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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Urinary albumin excretion rate (radial immunodiffusion), glomerular filtration rate (GFR) (single-shot 51Cr-
EDTA
technique), and arterial blood pressure (BP) were measured in 12 juvenile-onset, insulin-dependent diabetic patients with persistent proteinuria (greater than 0.5 g/day) due to diabetic nephropathy. Mean age of the patients was 30 yr. All patients had a diastolic blood pressure greater than or equal to 95 mm Hg. Metoprolol, hydralazine, and furosemide or thiazide were used as antihypertensives. During the 12-mo treatment period, BP decreased from 151/104 to 133/85 mm Hg (P less than 0.001), the urinary albumin excretion rate diminished from 1447 to 613 micrograms/min (P less than 0.005), and GFR declined from 96 to 89 ml/in/1.73 m2 (P less than 0.01). A linear relationship between mean blood pressure and the logarithm of the albuminuria was found (r = 0.48, P less than 0.01). Arterial
hypertension
is an early feature of diabetic nephropathy in young insulin-dependent patients. Early and aggressive treatment of that condition decreases albuminuria, probably due to reduced intraglomerular filtration pressure. Whether sustained reduction in arterial blood pressure to near-normal levels during several years also reduces the rate of decline in GFR in diabetic nephropathy remains to be established.
...
PMID:Reduced albuminuria during early and aggressive antihypertensive treatment of insulin-dependent diabetic patients with diabetic nephropathy. 704 30
Renal function was evaluated in a group of 24 patients (21 men and 3 women, mean age 47 years) who had survived the malignant phase of
hypertension
during the period of 1969-1979. Five had grade III retinopathy (haemorrhages and exudates) and 19 had grade IV changes (papilloedema, FH IV) at diagnosis. Highest recorded blood pressure was 248 +/- 4/152 +/- 3 mmHg (mean +/- S.E.M.). Renal function rapidly deteriorated in 7 cases with progression to terminal uraemia. All patients in this group had a marked elevation in serum creatinine at diagnosis (448 +/- 105 mumol/l) and inadequate blood pressure control. Two of these 7 patients died and 5 underwent renal transplantation. The other 17 patients initially had serum creatinine less than or equal to 250 mumol/l (169 +/- 19 mumol/l-glomerular filtration rate (GFR) 51 +/- 7 ml/min). All except one were reinvestigated after a mean time of 6 years (range 6 months-11 years) with evaluation of blood pressure and determination of GFR by 51Cr-
EDTA
clearance. At follow-up their blood pressure was fairly well controlled (153 +/- 3/99 +/- 2 mmHg). Their GFR was 62 +/- 6 ml/min. Of the 11 patients in whom two GFR determinations were available (one initially and one at follow-up), six patients showed a marked increase in GFR while 5 patients showed only slight or no improvement in spite of fairly good blood pressure control. In malignant hypertension adequate antihypertensive treatment can lead to a pronounced improvement in GFR unless renal function has deteriorated gravely.
...
PMID:Renal function as an indicator of prognosis in malignant essential hypertension. 708 93
Thirty-two male veterans participated in a study to determine cumulative lead exposure in an urban population. Subjects were chosen on the basis of blood pressure status in order to attempt to compare lead exposure between patients with and without
hypertension
. Patients currently enrolled in
hypertension
clinic and on treatment were recruited and matched with controls for age, race, and socioeconomic status. Each subject underwent provocative chelation via slow intravenous infusion of CaNa2
EDTA
and 6-h urinary lead measurement and completed an interviewer-administered questionnaire. Twenty blacks and 12 whites participated, with a median age of 52 years (range: 27 to 72). Urinary lead excretion ranged from below detection limits to frankly toxic levels in an individual with heavy moonshine ingestion. Lead levels were higher than reported in other non-workplace populations. The distribution of lead values was skewed, as expected, with a median excretion of 75 mcg lead/6 h (corresponding to a median 24 degrees post-chelation urinary lead excretion of 286 mcg) and modal values between 50 and 75 micrograms lead. Levels of 95 mcg lead/6 h (corresponding to 24 degrees levels of 333 mcg lead) and above were considered "high" (N = 11) and the remainder were "low" (N = 21). Among those able to recall various characteristics of their first childhood dwellings, the presence of flaking paint in a multiple family dwelling was strongly associated with "high" lead excretion (X2 = 9.32, p = 0.009). Hypertensives excreted slightly more lead than nonhypertensives, although the difference was not statistically significant in this small sample. Lead excretion was not associated with current (treated) blood pressure determinations among hypertensives. However, lead excretion was associated with systolic pressure as recorded on entry to the
hypertension
clinic (N = 21, R2 = 0.24, p = 0.03).
...
