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

This study carried out at a type "C" hospital, analyses the actual pathology of 1,052 patients attended to at the internal medicine department during a period of one year. The sex distribution did not show any differences. The median age (64 years) was significantly superior in women. The more frequent diseases were from group VII (cardiovascular: 512 cases) and group VIII (respiratory: 471 cases) according to the 9th edition of the who international diseases classification. The most frequent causes for admission were: respiratory infection (19.5%), cardiac insufficiency (13.8%) and CVA (10.6%). The most frequent baseline diseases were cardiomyopathy (20.4%), chronic obstructive airways syndrome (16%), malignant neoplasia (8.5%) and hepatopathy (7.6%). The risk factors and toxic habits observed were: Chronic bronchitis (19.6%), blood hypertension (15.5%), diabetes (13.5%) and high alcohol intake (10%).
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PMID:[A morbidity study in a general internal medicine service in a third-level hospital]. 195 89

A prospective study was made in the years 1973 through 1983 on mortality among 4591 patients (2095 men and 2469 women) with usually noninsulin dependent diabetes, of 1-10 years duration. The anamnestic data and examination parameters obtained during a cross-sectional investigation served as the prognostic changeables (risk factors) to assess the mortality due the most frequent circulatory diseases. The applied model of the logistic regression allowed an attempt of the assessment of their independent effect. Analysis regarding the sex and the methods of diabetes treatment was done in four groups of mortality causes classified according to the VIII Revision of the International Classification of Disease. Injuries and Causes of Death: 1. Cardiovascular system diseases. 2. Ischaemic heart diseases. 3. Other diseases of the cardiovascular system. 4. Vascular diseases of the brain. The quantitative and qualitative effect of the arbitrarily chosen factor of death risk was of varying importance and was related to the sex and the methods of the hypoglycemising treatments. The effect of ageing was an independent factor of death risk among all analysed causes of mortality in both sexes independent from the methods of the hypoglycemising treatment with the one exception of women treated with insulin who died of stroke. Generally however, the ageing factor showed a greater prognostic value in patients treated with insulin. Hypertension, especially if marked, showed to have the most prognostic value among the all analysed factors of death-risk especially in patients on oral antidiabetics. The risk in this group was due mainly to the cerebral stroke, to a lesser degree to the "other" diseases of the circulatory system, and to the all diseases of the circulatory system but to the least degree it was related to the ischaemic heart disease, in both sexes. Among insulin treated diabetics the hypertension was a death-risk of most importance in men usually due to the vascular brain disease and other diseases of the cardiovascular system but to a lesser degree to the circulatory diseases, as a whole. In women however the marked hypertension increased the death-risk in patients with coexisting circulatory disease, not a particular one, but as a whole. Albuminuria had a pronounced prognostic value, especially if massive, in both types of diabetes, mainly, however, among women who died of any cardiovascular causes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Mortality risk factors in cardiovascular diseases in patients with diabetes mellitus in Warsaw--a 10-year prospective study]. 262 54

As I have indicated in the foregoing discussion, there are several syndromes that with various degrees of proof seem to be caused by unilateral vascular compression of a cranial nerve at the brain stem. Jannetta has summarized this concept as follows: "As we age, our arteries elongate and our brains 'sag'. As a consequence of these processes, redundant arterial loops and bridging or intrinsic hindbrain veins may cause cross-compression of cranial nerve root entry zones in the cerebellopontine angle. This pulsatile compression can be seen to produce hyperactive dysfunction of the cranial nerve. Symptoms of trigeminal or glossopharyngeal neuralgia (somatic sensory), hemifacial spasm (somatic motor), tinnitus and vertigo (special sensory), and some cases of 'essential' hypertension are caused by these vessels compressing cranial nerves V, IX-X, VII, VIII, and left X and medulla oblongata. Using microsurgical techniques, the symptoms may be relieved by vascular decompression. . .".
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PMID:Neurovascular compression syndromes. 389 20

