have opposite functions: Prostacyclin which is synthesized in the vascular wall antagonizes the aggregating action of Thromboxane A2 which is formed in the platelets. A defect or an imbalance in the production of PG:s in the vascular wall, in platelets or in the kidney is assumed to play a pathogenetic role in a variety of cardiovascular and renal diseases such as in hypertension, atherosclerosis, persistent ductus arteriosus and Bartter's syndrome.
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PMID:[Prostaglandins in cardiovascular and renal function. Biochemical, physiological and clinical findings (author's transl)]. 10 97

The increase in total body sodium and hyperactivity of the renin-angiotensin system plays a major part in hypertension in patients underdoing chronic dialysis. After sodium depletion most patients become normotensive. Their hypertension seems to be due to sodium overload but it is favoured by insufficient inhibition of renin secretion. Some renin hypertensive, hypersecretion of renin is the main factor in these cases but its effect is aggravated by the sodium overload. Other factors may play a role as suggested by the studies of hypertensive patients after bilateral nephrectomy. However, their roles and mechanisms are unknown at present.
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PMID:[Physiopathology of arterial hypertension in chronic hemodialysis patients]. 11 4

The response of arterial pressure to an infusion of saralasin was compared to the effect of surgical correction of renal vascular lesions (3 to 6 months after surgery) in eleven patients whose hypertension was associated with uni or bilateral stenosis of renal artery. Saralasin was infused after four days of dietary sodium restriction (10-40 mEq/day). An excellent correlation (r = 0.83, p less than 0.005) between the effects of saralasin and surgery was obtained. There was no correlation between the response to saralasin or to surgery and the ratio of renal vein renin activities. It is suggested that saralasin may be a good tool for predicting the effect of surgery in renovascular hypertension, when infused in moderately sodium depleted patients.
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PMID:[Saralasin and prediction of the surgical result in renovascular arterial hypertension]. 11 7

Prostaglandins (PG) A1, B1, E2, F2 alpha and plasma renin activity (PRA) were measured by radioimmunoassay in 8 patients with unilateral artery stenosis, 7 hypertensive patients with unilateral renal atrophy without stenosis ans 20 controls. The measurement of the PG and PRA in the hypertensive group was performed in the infra-renal inferior vena cava and in the two renal veins. PRA and PGA1 were significantly raised in the renovascular hypertensive patients but no significant change was observed in the group with unilateral renal atrophy. On the other hand, the PGE2 and PGF2 alpha were raised in both groups, especially in the renal veins on the stenosed or atrophic side. There was a positive significant correlation between PRA and PGA1 and PGB, but none with PGE2 or PGF2 alpha. This study suggests that the increase in PGA1 and PGE2 represents a secondary hypertensive mechanism which is diuretic and natiuretic. The increase of PGF2 alpha represents a direct mechanism of hypertension. Simultaneous measurement of the vasopressor (PRA and PGF2 alpha) and vasodepressor (PGA and PGE) systems may give a better diagnostic and prognostic approach to renovascular hypertension.
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PMID:[Prostaglandins in renovascular arterial hypertension]. 11 9


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