PMID:Predictors of lead stores in male veterans. 747 75
According to a randomized double-blind cross-over design, the short-term (8 weeks, n = 12) and acute (2 h, n = 6) systemic and renal hemodynamic effects of carvedilol (25-50 mg o.d.) and metoprolol (100-200 mg o.d.) were compared in kidney allograft recipients with mild transplant dysfunction and arterial
hypertension
chronically treated with metoprolol. Cardiac output (Q) was measured by Doppler echography and renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were measured by constant infusion techniques using [123I]iodohippurate and [51Cr]
EDTA
, respectively. After 8 weeks, mean blood pressure (101 +/- 3 vs. 103 +/- mm Hg) and RBF (318 +/- 14 vs. 316 +/- 14 ml/min) were comparable for the two drugs, whereas heart rate (HR), Q, and GFR (39 +/- 2 vs. 42 +/- 2 ml/min, p < 0.05) were slightly lower and the RBF/Q ratio (6.4 +/- 0.4 vs. 5.8 +/- 0.4%, p < 0.05) was higher with carvedilol than with metoprolol. During short-term treatment, a single dose of metoprolol acutely decreased HR and Q, carvedilol increased RBF, and both carvedilol and metoprolol enhanced the RBF/Q ratio and decreased renal vascular resistance (by 23 and 7%, p < 0.01 carvedilol vs. metoprolol). These data suggest that carvedilol has beneficial acute renal hemodynamic effects in hypertensive kidney allograft recipients with mild transplant dysfunction.
...
PMID:Systemic and renal hemodynamic responses to carvedilol and metoprolol in hypertensive renal transplant patients. 750 22
A 16-month-old boy ingested liquid zinc chloride/ammonium chloride soldering flux. He developed severe local burns, metabolic acidosis, hepatic damage, hyperamylasemia, lethargy, and
hypertension
. Peak measured plasma zinc was 1,199 micrograms/dL. Because of persistent signs of systemic toxicity, he was chelated with dimercaprol (BAL) and
EDTA
. Although clinical improvement was noted coincident with the initiation of chelation, there was no apparent increase in urinary zinc excretion. Scarring in the gastric antrum necessitated an antrectomy. The child recovered without other apparent complications.
...
PMID:Acute zinc chloride ingestion in a child: local and systemic effects. 771 Jan 73
With the aim of studying the diurnal variation in blood pressure in relation to degree of fluid retention, 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was performed in 31 insulin-dependent diabetic patients with nephropathy. The extracellular volume was calculated from the distribution volume of 51Cr-
EDTA
after a single injection. The study population was arbitrarily divided into two groups, depending on their extracellular volume. Group 1 included 15 patients with a lower extracellular volume and group 2, 16 patients with a higher extracellular volume. Ambulatory blood pressure was measured with a portable monitor using an oscillometric technique. In all patients, the mean +/- SD 24-h ambulatory blood pressure was 135/79 +/- 14/7 mmHg. Day and night-time blood pressure were 136/81 +/- 14/7 and 133/75 +/- 17/8, respectively (p < 0.02). The ambulatory blood pressure was 135/80 +/- 14/7 in group 1 and 136/78 +/- 15/6 mmHg in group 2. The nocturnal change in blood pressure was significantly greater in group 1 than in group 2, -9/-9 +/- 10/5 mmHg and 1/-3 +/- 10/6 mmHg, respectively (p = 0.005/0.01). There were no other significant differences between the groups than the diurnal blood pressure pattern. There were significant correlations between day ambulatory blood pressure and night ambulatory blood pressure and 24-h ambulatory blood pressure and urinary albumin excretion. There was no correlation between ausculatatory clinic blood pressure on the one hand and albuminuria on the other. Latent fluid retention therefore may contribute to nocturnal
hypertension
in diabetic nephropathy.
...
PMID:Latent overhydration and nocturnal hypertension in diabetic nephropathy. 771 17
The effect was studied of blood pressure lowering treatment on renal failure and albuminuria (UAE) in patients with type I diabetes (IDDM) and imminent nephropathy as well as in patients with over diabetic nephropathy. The group of 24 patients with imminent nephropathy was subdivided: 1. twelve patients with borderline or overt
hypertension
with mean BP lowered not below 100 mmHg, and 2. twelve patients with BP within the normal limits, taking no hypotensive agents. In the other group of 12 patients with overt diabetic nephropathy
hypertension
was lowered below 105 mmHg and kept so for at least two years. All patients estimated their glycemia and glycosuria by themselves, ate 0.8 g protein/kg/24 h and about 100 mmol Na/24h. Under hospital conditions the following were estimated: albuminuria, glomerular filtration rate (51Cr
EDTA
) and effective renal blood flow (131I hippurate). The same examinations were repeated 1 year and 2 years later. The lowering of BP below 100 mmHg in patients with imminent diabetic nephropathy significantly lowered microalbuminuria without changing GFR, ERPF despite good or satisfactory compensation of diabetes. Maintaining BP below 105 mmHg for 2 years did not prevent the patients with overt nephropathy to develop progressive renal failure despite the rate of GFR deterioration and of the increase of albuminuria slowed down.
