Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Ouabain-sensitive uptake of 86Rb, a measure of the Na+-K+ pump activity, was studied in tail arteries of rats made hypertensive with deoxycorticosterone and saline. 2.
Decreased activity
of the ouabain-sensitive Na+-K+ pump supports the hypothesis that the activity of Na+-K+ pump is suppressed in volume expanded
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Altered activity of the sodium-potassium pump in arteries of rats with steroid hypertension. 21 75
In contrast to standard bicycle exercise with moderate or submaximal effort, low-effort exercises were employed by the author who studied their effect on cardiovascular system of stage II
hypertension
patients. They were males (n-126) aged 47.2 +/- 3.6 with the disease history of 8.4 +/- 1-9 years. Associated coronary heart disease was diagnosed in 82% of the patients. The test subjects were divided randomly into three groups: group 1 patients received drugs only, group 2 received drugs and exercised walking, group 3 received drugs and exercised on bicycle ergometer in the nonstrenuous regimen. It was found that exercise tolerance of the patients was different and depended on the hemodynamic type.
Hypokinetic
circulation patients showed the lowest exercise tolerance. Low-effort bicycle exercise in addition to drugs is indicated for hyper- and eukinetic circulation patients. Walking is inferior to the bicycle exercise and can be recommended as a variety of nonpharmacological treatment of
hypertension
stage II. The combined effect of walking and chemotherapy produced the rise in cardiac capacity in the absence of the adequate increment in coronary blood flow, whereas bicycle exercise seems to enhance cardiac coronary circulation in hypertensive subjects.
...
PMID:[A comparative analysis of the effect of low-intensity physical training on a bicycle ergometer, graded walking and drug therapy on the cardiovascular system of patients with stage-II hypertension]. 141 80
To investigate pathogenesis of arterial
hypertension
in diabetes mellitus, the authors measured parameters of central and peripheral hemodynamics, basal renin levels, angiotensin, aldosterone, kallikrein-kinin system. The results were analysed with regard to
hypertension
type: essential (EH), atherosclerotic (AH) and nephrogenic (NH).
Hypokinetic
circulation, defected vascular elasticity, activation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and hypoactivity of kallikrein-kinin system were characteristic of EH and AH. Most pronounced changes in peripheral hemodynamics and hypoactivity of depressor kallikrein-kinin system were seen in NH.
...
PMID:[Pathogenesis of arterial hypertension in diabetes mellitus]. 178 Jul 71
Decreased activity
of the electrogenic sodium pump of vascular smooth muscle has been reported in several forms of experimental
hypertension
and may play an important role in basic disease mechanisms. It has been proposed that such pump suppression may characterize volume-expanded forms of
hypertension
. The present investigation tested this latter hypothesis. Sodium pump activity was assessed in vitro in sodium-loaded tail artery and thoracic aorta freshly excised from Dahl salt-sensitive (S) and salt-resistant (R) rats on low (0.4%) or high (8%) NaCl diets for 5 to 7 weeks. Rubidium (86Rb) uptake in the absence (total uptake) and presence (ouabain-insensitive uptake) of 1.0mM ouabain was measured and ouabain-sensitive uptake (nmole/mg dry weight/10 min) was calculated. In S rats, salt feeding was accompanied by elevation of arterial pressure, cardiac hypertrophy, increases of 20% to 30% in total blood volume, and increases in the ouabain-sensitive, ouabain-insensitive, and total uptakes in the aorta, but no significant change in uptakes in the tail artery. However, ouabain-sensitive uptake in the tail artery of all S rats exceeded than in R rats. There was no evidence of a decrease in vascular sodium pump activity accompanying
hypertension
in either artery. Therefore, the results of this study provide no evidence in support of the hypothesis that pump suppression in vascular smooth muscle characterizes volume-expanded forms of
hypertension
. It is unlikely that the observed increases in vascular pump activity in S rats reflected intracellular sodium concentrations higher than those in the control rats. Rather, increases in the numbers of pump molecules or in their turnover rate are probably involved.