Spleen cells from mice immunized with partially purified hog kidney renin were fused with mouse myeloma cells to produce a stable monoclonal hybridoma cell line that synthesizes an antibody against renin. A single monoclonal antibody was chosen for study and has been produced in large quantity and purified by affinity chromatography on protein A-Sepharose. The antirenin, which belongs to the IgG1 subclass, exhibits anticatalytic activity against both hog and rabbit renin. An immunoaffinity column prepared from antibody coupled to Sepharose has been used in the purification of renin from hog kidney. Although renin is quantitatively adsorbed from solution, it can be eluted from the column under gentle conditions. The highly purified renin, with specific activity of 2122 Goldblatt Units/mg protein, exhibits both charge (pH 4.1 to 5.1) and size (38,000 to 42,700) heterogeneity. Hog kidney renin dissociates in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and mercaptoethanol to heavy and light chains with molecular weights of 33,700 and 5,800, respectively. In the presence of SDS, a small amount of a nw form of renin is observed with a molecular weight of 19,500 which retains activity on renaturation. The monoclonal antibody should be a useful tool for the study of the renin-angiotensin system and especially for the purification of renin. The hybridoma cell line used in this study (F-32 VIII C4) has been donated to the American Type Culture Collection.
Hypertension
PMID:Purification of hog kidney renin with immobilized monoclonal antirenin. 637 44

A retrospective study was carried out to determine the frequency, age of onset, mode of presentation, pattern of joint involvement, and incidence of primary and secondary gout in black patients with gout who were admitted to the King Edward VIII Hospital in Durban, South Africa. Nineteen patients were admitted to hospital with gout over a 5-year period from 1977 to 1981. The admission rate was found to be 4.7/100 000 hospital admissions. Five patients (26%) presented with monoarthritis and 14 patients (74%) had polyarthritis on admission. The joints most frequently involved were the knees (74%), the first metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint (58%), and ankles (42%). The serum uric acid (SUA) was increased in 94%, and tophi were noted clinically in 47%. Eight patients (42%) with hypertension were on treatment with diuretics and 7 of these patients had a raised blood urea. These 8 patients (42%) were considered to have secondary gout, while no secondary causes were noted in the remaining 11 patients (58%) who had primary gout.
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PMID:Gout in South African blacks. 674 1

Over a 5-year period 14 patients with acromegaly and gigantism were seen at the endocrine clinic of King Edward VIII Hospital: 9 were Blacks and 5 Indians; 8 of the patients were women. The mean age of the patients was 46 years. Surprisingly, only 2 patients complained of acral overgrowth. Symptomatology was varied and not characteristic of the condition. On examination all patients had unequivocal signs of soft-tissue and bony overgrowth, 64% had visual abnormalities and 50% hypertension. Radiologically, 88% showed an enlarged pituitary fossa. On biochemical investigation, the fasting levels of growth hormone (GH) were increased in 12 patients and during oral glucose tolerance tests, the GH levels in these 12 patients were not suppressed. One patient in whom the fasting GH level was not increased had progressed to the stage of panhypopituitarism, in the remaining patient challenge with thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) led to increased GH levels and L-dopa challenge resulted in a paradoxical decrease in GH levels. Seven patients with increased GH levels who were challenged with L-dopa showed the typical decrease in GH levels found in this condition; in 5 of these patients, challenged with TRH, GH levels increased. The findings emphasize that despite the ease of clinical diagnosis, appropriate biochemical investigations are necessary to confirm the exact status of the disease, which is rare in the population studied.
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PMID:The clinical presentation and biochemical diagnosis of acromegaly and gigantism. 680 79

