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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Consecutive hypertensives admitted with cardiovascular complications were studied. One hundred and eight complicated hypertensives (10%) out of 1,066 medical admissions were seen in the three month study. Thirty three per cent had cerebrovascular disease, 30% ischaemic heart disease, 2% had malignant hypertension and 85% had hypertensive heart disease. All patients had uncontrolled
hypertension
at admission (mean blood pressure 184/115 mmHg). Twenty-four patients (22%) were newly diagnosed; of the rest of previously diagnosed hypertensives (78%), 3% had never been on treatment and 56% had dropped out of treatment, which explained their ineffective blood pressure control. However, 18% of patients had apparently been on regular follow up and treatment, and yet their blood pressure control was poor. Many patients had evidence of renal disease. The prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors was also high; 56% had hypercholesterolaemia; 46% had hypertriglyceridaemia; 44% smoked, 38% were
overweight
or obese, and 18% were diabetic. This indicates that
hypertension
is best regarded as an ingredient of a cardiovascular risk profile and its management requires multifactorial correction of all risk factors identified.
...
PMID:The Mentakab Hypertension Study project. Part I--Complicated hypertensives in hospital: who are they? 177 3
Investigations were undertaken to estimate various energy expenditure during professional work on incidence of
hypertension
,
overweight
, obesity, hyperuricaemia and hypercholesterolemia in workers of two enterprises in Upper Silesia. The study was carried out in 1957 individuals (1392 male, 565 female) divided into 5 groups according to the hardness of their work. Serum level of uric acid and cholesterol was determined in all investigated subjects. Incidence of
hypertension
,
overweight
and obesity was estimated. It has been stated that incidence of
hypertension
, hypercholesterolaemia,
overweight
and obesity in men and hyperuricaemia in both sexes decreased with hardness of the work. The incidence of
hypertension
,
overweight
and obesity was not related to hardness of the work in women. The authors conclude that physical activity associated with professional work can be much more in men than in women listed as a preventive measure against arteriosclerosis.
...
PMID:[Effect of work load on arteriosclerosis risk factors in employees of 2 Upper Silesia industries]. 179 21
Arterial
hypertension
is frequently associated with metabolic abnormalities. Hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance are found in obese patients, in non-insulin-dependent diabetics and in some hypertensive patients, irrespective of whether the patients are
overweight
or have diabetes mellitus. Membrane transport abnormalities, such as increased sodium-lithium exchange associated with
hypertension
are also significantly related to disturbances in lipid metabolism. Increased sympathetic nervous system activity is a well established feature of arterial
hypertension
and this may also affect glucose and lipid metabolism. The possibility of these metabolic alterations in the hypertensive patient must be taken into account when deciding upon treatment. Attention to diet is mandatory and includes advice to reduce energy, salt and saturated fat intakes and to increase the intake of less digestible fiber and of potassium; alcohol consumption should be limited. Energy expenditure by regular aerobic physical exercise should be encouraged and continuous effort is necessary to help patients stop smoking. In patients with
high blood pressure
and abnormalities in lipid and glucose metabolism, it is wise to start pharmacological treatment with drugs that are known to be neutral in their metabolic effects, such as calcium antagonists, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or alpha-blocking agents.
...
PMID:Metabolic disturbances and antihypertensive therapy. 179
The status of selected cardiovascular risk factors was ascertained in a consecutive sample of 661 (222 men and 439 women) African-American adults who were screened for the Northeast Oklahoma City Cholesterol Education Program, a church-based cholesterol intervention program.
Hypertension
was present in 48.4% and 44.7% of men and women, respectively. Average systolic blood pressure levels were similar in men and women (132.0 vs 131.5 mm Hg, P = 0.40) although average diastolic blood pressure levels were higher in men (84.0 vs 81.1 mm Hg; P < .0001). A substantial proportion of the screenees were unaware of their
hypertension
, and blood pressure normalization (SBP < 140 and DBP < 90 mm Hg) was uncommon in drug-treated hypertensives. Average cholesterol levels were slightly higher in women compared to men (206.0 vs 199.6 mg/dL, P = 0.11). The majority of persons with elevated cholesterol levels (> or = 240 mg/dL) were unaware of their condition and were infrequently treated with cholesterol-lowering drugs.
