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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The potential role of transient sarcolemmal membrane wounding as a signal transduction event for cardiomyocyte hypertrophy was evaluated in rats with short-term pressure overload caused by banding of the proximal aorta. This procedure resulted in significant increases in left ventricular systolic (1.5-fold) and end-diastolic (2.6-fold) pressures and wall stresses that were associated with significant wall thinning and cavitary enlargement. Quantitative image analysis of frozen sections of the stressed ventricles obtained 60 minutes after banding demonstrated a 6- to 10-fold increase in cytosolic staining with a horseradish
peroxidase
-labeled anti-albumin antibody compared with sham-operated controls, indicating that an increase in transient sarcolemmal membrane permeability (wounding) is an early response to an abrupt increase in hemodynamic load in vivo. We conclude that an intense hemodynamic stress in vivo can result in histologically detectable cardiomyocyte wounding.
Hypertension
1997 Nov
PMID:Cardiac myocyte membrane wounding in the abruptly pressure-overloaded rat heart under high wall stress. 936 53
To identify tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha immunopositive cells, third trimester human placental bed biopsies were selected from nine normotensive control women, 16 severely pre-eclamptic patients and seven patients with pre-existing
hypertension
with superimposed pre-eclampsia. In addition, five first and early second trimester specimens were included in the study. Immunostaining was performed with a mouse IgG1 monoclonal antibody (J1D9) reactive specifically with human TNF-alpha (1:300 ascitic fluid), using a biotin-streptavidin-
peroxidase
technique. Variable staining of stromal cells was noted in all biopsies. Specimens of early pregnancy showed marked immunostaining for TNF-alpha on proliferating tips of anchoring villi, invasive interstitial cytotrophoblast (but not the multinuclear giant cells), and endovascular trophoblast invading the spiral arteries. At term, weak staining was found in trophoblast incorporated within spiral artery walls. In biopsies from pre-eclamptic patients, spiral arteries without physiological change showed very little staining except in atherotic vessels where the infiltrated lipophages often showed intense immunolabelling. The marked presence of TNF-alpha in extravillous cytotrophoblast of young specimens is suggestive of a role in early invasion. Immunostaining of foam cells in non-invaded spiral arteries in pre-eclampsia at or near-term indicates a potential role of this cytokine in the development of atherotic lesions.
...
PMID:Immunolocalization of tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in the placental bed of normotensive and hypertensive human pregnancies. 963 18
A 46-year-old woman was referred to our department in July 1996 with complaints of fever and myalgia in her calves. She had a 20-year history of purulent sputum; diffuse panbronchiolitis had been diagnosed in 1983. Physical examination revealed low-pithed rhonchi over the lung fieldis and hypesthesia of the right leg. She had a white blood cell count of 16,100/mm3, including 4% eosinophils, and a platelet count of 80.0 x 10(4)/mm3. The serum IgE level was 2,200 U/ml, and the cold hemagglutinin titer was high. Pulmonary-function tests showed mixed ventilatory dysfunction, and arterial blood gas analysis revealed a PaO2 of 55.8 Torr on room air. Pseudomonas aeruginosa was cultured from her sputum. A chest X-ray film and CT scan showed diffuse nodular shadows and bronchiectatic changes with mild hyperinflation. An infiltrative lesion in right S6 area could also be seen. Administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics did not alleviate her symptoms. The level of
myeloperoxidase
-specific antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (MPO-ANCA) in serum was 245 EU/ml, and 67Ga scintigraphy showed marked accumulation in the abdomen. Abdominal angiography demonstrated a bead-like appearance and irregularities in the peripheral branches of the hapatic artery, the splenic artery, the cystic artery, and the superior mesenteric artery. Because of the high
MPO
-ANCA level and the angiographic abnormalities,
MPO
-ANCA-related vasculitis was diagnosed. She was treated with 1 g of methylprednisolone daily for 3 days, followed by 60 mg of prednisolone and 50 mg of cyclophosphamide daily. Her condition improved dramatically, and the
MPO
-ANCA level became almost normal. During treatment, her blood pressure rose markedly with a normal serum creatinine level and normal urinalysis. Plasma renin activity was 13.3 ng/ml/hr. Renal angiography showed stenoses and irregularities in the peripheral branches of renal arteries bilaterally. These findings led to a diagnosis of renovascular
hypertension
due to vasculitis. Her blood pressure was controlled with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and a calcium antagonist. Vasculitis associated with chronic supportive lung disease has occasionally been reported, which suggests a casual relation between chronic respiratory infection and ANCA-related vasculitis. Systemic vasculitis should be taken into account as a potential complication of chronic suppurative lung disease.
...
