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

The effects of zinc supplementation on levels of various blood constituents and the outcome of pregnancy in 213 Hispanic women attending a prenatal clinic in Los Angeles was assessed in this double-blind study. The women were randomized into either a control (C) or a zinc-supplemented (Z) group and received similar vitamin and mineral supplements except that 20 mg zinc was added to the Z group's capsules. At the final interview, women (C + Z) with low serum Zn levels (less than or equal to 53 micrograms/dl) had higher (p less than 0.01) mean ribonuclease activity and lower (p less than 0.01) mean delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase activity than women with acceptable serum zinc levels. The incidence of pregnancy-induced hypertension was higher (p less than 0.003) in the C than in the Z group, but pregnancy-induced hypertension was not associated with low serum zinc levels at either the initial or final interview. The expected increase in serum copper levels was greater (less than 0.001) in women with pregnancy-induced hypertension (C + Z) than in normotensives. Except for pregnancy-induced hypertension, there was a higher incidence of abnormal outcomes of pregnancy in the noncompliers than in the compliers (C + Z).
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PMID:Zinc supplementation during pregnancy: effects on selected blood constituents and on progress and outcome of pregnancy in low-income women of Mexican descent. 647 22

Two groups of male Sprague-Dawley rats received from weaning 50 micrograms/ml of mercury as mercuric chloride (HgCl2) in drinking water for 320 and 350 days. Hg exposure increased cardiac inotropism, without chronotropic changes, in both groups, and induced arterial hypertension in the rats exposed for 350 days. In the exposed rats, cardiovascular responses to the stimulation of peripheral alpha and beta adrenoceptors were decreased and increased, respectively, possibly through a reduced intracellular availability of calcium ions for contractile mechanisms. Hg exposure did not affect either vagal or sympathetic activity or cardiovascular reactivity to several physiological agonists. On the other hand, Hg exposure induced baroreflex hyposensitivity and produced a drastic alteration of the levels of copper and zinc in brain and kidney.
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PMID:Cardiovascular homeostasis in rats chronically exposed to mercuric chloride. 659 6

We examined sera from 159 patients with ischemic heart disease and hypertension and from 50 apparently healthy control subjects for content of trace elements, cholesterol, triglyceride, and enzymes. Concentrations of copper, cobalt, cholesterol, and triglyceride were increased in all patients, but calcium was decreased in patients with hypertension, acute myocardial ischemia, and acute myocardial infarction. Also accompanying acute myocardial infarction were decreased concentrations of zinc and iron but increases in nickel, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and lactate dehydrogenase. Magnesium concentration was lower in patients with acute myocardial ischemia. In acute myocardial infarction, the concentrations of copper, zinc, and iron were higher after 21-30 h (as compared with the values at 0-10 h), by which time concentrations of calcium, magnesium, cobalt, and alanine aminotransferase had decreased. The variation in concentration of trace elements in serum from cases of ischemic heart disease and hypertension corresponds to the severity of the disorder.
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PMID:Trace elements in serum from Pakistani patients with acute and chronic ischemic heart disease and hypertension. 671 25

Essential trace elements such as zinc, iron, and copper participate in various enzyme reactions directly related to the regulation of blood pressure and indirectly related to generation of oxidative metabolic energy, alterations in blood lipid levels, and alterations in taste acuity. The toxicological action of several heavy metal ions including cadmium, lead, mercury, and thallium can cause hypertension by affecting hormone metabolism, vasoconstriction, and renal tubular function. We conclude, however, that neither deficiencies of essential elements nor the presence of toxic heavy metals are primary causes of hypertension in our population.
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PMID:Trace elements and blood pressure. 684 20

