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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronic pain emotional stress (PES), paired action of the white noise and electric skin stimulation and chronic (during 7 months) ethanol consumption in white rats were shown to act in the same direction. Hypertension, decrease of respiratory rate and increase of Hildebrandt index were observed as a result of PES, ethanol consumption, and especially under PES during ethanol consumption. Ethanol consumption by the animals led to their growth retardation and increase of the spleen and heart mass. Accidental thymus involution was noted both under ethanol consumption and PES. Activation of lipid peroxidation and decrease of superoxide dismutase activity (of its mitochondrial form especially) as well as of Na+,K+-ATP-ase activity were observed in brain homogenates of the rats after PES, while the general ATP-ase activity remained unchanged. An increase of triiodothyronine level and the tendency to thyroxine level increase as well as a decrease of superoxide dismutase activity were observed in the blood serum of these animals. A tendency towards lipid peroxidation level decrease and to brain superoxide dismutase activity increase, as well as blood antioxidation activity increase (evaluated by transferrin and coeruloplasmin contents and by serum superoxide dismutase activity) and a decrease of thyroxine level were observed as a result of ethanol consumption. The mechanisms are discussed of the "anti-stress" action of short-term ethanol consumption and of the action of its chronic consumption, additive to PES.
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PMID:[Effect of chronic ethanol consumption on emotional stress in the white rat]. 294 40

The relaxation of phenylephrine-contracted blood vessels by acetylcholine, nitroprusside, or atrial natriuretic factor has been linked to elevations in cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP). Also, 8-bromo-cGMP can induce vascular relaxation in isolated vascular smooth muscle contracted with phenylephrine. We determined whether these cGMP-dependent vasodilators could relax isolated rat aortas contracted with the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. cGMP was measured by radioimmunoassay. Acetylcholine, nitroprusside, and atrial natriuretic factor induced relaxation in vascular smooth muscle contracted by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. These relaxation responses were accompanied by elevations of cGMP. However, the sensitivity to these vasodilators was markedly decreased in phorbol ester-contracted vessels compared to phenylephrine-contracted vessels. Nifedipine and superoxide dismutase induced small but significant relaxations in phorbol ester-contracted vessels; however, blood vessels contracted with phenylephrine and phorbol ester relaxed completely with papaverine. There was a marked decrease in sensitivity to 8-bromo-cGMP in phorbol ester-treated vessels compared to phenylephrine-contracted vessels. Contractions induced by phorbol ester were not inhibited by amiloride or chlorpromazine. Also, following incubation in potassium-free salt solution, vessels incubated with phenylephrine or phenylephrine and phorbol ester underwent similar relaxations when exposed to potassium chloride. The contractile state induced by phorbol ester has decreased sensitivity to cGMP-dependent vasodilators. This may be due to nonspecific effects of the phorbol ester or to the mechanism by which protein kinase C activation maintains vascular tone.
Hypertension 1987 Jun
PMID:Phorbol ester, vascular relaxation, and cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate. 303 7

We studied the effects of superoxide dismutase (SOD), an enzyme that converts superoxide into peroxide, on the cardiopulmonary response to endotoxin in sheep. Sheep (n = 18) were prepared for chronic measurement of cardiopulmonary variables, including lung lymph flow, by surgically implanting catheters under halothane anesthesia. Nine of the animals were studied before and after the administration of endotoxin (0.75 microgram/kg) with and without SOD. An additional nine animals received SOD without the lipopolysaccharide. Endotoxin produced an increase in lung lymph flow that was initially associated with a marked pulmonary arterial (PA) hypertension and reduced lymph-to-plasma protein ratio (L/P). The lymph flow remained elevated later in the response, but there was only a mild increase in PA pressure, and the L/P was normal. There was also a fall in blood neutrophils and in cardiac index. SOD increased this secondary elevation in lung lymph flow, and the corresponding L/P was greater than the preendotoxin value. The fall in neutrophil count, cardiac output, and the elevation in PA pressure seen with endotoxin were not affected by SOD. When administered in the absence of endotoxin, SOD produced no perceptible change in the cardiopulmonary and lymph values. We conclude that peroxide, hydroxyl ion, and/or other free radicals formed by the action of SOD must be responsible for a portion of the endotoxin response rather than superoxide itself.
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PMID:Potentiation of lung vascular response to endotoxin by superoxide dismutase. 398 Mar 70

