Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Conservative management of chronic renal failure in children is essentially based on dietary prescription including recommendations for high caloric intake and a certain limitation of protein intake according to GFR in order to avoid any extra loading with nitrogen wastes. Prescriptions for sodium potassium and water have to be adjusted on their residual output. Prevention of osteodystrophy needs supplement of calcium, chelation of phosphorus with aluminium hydroxide and the prescription of vitamin D or its active derivatives. High blood pressure when present must be carefully controlled. Drugs, when necessary, have to be given with a dosage taking into account the level of renal failure. Finally, the mode of life of the uremic child should be as close to normal as possible.
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PMID:Conservative treatment of chronic renal insufficiency in children. 4 67

Cation transport and electrolyte composition were studied in leucocytes from 17 patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension. Significant increases in cell sodium and water contents, associated with a depression of the rate-constant for active sodium efflux, were found in the hypertensive patients. These abnormalities in cell sodium transport may possibly be related to mechanisms of hypertension.
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PMID:Abnormal leucocyte composition and sodium transport in essential hypertension. 4 73

Many reports indicate a significant negative correlation between death-rates for coronary heart-disease (C.H.D.) and water hardness. A reverse situation exists in the twin Kansas cities, U.S.A. Kansas City, Kansas, has water which is more than twice as hard as the softened water of Kansas City, Missouri, from the same source. Serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels were similar, but blood-pressure was higher in Kansas City, Kansas, and this correlated with higher serum-sodium, lower serum-potassium, and a tenfold higher serum-cadmium. Serum calcium and magnesium levels were higher in Kansas, while copper, chromium, cobalt, and zinc were higher in Missouri. The serum studies were con ducted on two matched groups of 260 adults from each of the sample cities. Hypertension may account for the reverse C.H.D. rate noted and be cadmium related.
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PMID:Possible toxic water factor in coronary heart-disease. 4 75

Twenty-three patients with stage III germinal neoplasia of the testis were treated with a variation of our original vinblastine-bleomycin program. This modification consisted of 0.4 mg/kg of vinblastine given in two fractions on Days 1 and 2 followed by continuous intravenous administration of 30 units of bleomycin in 1000 cc of 5% glucose and distilled water over a 24-hour period for 5 successive days beginning on Day 2. Therapy was repeated every 28-35 days as toxicity permitted. There were 17 responses, nine of which were complete (39%). Eight of the complete responses were in patients with massive disease in whom a low complete response rate was expected. Toxic effects consisted of severe leukopenia in 90% thrombopenia in 50%, and unexplained transient hyperbilirubinemia in about 30% of the patients. Bleomycin pneumonitis occurred in one patient and resulted in death. Hypertension was a new and unexpected side reaction experienced by four patients. Further trials are indicated since the complete response rate in patients with advanced massive disease appears to be improved.
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PMID:Continuous intravenous bleomycin (NSC-125066) therapy with vinblastine (NSC-49842) in stage III testicular neoplasia. 5 12

The present studies were performed in order to determine whether "filtration edema" will develop as a consequence of cerebral vasoparalysis, vasoparalysis in combination with arterial hypertension or arterial hypertension alone. A series of dogs, anaesthetised with i.v. Chloralose-Urethane were exposed 1) to cerebral vasoparalysis, produced by hypercapnia (PaCO2 about 150 mm Hg) and hypoxaemia (PaO2 40-60 mm Hg); 2) to arterial hypertension and 3) to a combination of cerebral vasoparalysis and arterial hypertension. Following cerebral vasoparalysis and arterial hypertension, a significant decrease of total cerebrovascular resistance and moderate increase of venous resistance was observed. Regional cerebral blood flow (133Xe), intracranial pressure, as well as the pressure in postcapillary venous outflow (sinus sagittalis wedge pressure and confluence sinuum pressure) were increased. Neither normotonic vasoparalysis nor vasoparalysis in combination with slight arterial hypertension (MABP more than 90 min above 180 mm Hg) resulted in cerebral edema. In contrast, cerebral vasoparalysis in combination with severe arterial hypertension (MABP more than 90 min above 220 mm Hg) resulted in a statistically significant increase in the water content in the white matter without evidence of protein extravasation. Multiple small foci of Evans blue extravasates, however, were found in the cortex following arterial hypertension in combination with vasodilation, indicating a damage of the blood brain barrier. In these blue stained cortical areas the water content was significantly in creased. The following conclusions were drawn from the results. Vasoparalysis during normotension does not produce brain edema despite the slightly elevated hydrostatic pressure gradient between intravasal and extracellular space. Only considerable increase of this hydrostatic pressure gradient caused by a combination of vasoparalysis with severe arterial hypertension is able to produce brain edema in the white matter. In addition, acute hypertension may cause minor multifocal damage of the blood brain barrier in the cerebral cortex. It is concluded that so-called brain swelling, which has been described by several authors in states of cerebral vasoparalysis, is not predominantly caused by brain edema but by vascular congestion. The clinical aspects of the result are discussed.
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PMID:[Cerebral vasoparalysis, arterial hypertension and brain edema (author's transl)]. 5 29

