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

1. We used path analysis and maximum-likelihood model fitting to evaluate the relative contributions of genetic and environmental factors to the relationships observed between level of blood pressure and both total plasma calcium concentration and platelet cytosolic free calcium concentration in 109 twin pairs. 2. Total plasma calcium concentration was positively associated with systolic (r = 0.26, P less than 0.001) but not diastolic blood pressure, a relationship which remained significant after adjustment for albumin, age and body mass index. A relationship between platelet cytosolic free calcium concentration and both systolic and diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.17 and r = 0.13, respectively, P less than or equal to 0.05) was no longer significant after adjustment for age and body mass index. 3. Additive genetic influences, unique environmental effects and age contributed to 60%, 30% and 10% of the variance in systolic blood pressure, respectively. Additive genetic effects explained 78% of the variance in plasma total calcium concentration and at least 48% of the variance in platelet cytosolic free calcium concentration in females and 37% in males. 4. Bivariate factor models provided evidence of genetic, but not environmental, co-variation of total plasma calcium concentration and systolic blood pressure, suggesting that a common genetic factor (or factors) contributes to their univariate relationship. In contrast, there was evidence of environmental, but not genetic, covariation of platelet cytosolic free calcium concentration and systolic blood pressure, suggesting that some of the individual experiences specific to each twin may be causing these two traits to vary together. 5. The possible confounding effects of adiposity and environmental factors should be considered in future studies investigating the role of intracellular calcium levels in the pathogenesis of hypertension.
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PMID:Platelet cytosolic free calcium concentration, total plasma calcium concentration and blood pressure in human twins: a genetic analysis. 131 58

It has been proposed that an increased activity of cell membrane Na+/H+ exchange, mirrored by increased erythrocyte Li+/Na+ exchange, may facilitate cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia. Patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus may develop a specific cardiomyopathy with systolic and diastolic abnormalities and increased thickness of the left ventricle. Therefore, we have investigated the relationships between erythrocyte Li+/Na+ and Na+/H+ exchange and echocardiographic parameters in 31 male insulin-dependent diabetics (aged 17-68), in good metabolic control. Three had untreated mild hypertension. In all patients the urinary albumin excretion rate was less than 200 micrograms min-1. Ten patients had a Li+/Na+ countertransport higher than 0.37 mmol l-1 cell h-1, the upper normal limit for our laboratory (0.49 +/- 0.10, mean +/- SD). In comparison with the patients with normal countertransport, they had increased interventricular septum thickness and relative wall thickness (h/r). End diastolic volume and cardiac index were reduced while blood pressure and urinary albumin excretion rate were similar. In the whole study group, interventricular septum thickness was significantly correlated to Li+/Na+ exchange (r = 0.61, P less than 0.001) and Na+/H+ exchange (r = 0.35, P less than 0.05), independently of the effect of age and blood pressure. Posterior wall thickness was correlated to Li+/Na+ exchange (r = 0.38, P less than 0.05) and h/r to Li+/Na+ exchange (r = 0.41, P less than 0.05) and to Na+/H+ exchange (r = 0.44, P less than 0.05). Li+/Na+ exchange was negatively correlated to cardiac index (r = -0.37, P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Erythrocyte Li+/Na+ and Na+/H+ exchange, cardiac anatomy and function in insulin-dependent diabetics. 132 68

1. Disturbances of sodium and water homoeostasis may contribute to the close association between diabetes, hypertension and proteinuria. We therefore studied the patterns of two natriuretic hormones, plasma atrial natriuretic peptide and urinary dopamine, in 165 Chinese patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus controlled by diet or oral hypoglycaemic agents on two occasions over a 6-week period. Patients were divided into three groups based on the mean value of two 24h urinary albumin excretion measurements. In group 1, 88 patients had normoalbuminuria (urinary albumin excretion < or = 30 mg/day), in group 2, 48 patients had microalbuminuria (urinary albumin excretion between 30 and 300 mg/day), and in group 3, 29 patients had macroalbuminuria (urinary albumin excretion > or = 300 mg/day). 2. The supine systolic blood pressure (mean +/- SD) was higher in patients with abnormal albuminuria (group 1: 140.9 +/- 27.4 mmHg; group 2: 158.1 +/- 26.4 mmHg; group 3: 166.7 +/- 23.9 mmHg; F = 13.1, P < 0.001, analysis of variance). Urinary sodium output was similar in these three groups of patients. The geometric means (anti-logarithm of 95% confidence interval logarithm) of plasma atrial natriuretic peptide concentrations increased with increasing proteinuria [group 1: 33.3 (29.9-37.1) pg/ml; group 2: 39.1 (34.2-44.6) pg/ml; group 3: 50 (38.6-54.7) pg/ml; F = 4.24, P < 0.01; analysis of variance], whereas those of urinary dopamine output were related inversely to proteinuria [group 1: 1291.7 (1167.2-1437.0) nmol/day; group 2: 1142.3 (975.9-1337.2) nmol/day; group 3: 982.7 (775.7-1245) nmol/day; F = 3.10, P < 0.05, analysis of variance].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Atrial natriuretic peptide and urinary dopamine output in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 132 42