The appearance of superoxide anion radical in cerebral extracellular space during and after acute hypertension induced by intravenous norepinephrine was investigated in anesthetized cats equipped with cranial windows. Superoxide was detected by demonstrating the presence of superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium. The superoxide dismutase-inhibitable rate of reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium was 4.1 +/- 1.61 nM/min per cm2 during hypertension and 4.55 +/- 0.62 nM/min per cm2 one hour after hypertension had subsided. During norepinephrine administration in the absence of hypertension, the superoxide dismutase-inhibitable rate of reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium was 0.44 +/- 0.17 nM/min per cm2. The reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium during hypertension was also inhibited by prior treatment of the brain surface with phenylglyoxal at pH 10, to induce irreversible inhibition of the anion channel. The results show that acute hypertension is associated with the generation of superoxide which enters the extracellular space of the brain via the anion channel. Following hypertension, the sustained vasodilation caused by acute hypertension was inhibited significantly by topical application of superoxide dismutase and catalase, showing that it was due in part to superoxide and other radicals derived from it. The vasodilator response of cerebral arterioles to topical acetylcholine was converted to vasoconstriction following acute hypertension, and restored to vasodilation following topical application of superoxide dismutase and catalase. The results show that superoxide and other radicals generated after acute hypertension interfere with acetylcholine-induced endothelium-dependent vasodilation, probably because they destroy the endothelium-derived relaxant factor.
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PMID:Superoxide generation and reversal of acetylcholine-induced cerebral arteriolar dilation after acute hypertension. 405 9

In 30 anesthetized sheep, we show that repeated bolus injections of autologous zymosan-activated plasma produce pulmonary hypertension, hypoxemia, intrapulmonary thromboxane release, pulmonary leukostasis, and sustained increases in lung lymph flow and protein clearance. Studies with platelet-rich plasma demonstrated that addition of zymosan-activated plasma does not induce platelet aggregation or thromboxane release. We studied the role of cyclooxygenase products as mediators of these pathophysiological responses by pretreating sheep with either meclofenamate (4 mg/kg) or ibuprofen (12.5 mg/kg). Both drugs inhibited thromboxane release and hypoxemia. Ibuprofen, but not meclofenamate, reproducibly attenuated the hypertensive responses and the increases in lymph flow and protein clearance. Neither drug prevented pulmonary leukostasis. These results demonstrate that cyclooxygenase products mediate the development of complement-induced hypoxemia but are not sole mediators of pulmonary hypertension or increases in vascular permeability. Furthermore, ibuprofen has anti-inflammatory actions, not shared by meclofenamate, which enhance the effectiveness of this drug. Since activated leukocytes release reactive oxygen metabolites, we treated sheep with superoxide dismutase (2800 U/kg per hour) to determine the role of superoxide anions in these responses. This treatment significantly attenuated the increases in lung lymph flow and protein clearance. The results suggest that multiple mediators, which may originate from activated leukocytes sequestered in the pulmonary circulation, contribute to the pathophysiological changes seen with intermittent complement activation. Cyclooxygenase products of arachidonic acid contribute to the hypertension and are solely responsible for the hypoxemia. Reactive oxygen metabolites are important mediators of the complement-induced increases in lung vascular permeability.
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PMID:Role of intrapulmonary release of eicosanoids and superoxide anion as mediators of pulmonary dysfunction and endothelial injury in sheep with intermittent complement activation. 631 51

Hemin, in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol and oxygen, catalyzes the selective degradation of heme-binding proteins to small peptide fragments. Among the proteins examined, the heme-binding protein of rabbit serum (HBP-93) proved to be unusually sensitive. Myoglobin also exhibited considerable sensitivity whereas hemopexin and bovine serum albumin were only slightly susceptible to this degradative action of hemin. The reaction with HBP-93 depended upon coordination of the protein with hemin, was optimal at pH 6.5 and increased 4-fold as the temperature was elevated from 10 to 60 degrees C. The requirement for both oxygen and the reducing agent, 2-mercaptoethanol, and the partial protection of HBP-93 to degradation by catalase, superoxide dismutase, mannitol, and thiourea suggest the involvement of reduced oxygen species in the reaction. A possible role for the heme-mediated degradation of proteins in cell differentiation and other biological responses is discussed.
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PMID:Hemin-mediated oxidative degradation of proteins. 632 3

