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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In some cases of hypertensive men the authors obtained 24-hour blood pressure profiles by easy non-invasive technique (
Mercury
manometer) and under the usual atmosphere and activities of a hospital. The control Group, 32 normotensive men, showed a normal circadian blood pressure variability with systolic acrophases at 10.00 h and 16.00 h and a bathyphase around 3.00 h. The diastolic blood pressure had a smaller variability. One patient with essential hypertension stage II (WHO), case 1, kept the normal day-night rhythm. By case 2, a man with essential hypertension stage III (WHO), the authors refer to the possibility of considerable differences of blood pressure behaviour during the night in cases of severe
hypertension
in contrary to normal blood pressure variability. After a supplementary fourth medication this patient showed a significant decrease of blood pressure during the night. Nevertheless he kept his acrophase at night. The recording of day-night profiles of blood pressure seems to be useful in relation to the judgement of classification of severity, of the mode of anti-hypertensive medication and of the success in therapy.
...
PMID:[Variation in nocturnal blood pressure behavior in stage III (WHO) hypertension--a case report]. 344 57
The cause and treatment of early variceal bleeding in 15 patients who had undergone distal splenorenal shunt were reviewed. Eight of these patients were taken from a group of 91 who underwent selective shunts from July 1983 through June 1985 and had extensive preoperative and postoperative evaluation of shunt patency and pressure gradient. Seven patients operated upon before July 1983 were reviewed because they illustrate the cause, diagnosis, successful and unsuccessful management of bleeding after selective shunt. Urgent selective arteriography combined with shunt catheterization is the key diagnostic and therapeutic maneuver. Thrombosis of the shunt can be successfully managed by revising the anastomosis. Stenosis of the shunt can be successfully treated with balloon dilation or operative revision of the anastomosis. When renal vein
hypertension
(RVH) occurs, there might be inadequate decompression of the varices. A gradient of 10 millimeters of
mercury
or greater from left renal vein to vena cava is diagnostic. Measurements of 30 patients who had no bleeding and one patient with documented RVH show the gradient decreases over time. Treatment should be supportive until this adaptation occurs. Hemorrhage can also occur in patients with a patient shunt but without a significant pressure gradient. Inadequate decompression of the varices through the short gastric veins leading to the spleen has been proposed as one cause. Termed short gastric
hypertension
, this syndrome could be expected to parallel RVH because the venous collaterals will enlarge and eventually decompress the varices. Treatment should be aimed toward supporting the patient until this adaptation occurs. A small number of patients continue to bleed despite these therapeutic interventions but can sometimes be salvaged with a total shunt.
...
PMID:Evaluation and treatment of early hemorrhage of the alimentary tract after selective shunt procedures. 349 94
Abnormalities of renin release and of venous distensibility have been described in essential hypertension. We have postulated that decreased venous distensibility could contribute to the blunted renin response to upright posture in
hypertension
. Stiffer veins might prevent venous pooling in the lower extremities, which in turn might affect the stretch on cardiopulmonary mechanoreceptors, thereby influencing the reflex release of renin. We investigated this hypothesis in the present study of 47 patients with mild
hypertension
and 26 (male) healthy volunteers of similar age and race. To induce isolated changes in the stretch of cardiopulmonary mechanoreceptors, systemic hemodynamics were measured before and after thigh cuff inflation at 60 mm Hg for 30 minutes. Cardiac output was determined by dye dilution. Before the intervention, variable thigh cuff pressures were used to measure venous pressure volume with
mercury
-in-Silastic strain gauge plethysmography. Venous distensibility was diminished in
hypertension