Now that most patients with Wilms' tumour are cured, it is practicable to study the long-term morbidity of their treatment and use this information to reduce treatment sequelae in the future. In this study we evaluate the size and function of the remaining kidney in 53 survivors of Wilms' tumour with a mean off treatment follow-up of 13 years. There was evidence of renal dysfunction in 17 (32%), including ten (19%) with a low GFR (< 80 ml/min/1.73 m2SA), six (11%) with hypertension and five (9%) with increased urinary albumin excretion. Measurements of renal size showed 'good' renal compensatory hypertrophy in only 55% of patients. 'Good' refers to renal size of more than 2 s.d. above the mean renal length for children with two kidneys. There were no correlations between GFR, renal size, blood pressure, microalbuminuria or type of treatment. However, children less than 24 months at diagnosis and children receiving chemotherapy with radiation doses to remaining kidney of more than 1200 cGy had a worse renal prognosis. Patients whose Wilms' tumour is diagnosed in infancy should have careful long-term follow-up of renal function and size. Older patients may safely be followed up less often, unless their remaining kidney was received > 1200 cGy.
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PMID:Renal size and function after cure of Wilms' tumour. 132 9

One hundred and forty-seven patients with essential hypertension (EH) and 126 patients with secondary arterial hypertension (AH) on the basis of chronic pyelonephritis were studied by means of radiocardiography with 131I-albumin and M-mode echocardiography. The importance of the haemodynamic type of circulation for the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) was established. Correlative analysis revealed that the influence of arterial pressure (AP) on LVH is increased by stabilization of AH, especially in patients with the normo- and hypokinetic types of circulation; interestingly, the relation between LVH and systolic pressure was closer than that between LVH and diastolic pressure, especially in patients with secondary AH. Moreover, it was shown that the development of LVH is due to a preferential increase in posterior wall thickness in essential hypertensives and in ventricular septal thickness in secondary hypertensives, although all patients with LVH had dilatation of the left ventricular cavity.
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PMID:The influence of the haemodynamic factor on the development of left ventricular hypertrophy in patients with arterial hypertension. 133 11

In 199 normotensive pregnant women at 20 and 30 weeks of gestation, a fasting urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (FU Alb/Cr) was evaluated to predict pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH). FU Alb/Cr in patients destined to develop PIH was significantly high compared to that in normotensive women. When FU Alb/Cr of more than 16 was considered to represent a positive test result, the negative predictive value was 94% and 96%, respectively. FU Alb/Cr is a useful screening tool for PIH.
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PMID:Usefulness of the urinary microalbumin/creatinine ratio in predicting pregnancy-induced hypertension. 134 9

1. It has been suggested that hypertension may be an important determinant of the rate of progression of diabetic microangiopathy. 2. Renal microvascular disease as assessed by urinary albumin excretion and glomerular ultrastructure was evaluated in a model in which streptozotocin diabetes was induced in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). 3. Diabetes was associated with increases in urinary albumin excretion, and hypertension resulted in a further increase in albuminuria. 4. Various antihypertensive regimens were administered to diabetic SHR, with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor perindopril and triple therapy (hydralazine, reserpine and hydrochlorothiazide) being more effective than the calcium antagonist (lacidipine) in retarding the increase in albuminuria in diabetic SHR. 5. Antihypertensive therapy appears to ameliorate the development of diabetic renal disease.
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PMID:Diabetic renal microvascular disease: the role of hypertension and ACE inhibitors. 139 13

