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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyperplasia of myocytes in cardiac adaptation is a rare event in the mammalian cardiac muscle. Recent findings support the concept that proliferation of myocytes in the adult mammalian heart may be induced after a prolonged increase in pressure load on the myocardium. To determine whether short-term
hypertension
leads to hyperplasia of myocyte nuclei in the rat heart renal hypertension was produced in 12 Wistar rats. As soon as
hypertension
occurred, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) (50 mg/kg/day) was injected intraperitoneally on three subsequent days. Twelve sham-operated rats served as controls. After 3 days, the left cardiac ventricle was excised and double-staining with anti-BrdU antibody and propidium iodide was performed to determine the phase of cell-cycle of the BrdU-positive cells by flow-cytometry. Immunohistochemical double-staining with desmin, smooth muscle actin,
vimentin
, and BrdU was done to classify the BrdU-positive cells. Most of the BrdU-positive cells were in the G0/G1-phase of the cell-cycle, suggesting cell proliferation or DNA-repair have taken place; polyploidy was not observed. In the hypertensive group (4.62% +/- 2.36) significantly more cells incorporated BrdU than in the control group (1.46% +/- 0.96). Immunohistochemically, the majority of the BrdU-positive cells consisted of fibrocytes, smooth muscle cells, and endothelial cells. Only 0.35% +/- 0.26 of cardiac myocytes in the normotensive group showed positive BrdU-staining compared to 0.48% +/- 0.32 in the hypertensive group. This difference was statistically not significant. This study showed that early after onset of
hypertension
proliferation of non-myocytes, but not of myocytes occurred. DNA synthesis is limited almost completely to the interstitial cells and does not occur in any significant extent in cardiac myocytes. In conclusion, hyperplasia of cardiac myocytes is not observed at early stages of
hypertension
, but it may develop at a late stage of cardiac adaptation.
...
PMID:Early proliferative changes in hearts of hypertensive Goldblatt rats: an immunohistochemical and flow-cytometrical study. 887 76
Binswanger's disease is pathologically characterized by a combination of diffuse cerebrovascular white matter lesions and lacunar infarcts in the basal ganglia and white matter. Although a blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction has been implicated in the pathogenesis of these white matter (WM) lesions, few authors have addressed this problem. In the present study, we describe BBB dysfunction and its regional differences in the brains of Binswanger's disease patients. Twelve brains from Binswanger's disease patients (group III) were examined and compared with those from five patients with non-neurological disease (group I) and five cortical infarct patients without significant WM lesions (group II). Immunohistochemistry was performed for glial fibrillary acidic protein and
vimentin
as astroglial cell markers, and for immunoglobulins, complements and fibrinogen as extravasated serum protein markers. The grading scores for IgG extravasation were significantly higher in group III as compared to group I, in both the periventricular WM and the subcortical WM (P < 0.01). In group III, the scores in the periventricular WM and subcortical WM were significantly higher than in the subcortical U fibers and cerebral cortex (P < 0.01 for the periventricular WM; P < 0.001 for the subcortical WM), respectively. Clasmatodendritic astroglia, which had swollen cell bodies and large cytoplasmic vacuoles with disintegrated processes, incorporated the serum components IgG, IgM, C3d, Clq and fibrinogen, both in the periventricular WM and subcortical WM in 5 out of 12 (42%) Binswanger's disease brains. These results indicate that WM lesions in Binswanger's disease are accompanied by BBB dysfunction, although it remains uncertain whether BBB dysfunction is secondary to either chronic cerebral ischemia or arterial
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Blood-brain barrier dysfunction in Binswanger's disease; an immunohistochemical study. 945 25
Recent evidence indicates that tubulointerstitial injury plays an important role in hypertensive kidney injury and that phenotypic changes contribute to this pathology. Moreover, angiotensin II is known to be actively involved in the pathogenesis of progressive kidney injury induced by
hypertension
. The present study was undertaken to see the effect of a newly developed angiotensin II type I receptor (AT1 receptor) antagonist on
hypertension
-induced kidney injury and to determine the contribution of phenotypic changes to morphologic alterations. Two-kidney, one-clip (2K1C), Goldblatt hypertensive rats (n = 27) were made by clipping the left renal artery. These animals were orally administered 57G709 (a selective non-peptide AT1 receptor antagonist)(10 mg/kg/day), captopril (20 mg/kg/day), or vehicle alone for 23 days beginning 4 weeks after clipping. In the non-clipped kidney of vehicle-treated 2K1 C rats, marked tubulointerstitial injury as well as glomerular sclerosis and/or hyalinosis was found in association with phenotypic changes, as shown by the neoexpression of