, as evidenced by a shift in the calf venous volume/pressure curve toward the pressure axis. During the 30-minute experiment, the hypertensive subjects had less blood pooling in their legs in response to thigh cuff inflation, as compared with the control subjects. The hemodynamic and renin responses reflected this diminished effect of thigh cuff inflation on venous return. The smaller increase of renin in the hypertensive group was associated with a smaller fall in the stroke index and right atrial pressure; the reflex rise in the heart rate was also decreased. By pooling blood in the lower extremities, thigh cuff inflation simulates upright posture. It is customary to classify the renin status of hypertensive patients according to the renin response to upright posture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hypertension
1986 Jun
PMID:Decreased venous distensibility and reduced renin responsiveness in hypertension. 352 19
A study of the variability of blood pressure was conducted among a total of 780 Massachusetts children, 335 children in East Boston and 445 children in Brookline, ages 8-18 years. All children had their blood pressure measured with a standard
mercury
sphygmomanometer in a school setting on four visits one week apart with three measurements per visit. In East Boston, repeat measurements were made for the same children for four consecutive years. A nested random effects model was used to estimate between- and within-visit variance components. For children aged 8-12 years, these were, respectively, 33.1, 12.0 in boys and 31.2, 11.1 in girls for systolic blood pressure and 57.7, 21.3 in boys and 56.6, 22.6 in girls for systolic muffling blood pressure (Korotkoff phase 4). For children aged 13-18 years of age, they were, respectively, 41.1, 11.8 in boys and 35.2, 12.2 in girls for blood pressure and 40.6, 15.5 in boys and 36.1, 11.4 in girls for diastolic blood pressure (Korotkoff phase 5). Within-person variability for systolic pressure was comparable to previously published data for 434 white adults ages 30-49 years not on antihypertensive medications; however, within-person variability for diastolic pressure was considerably higher in the children, accounting for over 75% of total variability among 8-12-year-old children, compared with 27% for adults. No meaningful effects of age, sex, or blood pressure level on variability of systolic pressure were found. However, age and level of blood pressure each had a large and independent inverse association with variability of diastolic pressure; variance components for younger children (ages 8-12 years) and children with low diastolic pressure (less than 60 mmHg) were approximately twice as large as for older children (ages 13-18 years) and children with diastolic pressure greater than or equal to 60 mmHg, respectively. Finally, predictive value estimates of blood pressure are provided for particular age-sex groups to enable one to efficiently identify children whose true mean level of blood pressure exceeds the 90th percentile for their age-sex group with minimum misclassification. Because of the substantial variability of diastolic pressure in young children, resulting in relatively low predictive value estimates, systolic pressure (either alone or in combination with diastolic pressure) may be more useful as the primary tool for screening children under age 13 years for
high blood pressure
.
...
PMID:Reproducibility and predictive values of routine blood pressure measurements in children. Comparison with adult values and implications for screening children for elevated blood pressure. 368 21
This study documents our experience with labetalol administered by continuous intravenous infusion for severe
hypertension
. Infusions were performed in 14 hospitalized patients (15 infusions) with supine diastolic pressure greater than 125 mmHg or supine systolic pressure greater than 200 mmHg. Blood pressures were measured by intra-arterial recording or an Arteriosonde 1225 Doppler instrument standardized with a
mercury
sphygmomanometer. Patients initially received 2 mg/min continuous infusion; the infusion rate varied between 0.5 and 2.0 mg/min according to the protocol. The infusion was terminated when diastolic pressure decreased 30 mmHg or when 300 mg of the drug had been infused. Goal blood pressure was achieved in all but two infusions. Sedation was the most common adverse reaction, followed by nausea and diaphoresis. No patient required discontinuation or reduction in infusion rate secondary to side effects. We conclude that continuous intravenous infusion of labetalol offers an effective alternative to current parenteral therapy.
...