An enzyme immunoassay has been developed to measure human manganese-superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD) in serum and urine. The assay can be done in less than 5 h, is highly sensitive (detecting limit, 0.1 ng of Mn-SOD) and simple. There is no interference from factors in serum or urine under assay conditions, and the method is specific for human Mn-SOD. Serum Mn-SOD concentrations were markedly increased in patients with liver diseases, but not in renal diseases. On the other hand, urinary Mn-SOD levels were elevated in a few patients with nephrotic syndrome and lung cancer, but were decreased in patients with hypertension. Furthermore, investigations were conducted on the clinical course of serum Mn-SOD levels in a case of alcoholic hepatitis, and on correlations between serum Mn-SOD and the conventional liver function tests. The localization of Mn-SOD in liver was also explored using immunofluorescent staining. The fluorescence was intense in the degenerated portions of liver tissue from a patient with drug-induced hepatitis.
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PMID:Enzyme immunoassay for manganese-superoxide dismutase in serum and urine. 676 11

Acute severe hypertension induced by intravenous norepinephrine or angiotensin in anesthetized cats equipped with a cranial window caused prolonged arteriolar vasodilation associated with reduced responsiveness to arterial hypercapnia or hypocapnia and passive response to changes in arterial blood pressure. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy of such pial arterioles showed discrete destructive endothelial lesions the density of which correlated with the degree of vasodilation. Abnormalities of the vascular smooth muscle were seen in all dilated arterioles but affected only a small number of smooth muscle cells. The oxygen consumption of pial arterioles from cats subjected to hypertension was significantly reduced in comparison to that of vessels from normal animals. The arteriolar abnormalities induced by hypertension were inhibited by pretreatment with inhibitors of cyclooxygenase (indomethacin or AHR-5850) or by topical application on the brain surface of scavengers of free oxygen radicals (mannitol or superoxide dismutase). The results suggest that the mechanism of the arteriolar abnormalities from acute hypertension involves a sudden increase in prostaglandin synthesis that leads to generation of free oxygen radicals.
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PMID:Mechanism of cerebral arteriolar abnormalities after acute hypertension. 722 3

Lipid peroxidation (LPO) products and activity of antioxidant defense (AOD) were evaluated in the whole blood and red cells of 78 patients with hypertension stage II given anapriline, corinfar and hypotiazid. Combined therapy with anapriline and hypotiazid (80-120 mg/day and 50 mg/day, respectively) diminishes concentrations of diene conjugates and malonic dialdehyde (MDA) in blood though LPO parameters after the treatment exceeded those of healthy subjects. Native antioxidants content and activity of antioxidant enzymes glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase increased. Combination of corinfar (30-60 mg/day) with anapriline (80-120 mg/day) inhibits LPO and antioxidant defense activity to optimal leading to normalization of some LPO values and activity of antioxidant enzymes after the treatment. This combination was also effective as related to lowering of high blood pressure.
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PMID:[The lipid peroxidation indices of hypertension patients undergoing combined therapy with anaprilin, korinfar and hypothiazide]. 748 27

We undertook these studies to determine whether a deficient nitric oxide production in genetically hypertensive rats could result from its being scavenged by an excess production of superoxide. In one study we used a porphyrinic microsensor to measure nitric oxide concentrations released by cultured endothelial cells from stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP) and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). SHRSP cells released only about one third the concentration of nitric oxide as did WKY cells. Treatment of cells with superoxide dismutase increased nitric oxide release, demonstrating that normally nitric oxide is scavenged by endogenous superoxide. The increase in nitric oxide release in response to superoxide dismutase treatment was more than twice as great from SHRSP as from WKY cells, demonstrating the greater amount of superoxide in the hypertensive rats. A direct measure of superoxide with the use of lucigenin demonstrated the presence of 68.1 +/- 7.1 and 27.4 +/- 3.5 nmol/L of this anion in SHRSP and WKY endothelial cells, respectively. The presence of superoxide in the rat aorta was also estimated by quantification of its effect on carbachol relaxation. This relaxation was diminished when endogenous superoxide dismutase was blocked by diethyldithiocarbamic acid. This blockade reduced the relaxation by 51.2 +/- 5.2% in SHRSP aortas and by only 22.0 +/- 8.2% (P = .015) in WKY aortas. Data from these diverse systems are in agreement that superoxide production is excessive in SHRSP tissues. This excess superoxide, by scavenging endothelial nitric oxide, could contribute to the increased vascular smooth muscle contraction and hence to the elevated total peripheral resistance of these rats.
Hypertension 1995 Dec
PMID:Role of superoxide in the depressed nitric oxide production by the endothelium of genetically hypertensive rats. 749 Jan 39


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