PMID:[Diffuse panbronchiolitis with myeloperoxidase-specific antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-related vasculitis]. 974 63
Prior to 1972, the increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality that diabetics endure had been attributed to vascular disease. In 1972, Rubler et al. proposed the existence of a diabetic cardiomyopathy based on their expereince with four adult diabetic patients who suffered from congestive heart failure (CHF) in the absence of discernable coronary artery disease, valvular or congenital heart disease,
hypertension
, or alcoholism. Alternative explanations for CHF, such as anemia and vascular and renal disease in these four patients, gave rise to criticisms, but a wave of subsequent studies in the 1970s and 1980s provided credence to this new disease entity. This review of the studies done since 1972 appears to support the concept of a diabetic cardiomyopathy independent of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The exact mechanism is still questionable, and several mechanisms have been proposed including small and microvascular disease, autonomic dysfunction, metabolic derangements, and interstitial fibrosis. However, the weight of evidence leans toward the development of fibrosis, possibly caused by the accumulation of a
peroxidase
acid schiff (PAS)-positive glycoprotein, leading to myocardial hypertrophy and diastolic dysfunction.
...
PMID:Diabetic cardiomyopathy. 985 79
An improved linkage map for rat Chromosome (Chr) 10 with two F2 populations was constructed. Thirty new microsatellite markers were generated from a Chr 10-specific, small-insert genomic library and mapped to rat Chr 10. Among them were the rat homologs for the mouse gene for light and heavy chains of
myeloperoxidase
and human neurofibromatosis 1. Eight newly generated markers (D10Mco62, D10Mco63, D10Mco64, D10Mco65, D10Mco67, D10Mco68, D10Mco70, and D10Mco74) were mapped to the region of the rat Chr 10 blood pressure QTL. The availability of such markers may be instrumental in the search for genes responsible for the
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Improved linkage map and thirty new microsatellite markers for rat Chromosome 10. 989 28
Scleroderma renal crisis is characterized by intimal thickening of the afferent glomerular arterioles resulting in
hypertension
and fibrinoid necrosis of the capillary tuff. We report a 67-year-old man with long-standing systemic sclerosis who developed normotensive progressive renal failure, proteinuria, and a nephritic urinary sediment with serum
myeloperoxidase
-antineutrophil cytoplasmatic antibodies (MPO-ANCA). Renal biopsy showed pauci-immune crescentic glomerulonephritis but none of the typical vascular changes of scleroderma renal crisis. Because comparable cases have recently been reported from Japan, normotensive
MPO
-ANCA-positive crescentic glomerulonephritis may form an entity of progressive renal failure in scleroderma.
...
PMID:MPO-ANCA-Positive crescentic glomerulonephritis: a distinct entity of scleroderma renal disease? 1019 34
Captopril (D-3-mercapto-2-methylpropanoyl-L-proline) is an angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, used widely in the treatment of
hypertension
and congestive heart failure. Captopril also inhibits proliferation of a variety of cell types, including several lacking ACE and renin acitvity. We have previously demonstrated that human mammary ductal carcinoma cells are among the cell types whose mitotic activity is inhibited by captopril. In those cells, captopril also reduces estrogen receptor (ER) and increases progesterone receptor (PR) concentrations. The present study evaluated the mechanism of captopril's antiproliferative action in an ER/PR-negative human mammary ductal carcinoma cell line, Hs578T. Cells grown in a 10% serum medium showed negligible changes in the presence of captopril alone. However, in the presence of subphysiologic concentrations of copper salts or copper-loaded ceruloplasmin, captopril caused a dose-dependent reduction in cell number, thymidine incorporation and mitochondrial dehydrogenase activity. In contrast, iron salts and iron-saturated transferrin had no effect on captopril activity. Catalase and horseradish
peroxidase
nullified the cytotoxic effects of captopril/Cu++, whereas H2O2 mimicked those effects. These data are consistent with the notion of a copper-catalyzed oxidation of captopril, leading to the generation of H2O2 as the cytotoxin to this clinically important cell type.
...