Overweight
was highly prevalent, was more common with advancing age, and was related to the presence of
hypertension
in both men and women. In addition, a strong linear relation between
overweight
and blood pressure was present in both sexes.
Overweight
was more common in young men (< 35 years old) compared to age-matched women; however, women were increasingly more
overweight
than men after 35-44 years of age. In fact, by age 65, 90% of the women were
overweight
. These data indicate an excessive prevalence and high mean levels of modifiable cardiovascular risk factors in these church-attending African-American adults. Because churches are a central institution in most African-American communities, and their congregations appear to have an excessive cardiovascular disease risk factor burden, churches may be appropriate sites for the implementation of community-based risk factor control programs.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular risk factor prevalence in African-American adult screenees for a church-based cholesterol education program: the Northeast Oklahoma City Cholesterol Education Program. 184 23
Since the interaction between disorders of the respiratory coordination and cardiovascular or cardiopulmonary regulation is still largely unknown the intention of the present investigation is to point out the coincidence of cardiac arrhythmias, such as premature ventricular capture (PVC) beats and conduction blocks, with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). For the first time a group of more than 300 patients with suspected OSA is examined concerning risk factors and frequent diagnoses as obesity,
hypertension
, coronary heart disease (CHD), heart insufficiency, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and daytime hypoxaemia. Summarizing the results of lung function test, blood gas analysis, strain-ECG, Holter-ECG and inductive plethysmography with oxygen partial pressure measurement by ambulatory work-up the following statements can be made: PVC beats occurring markedly during sleep give hints for OSA being the underlying cause, especially if the patients are young and
overweight
. Hypoxaemia increasing during the apnea episodes should be considered as one possible pathogenetic mechanism. Second- and third degree conduction blocks and sinus arrest coincident very often with OSA. They suggest to be life-limiting factors the more so since they often go along with CHD or heart insufficiency.
Systemic arterial hypertension
and
overweight
have the highest prevalence in OSA, signs for heart insufficiency and daytime hypoxaemia are also significantly more frequent than in non-OSA patients. We could find no hints for direct pathogenetic coherence between CHD and OSA or between COPD and OSA, nevertheless pronounced nocturnal changes in blood gases and intrathoracic hemodynamics have important influence on the cardiopulmonary and cardiovascular system, as partly illuminated in other more pathogenetic oriented studies by the present time.
...
PMID:[Cardiopulmonary risk factors in patients with sleep apnea]. 186 5
Epidemiologic studies demonstrated an excess risk of ischemic heart disease (IHD) among individuals who simultaneously exhibit
hypertension
and elevated atherogenic lipids (coronary high risk (CHR)-status). Yet, relatively little is known about factors which contribute to the development of CHR-status during early and middle adulthood. The present study explores the role of selected biobehavioral and psychosocial factors in explaining CHR-status using data from a prospective 6.5 years investigation of a cohort of 416 middle-aged (40.8 +/- 9.6 years) male blue-collar workers. Multivariate logistic regression analysis shows that
overweight
(odds ratio (o.r.) 4.14), smoking (o.r. 2.19), low promotion prospects at work (o.r. 2.71), competitiveness at work (o.r. 2.79) and feelings of sustained anger (o.r. 5.41) independently contribute to the explanation of CHR-status. Furthermore, the operational definition of CHR-status is validated by estimating its power in predicting IHD incidence in the study cohort. In conclusion, co-manifestation of
hypertension
and elevated lipids is more likely to exist among those blue-collar men who exhibit distinct work-related characteristics in addition to established biobehavioral risks such as
overweight
and smoking. In view of the high prevalence of CHR-status and of IHD among men in the lower socio-economic strata this finding is also of interest for health policy.
...
