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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
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The authors report 3 cases of acromegaly diagnosed while the patients were in hospital for cardiovascular disease: arterial hypertension in two and hypertrophic myocardiopathy in all three. Coronary arteriography was normal in the 3 patients. The exercise-induced dyspnoea observed in these 3 cases was unexplained by right and left cardiac catheterization results (normal pressures, normal or increased cardiac index). It was most probably related to the myocardial hypertrophy and to abnormalities in diastolic function demonstrated by radioisotopic methods in patients 2 and 3. The degree of myocardial hypertrophy present in these 3 patients seemed to correlate with the size of the pituitary adenoma and the plasma level of growth hormone rather than with the duration or degree of arterial hypertension. After excision of the pituitary adenoma hypertension persisted in 1 case, due to associated adrenal gland hyperplasia, and subsided in the other cases. Abnormalities of diastolic function and dyspnoea are gradually regressing but left ventricular hypertrophy has not significantly decreased after 6 post-operative months.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular involvement in acromegaly. Apropos of 3 cases]. 312 8

Cardiovascular and Renal function were examined in two populations of long-term insulin-dependent diabetics, those with microalbuminuria, a sign of early, subclinical nephropathy and those with clinically manifest diabetic nephropathy. In addition, clinical variables of possible importance for the occurrence and prognosis of diabetic nephropathy were analyzed. Microalbuminuria - a mean of three over-night urinary albumin excretion rates greater than 20 micrograms/min - was found in 16% of Albustix-negative, normotensive, insulin-dependent diabetics. The microalbuminurics had higher supine blood pressures than normoalbuminurics. The albumin excretion rate in microalbuminurics correlated to blood pressure at rest but not to glycosylated haemoglobin. The cardiovascular responses to five different test manoeuvres revealed more evident signs of autonomic nerve dysfunction in microalbuminurics than in normoalbuminurics. The circulatory reactions during mental stress however, were almost identical in the two subgroups. Despite similar glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow the albumin excretion during mental stress increased in microalbuminurics, but remained unchanged in normoalbuminurics. It is postulated that a disturbance of glomerular basement membrane permeability is a pre-requisite for the elevated albumin excretion seen in microalbuminurics. Inability to regulate glomerular haemodynamics, due to autonomic nerve dysfunction, may also be a contributing factor. Such dysfunction perhaps even explains why microalbuminurics have higher blood pressures at rest compared with normoalbuminurics. In manifest diabetic nephropathy the rate of renal functional decline correlated to arterial blood pressure, while glycemic control showed no such relation. Patients with rapidly progressive nephropathy showed higher values of growth hormone than slow progressors. In patients with diabetic renal failure, cardiac catheterization revealed reduced stroke work and elevated left ventricular end-distolic pressure during exercise. Autonomic nerve dysfunction and arterial hypertension possibly contributed to the impaired cardiac performance. The existence of a specific diabetic cardiopathy must even be considered. There was a male predominance both in subclinical and manifest diabetic nephropathy. Age at onset of diabetes was lower in micro- as compared to normoalbuminurics. Duration of diabetes had no prognostic implication in subclinical or manifest nephropathy. The mortality rate was high in patients with manifest nephropathy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Studies of cardiovascular and renal function in subclinical and manifest diabetic nephropathy. 316 65

M-mode echocardiography was used to study cardiac involvement in 78 patients with acromegaly. Proportionate concentric or eccentric left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) was a common finding. Calculated left ventricular mass (LVM) was increased significantly in a hormonally active disease group compared to an inactive disease group or a control group (153 +/- 7 vs. 96 +/- 8 and 89 +/- 3 g/m2 resp.; p less than 0.001 for both). The increase of LVM in hormonally active disease is due to predominantly LV dilatation, whereas associated hypertension, if present, aggravates the LVH exclusively due to thickening of the LV wall. Hypocorticalism, if present, does not influence the degree of LVH. Asymmetric septal hypertrophy was not found to be specific for acromegaly and was seen in only 7.7% of patients. There was no correlation between LVM and both the plasma levels of growth hormone and duration of disease. On the basis of a retrospective analysis of LVM in successfully treated patients the authors conclude that specific heart muscle disease in acromegaly, manifesting itself as LVH, is slowly reversible after cessation of the growth hormone hyperproduction.
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PMID:The nature of cardiac hypertrophy in acromegaly: an echocardiographic study. 316 77