Hypertension
PMID:Sodium pump activity in arteries of Dahl salt-sensitive rats. 725 Oct 90
We examined the plasma lipids, lipoproteins, and selected apolipoproteins in approximately 9,000 men and women from six different regions of Turkey with markedly different diets, ranging from an Aegean coast diet high in olive oil (plasma cholesteryl ester fatty acids enriched in monounsaturated fatty acids) to an inland Anatolian diet high in meat and dairy products (plasma cholesteryl esters enriched in saturated fatty acids). The rural population consuming an olive oil-rich diet had the lowest plasma cholesterol levels (men, 149 mg/dl; women, 150 mg/dl). The urban populations of Istanbul and Adana had higher plasma cholesterol levels (men, 202 and 184 mg/dl, respectively; women, 181 and 190 mg/dl, respectively). Affluent men had the highest cholesterol levels (207 mg/dl). The low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels tended to parallel the total cholesterol levels (highest for Istanbul men at 136 mg/dl and lowest for Aegean coast men and women at approximately 100 mg/dl). Strikingly, the Turkish people were found to have very low levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (HDL-C) (mean values for all six regions: men, 34-38 mg/dl; women, 37-45 mg/dl) and total cholesterol/HDL-C ratios that were high (mean values for all six regions: men, 4.5-5.5; women, 3.9-5.0). The low HDL-C levels appear to be caused, at least in part, by a genetic factor. Triglyceride levels also tended to be high in Turkish men (approximately 120-150 mg/dl) and women (approximately 90-110 mg/dl). Thus, even though the total plasma cholesterol levels are not excessively elevated in comparison to those in other populations, the presence of low HDL-C or low HDL-C coupled with mildly elevated triglyceride levels may represent a significant risk factor for heart disease in the Turkish population. Affluence and higher education were associated with higher cholesterol levels.
Lack of physical activity
, smoking, and alcohol consumption also tended to be associated with a detrimental lipid profile. Lipoprotein[a] levels were identical among the regions surveyed (mean: 11-15 mg/dl) and displayed the typical distribution with an increased number of individuals with low levels. The 90th percentile value for lipoprotein[a] was about 30 mg/dl for both men and women. Smoking, a major risk factor for heart disease, was very prevalent in the Turkish population, especially in men (50-70% smokers) and women in urban areas (30-40% smokers).
Hypertension
, defined as a systolic pressure > 140 or a diastolic pressure of > 90 occurred in approximately 17% and 26% of the men and women surveyed, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Turkish Heart Study: lipids, lipoproteins, and apolipoproteins. 761 27
Due to affluence and a sedentary life style a great deal of people in the western countries are affected by coronary heart disease (CHD). The relation between CHD and certain risk factors pertaining to life style is evaluated in this study. A primary purpose is to study certain crucial risk factors for women. The main variables are age, smoking, overweight (measured by BMI), blood pressure and exercise. This prospective study is based on self-reported data from the nation-wide Swedish Level of Living Survey and on data from the national Cause of Death Register. The data were analysed separately by sex using a proportional hazards model. The sample was divided into two strata: those with heart disease and/or diabetes initially, and all the rest. A sample of 2546 men and 2760 women between 45 and 74 years of age was followed from 1980 to the end of 1990. During this period 189 men and 75 women died of coronary heart disease (CHD). It was found that
high blood pressure
raised the relative risk (RR) of death from CHD by almost 60% in both men and women. Male smokers (> 14 cigarettes a day) had about 60% (significant) and female smokers (> 10 cigarettes a day) 150% (significant) excessive mortality from CHD. Different levels of overweight among women were strongly related to excess mortality from CHD, ranging between 100 and 300%. Among men there was no such relation.
Lack of physical activity
showed only a weak (non-significant) increased risk of death due to CHD. Diabetes was also found to be an important risk factor for mortality from CHD, especially among women, being seven times as high as among non diabetics. A test of sex differences revealed that there were two significant interactions, namely between sex and overweight, and between sex and age. Background variables in relation to mortality from all cardiovascular diseases (CVD) were also studied. There were of course many similarities between the effects of the background variables in both the disease groups, but there were interesting differences too, e.g. overweight turned out to be a significant risk factor also for men and physical inactivity for women.
...
PMID:Multivariate analyses of mortality from coronary heart disease due to biological and behavioural factors. 874 Aug 79
In summary, autoregulation of the renal vasculature provides a mechanism by which renal function is maintained relatively constant despite variations in systemic blood pressure. This system also provides a means for changes in blood pressure to occur without causing inappropriate alterations in urinary NaCl excretion. Alterations in the autoregulatory response can have clinical consequences. Increased activity of the TGF mechanism may be causally related to the development of some forms of
hypertension
.