Female Long-Evans hooded rats received Schroeder's rye-based diet and 0 or 1 microgram/ml cadmium, or cadmium plus lead in mineral fortified drinking water from weaning to 18 months. The heavy metal-fed rats were normal with respect to control, including growth rates and final body weights. Rats receiving added cadmium and cadmium plus lead in the diet were characterized by a persistent hypertension which was evident after 2 months. Cardiac conduction system excitability was depressed preferentially in cadmium-(atrioventricular nodal region) and cadmium plus lead-(His-Purkinje system) fed rats. Although heart rates were comparable to control, myocardial contractile activity (peak active tension and dT/dt) was significantly decreased in intact perfused heart preparations from both heavy metal-treated groups. In conjunction with the observed physiologic changes, various tissue-specific metabolic alterations were detected in heart, kidney, and liver. Generally, prolonged heavy-metal ingestion at these levels resulted in impaired energy metabolism (e.g., decreased ATP, PCr; increased Pj, ADP concentrations) and altered essential mineral composition (e.g., calcium, magnesium, zinc, and to a lesser extent, sodium and potassium; copper levels were unaffected) that varied in severity according to the tissue. The addition of lead to the cadmium diet had little additive effect on the cardiovascular system; however, renal and hepatic tissues did exhibit apparent additive effects further suggesting that cadmium and lead actions and interactions may be tissue dependent. These experimental findings and the biologic inferences derived are consonant with the hypothesis that chronic, life-long cadmium exposure approximating environmental levels may have significant adverse effects on mammalian systems, that include effects on cardiovascular tissues.
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PMID:Cardiac physiologic and tissue metabolic changes following chronic low-level cadmium and cadmium plus lead ingestion in the rat. 685 84

To determine the dual effect of exercise training and copper depletion on myocardial function and ultrastructure, postweanling rats were either trained or sedentary while fed copper-adequate or copper-deficient diets for 8 wk. Rats developed characteristic myocardial subcellular degeneration and increased cardiac mitochondrial volume density when copper depleted, despite lack of overt cardiac hypertrophy, hypertension, or anemia. Training combined with copper depletion induced mild left ventricular hypertrophy. Basal laminae appeared fractionated in areas at capillary-myocyte interface, with focal pericapillary and interstitial collagen accumulation, whereas overt fibrosis was absent or minimal. Electrocardiograms revealed increased QRS wave and QT duration and notching of QRS complex with copper depletion, consistent with intraventricular conductance disturbances. The oxidative capacity of soleus muscle increased with training in copper-adequate rats, but was reduced with progressive copper depletion. These data suggest that copper depletion and training are synergistic in effecting focal accumulation of collagen, with deleterious effect on exercise capacity.
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PMID:Submaximal, aerobic exercise training exacerbates the cardiomyopathy of postweanling Cu-depleted rats. 750 43

Hypertension, cigarette smoking, and nicotine augment the clinical significance of other risk factors associated with cardiovascular diseases by mechanisms which are poorly understood. Since altered trace element metabolism and antioxidant status have also been implicated in these diseases, the present study investigated the interaction of nicotine treatment and hypertension on tissue trace element concentrations and select indices of antioxidant status. Spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) and normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats were treated with nicotine, via a time release tablet at an average rate of 75 micrograms/h for 6 weeks. Systolic blood pressure in nicotine-treated SHRs was significantly higher at weeks 3 and 6 of treatment than in the SHR-controls. Blood pressure in WKY rats was not affected by nicotine. Plasma and liver iron concentrations in the nicotine-treated SHR were higher than the SHR-controls and the WKY groups. Nicotine treatment did not affect plasma and liver zinc and copper concentrations or liver manganese (Mn) concentrations. Plasma ceruloplasmin activity was increased by nicotine treatment in the SHRs. Liver Mn superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) activities and glutathione concentrations, and liver and heart glutathione reductase activities, were higher in both groups of SHRs than in the WKY groups. Red cell SOD activity in the nicotine-treated SHR was lower than in the SHR-controls. In summary, blood pressure increased more rapidly in the nicotine-treated SHRs compared to the controls. The marked effects on antioxidant status observed were attributable more to hypertension than to the nicotine treatment.
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PMID:Comparative effects of 6-week nicotine treatment on blood pressure and components of the antioxidant system in male spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) and normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats. 774 May 54

