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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There are different types of renal hypertension:
hypertension
due to parenchymal renal disease, renovascular
hypertension
,
hypertension
due to urological disease,
hypertension
of endstage renal disease. Treatment has to consider-above all-the possibility of specific, medical or surgical procedures that may cause the underlying condition. If the underlying disease is not amenable to specific therapy, symptomatic medical treatment to lower blood pressure is indicated: besides control of
sodium
-intake and body weight antihypertensive drugs are generally indicated. We use them, alone or in combination, in the following line of order: diuretics, beta-adrenergic blockers, dihydralazine, reserpine, clonidine, alpha-methyldopa, guanethidine.
...
PMID:Treatment of renal hypertension. 0 Jan 67
Blood pressure (BP), plasma renin concentration (PRC), plasma renin substrate concentration (PRSC) and exchangeable
sodium
(ES) have been studied in 27 patients undergoing regular hemodialysis because of end-stage renal disease. PRC was significantly higher in the hypertensive than in the normotensive patients. The pattern of PRSC was similar in the groups of patients but with a marked individual variation. ES was slightly lower in the hypertensives than in the normotensives but the difference was not statistically significant. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated a significant correlation between mean BP, the natural logarithm of PRC and ES, but the effect of ES was negligible. PRC was negatively correlated to ES in all patients, including the hypertensives. These results strongly suggest that the renin-angiotensin system is the most important factor involved in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
in end-stage renal disease, when
sodium
balance is adequately controlled. A clinical application of the predictive value of PRC concerning the effect of bilateral nephrectomy on
hypertension
is outlined.
...
PMID:Hypertension in end-stage renal disease. The relationship between blood pressure, plasma renin, plasma renin substrate and exchangeable sodium in chronic hemodialysis patients. 1 Jul 15
Plasma renin levels have been used to discriminate between different forms of
hypertension
, but how to define the normal range of plasma renin levels has not been agreed upon.
Sodium
depletion stimulates renin release. Evaluation of plasma renin would, therefore seem possible only in relation to
sodium
balance. Plasma renin concentration and concurrent daily
sodium
excretion were determined in 33 healthy normotensive subjects (control group) ingesting high, normal and low
sodium
diets. A well-defined hyperbolic relationship was found between the two variables indicating that the physiologic level of plasma renin concentration depends on the state of
sodium
balance. An increase in plasma potassium concentration may reduce plasma renin concentration, but this appeared to be overruled by the stimulating effect of
sodium
depletion. To examine whether beta-adrenergic stimulation contributes to the increase in plasma renin concentration during
sodium
depletion, the relationship between plasma renin concentration and concurrent
sodium
excretion was studied during beta-receptor blockade with propranolol. In 20 healthy normotensive subjects in whom beta-receptor blockade was verified by a significant reduction in pulse rate, the same hyperbolic relationship was found between plasma renin concentration and
sodium
excretion as in the control group showing that
sodium
depletion stimulates renin release independent of sympathetic nervous activity.
...
PMID:Effect of sodium depletion on plasma renin concentration before and during adrenergic beta-receptor blockade with propranolol in normotensive man. 1 Jul 25
The renin-angiotensin system appears to play a major role in the regulation of
sodium
excretion and fluid intake in a wide variety of animal species from mammals to teleosts. In mammals the system has evolved further importance in terms of blood pressure homeostasis. This hormonal system in all species appears to involve a serum protein prohormone, angiotensinogen, a proteolytic enzyme, renin, and angiotensin I, the decapeptide product of the reaction between renin and angiotensinogen. The importance of this system to the organism appears to correlate directly with the necessity to conserve
sodium
while an abnormality of this process may underlie the development of
hypertension
in man. As the starting point of the system, angiotensinogen assumes special importance as a possible index of evolutionary development. In addition, it has been known for many years that human (viz. primate) angiotensinogen differs from that found in other mammals in its inability to be a substrate for animal renins while animal angiotensinogens readily react with human renin. Thus, the enzymatic specificity appears to reside with the prohormone. The biochemical basis for this difference is unresolved due primarily to the lack of purified human angiotensinogen. In this paper we describe methods for the purification of human angiotensinogen which have direct applicability to animal angiotensinogens. Our approach utilizes ammonium sulfate precipitation, Sephadex G-150 chromatography, multiple isoelectric focusing, and concanavalin A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. With the availability of highly purified human angiotensinogen we compared the molecular weights, heterogeneity, isoelectric points, and thermal lability of hog, rabbit, and human angiotensinogen in order to define the biochemical basis of the species variation in renin reactivity...
...