PMID:Labetalol by continuous intravenous infusion in severe hypertension. 372 59
The authors have studied the effects of Nitrendipine, orally given in a dose of 20 mg, once a day for 30 days, in patients with mild to moderate
hypertension
. Twelve patients initially entered the study but four of them discontinued the treatment during the first week, because of unwanted side-effects: headaches, palpitation, sensations of burning skin. The remaining eight patients underwent a comparative evaluation at the end of a placebo period (DO) and at the end of the active treatment (D30), including successively: an automatic blood pressure recording with a Bard-Sentron device for 3 hours, then a determination of plasma renin activity, aldosterone and catecholamines, and finally a measurement of the blood pressure with a
mercury
manometer, at rest and during a standardized exercise on an ergometric bicycle. At D30, the Nitrendipine tablet was given one hour after the beginning of the automatic recording. The blood pressure measured with the
mercury
manometer (i.e. approximately 2 hours after the dose of Nitrendipine) significantly decreased from D0 to D30, at rest and during exercise, respectively from 161.5/104.6 to 132.8/82.5 mmHg and from 210.0/116.8 to 190.0/95.6 mmHg. The automatic recording provided, at D0, a mean blood pressure value of 152.4/90.6 mmHg; at D30, this mean value was as high as 142.6/90.7 mmHg during the hour preceding the dose of Nitrendipine (NS) and as high as 129.2/78.6 mmHg during the 2nd hour following the intake of the tablet (p less than 0.01). Plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity significantly (p less than 0.05) increased from D0 to D30, whereas catecholamines did not change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the antihypertensive effect and tolerability of a new delayed-action calcium channel blocker: nitrendipine, prescribed as a single daily dose of 20 mg]. 381 62
To characterize any digitalis-induced differences in intestinal blood flow autoregulation, we studied the circulatory responses of the rat intestine in control (n = 7) and chronically digitalized (n = 7) animals. Data were generated from denervated isoperfused small intestinal preparations. Arterial pressure, venous pressure, and oxygen consumption were continuously monitored. Determinations of intestinal blood flow allowed calculation of mesenteric vascular resistance and oxygen consumption. Animals underwent stepwise reductions in arterial pressure and acute venous
hypertension
(10 to 15 mm Hg). There were no differences in baseline hemodynamic or metabolic parameters in control (C) or digitalized (D) animals. Blood flow and oxygen consumption were autoregulated in both C and D rats until perfusion pressure decreased below 50 mm Hg. The response to acute venous
hypertension
was different. In D rats, venous
hypertension
resulted in increased vascular resistance (millimeters of
mercury
per milliliter per minute per 100 gm) [0.89 +/- 0.05 to 0.97 +/- 0.07; p less than 0.05], whereas C rats demonstrated no change [0.92 +/- 0.08 to 0.95 +/- 0.09]. The decrease in oxygen consumption in D rats (-14%) was slightly but significantly greater than that observed in C rats (-9%). Digitalized rats demonstrated a heightened myogenic response to acute venous
hypertension
with deleterious effects on vascular resistance and oxygen consumption. This reaction was intrinsic to the mesenteric circulation and not mediated by sympathetic nerves or central reflexes. Nonocclusive mesenteric ischemia in digitalized patients may reflect a similar abnormal response to the acute increases in portal pressure accompanying cardiac failure.
...
PMID:Chronic digitalis administration alters mesenteric vascular reactivity. 382 Apr 9
Diuretics are the mainstay of drug therapy in the treatment of many cardiovascular disorders. However, perusal of knowledge of their haemodynamic activities in heart failure and
hypertension
reveals major gaps. In left ventricular failure complicating acute myocardial infarction, intravenous frusemide reduces the elevated left heart filling pressure with little change in systemic blood pressure, heart rate or cardiac output, and restores the ability of the left heart to handle an acute increase in filling volume. But there is little knowledge of the haemodynamic effects of other intravenous diuretics, oral diuretics or diuretics other than those acting on the loop of Henle in this emergency clinical situation. Even less information is available on the haemodynamic effects of diuretics in patients in chronic heart failure. In patients with valvular heart disease, parenteral
mercury
and oral thiazides reduce right heart and pulmonary vascular pressures with variable (dose-dependent?) changes in cardiac output. Information on the effect of loop diuretics, the comparative effects of intravenous versus oral routes of administration and dose-response correlations are all lacking. In
hypertension
, the dose-blood pressure lowering response relationship of orally administered diuretics is relatively flat. The majority of information relates to oral thiazides; there is little reliable information on the anti-hypertensive efficacy of the loop diuretics. The acute and chronic effects of the majority of commonly used diuretics on cardiac and peripheral vascular functions is unexplained. More is known of their potentially adverse metabolic effects than of their possible circulatory benefits in hypertensive patients. Many unwanted side-effects of these drugs have been described; their potential importance is related directly to the disease state and doses in which they are used. In acute heart failure, their potential danger is probably minimal. In the treatment of chronic heart failure their most sinister potential is in the excessive secretion of potassium and magnesium. In hypertensive patients their long-term administration in high-doses may lead to undesirable metabolic effects that tend to offset their blood pressure lowering activity. Despite their drawbacks, diuretics continue to provide the natural first-line treatment of choice of these common cardiovascular syndromes. But more information on their mechanisms of vascular activities and the differences in non-diuretic activity between different compounds is urgently required.
