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

We produced experimental renovascular arterial hypertension in 57 rhesus monkeys by modified Goldblatt's procedures. Hypertensive fundus changes were studied in detail by serial ophthalmoscopy and fluorescein fundus angiography in all animals on a long-term follow-up, and pathologically in 23 eyes. Initial evidence of hypertensive optic neuropathy was optic disc edema which developed at the median blood pressure (BP) of 190 mmHg (normal BP, 120 mmHg). On follow-up, mild to marked pallor of the optic disc developed. The optic disc changes were correlated with BP and other fundus changes. Pathogenesis of hypertensive optic neuropathy, which has been highly controversial so far, is discussed at length in the light of the findings of the present study and other recent evidence. All the available clinical and pathologic findings in the present study indicate that hypertensive optic neuropathy represents a form of anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, and that hypertensive optic neuropathy is a distinct entity. A caution is given against a precipitous reduction of BP in patients with hypertensive optic neuropathy because that may cause complete, permanent blindness.
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PMID:Fundus lesions in malignant hypertension. V. Hypertensive optic neuropathy. 395 18

Following the ingestion of an alleged aphrodisiac known as "yo-yo," a 16-year-old girl experienced an acute dissociative reaction accompanied by weakness, paresthesias, and incoordination. Subsequent symptoms included anxiety, headache, nausea, palpitations, and chest pain. Hypertension, tachycardia, tachypnea, diaphoresis, pallor, tremors, and an erythematous rash were noted on physical examination. Serum epinephrine and norepinephrine levels were found to be elevated. Symptoms resolved spontaneously but lasted approximately 36 hours. The ingested substance was identified as yohimbine. The pharmacology of yohimbine and the treatment of yohimbine poisoning are discussed.
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PMID:Yohimbine: a new street drug. 403 64

The incidence of pheochromocytoma among the hypertensive population is less than 1%. One third of the patients have intermittent hypertension, one third have remittent hypertension, and one third have persistent hypertension. The most common symptoms accompanying paroxysms include palpitation, headache, sweating, and pallor. Several familial syndromes have been described and should be searched for in every case of pheochromocytoma. Indications for screening for this tumor include severe and progressive hypertension, labile hypertension, or paroxysmal, symptomatic hypertension. In the majority of cases, diagnosis can be established by urinary assays for vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) and metanephrine. Plasma catecholamine determinations and computerized axial tomography have added other dimensions to the preoperative diagnosis and localization of this tumor. Surgery is obviously the treatment of choice. Preoperative alpha-blockade ameliorates clinical manifestations, allows volume expansion, and allows safe induction of anethesia.
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PMID:Pheochromocytoma: clinical diagnosis and management. 703 87

Complications from mydriatic and cycloplegic drugs are rare compared with their extensive use. Adverse effects are often related to dosage or other factors. The ocular complications include increased intraocular pressure, pigmentation of the conjunctiva and cornea, pigment in the anterior chamber, lacrimal duct blockage, macular edema, corneal endothelium damage, hyperemia, allergy, discomfort, and blurred vision. The systemic complications are those common to sympathomimetic and parasympatholytic drugs and include tachycardia, hypertension, headache, faintness. pallor, trembling, excessive sweating, palpitations, arrhythmias, confusion, hallucinations, drowsiness, ataxia, flushed skin, high fever, dysarthria, thirst, dry mouth, convulsions, disorientation, nervousness, coma, and death. An understanding of all possible side effects is of paramount importance to those using these drugs in the treatment of anticholinesterase poisoning. This review is intended as a ready reference to the adverse effects of mydriatic and cycloplegic drugs.
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PMID:Mydriatic and cycloplegic drugs: a review of ocular and systemic complications. 703 29

A previously healthy 10-year-old girl suffered sudden, binocular visual deterioration. During the next few years her neurologic and visual condition progressively worsened and she developed hypertension, seizures, ataxia, and lactic acidemia, leading to death at the age of 16 years. Bilateral optic disk pallor was followed by the loss of the foveal reflex and pigmentary maculopathy, manifested as disorganization of the retinal layers, loss of ganglion cells, degeneration of the photoreceptors and nuclei, and irregular infiltration of the retina by pigment epithelial cells. The optic nerves and tracts showed central axonal loss. Bilateral, multifocal symmetric areas of cerebral atrophy and necrosis of the neuropil and neurons in the cerebral cortex, basal ganglia, and thalamus were observed; neurons persisted in the dorsal medulla, despite neuropil degeneration.
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PMID:Pigmentary macular degeneration with multifocal necrotizing encephalopathy. 729 3