PMID:Mechanism of captopril toxicity to a human mammary ductal carcinoma cell line in the presence of copper. 1051 67
Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) are commonly associated with a necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis (GN) that is pauci-immune, with few or no glomerular immune complex deposits detectable by immunofluorescence (IF) or electron microscopy (EM). Immunoglobulin A (IgA) nephropathy may also be manifest as a crescentic GN, but it is characterized by mesangial immune complex deposits containing IgA and is rarely associated with
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
)- or proteinase 3 (PR3)-specific ANCA when an enzyme immunoassay is used to detect these antibodies. This report describes six patients with severe crescentic GN with mesangial IgA deposits by IF and mesangial electron-dense deposits by EM in patients with positive ANCA serological test results (four patients, anti-PR3; one patient, anti-
MPO
; one patient, anti-PR3 and anti-
MPO
). Patients presented with acute or progressive renal insufficiency, hematuria, proteinuria (nephrotic range in two patients), and
hypertension
. Three patients had evidence of systemic vasculitis: two patients at initial presentation and one patient later in the clinical course. Renal biopsy specimens showed crescents in greater than 50% of glomeruli in all cases, but only mild, focal and segmental mesangial and endocapillary hypercellularity, more typical of ANCA-associated crescentic GN than of crescentic IgA nephropathy without associated ANCA. Semiquantitative analysis of mesangial and endocapillary cellularity performed on renal biopsy slides from these six patients and from eight ANCA-negative patients with IgA nephropathy and crescents in greater than 50% of glomeruli showed significantly greater hypercellularity in the ANCA-negative cases. Three of five ANCA-positive patients for whom follow-up clinical data were available showed improved renal function after treatment with cyclophosphamide and corticosteroids and have not developed end-stage renal disease 17, 20, and 25 months postbiopsy. The remaining two patients were dialysis dependent at the time of biopsy and have remained so despite treatment with cyclophosphamide and corticosteroids. The findings suggest an overlap syndrome of ANCA-associated crescentic GN and IgA nephropathy that resembles the former both histologically and in its potential to respond to aggressive therapy if detected relatively early in its course.
...
PMID:ANCA-associated crescentic glomerulonephritis with mesangial IgA deposits. 1100 72
Risk factors for cardiovascular disease have been shown to exacerbate the inflammatory response and microvascular dysfunction that is normally associated with ischemia-reperfusion. The objective of this study was to determine whether hypercholesterolemia and/or
hypertension
alter I/R-induced expression of P-selectin in the intestinal vasculature. Male control and hypertensive (HTN) rats were placed on either a normal diet or high cholesterol diet (HCD) for at least 3 weeks resulting in hypercholesterolemia (HC). Ischemia was induced by occlusion of the superior mesenteric artery for 15 min, followed by either 30 min or 4 h of reperfusion. The dual radiolabeled antibody technique was used to quantify the rapid (30 min) and transcription-dependent (4 h) expression of P-selectin. Tissue
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) was used to quantify neutrophil infiltration. The constitutive (basal) expression of P-selectin did not differ among the experimental groups. Although I/R significantly increased P-selectin expression in control, HC, and HTN+HC, P-selectin expression did not increase in HTN. The HC group exhibited the largest increments in P-selectin expression and tissue
MPO
after I/R. The increment in P-selectin expression was not significantly attenuated in HC rats that were rendered thrombocytopenic with anti-platelet serum. Treatment with an anti-P-selectin antibody largely prevented the exaggerated
MPO
increase noted in HC. These findings indicate that hypercholesterolemia in contrast to
hypertension
enhances the expression of P-selectin in the postischemic intestinal vasculature.
...
PMID:Influence of hypercholesterolemia and hypertension on ischemia-reperfusion induced P-selectin expression. 1116 66
This study was performed to clarify the relationship between changes in contractile proteins in renal vascular walls and the prognosis of
hypertension
during pregnancy. Twenty preeclamptic patients underwent renal biopsies after delivery and were divided into the following three groups: group I, patients with persistent
hypertension
after delivery (n = 7; mean age, 34.8 +/- 1.4 years [SE]); group II, patients who became normotensive after delivery and hypertensive again during follow-up (n = 5; mean age, 34.8 +/- 1.6 years), and group III, patients who became normotensive after delivery (n = 8; mean age, 28.0 +/- 1.0 years). We also examined age-matched healthy controls (group IV; n = 7; mean age, 34.9 +/- 1.5 years). Renal biopsy specimens were immunohistochemically stained by the avidin-biotinylated
peroxidase
complex method using antimonoclonal smooth muscle cell myosin heavy chain isoform antibodies (SM-1, SM-2) and antimonoclonal alpha-smooth muscle cell actin antibody (actin). We estimated and semiquantitatively scored the degree of staining in each section. In interlobular arteries, SM-1, SM-2, and actin staining in group I were significantly reduced compared with group IV (SM-1, SM-2, P: < 0.05; actin, P: < 0.01). In afferent arterioles (Afs), SM-1, SM-2, and actin staining were reduced in group I. SM-2 staining in group I was significantly reduced compared with the other three groups (versus group II, P: < 0.05; versus groups III and IV, P: < 0.01). These findings suggest that phenotypic changes in vascular smooth muscle cells (especially the disappearance of SM-2 in Afs) reflect the stage of underlying essential hypertension and can predict from the change in
hypertension
during pregnancy whether it will persist after delivery.
...
PMID:Renal vascular walls in patients with preeclampsia superimposed on essential hypertension. 1127 72
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