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

A study of the distribution of the various risk factors for coronary artery disease as a function of the age and sex of a homogenous population of 316 patients has brought to light the following findings: -- These was found to be a greater incidence (statistically significant) of hypertension disorders of glucose metabolism obesity and hypercholesterolaemia in the females, and of tobacco consumption (cigarettes) and, to a lesser extent, of hypertriglyceridaemia and of gout in the males; -- The females who 'tot up' risk factors have their myocardial infarction at a greater age than the males -- The risk factor which separates the two sexes in the consumption of cigarette tobacco. These findings agree with those already in the literature.
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PMID:[Myocardial infarction: comparative study of principal risk factors in the two sexes]. 82 69

Adrenal regeneration hypertension (ARH) was induced in virgin and breeder, spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. The blood pressure of the previously normotensive, virgin, SD rats and the SD breeder rats with preexistent mild hypertension became greatly elevated. ARH caused an increase in the preexisted severe hypertension in SHR virgin and breeder rats. Serum enzymes, e.g., CPK, SGOT and LDH, were greatly elevated concomitant with the finding of old and new foci of myocardial necrosis. ARH produced a dichotomous metabolic effect, i.e., elevated cholesterol, glucose, and corticosterone levels in SD rats but reduced levels in SHR rats. The zonae glomerulosae of the the regenerated adrenal glands of SD rats were devoid of lipid whereas the zonae glomerulosae of SHR rats were full of lipid. Intact SHR breeder rats develop arterial lesions confined to their reproductive organs but after ARH treatment, they were found to have aortic, coronary and renal arterial lesions which were similar to those which occur, spontaneously, in SD breeder rats. It is suggested that changes in the spectrum of adrenal steroids produced during ARH may contribute to the diverse metabolic changes and the alterations in the usual cardiovascular degenerative changes found in these two strains.
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PMID:Comparative effects of adrenal regeneration hypertension on non-arteriosclerotic and arteriosclerotic Sprague-Dawley vs spontaneously hypertensive rats. 83 44

In three hypertensive uremic children in whom hypertension was not controlled by sodium-free diet, ultrafiltration and hypotensive drugs, a total of twenty low sodium concentration hemodialyses were carried out. In all patients there was insignificant sodium excretion in urine and diastolic blood pressure diminished 10 to 20 mm Hg; two patients showed also reduction of systolic blood pressure. No important changes were seen in the serum concentrations of sodium, calcium and glucose. In one patient improvement of his retin lesions, as well as radiological reduction of heart size were observed. In other two cases, cardio-respiratory symptoms associated with hypertension disappeared. In all but two of them hypotensive drugs were withdrawn; in the other one dose was reduced. With low sodium concentration hemodialysis, sodium extraction was higher than that obtained when using the conventional dialysis solution. Interchangeable sodium decreased in all patients.
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PMID:[Hemodialysis with low sodium concentration in hypertensive uremic children]. 84 94

In order to investigate the combined effects of diabetes and hypertension on the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease, adult male and female SHR rats which develop hypertension spontaneously were given a single, 10 mg or 15 mg/100 g body wt. injection of alloxan s.c. to induce moderate or severe diabetes. Insulin was deliberately withheld. Animals were examined by autopsy daily for 7 days post-alloxan and after 4 and 8 weeks. Mortality was high--only 52% of the males survived as against 80% of the females. Most deaths occurred on Day 5 and were associated with adrenal haemorrhage and hyperplasia, thymus galnd involution, fatty liver and marked hypotension despite elevated aldosterone levels. During the first week, corticosterone levels increased significantly in the male; in females they showed little change. After 4 weeks, the severly diabetic animals became emaciated and moribund; corticosterone and aldosterone levels fell to very low levels despite adrenal hyperplasia. The beta cells of the moderately diabetic animals eventually lost their ability to secrete insulin and these animals too became cachetic and moribund with concomitant elevation of lipid, glucose and BUN levels, as well as myocardial infarction, fatty liver, and generalized hyalin arteriolo-, arterio-, and nephrosclerosis. It is suggested that the combined hormonal and metabolic alterations of diabetes and hypertension reinforced one another in these spontaneously hypertensive rats, leading to intense stimulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system, the exacerbation of those cardiovascular degenerative changes known to be associated with uncontrolled diabetes or hypertension, eventual impaired adrenocortical steroidogenesis, hypotension and death.
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PMID:Alloxan diabetes in spontaneously hypertensive rats: gravimetric, metabolic and histopathological alterations. 86 Nov 67

The purpose of the investigation was to study the possibilities of involving the population at large in mass screening procedures, the possible classification of the population with regard the degree of risk of ischaemic heart disease, and the potentials of its preventive therapy. The examined contingent was classified with due regard to some risk factors (arterialy hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, imparied glucose tolerance) and pathological states. The final grouping of the contingent was as follows: the group of "normal" was comprised by 53.4% of the examined, the "intermediate"-18.6%, the "pathological"-28%. The "intermediate" group comprised 350 persons selected for preventive therapy by a double blind method. Surveillance of 10% of those in the "normal" group and the whole "pathological" group was arranged.
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PMID:[Methodical study of multifactorial prevention of ischemic heart disease]. 88 2