Decreased activity
of TGF or an impaired myogenic response may help explain the increased susceptibility that certain patient groups exhibit toward
hypertension
-induced renal injury. The aggressive treatment of
hypertension
in patients with impaired renal autoregulation may be associated with an increase in the serum creatinine concentration. As long as this increase is neither excessive nor progressive, physicians should not be dissuaded from trying to achieve newly established blood pressure goals.
...
PMID:Impaired renal autoregulation: implications for the genesis of hypertension and hypertension-induced renal injury. 1141 53
Hypersecretion of cortisol is associated with
hypertension
. In addition, an abnormal cortisol metabolism may play a role in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
. The 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11beta-HSD) isozymes catalyze interconversion of cortisol and cortisone and play an important role in the regulation of the effects of cortisol. Activity of 11beta-HSD type 2, converting active cortisol in inactive cortisone, is crucial in preventing access of cortisol to the renal mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs).
Decreased activity
of this isozyme in the kidney, either congenitally in Apparent Mineralocorticoid Excess syndrome or acquired following licorice consumption, allows cortisol access to the MRs, resulting in hypokalemic
hypertension
. In normotensive subjects, an association has been demonstrated between blood pressure increase on a high-salt diet and a mild decrease of renal 11beta-HSD2 activity. In ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), plasma cortisol levels are very high, resulting in mineralocorticoid
hypertension
caused by saturation of the available renal 11beta-HSD2 capacity. Activity of the 11beta-HSDs has also been demonstrated in many extrarenal sites. Several studies have demonstrated extrarenal effects of cortisol on blood pressure, as well as a possible role for altered extrarenal 11beta-HSD activities in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
. More studies are needed to clarify the role of 11beta-HSDs in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Cortisol, 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases, and hypertension. 1547 32
Obesity and its associated morbidities and mortalities are the effects of imbalance between energy intake and expenditure. The healthcare burden for the treatment of obesity is significantly high, due to increased risk of secondary chronic diseases such as
hypertension
and associated co-morbidities such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Lack of physical activity
, high fat diets and sedentary life styles are major factors contributing to obesity. However, genetic predisposition and ethnicity are increasingly found to cause obesity. Till date, approved therapeutics have addressed excess energy intake by acting on central neural circuits that regulate feeding or on peripheral mechanisms to reduce nutrient absorption from the gut. These approaches have met with moderate success; and recently with safety concerns, leaving an unmet medical need for effective and safe pharmacotherapy for obesity thereby posing a significant challenge to pharmaceutical industry. Potential antiobesity drugs, which are being investigated by different companies, can be classified in 4 broad categories: 1) Agents that primarily decrease appetite through central action; 2) Agents that primarily increase metabolic rate or affect metabolism through peripheral action; 3) Agents that act on gastrointestinal tract; and 4) Agents that not only affect obesity but also overall Metabolic Syndrome. The current review will deal mainly with different molecules, which are under development for the above-mentioned targets and also their potential benefits and disadvantages.
...
PMID:Antiobesity therapy: emerging drugs and targets. 1671 87
Lack of physical activity
as well as smoking, overweight, high blood cholesterol level and
hypertension
are independent risk factors for development of various chronic diseases.
Lack of physical activity
is a main cause of non-communicable diseases morbidity and mortality in about 23% of cases (WHO, 2002). Goal of the survey was the identification and characteristics of physical activity among adults. We conducted epidemiologic survey among the school-children and students in Tbilisi. Survey was carried out in 40 schools from all regions of Tbilisi and 9 state and private institutes. Schools were selected by randomized trail in each region of Tbilisi and in each school were questioned all teen-agers from 14-17 year old. For selecting group of survey was used method of "proportional probability of value". There were questioned 2 500 school children and 1000 students, 38% boys and 62% girls. The results of survey ascertained that 23,5%-39,5% of respondents are training or engaged in sport everyday, or several times per week; 17,2% - once in a month; 9,3% once in a year; or 10,5% - never. Adults are less informed about useful effect of physical activity. Respondents had different point of on the role of physical activity: some of them thought it controls weight; others - prevents development of different diseases; the rest thinks that it copes with psycho-emotional stress, and none of them precise about effectiveness of physical activity in all cases mentioned above. Propaganda of healthy life stile must be associated with the effectiveness of physical activity on health.
...
PMID:[Investigation of physical activity among adults]. 1690 31
1
2
Next >>