Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The blood pressure, heart rate, and plasma catecholamine (CA) response to standing and mental stresses were studied in 14 normotensive subjects with normotensive parents (PNT group), 14 normotensive subjects with hypertensive parent(s) (PHT group), and eight borderline hypertensive patients (BHT group). Mean basal plasma norepinephrine (NE) concentration in BHT group (302 +/- 94 pg/ml) and PHT group (289 +/- 167 pg/ml) were significantly higher than in PNT group (205 +/- 76 pg/ml). Significant differences in the mean basal plasma epinephrine (E) were found only between the PNT and BHT groups (22 +/- 12 vs 43 +/- 18 pg/ml, p less than 0.01). Both plasma NE and E increased significantly on standing in all groups. With mental stress, plasma E increased significantly, though plasma NE did not change significantly in all three groups. The mean changes in blood pressure, heart rate, and plasma CA in response to standing and mental stresses were not different in the three groups. However, a higher incidence (50%) of high blood pressure responders (greater than or equal to 20 mmHg in systolic blood pressure) to mental stress was found in the PHT group compared with PNT (14%) and BHT (12%). The high responders in the PHT group had significantly higher mean plasma E concentrations throughout the experiment. Also, their increases in plasma NE and E in response to mental stress were higher than those of the low responders. The results indicate that genetic predisposition to hypertension plays a significant role in determining plasma catecholamine levels and the responsiveness to stress, especially to mental stress.
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PMID:The adreno-sympathetic system, the genetic predisposition to hypertension, and stress. 400 25

The blood pressures (BP) of the parents of a group of students were determined and two subgroups of students were defined, one with (PHT group) and one without (PNT group) a familial predisposition to hypertension. Observations were made in both groups during three periods of modified dietary electrolyte intake: (i) no-added sodium (low Na), (ii) no added sodium with potassium supplementation (low Na/high K), and (iii) sodium supplementation (high Na). The diets were given in random order. At the start of the trial, while the students continued their customary diet, the PHT group had higher systolic and diastolic pressures and plasma noradrenaline levels than the PNT group. At the end of 4 weeks of the high Na diet, the BP levels of both groups were significantly higher than those after the low Na diet. In contrast, when the low Na diet was supplemented for 2 weeks with potassium, BPs of the PHT group fell significantly, while those of the PNT group rose slightly. BP in the PHT group was significantly lower during the low Na/high K than during the high Na diet (systolic 10.5 mm Hg +/- 2.3 SE; diastolic 11.2 +/- 2.5, the changes being significantly different from those in the PNT group. The changes in plasma renin and aldosterone were similar in both groups during the different diets. Plasma noradrenaline fell in the PHT group, but rose in the PNT group when the low Na diet was supplemented with potassium. This fall in plasma noradrenaline in the PHT group during the low Na/high K diet correlated with the falls in systolic and diastolic BP. It is concluded that whereas young adults with a familial predisposition to hypertension behave similarly to those without such a predisposition in having a pressor response to a high sodium intake, they are peculiar in showing a depressor response to a high potassium intake.
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PMID:Blood pressure and hormonal changes following alteration in dietary sodium and potassium in young men with and without a familial predisposition to hypertension. 610 98

Some of the relatively easily measurable and possibly hypertension-associated parameters were evaluated in thirty normotensive young subjects divided into the PHT (either parent hypertensive) group and the PNT (both parents normotensive) group. In subjects of the PHT group, the platelet aggregating sensitivity to the arachidonic acid and the ratio of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol were significantly (p less than 0.05) increased while urinary kallikrein excretion was decreased without simultaneously significant elevation of blood pressure. The enhanced platelet aggregating sensitivity to the arachidonic acid and the increased ratio of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol suggest that subjects with a positive family history of hypertension might have a greater tendency to atherosclerosis and could contribute to the development of essential hypertension. Decreased urinary kallikrein excretion suggests that the vasodepressive activity of the kallikrein-kinin system might be inhibited in subjects with a positive family history of hypertension.
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PMID:Relation of family history of hypertension to platelet aggregation, ratio of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol and urinary kallikrein excretion. 643 May 81

We investigated the relation between home blood pressure (BP) and body weight in 38 young normotensive men (mean age, 16 years) whose parents were normotensive (PNT group) and 34 age- and sex-matched normotensive men, one or both of whose parents were hypertensive (PHT group). Although causal BP measurements were similar in both groups, home systolic BP was significantly higher in the PHT group (123 +/- 1 mm Hg) than in the PNT group (116 +/- 1 mm Hg). Body weight was significantly greater in the PHT group (66.0 +/- 1.4 v 61.8 +/- 1.3 kg, P < .05) and body mass index (BMI) was not significantly higher in the PHT group (22.4 +/- 0.5 v 21.3 +/- 0.5 kg/m2, P = .09). Body weight (r = 0.38) and BMI (r = 0.42) were significantly correlated with home systolic BP in the PHT group. There were no differences in serum lipid or uric acid concentrations between the two groups. Our results showed that young normotensive subjects with a genetic predisposition to hypertension weighed more and had higher home systolic BPs compared with subjects without a family history of hypertension. Our observations further indicated a close relationship between a family history of hypertension and increased body weight, even in young normotensive men.
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PMID:Relation of home blood pressure to body weight in young normotensive men with or without family history of hypertension. 791 46