...
PMID:[Effect of treatment of arterial hypertension on renal function in patients with imminent and overt diabetic nephropathy]. 773 1
We investigated the effect of raising arterial plasma epinephrine within the lower pathophysiological concentration range on various indicators of blood platelet function and hematocrit. Epinephrine was raised over 60 minutes by a stepwise increasing intravenous infusion in 40 healthy men aged 20 to 40 years. Platelet count increased progressively with increasing arterial epinephrine to a maximal change of 69 +/- 6 x 10(9)/L in
EDTA
-anticoagulated blood and a maximal change of 42 +/- 6 x 10(9)/L in acid-citrate-dextrose (ACD)-anticoagulated blood, and the weight of circulating platelets increased by 29% (P < .001). Platelet size increased significantly in
EDTA
and decreased in ACD, and the difference between
EDTA
and ACD was significant (P < .0001) for both count and size, suggesting that epinephrine not only recruits platelets into the circulation but also induces some microaggregation in vivo or adhesion ex vivo. Aggregation of platelets in vitro induced by epinephrine decreased (P < .003 for delta optical density and P = .038 for maximal optical density) after epinephrine infusion compared with saline but did not change when stimulated with ADP or collagen. These findings suggest a selective downregulation of the epinephrine-activating mechanisms concomitant with a rise in the platelet content of epinephrine by 81% (P < .001) and no change in the platelet sodium-proton membrane exchange. The release of granular content (beta-thromboglobulin and platelet factor 4) to the circulation in response to epinephrine was not significant. Thus, under acute conditions it seems that the platelets may protect themselves against inappropriate overstimulation by epinephrine. The importance of platelet epinephrine uptake is still unknown, but sodium-proton exchange does not seem to be involved in regulating the effects of circulating epinephrine on platelet function. Epinephrine has a pronounced effect on raising hematocrit (maximal change of 1.74 +/- 0.13 x 10(-2), P < .0001).
Hypertension
1995 May
PMID:Effect of circulating epinephrine on platelet function and hematocrit. 773 22
Diabetic nephropathy is characterized by
hypertension
and a relentless decline in kidney function. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors have been claimed to preserve kidney function better than an equal blood pressure (BP) reduction with conventional antihypertensive treatment (renoprotection). We compared the effect on kidney function of lisinopril (10-20 mg/day) and atenolol (50-100 mg/day) in hypertensive NIDDM patients (mean age 60 +/- 8 years) with diabetic nephropathy. Forty-three (21 lisinopril and 22 atenolol) patients were enrolled in a 1-year randomized double-blind parallel study. Eight patients dropped out, and the results for the remaining 35 patients (16 lisinopril and 19 atenolol) are presented. Diuretics were required in 10 of 16 lisinopril patients and 12 of 19 atenolol patients. The following variables were measured: 24-hour ambulatory BP (Takeda TM2420), albuminuria (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay), fractional albumin clearance, and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) ([51Cr]
EDTA
technique). The average reduction in mean arterial BP during the 12 months was identical in the two groups 12 +/- 2 vs. 11 +/- 1 mmHg in the lisinopril and atenolol group, respectively. Albuminuria was on average reduced 45% in the lisinopril group vs. 12% in the atenolol group (P < 0.01), and fractional albumin clearance was on average reduced 49% in the lisinopril group vs. 1% in the atenolol group (P < 0.05). GFR declined identically in the two groups 11.7 +/- 2.3 vs. 11.6 +/- 2.3 ml.min-1.year-1 in the lisinopril and atenolol groups, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Impact of lisinopril and atenolol on kidney function in hypertensive NIDDM subjects with diabetic nephropathy. 807 Jun 10
The particulate enzyme that degrades angiotensin I (ANG I) to [des-aspartate1]angiotensin I ([des-Asp1]ANG I) in the hypothalamic homogenate of the rat has been established as a specific aminopeptidase. The major characteristics is its resistance to inhibition by 10(-4) M amastatin, bestatin and
EDTA
. Among the four amino acyl-beta-naphthylamides (aspartyl, glutamyl-, arginyl- and leucyl-beta-naphthylamide), aspartyl-beta-naphthylamide is the most susceptible substrate of the enzyme; being degraded at twice the rate of arginyl-, and leucyl-beta-naphthylamide, and six times that of glutamyl-beta-naphthylamide. Although the precise role of this aminopeptidase has yet to be determined, its presence establishes the existence of a specific pathway for the degradation of ANG I that bypasses the formation of ANG II. The relationship between degradation and
hypertension
is shown by our recent findings that the formation of [des-Asp1]ANG I form ANG I in the hypothalamic homogenate of the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) is significantly enhanced, and the findings of other investigators that the production of ANG II by neuronal cultures of the SHR is significantly decreased.
...
PMID:Degradation of angiotensin I to [des-Asp1]angiotensin I by a novel aminopeptidase in the rat hypothalamus. 809 92
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