Repeatedly bred male rats which develop arteriosclerosis spontaneously were subjected to unilateral nephrectomy, 1% saline drinking water, and 2 mg subcutaneous injections of deoxycorticosterone acetate per animal weekly for 7 weeks to induce severe hypertension (+/- 175 mmHg systolic). Acute cerebral ischemia was induced by ligating one carotid artery. Two days later, experimental animals were subjected to acute myocardial ischemia by injecting them subcutaneously with a single dose of isoproterenol (25 mg/100 g body weight). All of the experimental animals died within 4 hours of the injection of isoproterenol. During this same period, blood pressure, body weight, thymus, kidney, and testicular weights were reduced, whereas heart and adrenal gland weights increased markedly. Serum enzymes (CPK, SGOT, and LDH), lipids (triglycerides and free fatty acids), glucose, BUN, and corticosterone rose progressively. Fatty infiltration of the liver, adrenal hyperplasia, myocardial thrombi, renal degenerative changes, and cerebral edema became progressively more severe. A hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis component may be involved in the reaction to the stress of acute cerebral or myocardial ischemia, which is intensified when the two ischemias are combined, and chronic hypertension may exacerbate both.
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PMID:Acute cerebrovascular and myocardial ischemia superimposed upon chronically hypertensive and arteriosclerotic male Sprague-Dawley rats. 90 14

In vitro glucose-14C uptake by the epididymal adipose tissue was studied in young rats with spontaneous hypertension (SHR), in rats with two-kidney Goldblatt hypertension, and in control rats with normal pressure. Some of the animals were subjected to bilateral adrenalectomy one week before the study. Rats with either type of hypertension and intact adrenals did not differ from the controls in the intensity of glucose-14C uptake by the adipose tissue both with and without stimulation of its transmembranous tranport with insulin. Adrenalectomy revealed that the response of the adipose tissue to insulin in rats with hypertension differed from that in the controls. In the control animals adrenalectomy causes marked decrease in insulin "sensitivity" of the fat cells, whereas in adrenalectomized rats with hypertension the level of glucose-14C in stimulation of its transport with insulin does not change. The results of the study testify to qualitative changes in the membranes of the fat cells in rats with chronic arterial hypertension and may be proof of extensive alteration of the cell membranes in this disease.
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PMID:[Characteristics of glucose absorption by the adipose tissue in renal and spontaneous hypertension in rats]. 92 52

The blood sugar content was determined in 142 patients with myocardial infarction on the 1--3rd, 7-10th, 28--30th days of the disease by the Hagedorn-Jensen method. The standard glucose tolerance test was conducted in 64 patients on the 30th day of the disease and repeated in 20 patients 18 months after infarction. It was concluded that transient hyperglycemia developed in 47.8% of patients with myocardial infarction in the acute period, predominantly in those with a sugar curve of the diabetes-decipiens type. Carbohydrate tolerance was reduced in two thirds of the patients. In some of them this disorder was attended with clinical signs of diabetes and a severe course of myocardial infarction. In patients with diminished carbohydrate tolerance the sugar curve remained abnormal 18 months after the disease. Obvious diabetes developed in 6 out of 20 patients examined. Among relatives of patients with disturbed carbohydrate metabolism diabetes mellitus was encountered more frequently and the incidence of ischemic heart disease and hypertension was higher.
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PMID:[Hyperglycemia and the glucose tolerance test in the acute period of myocardial infarct and in the remote post-infarct period]. 92 75

The antihypertensive effect and side-effects during 12 months' treatment with bendroflumethiazide and propranolol have been compared in two randomly selected, equally large groups (n= 53) of previously untreated male hypertensives. Systolic BP above 170 or diastolic BP above 105 mmHg on two occasions were defined as hypertension. The same BP reduction was achieved in both groups. During the 12 months' treatment one subject on bendroflumethiazide developed diabetes mellitus and one on propranolol developed cardiac decompensation. None developed gout. Contrary to what had been presumed, glucose tolerance improved during 12 months' treatment with both agents, while there were no changes in fasting blood sugar, insulin or triglyceride concentrations. No changes were found in serum potassium or total body potassium during 12 months' bendroflumethiazide treatment, while serum potassium increased during treatment with propranolol. Uric acid increased slightly during treatment with both agents. Prolongation of the follow-up to 24 months did not change any of the findings regarding metabolic changes during treatment. The frequency of subjective side-effects decreased to the same extent during treatment with both drugs. It is concluded that bendroflumethiazide and propranolol are equally useful as antihypertensive agents and that the risk of impariment of glucose metabolism and potassium balance seems to be very slight during treatment with bendroflumethiazide in mild hypertension.
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PMID:Antihypertensive effect and side-effects of bendroflumethiazide and propranolol. 93 76

A large number of individuals currently diagnosed as having diabetes mellitus are asymptomatic. In order to provide rational therapy for this patient population, it is necessary to focus upon the differences between these patients and the classic prototypes with polyuria and weight loss, who require insulin for survival. Patients with asymptomatic diabetes do not need insulin for survival, and, by definition, they do not need it to alleviate symptoms. They tend to be middle-aged and overweight, but they can be young and thin. Their degree of hyperglycemia is moderate, often indistinguishable from that of normal individuals in their day-to-day existence. Indeed, they can often be differentiated from normal persons only on the basis of their blood glucose response to the stress of a large dextrose challenge; in this regard, the potential problem of over-diagnosing diabetes has been discussed. Since the major problem facing patients with asymptomatic diabetes is accelerated atherogenesis, the therapeutic approach must be based upon efforts to delay or prevent the onset of vascular disease. It has yet to be shown that any therapeutic intervention helps such patients, but an argument has been made in support of the following goals in subjects with asymptomatic diabetes whose fasting blood glucose level is less than 170 mg/100 ml: (1) stop smoking, (2) control hypertension, (3) attain ideal body weight, and (4) maintain blood triglyceride and cholesterol levels well within normal limits. Attempts to lower blood glucose with either insulin or oral agents do not seem indicated in the majority of patients within this defined diabetic population.
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PMID:Treatment of asymptomatic diabetes mellitus. 97 61


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