In order to estimate the neuroendocrine function of the central nervous system eventually leading to growth hormone (GH) secretion in essential hypertension, 17 patients with mild arterial hypertension (7 obese and 10 with normal body weight) were examined. The control group consisted of 16 normotensive volunteers (7 obese and 9 with normal body weight). The GH secretion was determined by radioimmunoassay during nocturnal sleep. In all the subjects, the serum GH was also measured after placebo and after the centrally acting alpha 2-adrenergic agonist-clonidine administered i.v. in a dose of 0.15 mg. The fasting serum insulin concentration was also measured in all the subjects. Clonidine decreased the mean arterial pressure in all the subjects investigated. However, in response to clonidine an increase in GH secretion in all hypertensive and normotensive cases with normal body weight was demonstrated, whereas in all obese hypertensive and normotensive patients no significant GH rise was found. It indicates that inhibition of GH secretion in patients with essential hypertension is related to coexistent obesity rather than with that of arterial hypertension. A strong (r = 0.76) and significant (p less than 0.0005) correlation demonstrated between the maximal GH concentration during the nocturnal sleep and after clonidine suggests that the mechanism of GH inhibition in response to both these stimuli is similar and it probably is related to the inhibition of neurohormonal secretion of the growth hormone releasing factor (GRF). However, the negative correlation between the fasting insulin concentration and GH response to clonidine shown in obese subjects only, points to a more complex mechanism of GH inhibition in obesity.
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PMID:Growth hormone (GH) secretion during nocturnal sleep and after clonidine in patients with essential hypertension. 328 64

Calcium antagonists lead to a relaxation of smooth vascular muscles and exert a cardiodepressive effect. They make up a heterogeneous group, with primarily substances of the nifedipine and verapamil type playing the most important role in the treatment of cardiocirculatory diseases. The principal indications include coronary heart disease and hypertension. During physical exercise, following the administration of calcium antagonists, VO2max and endurance performance are not impaired. The rate of perceived exertion does not increase to any greater extent in comparison with placebo. Nifedipine leads to an increase of noradrenaline (norepinephrine) as an expression of a reflex activation of the sympathetic system and to a slight increase in heart rate, while calcium antagonists of the verapamil type lower heart rate by 10 to 15 beats/min during physical exercise as a result of their intrinsic negative chronotropic effect. Cardiac output, in spite of the drop in heart rate, remains unchanged. Neither carbohydrate metabolism nor lipid metabolism, including lipolysis, which provide the essential energy-yielding substrates during exercise, are affected by calcium antagonists. Potassium likewise remains unchanged. The response of the hormones insulin, growth hormone and cortisol is the same with calcium antagonists both during incremental graded exercise and during prolonged exercise as with placebo. In comparison with the administration of only calcium antagonists, the combination of calcium antagonists and beta-blockers impairs physical performance. The diminishment in performance, however, is markedly less pronounced than with beta-blocker monotherapy. Unimpaired performance is crucial for physically active patients. Especially for patients performing regular physical activity who suffer from mild hypertension, calcium antagonists provide a viable therapeutic alternative to beta-blockers.
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PMID:Calcium antagonists and exercise performance. 329 89

Susceptibility to diabetic nephropathy may be related to a predisposition to arterial hypertension. We have studied the activity of sodium-lithium countertransport in red cells, a marker of risk for essential hypertension, in white European adults with insulin-dependent diabetes and diabetic nephropathy, a matched group of patients with diabetes without renal disease, and nondiabetic patients with renal disease. Measures of metabolic control and concentrations of plasma free insulin and growth hormone were similar in the two diabetic groups. The degree of impairment in renal function was similar in the diabetic and nondiabetic patients with renal disease. Body-mass index and plasma potassium concentrations were similar in all three groups. Diastolic blood pressure was elevated to a similar degree in the two groups with renal disease, as compared with that in the diabetic patients without renal disease. The rates of sodium-lithium countertransport in red cells were significantly higher in the diabetic patients with renal disease (mean +/- SD, 0.55 +/- 0.19 mmol of lithium per liter of red cells per hour) than in the diabetic patients without renal disease (0.33 +/- 0.16; P less than 0.005) and in the nondiabetic patients with renal disease (0.31 +/- 0.14; P less than 0.001). Predisposition to hypertension, as indicated by elevated sodium-lithium countertransport activity in red cells, may serve as a marker for the risk of renal disease in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes.
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PMID:Increased sodium-lithium countertransport activity in red cells of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes and nephropathy. 333 2

