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

The voltage criteria of left ventricular hypertrophy were studied in 229 hypertensive patients undergoing treatment and 62 patients who were not treated. The limb-lead voltage criterion (R Lead aVL greater than or equal 11 mm.) was found more frequently in patients with radiographic evidence of cardiomegaly than other voltage criteria. This may have been due to a more negative axis in patients with cardiomegaly than in patients without cardiomegaly. It is possible that dilatation of the left ventricle to the left and posteriorly accentuates limb-lead criteria at the expense of V-lead criteria. Left anterior hemiblock occured in less than 10 per cent of the hypertensive patients. In 10 out of 16 patients with left anterior hemiblock, the hemiblock disappeared after treatment of the hypertension for 4 years whereas all five hemiblocks in untreated hypertensives persisted. Development of left anterior hemiblock subsequently occurred in only one patient with treatment and one without treatment over a 4-year period.
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PMID:Electrical axis and voltage criteria on left ventricular hypertrophy. 12 15

Hypertension may result from chronic lead exposure. Lead poisoning arising from "moonshine whiskey" drinking has been associated with a rise in plasma renin activity. In the present study, plasma renin concentration following intravenous administration of frusemide was measured in eleven subjects with moderate or severe lead poisoning of industrial origin. The results were compared with those obtained for seven normal, control subjects. There was no significant difference in response obtained in the two groups. Industrial lead poisoning does not appear to affect renin release. The combined insult of lead and alcohol may explain the findings in the previous study.
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PMID:Occupational lead exposure and renin release. 51 24

The amplitude and duration of P waves in Leads II (P II), P terminal force in V1, (PV1) and the sums of P II and PV1 were compared in 37 subjects with left atrial size obtained by echocardiographic technique in 36 instances and with hemodynamic estimates of pulmonary capillary wedge pressures in 16 cases. The 22 females and 15 males were subdivided into the following groups. Group I, four normal subjects, Group II, 11 patients with predominant aortic insufficiency (two of whom had a mild mitral insufficiency); Group III, 14 patients with mitral valve disease, seven of whom had mitral insufficiency (two with minimal aortic insufficiency) Group IIIa) and seven had mitral stenosis (Group IIIb); Group IV, eight patients with miscellaneous disorders, i.e., coronary artery disease (5), hypertension (2), and idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (1). Good correlations were obtained between left atrial size and P in Lead II (P II) (r = 0.74; p less than 0.001) and between P terminal force in V1 (PV1) and left atrial size (r = -0.69; p less than 0.001). In Group IV good correlation between PV1 and atrial size was noted. Some correlation between the sum of P II and PV1 and left atrial size (r = 0.51; p less than 0.02) was noted, but a better correlation was obtained in the patients with aortic insufficiency (r = 0.80; p less than 0.01). Pulmonary capillary wedge pressures were not reflected in changes in P II or PV1, except for the group with mitral stenosis (Group IIIb). Adding P II to PV1 improved the correlation with wedge pressure for the entire group.
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PMID:Comparison of left atrial size and pulmonary capillary pressure with P wave of electrocardiogram. 96 78

Lead may exert toxic effects on several organ systems, but those in the kidney are the most insidious. Acute lead nephropathy is characterized by proximal tubular dysfunction with the development of a Fanconi-type syndrome, alterations in mitochondrial structure and the development of cytosolic and nuclear inclusion bodies. Intracellular lead is associated with specific high affinity proteins and can also bind to metallothionein. Chronic lead nephropathy is irreversible and is typically accompanied by interstitial fibrosis, both hyperplasia and atrophy of the tubules, glomerulonephritis and, ultimately, renal failure. In addition, lead produces renal neoplasms in experimental animals. Chronic lead exposure is also implicated in the development of saturnine gout and hypertension. The metal interacts with renal membranes and enzymes and disrupts energy production, calcium metabolism, glucose homeostasis, ion transport processes and the renin-angiotensin system. This review summarizes the biochemical effects of lead on the kidney to understand the mechanisms of lead-induced nephropathy and other associated disorders.
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PMID:Lead nephrotoxicity and associated disorders: biochemical mechanisms. 131 92

The health status of 200 workers from the Institute for Ferrous Metallurgy is studied in view of the harmful effect of the unfavourable factors of the working environment (noise, microclimate, toxic aerosols, gases and vapours). Internal examinations are also performed. A number of laboratory indices are determined in order to assess the liver and kidney functions. A complete blood test and lipid metabolism are examined. Lead and manganese are determined in blood by atomic-absorption spectrophotometry. In 23.5% of the examined are established data for arterial hypertension; with diseases of the gastric-intestinal tract are 22%. The influence of the toxic aerosols and the nervous and psychic loading of the examined workers on the higher prevalence of the paraoccupational diseases are discussed.
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PMID:[The incidence of paraprofessional diseases in employees of the Research Institute of Ferrous Metallurgy in Kremikovtsi]. 136 45