PMID:Human angiotensinogen. Purification partial characterization, and a comparison with animal prohormones. 1 60
Only recently approved for use in the treatment of
hypertension
in the US, the beta-adrenergic receptor blocking compound propranolol has been used elsewhere for this purpose since 1964. The exact mechanisms to explain why and how "beta-blocking drugs" reduce arterial pressure are not known with certainty, but possible explanations include: (1) "resetting" of the baroreceptors, (2) reduction of cardiac output, (3) adaptation of circulation ("autoregulation"), (4) inhibition of renin release, (5) central nervous system effects, (6) possible antihypertensive metabolites, and (7) other unknown mechanisms or a combination of known mechanisms. Propranolol alone has been demonstrated to be extremely effective in reducing arterial pressure. In addition, the combination of propranolol and vasodilator and diuretic drugs would be expected to reduce vascular resistance without reflexive cardiac stimulation and with prevention of
sodium
and fluid retention.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of propranolol in hypertension. 1 2
Patients with essential hypertension can be subdivided into groups with low (19%), normal (59%) or high (23%) renin
sodium
index. The proportion with low renin
hypertension
increases with age. Patients with high renin fall in two categories: younger patients with fairly mild
hypertension
and older patients with more severe
hypertension
and signs of renal disease. The antihypertensive efficacy of betablocker monotherapy is best in high renin forms, good but less consistent in normal renin patients and uniformly bad in low renin hypertensives. In relation to age, betablockers normalized blood pressure (less than or equal to 95 mm Hg diastolic) in three-quarters of the younger-than-40-year-olds, in about half of those 40-60 years of age but in only 20% of those over 60 years. On this basis, it is postulated that the older patients with a low renin exhibit a relatively hypoadrenergic state whereas those with a normal or high renin--for a given age and elevated pressure--have a relatively increased adrenergic nervous activity. Because the betablockers have a potent suppressive action on the renin-angiotensin system--and, as a consequence, on angiotensin vasoconstriction, aldosterone volume expansion and central stimulatory feedback mechanisms--their antihypertensive mode of action may be linked to an important extent, although not exclusively, to renin suppression.
...
PMID:Renin and age as determinants of a predominantly betablocker-based antihypertensive drug program. 1 85
Ganglioplegic drugs, including trimetaphan, have been imperfect agents of arterial hypotension, liable to produce tachyphylaxis, and not blocking intercurrent attacks of adrenergic
hypertension
the dose is inconstant and reversibility sometimes doubtful. The association of neuroleptics, in particulier promazines, permits an appreciable economy in dosage, stabilises the curves of hypotension, with the disadvantage of blocking normalisation of blood pressure. Sodium nitroprusside does not have the disadvantage of ganglioplegic drugs. Although usable alone, the blood pressure graphs sometimes have a certain instability mainly due to the difficulty of regulating the ideal perfusion flow rate. The authors show that the association of neuroleptic drugs has here also an effect of economy of dosage and facilitates the rise in blood pressure. Verification of reinforcement of the effect of
sodium
nitroprusside by chlorpromazine, acepromazine and levomepromazine was carried out in the dog. The authors show significant graphs.
...
PMID:[Controlled arterial hypotension produced by nitroprusside combined with neuroleptics]. 1 64
From analyses of the effectiveness of beta-blocker monotherapy in relation to the patient's age and to pre-treatment renin determinations an antihypertensive drug program is proposed in which beta-blockers form the cornerstone. Patients with essential hypertension can be subdivided into groups with low (19%), normal (59%), or high (23%) renin
sodium
index. The proportion with low renin
hypertension
increases with age. Patients with high renin fall into two categories: younger patients with fairly mild
hypertension
and older pateients with more severe
hypertension
and signs of renal disease. The antihypertensive efficacy of beta-blocker monotherapy is best in high renin forms, good but less consistent in normal renin patients and uniformly bad in low renin hypertensives. In relation to age, beta-blockers normalized blood pressure (larger than or equal to 95 mmHg diastolic) in three-quarters of the younger than 40-year-olds, in about half of those aged 40--60 years, but in only 20% of those aged over 60 years. On this basis, it is postulated that the older patients with a low renin exhibit a relatively hypoadrenergic state while those with a normal or high renin--for a given age and elevated pressure--have a relatively increased adrenergic nervous activity. Because the beta-blockers have a potent suppressive action on the renin-angiotensin system--and, as a consequence, on angiotensin vasoconstriction, aldosterone volume expansion and central stimulatory feedback mechanisms--their antihypertensive mode of action may be linked to an important extent, though not exclusively, to renin suppression.
...
PMID:A beta-blocker-based antihypertensive drug program guided by age and renin. 1 22
Six patients with permanent
hypertension
with renal artery stenosis were treated by conservative reparative surgery appart from one of them (unilateral nephrectomy) and were all seen again at the 8th month at the earliest in the absence of any anti-hypertensive therapy. Study of the renin-angiotensin system carried out on a normal
sodium
diet, after stopping all anti-hypertensive treatment for at least 15 days, was combined with the anti-hypertensive response under the influence of a beta-blocker. There were two types of response pre-operatively: firstly, with beta-blockers alone a normal blood pressure which remained normal postoperatively; the second group of patients remained hypertensive, requiring the addition of diuretics, and remained hypertensive after surgery. This response, although non-specific, would appear to represent an important element in assessing the curability of reno-
vascular hypertension
.
...
PMID:[The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in hypertensive subjects. III- The use of beta-blockers in reno-vascular hypertension (author's transl)]. 2 Jun 2
In 21 of 23 patients with
hypertension
unresponsive to other treatment minoxidil, a new antihypertensive drug acting via peripheral vasodilatation, lowered their blood pressure from 191 +/- 19/117 +/- 12 MM Hg to 147 +/- 13/117 +/- 12 mm Hg. The drug causes a reflex tachycardia and must therefore be combined with beta-blockers. Furthermore, an effective diuretic must also be used because minoxidil causes
sodium
retention. Hypertrichosis is an important side-effect for which the drug may have to be discontinued, especially in young women. Orthostasis did not occur in the reported series. The authors recommend that the drug be made available for the treatment of malignant hypertension.
...
PMID:[Minoxidil in the treatment of malignant hypertension (author's transl)]. 2 86
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