PMID:Psychosocial and biobehavioral characteristics of hypertensive men with elevated atherogenic lipids. 187 14
A retrospective survey of the case records of 130 patients with newly diagnosed non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) was performed to assess the effect of 1 year of clinical attendance on blood glucose control, body weight, lipid profile and blood pressure. The mean age of these patients was 63 +/- (SE) 0.1 years and 45% were 65 years or older. Body mass index (BMI) was 28.3 +/- 0.49 kg m-2 and 72% were
overweight
or obese. Sixty-seven percent of the patients were hypertensive (WHO criteria). Serum cholesterol was 6.0 +/- 0.2 mmol/l, HDL cholesterol 1.0 +/- 0.0 mmol/l and triglycerides 3.14 +/- 0.29 mmol/l (non-fasting). Seventy-two percent of the patients were managed on diet alone and 23% by diet plus sulphonylurea. The remaining 5% were treated by metformin or a combination of metformin plus sulphonylurea. After one year, glycated haemoglobin (HbA1) decreased from 10.7 +/- 0.3% to 8.2 +/- 0.2% (P less than 0.01; normal less than 7.5%). The sulphonylurea groups showed similar decreases in HbA1. Overall there was a small but significant fall in BMI (-0.5 +/- 0.2 kg m-2; P less than 0.05). However, the diet treated patients showed a significant decrease in BMI (-0.8 +/- 0.3 kg m-2; P less than 0.01) whilst BMI increased in the sulphonylurea treated group (+0.7 +/- 0.2 kg m-2; P less than 0.01). Serum lipid concentrations remained unchanged in both groups. The proportion of patients with
hypertension
remained the same. Hence after one year of clinical attendance, HbA1 improved but there was minimal change in the associated cardiovascular risk factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Management of newly diagnosed non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes mellitus: a retrospective audit. 187 4
Hypertension
has been related to both obesity and a high salt intake. Evidence for the associations of blood pressure with body weight and dietary salt intake is summarized. In both adolescents and adults correlations between blood pressure and weight are highly significant, and in longitudinal studies change in blood pressure over time is correlated with change in weight. Correlations between salt intake and blood pressure are less striking, and the results of trials of modest salt restriction demonstrate a small but significant effect on blood pressure. Individuals vary in their susceptibility to salt, and hypertensive individuals are more responsive than normotensive individuals. Dietary deficiencies of potassium and calcium may amplify the effect of a high salt intake on blood pressure. Animal models provide compelling evidence for a genetic component to salt sensitivity of blood pressure. In two
hypertension
prevention trials, change in blood pressure was more convincingly related to change in weight than to change in dietary salt. Avoidance of obesity, or weight reduction in
overweight
individuals, should be key strategies for
hypertension
prevention. Avoidance of salt excess is also appropriate, although currently available trial data do not justify a recommendation of rigorous salt restriction for the entire population.
Hypertension
1991 Sep
PMID:Nutrition and hypertension prevention. 188 52
We examined patterns of physical activity and other characteristics that might deter
hypertension
or delay all-cause mortality among university alumni, 1962-1985. Collegiate sports play did not alter
hypertension
incidence, nor did contemporary walking, stair-climbing, or light sports play among 5463 University of Pennsylvania alumni, 739 of whom developed
hypertension
. But vigorous sports play reduced
hypertension
incidence; and
overweight
, gain in weight, history of parental
hypertension
, or any combination of these, increased it. Among 819 hypertensive Pennsylvania alumni (138 died during follow-up), vigorous sports play had minimal influence on mortality; but freedom from
overweight
and cigarette smoking deferred death. Among 16,936 Harvard College alumni, of whom 2614 died during follow-up, lack of vigorous sports play, or presence of
hypertension
, cigarette smoking, and
overweight
increased risk of premature mortality, heightened by any combination of these adverse characteristics. Overall, we found an inverse relationship between vigorous sports participation and
hypertension
risk but a direct relationship between risk and weight-for-height, weight gain, or parental
hypertension
. With regard to all-cause mortality, cigarette smoking and
hypertension
were most hazardous for the individual; smoking and lack of vigorous recreational play were most hazardous for the alumnus population as a whole.
...
PMID:Physical activity and hypertension: an epidemiological view. 193 Sep 24
Non-pharmacological techniques in the management of
hypertension
have been shown to be beneficial. This pilot study was set up to examine how often routine advice was given with respect to weight reduction and/or lifestyle adjustments, and whether it was needed. Three-quarters of the 69 patients in the study smoked or were
overweight
but only half of the smokers recalled advice to stop. One-fifth of the patients were apparently not told to lose weight. Only one-third recalled being told to reduce alcohol intake. Lifestyle counselling and the management of
hypertension
in this small study appeared to be not completely effective for various reasons. It is likely to be cheaper and more satisfactory than medication alone or as an adjunct and its application deserves further study.
...
PMID:Is the non-pharmacological treatment of hypertension neglected? 194 56
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