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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Microneurographic recordings of muscle nerve sympathetic activity, which is governed by baroreceptors and involved in blood pressure regulation, were made in the peroneal nerve in 16 healthy volunteers during physiological bladder distension. When the urge to urinate was pronounced, sympathetic outflow increased from a baseline level of 16.3 +/- 1.7 to 23.2 +/- 1.9 bursts/min (mean +/- SEM, p less than 0.01). There was a concomitant significant rise in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure, from 125 +/- 2/74 +/- 2 to 140 +/- 4/84 +/- 3 mm Hg. After micturition, sympathetic activity and blood pressure returned toward initial values. It is concluded that 1) increased sympathetic outflow contributed to the rise in blood pressure, 2) there is a vesicovascular response mediated by sympathetic vasoconstrictor neurons in humans corresponding to mechanisms observed in animals, and 3) the described functional relation between bladder distension and sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity probably plays a role in clinical conditions such as autonomic dysreflexia in humans with cervical spinal cord lesions and nocturnal micturition
syncope
.
Hypertension
1989 Nov
PMID:Sympathetic activity and blood pressure increases with bladder distension in humans. 280 12
Clinical and pathologic findings in seven patients who died of severe pulmonary artery
hypertension
due to toxic oil syndrome are assessed. These cases correspond to a late stage of evolution of the disease characterized by progressive deterioration in clinical features--increasing dyspnea, chest pain,
syncope
, and death (in low-output heart failure). The main pathologic pulmonary vascular findings consisted of plexiform lesions, thromboses, and venous lesions. Endothelial damage induced by the toxic agents is suggested as an initial causative mechanism, perpetuated by intimal proliferation and in situ thrombosis. Plexiform lesions appear late and active histologically. This new cause of pulmonary artery
hypertension
, with pathologic findings similar to those found in primary pulmonary hypertension, may help in understanding the pathophysiology of this unknown disease.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hypertension due to toxic oil syndrome. A clinicopathologic study. 291 83
Symptomatic common carotid artery occlusion (CCAO) is rare. We studied 17 patients with ischemic cerebrovascular symptoms and unilateral CCAO on angiography to help clarify clinical and radiologic features. Mean age was 62 years; 65% were women. Predominant symptoms and signs included visual-ipsilateral monocular or retrochiasmal symptoms (88%), motor weakness (88%), sensory disturbance (59%), dizziness/lightheadedness (53%), and
syncope
(24%). Dysarthria, headache, or involuntary limb shaking occurred less frequently. Positionally related symptoms occurred in approximately two-thirds of the patients. TIAs were often multiple and preceded a stroke or occurred without subsequent stroke in 82%. Hemispheric TIAs contralateral to the CCAO occurred in 41%. Ten patients (59%) suffered stroke, seven (70%) of which were ipsilateral to the CCAO. Vascular risk factors included cigarette use (76%),
hypertension
(71%), diabetes mellitus (41%), and hyperlipidemia (41%); 82% had two or more risk factors. Known cardiac disease was present in 59%. CCAO was present at the origin of the vessel in most patients. Most had atherosclerotic narrowing of multiple extracranial large vessels. During follow-up, none of the patients had a spontaneous second infarct; five had TIAs, including two with amaurosis fugax, all in the CCAO territory. More restricted external carotid collaterals may, in part, explain the higher frequency of ipsilateral stroke and contralateral TIAs than reported for internal carotid occlusion.
...
PMID:Common carotid artery occlusion. 279 68
In a prospective multicentre study a series of 188 patients over 65 years of age admitted for
syncope
(90) or transient loss of consciousness (98) was collected. There were 120 women and 68 men; mean age was 78.7 +/- 6.6 years; 140 patients had a significant history mainly of arterial
hypertension
and coronary disease; 81 patients were taking drugs (4.1 on average) and notably diuretics, antihypertensive agents, antiarrhythmic agents, nitrites and psychotropic drugs. The most frequent diagnoses were arrhythmia (20.2 p. 100), postural hypotension (15.4 p. 100), reflex and vasodepressive
syncope
(12.2 p. 100) and coronary disease (5.3 p. 100). Taken together, these diagnoses could be divided into cardiac diseases (26.5 p. 100), extracardiac diseases (54.2 p. 100), diagnosis unknown (19 p. 100). The condition was iatrogenic in 45 patients (24 p. 100). The means by which the diagnosis was reached were studied: in two-thirds of the cases, careful physical examination and electrocardiography alone provided a diagnosis. Seven patients died during their stay in hospital. Among the 181 survivors 148 (81.7 p. 100) were discharged and returned home.
...
PMID:[Etiological diagnosis of syncope and brief loss of consciousness in patients over 65. Results of a multicenter prospective study of 188 cases]. 296 35
Minoxidil (Loniten), a potent predominant arteriolar vasodilator, provides prompt and effective reduction of blood pressure in many patients with severe
hypertension
. Minoxidil results, however, in profound reflex tachycardia and increased plasma volume almost always necessitating concomitant use of beta-adrenergic blocking agents and diuretics. Hypertrichosis and massive fluid retention are troublesome adverse reactions that may require discontinuation of minoxidil and initiation of an alternative antihypertensive agent. When minoxidil is discontinued, diuretic dosage requires re-evaluation and possible tapering to prevent volume depletion. Volume depletion is a risk factor in patients with persistent peripheral edema, sodium deprivation or dehydration; these states may interfere with physiologic mechanisms that maintain adequate cerebral perfusion upon standing, triggering orthostatic hypotension and potential
syncope
.
Hypertension
clinic visits should routinely include supine followed by sitting and standing blood pressure determinations to ensure detection of orthostatic hypotension. Described in the article is a case study in which a patient developed severe orthostatic hypotension one month after minoxidil was discontinued. Pathophysiologic mechanisms are discussed.