This is a brief overview of multifaceted anatomical, experimental and clinical studies conducted by the author since 1955 on the optic nerve head circulation in health and disease. Conclusions, based on the accumulated information provided by these studies, are summarized. The studies on the pattern of blood supply of the optic nerve head have shown that: (a) its main source of blood supply is the posterior ciliary artery circulation, with retinal circulation supplying only the surface nerve fiber layer, (b) there is marked interindividual variation in the blood supply pattern, and (c) the blood supply in the optic nerve head has a sectorial distribution. The various factors which produce interindividual variation in the blood supply of the optic nerve head are discussed, particularly those in the posterior ciliary artery circulation; this is because all available evidence indicates that it is derangement in the posterior ciliary circulation in the optic nerve head that is primarily responsible for the common ischemic disorders of the optic nerve head, e.g. anterior ischemic optic neuropathy and glaucomatous optic neuropathy. Factors that may derange the blood flow in the optic nerve head include defective autoregulation of blood flow in it, vascular changes in its feeding arteries, hematologic abnormalities, systemic arterial hypertension and hypotension, and intraocular pressure; their roles are discussed. For better understanding and management of optic nerve head ischemic disorders, there is an urgent need for an accurate clinical method of assessment of blood flow in the posterior ciliary circulation in optic nerve head, since no satisfactory method is currently available. Redness or pallor of the optic disk on ophthalmoscopy is not a true guide to the optic nerve head vascularity as it gives no information about the state of the posterior ciliary circulation. Fluorescein fundus angiography, though far superior to the optic disk color for evaluation of optic nerve head vascularity, has a number of limitations. All these topics and various controversies about them are discussed briefly.
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PMID:The 1994 Von Sallman Lecture. The optic nerve head circulation in health and disease. 755 90

Vegetative dysfunction with episodes of tachycardia, hypertension, paleness, general hyperhidrosis, subfebrile condition, hyperglycemia manifest first among clinical symptoms of chromaffinoma. In respect to these symptoms severity the crises observed in chromaffinoma are classified as minor or major. Major crises may be cerebral, epileptiform, cardial and abdominal. The crises are attributed to hypercatecholaminergic arterial hypertension. A reliable laboratory diagnosis of the disease involves urinary measurements of catecholamines and their metabolites. Manifold increase of the latter concentrations may serve the diagnostic indication. The only effective treatment is the removal of the tumor from the adrenals.
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PMID:[The neurological aspects of chromaffinoma]. 785 73

We present two siblings with hereditary cortical cerebellar atrophy (CCA), who showed peculiar clinical features. Their unaffected parents are cousins. The mode of inheritance in this family was autosomal recessive. Both patients developed involuntary movement and ataxia during the fourth decade. The proband (patient 1) was the elder sister. She developed choreoathetoid involuntary movement and cerebellar ataxia at the age of 32. At the age of 39, she showed mental deterioration and marked gait disturbance due to severe ataxia and amyotrophy. At the age of 40, she took medication for hypertension. At the age of 42, she was bedridden and had generalized convulsions and dysautonomia. Involuntary movement continued until her death at age 44. She had amenorrhea since the age of 25 years. Neuropathological findings. The brain weighed 1,010 g. We found marked degeneration in the cerebellar cortex including the molecular, Purkinje cells, and granular cell layers, and in the inferior olivary nuclei. In the basal ganglia, the putamen and caudate nuclei were moderately affected, but the substantia nigra and globus pallidus were spared. The cerebral cortex was spared, but the cerebral white matter showed diffuse myelin pallor without fibrillary gliosis. In the pons, the volume of the tegmentum was moderately decreased, but the base was spared. The spinal cord was normal. The findings of the patient differed from those of the case originally reported by Gordon Holmes in 1907. Holmes autopsied a case showing severe degeneration in both the cerebellar cortex including all three layers and the inferior olivary nucleus as in our patient. However, the striatum of his case spared and the patient did not develop involuntary movement as did other patients. The patients presented here should be distinguished from Holmes' original case clinicopathologically.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Autosomal recessive hereditary cortical cerebellar atrophy with striatal degeneration--two siblings showing choreoathetoid movement, ataxia, dementia, and amenorrhea]. 806 39

A total of 4676 patients and 1759 patients were treated with lisinopril and nifedipine respectively in a post-marketing surveillance study conducted in general practice in the UK. Patients were followed up for 12 months. Most of the lisinopril patients had hypertension, but a small number (180) had heart failure. Most of the nifedipine patients had uncomplicated hypertension, but some (22.57%) had other cardiovascular disease with or without hypertension. Lisinopril and nifedipine were equally effective in reducing blood pressure. During the study, 1.5% of hypertensive patients assigned to lisinopril died compared with 1.8% of patients assigned to nifedipine, and 15.1% of lisinopril patients compared with 19.7% of patients in the nifedipine group withdrew because of adverse events. Cough, malaise and fatigue, nausea and vomiting were more frequent causes of withdrawal from lisinopril than nifedipine. Conversely, headaches, pallor and flushing, oedema and palpitations caused more frequent withdrawals from nifedipine. Anaemia was more often encountered on nifedipine treatment than on lisinopril. In hypertensive patients, the frequency of first-dose hypotension was similar on both treatments. Serious events occurred in 0.8% and 0.5% of patients given lisinopril and nifedipine respectively. Lisinopril was well tolerated by heart failure patients: 16 patients (8.88%) died and an incidence of 4.44% of serious adverse events was reported, a pattern to be anticipated in such patients; dizziness, giddiness, dyspnoea, cough, nausea and vomiting were the most frequent causes of withdrawal; the incidence of first-dose hypotension was low (2.22%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Post-marketing surveillance of lisinopril in general practice in the UK. 811 50

This 46 year old man complained for the first time five years ago about stinging bilateral occipital headache while in prone or horizontal position and disappearing completely in the supine position after a few minutes. Two years ago hypertension with values up to 240/140 mmHg was discovered on a routine examination. For the past six months the patient complained about sudden attacks with headache, hammering pulse, nausea, pallor, sweating and blood pressure values of 200/100 mmHg. A pheochromocytoma measuring 7 x 8 cm was diagnosed on the left side and removed subsequently.
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PMID:[Headache]. 812 27


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