vimentin
in periglomeruli, perivascular walls, distal tubuli, and injured interstitium. Renin expression was markedly suppressed in the non-clipped kidneys of vehicle-treated 2K1C rats as compared with renin expression in normotensive control kidneys of sham-operated rats. Both 57G709 and captopril markedly ameliorated hypertensive kidney injury as reflected by the glomerular sclerosing index and by the tubulointerstitial index as determined by the point-counting method, and this improvement was accompanied by a significant decrease in blood pressure, urinary protein excretion, kidney/body weight ratio, and heart/body weight ratio. In addition, the
vimentin
neoexpression mentioned above was also suppressed with an inhibition of angiotensin II. These results suggest that in 2K1C Goldblatt hypertensive kidney injury, the AT1 receptor antagonist 57G709 exerts a potent renal protective effect associated with the inhibition of phenotypic changes.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II receptor blockade limits kidney injury in two-kidney, one-clip Goldblatt hypertensive rats with special reference to phenotypic changes. 998 65
The aim of the study was to investigate the influence of long-term ACE inhibition with ramipril on myocardial hypertrophy and its molecular background in spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats (SHR-SP). Therefore, 1-month-old pre-hypertensive SHR-SP were randomized into three groups and exposed lifelong via drinking water to 1 mg/kg/day ramipril (anti-hypertensive dose, RHI), 10 micrograms/kg/day ramipril (non-anti-hypertensive dose, RLO) or placebo. After 15 months cardiac tissue was collected from ten rats each for immunohistochemistry and Northern blot analysis of structural proteins, proteins of the extracellular matrix and several growth factors. Results showed that RHI, but not RLO, treatment prevented development of myocyte hypertrophy (ANP). Furthermore, unlike placebo-treated rats, the ramipril-treated animals had no evidence of degeneration and loss of structural proteins (alpha -actinin), inflammatory infiltrates (CD45) and deposition of extracellular matrix proteins (collagen, fibronectin,
vimentin
). Only in RHI-treated animals, mRNA levels for TGF- beta(1)as well as of collagen alpha(1)(I) and fibronectin were downregulated compared to placebo-treated animals. In contrast, VEGF mRNA levels increased significantly in both groups of ramipril-treated animals v. placebo-treated SHR-SP. Thus, the reported life prolonging effect of high doses of ramipril which is associated with prevention of
hypertension
and hypertrophy is accompanied by prevention of the development of necrosis and fibrosis. The role of VEGF, however, seems to be independent of this effect.
...
PMID:Effect of long-term ACE inhibition on myocardial tissue in hypertensive stroke-prone rats. 1042 43
Clear cell sarcoma of the kidney is a distinct, highly malignant pediatric neoplasm. Its occurrence in adults is extremely rare and the subject of isolated case reports. We present a series of four cases (three males and one female) identified in an adolescent and in young adults (16, 18, 20, and 25 years) with flank mass (three cases), hematuria (two cases), flank pain (two cases), and
hypertension
(one case). Three patients had stage III disease and one had stage I disease (National Wilms' Tumor Study staging system). All tumors had predominantly or exclusively the classic histology of a monotonous proliferation of uniform small round cells with evenly distributed fine chromatin, although focal microcyst formation (two cases) and spindled architecture (one case) (variant patterns) were also noted. Therapy in all cases consisted of surgery and chemotherapy with or without radiation. Follow-up data (29-202 months) showed distant metastases in all four cases, including the lung (four cases), bone (two cases), and the liver (two cases). Three patients died of disease at 29, 59, and 63 months (mean, 50.3 months), and one patient is alive with no evidence of disease at 202 months. Ultrastructural features included scattered primitive junctions, short and irregular cytoplasmic extensions, and scant to a moderate amount of mitochondria. Immunohistochemical study (three cases) showed immunoreactivity with
vimentin
(two cases) and no reaction with cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, S-100 protein, or desmin. Flow cytometric analysis showed diploid DNA content in three primary tumors and tetraploidy in one metastatic tumor. The proliferative activity (S-phase fraction) was low to intermediate (mean, 9.8%). Our data suggest that clear cell sarcoma of the kidney in the young adult age group resembles its pediatric counterpart in ultrastructural and immunohistochemical characteristics, proclivity for skeletal and visceral metastasis, DNA diploid status with relatively low S-phase, and aggressive clinical course. Clear cell sarcoma of the kidney in adult patients, although rare, must be differentiated from sarcomatoid carcinoma, sarcomas, and round cell tumors because of its unique characteristics in comparison to other renal neoplasms.