A significant proportion of renal allografts fail within several months or years after transplantation, primarily because of chronic rejection. The etiology and pathophysiology of this condition remain unclear. We studied the renal function, morphology, and immunohistology, in parallel, among F344-to-Lewis allografts (n = 23) and isografts (n = 13) over the course of 24 weeks. Only an initial 10-day course of CsA (5 mg/kg/day) was given to both groups to prevent acute rejection. Hypertension did not develop, although awake systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in allografts at the end of the study. Significant differences in urine albumin excretion (UalbV) between isografts and allografts were evident as early as 4 weeks after engraftment but rose dramatically by 20 weeks (3.3 +/- 0.7 vs. 21.2 +/- 3.7 mg/day, respectively, P < .001). This pattern continued until the conclusion of the study (5.0 +/- 1.1 vs. 53.5 +/- 7.6 mg/day, P < .001). Serum creatinine values were only significantly elevated in allografts at 16 weeks, which temporally corresponded to the dramatic increase in UalbV. However, renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate, measured by paraaminohippurate and inulin clearances, respectively, were significantly lower in allografted organs, at 24 weeks. The frequency of glomerulosclerosis lesions was significantly increased in allografted kidneys at 24 weeks and correlated with UalbV values. Glomerular localization of mononuclear leukocyte subsets were equivalent between allografts and isografts; however, the numbers of interstitial macrophages, CD8+, and pan-T-cells were all significantly greater in allografts at 24 weeks. The infiltration of significantly greater numbers of macrophages and lymphocytes into the tubulointerstitium of the allograft group suggests a mononuclear leukocyte effector cell mediation of the progressive glomerular abnormalities in this model of chronic renal allograft rejection in the rat.
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PMID:Progressive albuminuria and glomerulosclerosis in a rat model of chronic renal allograft rejection. 141 63

The prevalence of arterial hypertension in primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is higher than in the general population. With the aim of determining the evolution of hypertension associated with PHPT, we analyzed a group of 56 patients followed for a mean of 60 months (range 10-101 months) after successful parathyroidectomy for PHPT. The study group consisted of 16 men and 40 women. The mean age was 49 +/- 12 years (range 18-73 years). None of the patients had renal impairment. Two hypertensive patients died during the follow-up from complications related to their hypertension. Twelve (21.8%) patients were hypertensive before parathyroid surgery (systolic greater than 160 mmHg and/or diastolic greater than 90 mmHg). Pre-operative midregion serum parathyroid hormone concentration was higher in the hypertensive patients than in normotensive patients (2.7 +/- 2.4 vs 0.82 +/- 0.4 mu iEq/l, p = 0.018). Pre-operative creatinine clearance was lower in the hypertensive patients than in normotensive patients (65.4 +/- 27.5 vs 86.7 +/- 26 ml/min, p = 0.002). There were no significant differences between normotensive and hypertensive patients in age, sex, body weight, clinical manifestations, weight of parathyroid tissue removed, and calcium metabolism, or in plasma concentrations of magnesium, uric acid, cholesterol, proteins, or albumin. During follow-up, none of the patients with pre-operative hypertension became normotensive, whereas 32% of the patients who were normotensive preoperatively developed clinical hypertension. The global prevalence of postoperative hypertension was thus 48%. The patients that developed hypertension after parathyroidectomy were followed for a longer period than the normotensive patients (76 +/- 17 vs 53 +/- 10 months, p = 0.005), had a lower postoperative creatinine clearance (74 +/- 28 vs 90 +/- 25 mg/min, p = 0.07), and higher cholesterol levels (6.2 +/- 1.5 vs 5.5 +/- 0.9 mmol/L, p = 0.08).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Long-term effects of parathyroidectomy for primary hyperparathyroidism on arterial hypertension. 141 42

Exercise-induced proteinuria may be increased in hypertensives. The mechanisms underlying the increased proteinuria are not known, and it has not been determined whether animal models of hypertension exhibit a similar response. We investigated whether indomethacin (Indo) altered exercise-induced proteinuria in normal and hypertensive deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA) Yucatan miniature swine (YMS). Five normal and four DOCA YMS underwent 30 min of treadmill exercise at 80% of maximal heart rate. Cumulative (exercise + recovery) albumin excretion in the DOCA YMS was 25-fold (P < 0.01) greater than observed in the normal YMS. Indo had no effect on resting or exercise-induced proteinuria in the normal YMS. However, Indo decreased the slightly elevated proteinuria at rest, and normalized the exaggerated exercise-induced proteinuria in the DOCA YMS. The antiproteinuric effect of Indo in the DOCA YMS was not associated with altered exercise, recovery blood pressure, or glomerular filtration rate. Thus hypertensive DOCA YMS exhibit an exaggerated exercise-induced proteinuria. It is suggested that eicosanoids are involved in this abnormal renal proteinuric response to exercise.
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PMID:Indomethacin attenuates exercise-induced proteinuria in hypertensive miniature swine. 141 9


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