As we age, our arteries elongate and our brains "sag." As a consequence of these processes, redundant arterial loops and bridging or intrinsic hindbrain veins may cause cross-compression of cranial nerve root entry zones in the cerebellopontine angle. This pulsatile compression can be seen to produce hyperactive dysfunction of the cranial nerve. Symptoms of trigeminal or glossopharyngeal neuralgia (somatic sensory), hemifacial spasm (somatic motor), tinnitus and vertigo (special sensory) and some cases of "essential" hypertension are caused by these vessels compressing cranial nerves V, IX--X, VII, VIII, and left X and medulla oblongata. Using microsurgical techniques, the symptoms may be relieved by vascular decompression, findings and results in 695 paients are briefly reviewed and correlated. A chronic primate model of "essential" hypertension is briefly described.
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PMID:Neurovascular compression in cranial nerve and systemic disease. 696 43

During a survey of all pregnant patients seen during 1 month at the King Edward VIII Hospital, Durban, the prevalence of hypertension in pregnancy proved to be 11,4%. The incidence in primigravidas was 17,8%, twice the figure in multigravid patients. The perinatal mortality rate for both groups of patients was increased, especially when proteinuria was also present. The infants born to the multigravid patient with hypertension and proteinuria not only have a higher risk of perinatal mortality (5 - 6-fold increase) but a significantly lower birth weight than the infant born to the primiparous patient.
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PMID:A survey of hypertension in pregnancy at the King Edward VIII Hospital, Durban. 742 93

The first generation high-dose ( 80 mcg estrogen) oral contraceptives (OCs) were associated with an increased risk of deep venous thrombosis (DVT). So manufacturers removed the high-dose OCs and first replaced them with OCs with 50 mcg estrogen, resulting in a lower incidence of thromboembolic events (40 vs. 20/100,000 users). When they introduced an even lower dose OC (30 mcg estrogen), the incidence fell further (about 8/100,000 users). Yet, women using the lowest-dose OCs still have DVT more often than do control women. Life-style, age, and smoking may be confounding factors, however. It is not clear whether loss of endogenous ovarian steroid production or the effects of the orally administered contraceptive steroids cause significant changes in hemostatic factors (antithrombin III, protein S, protein C, plasminogen, tissue-type plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1, histidine-rich glycoprotein, and VII, VIII, X, XII coagulation factors) during OC use. These changes tend to be within normal ranges. There is some doubt that these changes have any clinical significance. In nonsmokers, increased activity of anticoagulant factors and fibrinolytic factors counteract the effects on coagulation factors. Progestin-only OCs appear to affect hemostasis but have not increased the risk of thrombosis. There are considerable differences between people in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of contraceptive steroids. These differences may account for the increased risk of thromboembolic events in some people. Further research should identify methods of individualizing the dose of contraceptive steroids for a single patient. It should also explore the close interrelationship between hemostasis and lipid metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, and hypertension in the development of cardiovascular disease in OC users. Providers should discourage women with a past history of DVT from using hormonal contraception.
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PMID:Coagulation and anticoagulation effects of contraceptive steroids. 817 1

The aim of this work was to study the prevalence of hypertension in rural populations of the VIII region of Chile. Six thousand twenty four non institutionalized subjects. 14 years old or older, coming from eight randomly chosen rural communities were studied. Blood pressure was measured by trained personnel in two occasions within 30 minutes; in those classified as hypertensive, a third measurement was performed within 24 hours, eliminating alcohol intake and medications. Results show prevalence rates in the first, second and third measurement of 38.5, 30.8 and 22.8% respectively. The elimination of alcohol intake and medications decreased the prevalence in 3.9%. All the chosen communities has similar rates (19.8 to 21.2%) except Arauco, that had a significantly higher frequency of 31.9%. Zones of extreme ruralness had higher rates than small towns (23.8 vs 21.7%). There was a secular increase in the prevalence of hypertension from 4.9 in the 15 to 24 years old group to 57.8% among people 75 years old or older. Forty three percent of hypertensives were aware of such condition, 26.1% were receiving treatment and in 8.2% it was successful; all these figures were slightly better among women.
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PMID:[Hypertension in rural communities. Study in the VIII Region, Chile]. 819 Nov 59


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