...
PMID:Diuretics in cardiovascular therapy. Perusing the past, practising in the present, preparing for the future. 389 Mar 92
These students, as representative of french population, were examined in 1983. Right humeral arterial blood pressure was measured three times on dorsal decubitus with a
mercury
manometer by a medical doctor. People with a systolic arterial pressure greater than or equal to 150 mmHg and/or diastolic arterial pressure greater than or equal to 90, were considered as hypertensive. These hypertensive people came then for a new complete examination, six months later. A witness group, drawn by lot, were examined in the same conditions. Systolic, diastolic and mild arterial blood pressures (in mmHg) were for: (table; see text) Prevalence of
hypertension
is 2.2 p. 100 (46) for girls and 11.9 p. 100 (184) for boys. The most important difference between
high blood pressure
people and normal blood pressure people lies in morphological characters. (Table: see text). Sport activities, coffee and diet concerning sodium are identical in the two groups.
High blood pressure
people smoke less than normal blood pressure people. Previous history of
hypertension
are more frequent in
high blood pressure
people than normal blood pressure people. Upright posture induce modification in pressure on
high blood pressure
people. Meanwhile, stress induced by mental arithmetic, does not bring more elevation pressure about
high blood pressure
people than normal blood pressure people. Six months later: 58 p. 100 of
high blood pressure
group have still a
high blood pressure
, 26 p. 100 have a borderline blood pressure (systolic greater than or equal to 140, diastolic greater than or equal to 85).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Epidemiology of arterial hypertension in students at the University of Nice]. 393 33
In open-chest anesthetized dogs we measured phasic coronary blood velocity in an epicardial artery (left anterior descending), a small epicardial artery (within 0.5 cm before penetration into the myocardium), and an intramyocardial artery (septal) during changes in perfusion pressure and extravascular pressure. Circumflex artery diameter was also measured during pressure changes to directly assess vascular compliance. At low and normal arterial pressures (less than 125/86 mmHg) and during aortic insufficiency, the phasic character of blood flow velocity in the large epicardial arteries was markedly different from that in the small epicardial and septal arteries: there was retrograde systolic blood flow velocity in the septal artery and small epicardial artery, whereas antegrade blood flow velocity persisted in the left anterior descending artery. At pressures greater than 150/106 mmHg, the differences in the phasic character of blood flow velocity in the left anterior descending artery from that in the septal artery and small epicardial artery were small and decreased as aortic pressure increased. At pressures greater than 125 mmHg, the cross-sectional area change per millimeter of
mercury
was approximately three times less than at pressures between 30 and 75 mmHg, indicating decreased coronary compliance at the higher pressures. Increasing extravascular pressure in the septum (right ventricular
hypertension
) greatly increased retrograde systolic blood flow velocity in the septal artery (P less than 0.05). However, right ventricular bypass (0 right ventricular pressure) did not alter the phasic nature of blood flow velocity in the septal artery. From these results we confirmed that epicardial capacitance is inversely related to distending pressures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of coronary and extravascular pressure on intramyocardial and epicardial blood velocity. 397 Feb 21
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