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)

Sprague-Dawley rats susceptible (DS) to NaCl-induced hypertension suffer higher mortality when exposed daily to 2.0 ppm ozone than do hypertension-resistant (DR) rats, independent of salt in the diet or systemic blood pressure. To investigate one possible contribution to this differential sensitivity to ozone, alveolar permeabilities to serum albumin were measured both in ozone-exposed and in control DS and DR rats. Female rats aged 5-7 weeks maintained on a low-salt (0.4% NaCl) diet were injected intravenously with 125I-bovine serum albumin and were then exposed to either 2.0 ppm ozone or air for 5 h. After pentobarbital anesthesia, the rats were exsanguinated and their lungs were lavaged in situ with saline. Lavage fluids and blood samples were measured for radioactivity using a NaI-well gamma counter. The results indicated that while DS and DR control rats have similar pulmonary permeabilities to 125I-albumin, the lungs of the ozone-exposed DS animals were 63% (p less than 0.02) more permeable than those of DR rats exposed to ozone. Sloughing of epithelial tissue, mucous formation and an accumulation of macrophages in the end-airways were more pronounced among ozone-exposed DS animals than in DR-ozone-exposed rats. This increased damage among DS rats correlated well with the increased protein permeability levels. In similar studies, Sprague-Dawley (D) rats were more variable in their response to ozone than either inbred strain. However, the results appeared generally more like those of the DS animals, suggesting that the trait selected by inbreeding may have been resistance rather than sensitivity to ozone-induced lung injury.
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PMID:Alveolar permeability to protein in rats differentially susceptible to ozone. 400 66

Magnesium (Mg) is an element essential for many enzymatic reactions in the human body. Various human and animal studies suggest that changes in Mg status are linked to diseases such as cardiac arrhythmia, coronary heart disease, hypertension, premenstrual syndrome, and diabetes mellitus. Thus, knowledge of Mg levels in the human body is needed. A direct measurement of human blood serum, which contains only 0.3% of the total body Mg, is generally used to infer information about the status of Mg in the body. However, in many clinical situations, Mg stored in large levels, for example in bones, muscles, and soft tissues, needs to be monitored either to evaluate the efficacy of a treatment or to study the progression of diseases associated with the deficiency of total body Mg. This work presents a feasibility study of a noninvasive, in vivo neutron activation analysis (IVNAA) technique using the 26Mg (n, gamma) 27Mg reaction to measure Mg levels in human hands. The technique employs the McMaster University high beam current Tandetron accelerator hand irradiation facility and an array of eight NaI (T1) detectors arranged in a 4 pi geometry for delayed counting of the 0.844 and 1.014 MeV gamma rays emitted when 27Mg decays in the irradiated hand. Mg determination in humans using IVNAA of hands has been demonstrated to be feasible, with effective doses as low as one-quarter of those delivered in chest x rays. The overall experimental uncertainty in the measurements is estimated to be approximately 5% (1 sigma). The results are found to be in the range of the in vitro measurements reported for other cortical bones collected from different sites of the human skeleton, which confirms that this technique mainly provides a measure of the amount of Mg in hand bones. The average concentration of Mg determined in human hands is 10.96 +/- 1.25 (+/- 1 SD) mg Mg/g Ca. The coefficient of variation (11%) observed in this study is comparable with or lower than several studies using in vitro measurements reported in the literature and therefore allows for a quantitative intersubject comparison, even if to a limited extent. The features of the developed technique such as its simplicity, rapidity, accuracy, robustness, noninvasive nature, and very effective use of radiation doses, present the technique as a viable diagnostic tool available for trial in a clinical environment.
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PMID:In vivo assessment of magnesium status in human body using accelerator-based neutron activation measurement of hands: a pilot study. 1838 82

Background: Pheochromocytoma is a rare cause of hypertension in pregnancy, which is often overlooked; especially in late pregnancy because of more prevalent pre-eclampsia. It has been associated with significant morbidity and mortality rates in both mother and fetus, if not diagnosed and treated in time. Minimally invasive surgery has been infrequently used for surgical management of pheochromocytoma in pregnancy, with <20 reported cases in English literature. Case Presentation: A 26-year-old pregnant woman presented at 9 weeks of gestation with complaints of palpitations, sweating, and headache; with past history of first trimester spontaneous abortion caused by accelerated hypertension. She was found to have hypertension and diabetes, but no pedal edema, weight gain, or proteinuria. Ultrasonogram and MRI of abdomen revealed a left adrenal mass and 24 hours urinary catecholamines levels were increased, suggesting a pheochromocytoma. After preoperative optimization in consultations with obstetricians, endocrinologists, and anesthetists, she underwent laparoscopic left adrenalectomy during 15th week of gestation. Perioperative hospital course was uneventful for both mother and the fetus. After adrenalectomy, her diabetes was cured and hypertension was controlled with single antihypertensive. She was readmitted at 31 weeks of gestation with accelerated hypertension and underwent emergency caesarean for impending eclampsia at 32 weeks, and delivered a healthy female baby. 131I-meta-iodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scan and 68Ga-[1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid]-1-NaI(3)-octreotide positron emission tomography-CT (68Ga-DOTANOC PET-CT) scan was obtained in postpartum period to rule out any extra-adrenal pheochromocytoma, both of which did not reveal any abnormality. At 1 year follow-up, she is normoglycemic and hypertension controlled on single antihypertensive. Conclusion: Pheochromocytoma in pregnancy is a rare but potentially lethal condition, and high index of suspicion is required for early diagnosis. Multidisciplinary coordination is required for effective management of this rare condition. Laparoscopic adrenalectomy is safe in second trimester of pregnancy for both mother and fetus.
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PMID:Successful Pregnancy Outcomes After Laparoscopic Management of Pheochromocytoma. 3310 19