...
PMID:Clear cell sarcoma of kidney in an adolescent and in young adults: a report of four cases with ultrastructural, immunohistochemical, and DNA flow cytometric analysis. 1058 98
The aim of the study was to define features indicating malignancy in pheochromocytoma through analysis of clinical data, immunomorphological and nuclear DNA ploidy patterns with flow cytometry. The studied group consisted of 33 patients with
hypertension
and adrenal gland tumor. In all patients 24 hr measurements of adrenaline, noradrenaline, dopamine and their metabolites were taken and the content of these substances in the tumor tissue was measured. Morphologically most pheochromocytomas displayed alveolar pattern with polyhedral cells with clear cytoplasm. Nuclear pleomorphism was infrequent and mitotic figures were rare. In 5 tumors areas of ganglioneuromatous differentiation were present with neurofilament expression. Morphological features indicating malignancy were noted--vascular emboli of tumor cells, capsular infiltration and foci of necrosis. However, in the patient with metastases evident during operation, none of those features was found in the tumor sample. All pheochromocytomas expressed neuroendocrine markers (chromogranin A, synaptophysin and NSE) and most also
vimentin
. Reactivity of other markers was negligible. In DNA ploidy studies in 22/33 cases there was DNA diploid (normal) pattern. The patient with metastases belonged to this group. In 3 cases there were aneuploid tumor cells on histograms and in 8 increased number of tetraploid cells. The follow-up period of our patients was 1-43 months.
...
PMID:Immunomorphological studies and cytometric DNA ploidy in diagnostics of pheochromocytoma. 1097 31
A lipoma with a spindled proliferation within it, resembling known (myo)fibroblastic lesions such as fibrous histiocytoma or dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans, (ie, fibrohistiocytic lipoma), has not been previously reported. This tumor varies from other classic lipoma variants, including spindle cell lipoma, myolipoma, angiolipoma, and fibrolipoma. We examine the clinicopathologic findings of this new lipoma variant. The Soft Tissue Pathology Registry of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology was searched for patients with "lipoma with fibrohistiocytic proliferation." Lesions that were better classified as other entities were excluded. Patient slides and clinical history, including associated lesions, family history, duration of symptoms, history of trauma, natural progression, and treatments, were reviewed. Immunohistochemistry was performed on cases with available material (n = 6). Twelve patients with fibrohistiocytic lipoma were included. All tumors revealed a well-distributed quilt-like proliferation or solid focus of slightly plump to relatively bland spindled cells with collagenous stroma in short fascicular and storiform growth patterns. These spindled cells resembled those seen in either fibrous histiocytoma or dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans. However, the spindled proliferation was all within a well-circumscribed lipoma. The lesions lack the dermal involvement or plump pleomorphism of fibrous histiocytoma and the dermal involvement or infiltrative growth pattern of dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans. The fatty component demonstrated heterogeneously sized adipocytes, as those seen in other lipomas. Inflammation and hemosiderin were minimal. Mast cells were not identified. The tumors were typically found in the subcutis of the trunk of men (10 of 12; one each on the wrist and leg; mean age, 31 years). The average size of the lesions was 3.0 cm, and they were present for a mean duration of 10 months prior to surgical excision. One patient had two concurrent lesions; all others had solitary tumors. Another patient had a intracranial dermoid cyst removed during childhood. Four patients had a personal or family history of hypercholesterolemia,
hypertension
, or myocardial infarction. There was no history of antecedent trauma. Cases studied were positive for
vimentin
, calponin (5 of 5), CD34 (3 of 5), and occasionally KP-1 or lysozyme in the spindled component, and all cases studied were negative for the actins, caldesmon, S-100 protein, desmin, cytokeratins, and epithelial membrane antigen. Although the actins were negative in our laboratory, the more sensitive calponin positivity suggests myofibroblastic phenotype of the spindled component of this lesion. CD34-positive fibroblasts were present in three of five cases. Of eight patients with follow-up, there were no recurrences; all patients were alive and free of disease over a mean of 10 years (range, 2 months to 31 years). We have identified a lipoma variant, fibrohistiocytic lipoma, that has not been previously described. In our experience the morphology and calponin positivity suggest myofibroblastic phenotype for the spindled cells, within a lipoma. This entity can be distinguished from fibrous histiocytoma, fibromatosis, dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans, spindle cell lipoma and other lipoma, and liposarcoma variants.