Pituitary cell reaggregates from 14-day-old and adult spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) were cultured in serum-free, chemically defined medium supplemented with the thyroid hormone triiodothyronine and the glucocorticoid dexamethasone. After 1 wk in culture, aggregates were transferred into a perifusion system, and the effect of angiotensin II (ANG II) on prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) release was studied. In aggregates from adult SHR, ANG II displayed a significant and dose-dependent GH releasing activity, whereas a negligible effect or no effect was seen in aggregates from adult WKY. In contrast, no difference in the stimulation of PRL release by ANG II was found. To exclude the possibility that the enhanced GH responsiveness was secondary to longstanding hypertension, aggregates from animals in the prehypertensive stage were studied. Both the GH and PRL responses to ANG II were significantly higher in aggregates from 14-day-old SHR than in aggregates from 14-day-old WKY. These data indicate that abnormal GH and PRL responses to ANG II exist in pituitary cell aggregates from SHR long before hypertension develops. Because these differences were found in pituitary cells maintained in culture for 1 wk, they do not seem to be secondary to changes in brain regulation of pituitary function but rather are caused by factors intrinsic to the pituitary.
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PMID:Enhanced ANG II activity in anterior pituitary cell aggregates from hypertensive rats. 341 35

Cushing's syndrome in childhood is generally recognized by classical features such as truncal obesity, striae, easy bruising, moon facies, hypertension and growth retardation. Exceptionally, Cushing's syndrome has been reported to present as growth failure alone. We diagnosed transient hypercortisolism in 6 children who had poor growth as their only presenting abnormality. The 6 children all had integrated concentrations of cortisols (IC-F) (14.1 +/- 1.7 micrograms/dl; mean +/- 1 SD) which exceeded the IC-F in healthy children and adults (5.7 +/- 1.5 micrograms/dl; P less than 0.001). The IC-F of these 6 index cases overlapped the range of IC-F in patients with pathologically proven Cushing's syndrome (20.2 +/- 4.7 micrograms/dl). Four of the 6 patients were treated with human growth hormone for 8 months and showed a marked improvement in their growth rates. Four patients have entered puberty and are growing at normal rates. Three of the 6 children had normal repeat IC-Fs, subsequently, at a time they had normal growth rates. In 1-1/2 to 3 years of follow-up, none of the patients developed any other stigmata of Cushing's syndrome. We conclude that transient hypercortisolism, documented by the IC-F, may cause growth failure without other symptoms of Cushing's syndrome. Growth hormone therapy may improve the growth rate of these children at the time of their poor growth.
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PMID:Growth impairment due to transient hypercortisolism. 346 64

A 21-year-old woman suffering from acromegaly was treated with transsphenoidal subtotal hypophysectomy (microscopy: acidophilic adenoma), followed by x-ray and bromocriptine therapy. Seven years later she was re-operated because of a partial bitemporal loss of vision, intracranial hypertension, and regrowth of the pituitary tumour seen on CT-scan. A large part of the invasive suprasellar tumour was then removed by transcranial approach. The neurosurgery was followed by cobalt radiotherapy and bromocriptine administration. Two years later, symptoms and signs of tumour growth reappeared. Administration of cytostatics, such as doxorubicin (Adriamycin) and lomustine (Belustine), resulted in distinct clinical improvement associated with a seven-fold decrease in the serum growth hormone concentration. The visual field became normal and the intracranial mass on a CT scan decreased markedly. As a result the patient was able to resume work.
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PMID:Cytostatics for acromegaly. Marked improvement in a patient with an invasive pituitary tumour. 368 20

Although osteoma of the paranasal sinus is comparatively common, involvement of the sphenoidal sinus region is extremely rare. Lame reported that a total of twelve cases had been described in the European literature since 1800. Mikaelin, Kulczynski and Dolan, since then, described three cases. This paper deals with two surgical cases of sphenoidal sinus osteoma, reviewing literature on paranasal sinus osteoma and differential diagnosis in the sphenoidal sinus lesion. Case 1. A 20-year-old man was referred to us by an ophthalmologist, complaining of left visual disturbance (visual acuity: 0.02). He had a past history of chronic sinusitis. Neurological examination revealed papilledema on the left. Plain skull X-ray film showed marked destruction of the sphenoidal sinus and tomography demonstrated thinning and expanding of the sella floor with cloudiness in the sphenoidal sinus. CT scan showed an irregular high density mass in the sphenoidal sinus. Sublabial-nasoseptal sphenoidotomy was performed. The sinus was occupied by homogeneous osseous tissue surrounded by thin fibrous tissue. The osseous part was removed as much as possible by a high speed air drill. Histopathologic examination confirmed mature osteoma. Postoperative course was uneventful and left visual acuity was improved up to 0.06. He is now doing well without recurrence for six months. Case 2. A 59-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital, complaining of acromegaly for ten years. She had a past history of chronic sinusitis, hypertension, diabetes mellitus and left putaminal hemorrhage which was evacuated five months before. She had typical acromegalic features and serum levels of growth hormone was 65.8 ng/ml.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Osteoma of the sphenoid sinus--report of two cases]. 380 13


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