Imbalance of zinc and copper status has been hypothesized in human hypertension. A case-control study was carried out to elucidate the possible relationship between zinc and copper status and essential hypertension. Thirty-one subjects affected by mild stable hypertension, pharmacologically untreated, were investigated together with 31 normotensive controls individually matched for sex, age, and smoking habits. Zinc and copper in serum and urine wee measured, and serum activities of alkaline phosphatase (AP), lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (Cu-Zn SOD), lysyl oxidase (LOX), and monoamine oxidase (MAO) were evaluated. No significant difference in serum and urine zinc and copper content as far as in serum activity of zinc (AP and LDH) or copper (Cu-Zn SOD, LOX, and MAO)-dependent enzymes was found between hypertensives and normotensives. Positive relationships were found in normotensives between serum and urine levels of zinc (r = 0.577; p = 0.001) and copper (r = 0.394; p = 0.028), and between serum copper and Cu-Zn SOD (r = 0.534; p = 0.002). In normotensives, diastolic blood pressure and serum zinc were positively related (r = 0.370; p = 0.041). In hypertensives, inverse correlations were observed between diastolic blood pressure and AP (r = -0.498; p = 0.004) and Cu-Zn SOD (r = 0.452; p = 0.011), and between systolic blood pressure and LOX (r = -0.385; p = 0.033). Diastolic blood pressure was related to LDH inversely in hypertensives (r = -0.357; p = 0.049) and positively in normotensives (r = 0.457; p = 0.010). In normotensives, diastolic blood pressure was inversely related with MAO (r = -0.360; p = 0.046). These findings support the hypothesis that an imbalance of zinc and copper status might be involved in human hypertension.
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PMID:Zinc, copper, and zinc- or copper-dependent enzymes in human hypertension. 856 90

In mild hyperthermic rats with acute hypertension induced by intravenous injection of adrenaline, changes in blood-brain barrier permeability to macromolecules were investigated using Evans blue as indicator. Evans blue albumin extravasation was determined macroscopically, and a quantitative estimation with spectrophotometer using homogenized brain to release the dye was also performed to evaluate the macroscopic findings. Four groups of rats were studied: group I: control normothermia; group II: acute exposure to heat; group III: normothermia + acute hypertension; group IV: acute exposure to heat + acute hypertension. The rats were anesthetized with diethyl-ether. Body temperature was increased by elevating ambient temperature in the vented box covered with a 3 mm thick black copper plate. The colonic temperature was increased to 39 +/- 0.5 degrees C. During adrenaline-induced acute hypertension the mean arterial blood pressure increased in both normothermic and mild hyperthermic animals. Mean values for Evans blue dye were found to be 0.20 +/- 0.04 mg% whole brain in normothermic control rats and 0.30 +/- 0.1 mg% in hyperthermic rats (p < 0.05). Mean values for Evans blue dye in the whole brain were found to be 0.63 +/- 0. 2 mg% in the normothermic rats and 0.40 +/- 0.2 mg% in the mild hyperthermic rats during adrenaline-induced hypertension (p < 0.05). Our results show that the extravasation of Evans blue albumin was less pronounced in the brains of mild hyperthermic rats compared to normothermic rats after adrenaline-induced acute hypertension.
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PMID:Influence of acute exposure to heat on the blood-brain barrier permeability during acute hypertension. 857 4

Essential trace elements such as copper, zinc and selenium participate in various enzyme reactions necessary for antioxidant defense system of cells. It is not clear whether metabolism of these trace elements and related enzymes are specifically altered in hypertensive animals or humans. As endothelium-derived nitric oxide is inactivated by free radicals, oxidative stress is known to be involved in the pathogenesis of various vascular diseases including certain type(s) of arterial hypertension. The present review focuses on biological activity of endothelium-derived nitric oxide and trace elements and discusses the pathophysiological implications of trace elements for hypertension.
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PMID:[Trace elements and blood pressure regulation]. 858 74


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