...
PMID:Fibrohistiocytic lipoma: twelve cases of a previously undescribed benign fatty tumor. 1114 65
Presentation of a case of a "central type" neurofibromatosis in a 56-year old woman, clinically diagnosed erroneously as multiple sclerosis with a 20 years long course. Disturbances of hearing, walking, sight, sensitivity, incontinentia, intracranial
hypertension
and headache represented the main symptoms. More than 120 intracranial and tens of intraspinal meningiomas represented the leading postmortem finding. In a lesser frequency spinal plexiform neurofibromas and schwannomas were also found. The death was attributed to aspiration purulent bronchopneumonia. Various types of meningioma were seen microscopically, including secretory type and a type with amyloid. Immunostaining was positive with S-100 protein and EMA. Negative expression was found with
vimentin
, CEA, smooth muscle actin, estrogen and progesterone receptors, amyloid A and cytokeratins. With regard to the presence or absence of key morphological features the presented case was placed according to Sobol et al. (29) into the seventh category of neurofibromatosis (NF7).
...
PMID:[Multiple intracranial and intraspinal meningiomas in the neurocristopathy (phacomatosis) type of neurofibromatosis]. 1137 7
The molecular mechanisms of fibrosis in radiation nephropathy have received scant attention. Heat shock protein 47 (HSP47), a collagen-binding stress protein, helps in the intracellular processing of procollagen molecules during collagen synthesis. We investigated the role of HSP47 in the progression of radiation nephropathy using experimental radiation nephropathy. Experimental rat groups were as follows: (i) group I, sham operated (n = 12); (ii) group II, single doses of irradiation, either 7, 15 or 25 Gy to left kidney (n = 60); and (iii) group III, a similar irradiation procedure as group II after right nephrectomy (n = 60). The rats were followed up until 9 months after renal exposure to radiation. Renal dysfunction (as determined by serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen) and
hypertension
were noted in group III rats, along with inflammatory cell infiltration and interstitial fibrosis (as determined by increased deposition of collagens). Compared to control rat kidneys, an increased expression of HSP47 was noted in kidneys obtained from irradiated rats. By double immunostaining, HSP47-expressing cells were identified as alpha-smooth muscle actin-positive myofibroblasts and
vimentin
-positive tubular epithelial cells. Increased expression of HSP47 was closely associated with increased deposition of collagens in the widened interstitium of irradiated rats. Overexpression of HSP47 by phenotypically altered tubulointerstitial cells might play a role in excessive assembly/synthesis of collagens and could contribute to tubulointerstitial fibrosis in radiation nephropathy.
...
PMID:Role of heat shock protein 47 on tubulointerstitium in experimental radiation nephropathy. 1210 May 16
Myxoid changes rarely occur in adrenocortical adenomas and carcinomas. Only eight benign tumours with such features have been described thus far, five of which also had a prominent pseudoglandular component. We report an additional pseudoglandular myxoid adenoma of the adrenal gland detected in a 58-year-old male patient who developed mild
hypertension
. At surgery, a 4-cm mass was resected and found to contain cords and tubules of polygonal cells in a myxoid background. Limited areas of classical adrenocortical adenoma were detected in less than 20% of the tumour area. Lack of atypias and absence of mucin markers, together with an immunophenotype consistent with adrenal tumours (focal cytokeratin,
vimentin
, synaptophysin and alpha-inhibin immunoreactivities), led to a diagnosis of primary adrenocortical adenoma with an extensive pseudoglandular myxoid pattern. However, the differential diagnosis from metastatic well-differentiated adenocarcinomas, chordomas and retroperitoneal myxoid mesenchymal tumours (e.g. liposarcoma) may be difficult in the absence of a complete clinical history and a reliable immunoprofile. We strongly recommend staining of any myxoid or glandular tumour of the adrenal gland for alpha-inhibin and synaptophysin (probably the currently best characterised markers of adrenocortical origin) before considering alternative (probably more common) diagnoses of metastatic adenocarcinoma or retroperitoneal tumours localised to the adrenal gland.
...
PMID:Myxoid adrenocortical adenoma with a pseudoglandular pattern. 1523 11
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