The epidemiology, clinical symptomatology, diagnosis and management of acute and chronic lead intoxication are reviewed. While acute lead intoxication has become rare, the elevated environmental lead burden is thought to play a causal role in hypertension. Lead may also be linked with neuropsychological disorders of children and possibly even chronic renal failure. The epidemiological and experimental evidence for this hypothesis is critically discussed.
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PMID:Lead intoxication--new insights into an old problem. 161 43

Lead has been shown to affect calcium homeostasis. However, there is no prior evidence to indicate an effect of low concentrations of lead in the environment (approximately 1 microM) on the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration in any human tissue. We have investigated the effect of lead on the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration of human blood platelets using 19F-NMR and a fluorinated intracellular Ca2+ indicator. We report a basal intracellular free Ca2+ value of 172 +/- 8 nM. Treatment with 1, 5, 10 and 25 microM Pb2+ resulted in average increases in intracellular free Ca2+ of 39%, 91%, 135% and 172%, respectively. The percent increase in intracellular free Ca2+ was linearly and positively correlated with the log of Pb2+ concentration. Using atomic absorption spectroscopy, a significant increase in total calcium of approx. 10 nmol/mg protein was found in 25 microM Pb2+ treated platelets. This indicates that influx of external Ca2+ contributes to the observed increase in free Ca2+. The results provide an explanation for the previously reported effects of lead on platelet function, and suggest a mechanism for low level lead-induced hypertension.
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PMID:19F-NMR study of the effect of lead on intracellular free calcium in human platelets. 190 77

Lead exposure is widespread among industrial populations in the United States. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analysis of the lead content of bone offers a promising approach to acquisition of individualized data on chronic lead absorption in occupationally exposed populations. Dosimetric data obtained by XRF will permit accurate definition of dose-response relationships for such chronic consequences of lead exposure as central and peripheral neurologic impairment, renal disease. hypertension, and possibility reproductive dysfunction. Additionally, data on bone lead content obtained by XRF will permit validation of models describing the body lead burden and will allow direct assessment of the efficacy of therapeutic chelation. XRF data may also permit assessment of the possible role of genetic polymorphism of the enzyme delta-aminolevulinic dehydrase as a determinant of the pharmacokinetics and toxicity of lead. In both cross-sectional and prospective epidemiologic studies of body lead burden in occupationally exposed populations, the K-XRF instrument appears to be the technology of choice.
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PMID:Strategies for epidemiologic studies of lead in bone in occupationally exposed populations. 204 Feb 53

Lead exposure alters cardiovascular function and has been implicated in the etiology of hypertension. Therefore it was of interest to study the short term effect of lead treatment on atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), a hormone which produces vascular smooth muscle relaxation and natriuresis. Male Sprague Dawley rats were randomly divided into 5 groups containing 4 animals each and injected intraperitoneally with normal saline (control), 0.01, 0.1, 0.5 or 1.0 mg/kg of body weight with lead acetate solution twice a day for 7 days, and then maintained for a period of 30 days. During this period water consumption and urine volume were measured daily. At the end of the 30 day period, immunoreactive levels of ANF in hypothalamus, atria and plasma were measured by radioimmunoassay. Lead treatment did not alter water consumption, but significantly decreased urine output. At all doses, lead produced a decrease in hypothalamic content of ANF and slightly increased atrial levels. The content of ANF in plasma was decreased. The changes in ANF content indicate that lead interacts with the hormonal regulation of the cardiovascular system and these observations may relate to the cardiovascular toxicity of this heavy metal.
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PMID:Interaction of lead acetate with atrial natriuretic factor in rats. 213 98

The effect of Cd2+ and related metals (Ni2+, Hg2+, Pb2+, Co2+, Sn2+ Cu2+ and Zn2+) on vascular tension was studied using isolated rings of endothelium-free, smooth muscle from the ventral aorta of the shark, Squalus acanthias. Both Cd2+ and Ni2+ produced significant vasoconstriction at concentrations at or above 10(-6) M (112 and 59 ppb, respectively); the other metals were either marginally constrictive (Hg2+ and Sn2+) or were without effect (Pb2+, Co2+, Cu2+, and Zn2+). We suggest that previously published vascular effects of Hg2+ and Pb2+ may have been secondary to responses of the vascular endothelium, and that the role of Ni2+ in hypertension should be investigated further. Our data indicate that the effects of metals on this vascular smooth muscle are specific and not generic. Moreover, this system could be utilized to investigate the mechanisms of metal-induced vasoconstriction.
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PMID:The effect of cadmium and other metals on vascular smooth muscle of the dogfish shark, Squalus acanthias. 233 May 99


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