The effect of propranolol has been studied in two patients with chronic renal failure and hypertension which remained refractory despite the removal of excess sodium and water by dialysis. Measurements of plasma-renin, exchangeable sodium, and blood-volume demonstrated that in both patients hypertension was due to excess renin. The administration of propranolol was followed by a rapid fall in blood-pressure to normal, thereby obviating the need for bilateral nephrectomy. In both patients the fall in blood-pressure was accompanied by a striking fall in plasma-renin, and in one there was a highly significant association between plasma-renin activity and mean arterial pressure.
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PMID:Effect of beta-adrenergic blockade on plasma-renin activity and intractable hypertension in patients receiving regular dialysis treatment. 5 51

The middle cerebral artery (MCA) of cats was occluded permanently for 24h to study the influence of arterial hypertension during the early phase of focal ischemia upon the development of endema and changes of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). In normotensive animals MCA occlusion results in a hemispheric weight increase of about 8% and marked water and electrolyte alterations in both the grey and white matter of the MCA territory. The RISA space increases mainly in the grey matter. Hypertension aggravates these changes significantly, whereby water and electrolyte changes in the grey matter are predominantly concerned, while there is a preferential increase of the RISA space in the white matter. It is suggested that arterial hypertension aggravates the ischemic edema and enhances a vasogenic type of edema in the white matter.
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PMID:The effect of arterial hypertension of focal ischemic edema. An experimental study. 8 57

The relationships between altered nutrition and body composition of sodium, potassium and water are reviewed. The physiological mechanisms involved in cellular homeostasis of sodium and potassium are also discussed with particular reference to energy costs. Alterations in mineral metabolism in protein energy malnutrition, oedema, potassium adaptation, fasting and hypertension are described.
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PMID:Interrelations between the physiology of sodium, potassium and water, and nutrition. 10 69

The Frank-Starling relationship of hearts from adult spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR, Okamoto 1969), representing the established phase of hypertension, and of young SHR, representing the initial phase of hypertension, was investigated by using the isolated working heart preparation. In the "normal" diastolic pressure range (5 to 10 cm H2O), the left ventricle of both SHR groups displayed significantly reduced stroke volumes compared with hearts of normotensive controls (NCR); the degree of reduction being proportional to the left ventricular hypertrophy. This is suggested to be due to a reduced left ventricular diastolic compliance in SHR, as indicated by direct measurements of ventricular wall thickness and end-diastolic volumes in arrested hearts exposed to different end-diastolic filling pressures. Such a progressive shift of the Frank-Starling relationship to the right with duration of hypertension could, in combination with the gradual development of "structural autoregulation" of the precapillary resistance vessels, constitute dominating factors in shifting the hemodynamic situation in labile hypertension into that characterizing the established, or "fixed", state of hypertension.
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PMID:Consequences of myocardial structural adaptation on left ventricular compliance and the Frank-Starling relationship in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 12 25

The rats with chronic renal hypertension caused by constricting one renal artery, exhibit a decrease in the activity of Na-K-ATPase in the outer medulla of the "untouched" kidney, as compared to this activity in the kidneys of intact normotensive rats and in the "untouched" kidney of the rats where renal artery constriction did not result in hypertension. There were no differences between the control normotensive Wistar rats and the spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) in the prehypertensive and early hypertensive stages (at the age of 6-8 weeks) as far as the activities of Na-K-ATPase and oxidoreductases (SDH and LDH) in the renal cortex, the outer and inner medulla are concerned. The spontaneously hypertensive rats with chronic hypertension had at the age of 16-20 and 27-29 weeks lower activity of Na-K-ATPase, SDH, and LDH in the outer renal medulla than the control normotensive Wistar rats. The experimental results indicate that in chronic arterial hypertension there is a decrease in the activity of Na-K-ATPase, in the outer renal medulla, which suggests a reduction in the resorpo sodium and water.
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PMID:Na-K-adenosine triphosphatase in the kidney of rats with renal hypertension and spontaneously hypertensive rats. 13 Jun 15


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