...
PMID:Orthostatic hypotension occurring after discontinuation of long-term minoxidil therapy. 317 16
A 65-year-old male with diabetes,
hypertension
, and mild renal failure developed dizziness and
syncope
one week after starting clonidine 0.45 mg/day. A continuous ECG recording revealed sinus bradycardia, nodal rhythm, and multiple episodes of sinus arrest lasting up to 4.5 seconds. Upon discontinuation of clonidine, serial continuous ECG recordings revealed gradual decrease in the number and duration of the sinus arrest episodes, until their complete disappearance shortly after the third day off clonidine. This report shows that clonidine may cause a concentration-dependent sinus node dysfunction in addition to the atrioventricular (AV) node abnormalities previously ascribed to it.
...
PMID:Sinus arrest associated with clonidine therapy. 334 61
Computed tomographic (CT) findings of cerebral and cerebellar calcification are described in three American adults with raised serum lead levels and known exposure to lead for 30 or more years. Calcification patterns were punctiform, curvilinear, speck-like, and diffuse and were found in the subcortical area, basal ganglia, vermis, and cerebellum. Admission serum lead levels ranged from 54 to 72 micrograms/dl (normal, 0-30 micrograms/dl). Nonspecific neurologic manifestations consisted of dementia, diminished visual acuity, peripheral neuropathy,
syncope
, dizziness, nystagmus, easy fatigue, and back pain. Two patients developed chronic renal disease and
hypertension
; in both cases, serum parathormone was elevated. Blood, calcium, and phosphorus were normal in all three. No other structural abnormalities were observed with CT. Although the pathophysiologic mechanism of these findings remains poorly understood, it is suggested that chronic lead exposure should be included in the differential diagnosis of unexplained intracranial calcifications in adults.
...
PMID:Intracranial calcification in adults with chronic lead exposure. 348 74
A 49-year-old man with severe
hypertension
and chronic schizophrenia developed marked hypotension with postural
syncope
following therapy with the combination of chlorpromazine and captopril. Previously, the patient's blood pressure (BP) had been poorly controlled on a regimen of chlorpromazine and hydrochlorothiazide, nadolol, and prazosin. The supine and standing BP and 24-hour ambulatory BP were subsequently studied while the patient was maintained on chlorpromazine and captopril, chlorpromazine alone, and on no therapy. Chlorpromazine alone caused a moderate reduction in supine and standing BP with a reversal of the circadian BP profile. The combination of chlorpromazine and small doses of captopril (12.5 mg/d) induced a reduction in supine BP of 84/32 mm Hg compared with chlorpromazine alone and exaggerated the postural hypotension. Hormonal investigation demonstrated low baseline renin activity that increased during therapy with captopril and a physiologic catecholamine response to change in posture. These data demonstrate that there is a synergism between captopril and chlorpromazine that may result in marked, symptomatic hypotension that is probably unrelated to the baseline level of plasma renin activity or catecholamines.
...
PMID:Hypotension with postural syncope secondary to the combination of chlorpromazine and captopril. 353 Jan 67
Anxiety is the fifth most common clinical diagnosis in the primary care setting. Panic disorder, a severe episodic form of anxiety, has been found to occur in approximately 6% of primary care patients. These patients often selectively focus on one of the frightening autonomic symptoms and are frequently misdiagnosed. The three most common presentations of panic disorder in the medical setting are cardiac symptoms (chest pain, tachycardia), neurologic symptoms (headache, dizziness/vertigo,
syncope
), and gastrointestinal symptoms, especially epigastric distress. The presentation of cardiac symptoms by patients with panic disorder is especially likely to lead to expensive and potentially iatrogenic medical testing.
Hypertension
and peptic ulcer are the most commonly associated medical diagnoses in patients with panic disorder. Major depression, alcohol abuse, simple phobias, and posttraumatic stress disorder are the most frequently associated psychiatric diagnoses. Psychopharmacologic treatment of panic disorder has been demonstrated to be highly effective in double-blind, placebo-controlled studies. Effective psychopharmacologic agents include the tricyclic antidepressants (notably imipramine and desipramine), the monoamine oxidase inhibitors (phenelzine), and the high-potency benzodiazepines (alprazolam).
...
PMID:Panic disorder: epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment in primary care. 353 Nov 89
Nine patients with symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias were evaluated a mean interval of 16 years after surgical repair of tetralogy of Fallot. The clinical arrhythmia was sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) in 4 patients (group I) and premature ventricular contractions in 5 (group II). All patients underwent cardiac catheterization and electrophysiologic studies. Ventricular tachycardia was induced at electrophysiologic study in all patients in group I and in 3 patients in group II. Six patients with inducible sustained monomorphic VT underwent chronic drug testing based on electrophysiologic study. A mean of 3.3 drugs per patient was tested. Patients with right ventricular systolic hypertension did not respond to any drug tested, and underwent surgery. Five patients received drug treatment based on the results of electrophysiologic study. During a mean follow-up period of 2.2 years, no patient in either group had recurrent episodes of VT or
syncope
. In the postoperative patient with tetralogy of Fallot with symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias, it is concluded that electrophysiologic study is useful in reproducing clinical episodes of VT and in selecting effective antiarrhythmic medication; a small number of patients with ventricular premature complexes alone will have inducible sustained VT during electrophysiologic study; prognosis of these patients may be improved by treatment that results in prevention of VT induction; and in patients with right ventricular
hypertension
, VT is likely to be refractory to drug treatment.
...
PMID:Electrophysiologic drug testing in symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias after repair of tetralogy of Fallot. 359 95
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