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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Experimental
hypertension
was produced in 7 dogs by continuously infusing suppressor amounts of
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) and hypotonic saline after renal mass had been surgically reduced to 30% of normal. Data were collected during 9 days of control measurements, 14 days of
ADH
and saline infusion, and then 3 days of saline infusion to 1) determine the chronic effects of
ADH
on arterial pressure and 2) determine whether
hypertension
could be maintained during hyponatremia. During the period of
ADH
infusion, arterial pressure increased to hypertensive levels while plasma sodium concentration decreased almost 20 meq/1. Also, during the
ADH
infusion period, the dogs demonstrated decreases in heart rate, plasm potassium concentration, plasma renin activity, and plasma aldosterone concentration. Fluid volume expansion was evidenced by sustained increases in blood volume and sodium space. We conclude that when renal function is compromised, subpressor amounts of
ADH
can contribute to the development of
hypertension
, probably due to its fluid-retaining properties and in spite of the attendant hyponatremia.
...
PMID:Hypertension in dogs during antidiuretic hormone and hypotonic saline infusion. 42 Mar 14
Radioimmunoassay of plasma
arginine-vasopressin
(
AVP
) in regularly dialyzed patients with chronic renal insufficiency revealed a parallel increase of
AVP
and plasma osmolality (POsm) before dialysis (4.16 +/- 0.36 pg/ml and 312.6 +/- 1.80 mOsm/1) and their parallel declin to the normal range (1.93 +/- 0.27 pg/ml and 292.0 +/- 1.27 mOsm/1) during dialysis. Plasma
AVP
correlated with POsm before and after dialysis (r = 0.611 and 0.453, p less than 0.01 and less than 0.05 respectively). The increase of
AVP
before dialysis was lower than would correspond to the rise of POsm and lower than that recorded in healthy subjects during dehydration. Statistical correlation between plasma
AVP
and indicators of body fluid volume changes between or during dialysis were not proved. We found statistical correlation between the mean blood pressure and
AVP
before dialysis (r = 0.468, p less than 0.05). These findings suggest that in chronic renal insufficiency changes of POsm remain primary regulating factor of
AVP
secretion. The expansion of extracellular fluid volume has probably only a modifying effect. It remains to be elucidated whether the revealed statistical relationship between the mean blood pressure and
AVP
before dialysis plays also a pathogenetic role in the development of
hypertension
in chronic renal insufficiency.
...
PMID:Plasma concentration of antidiuretic hormone in patients with chronic renal insufficiency on maintenance dialysis. 44 6
Plasma concentrations of
vasopressin
and plasma renin activity were measured every 30 min for 24 h in 5 normal active humans, in 1 normal woman confined to bed (except for brief periods up to the bathroom), in 2 active patients with primary aldosteronism and in 1 patient with low-renin
hypertension
. Plasma
vasopressin
varied markedly over the day and night in a pattern suggesting episodic secretion of the hormone in the normal subjects. Assumption of upright posture was accompanied by a rise in plasma levels from undetectable to 20--50 pg/ml. Episodic secretion, however, also occurred during bed rest and sleep. In contrast, patients with primary aldosteronism and low-renin
hypertension
had plasma
vasopressin
levels considerably lower than the normals, and their profiles of plasma concentration lacked the peaks seen in normals. In the normals, although
vasopressin
and renin secretion often coincided, only 2 of 6 studies showed a significant correlation between the plasma levels of the two hormones. This study, therefore, shows that
vasopressin
is secreted periodically in normal humans, that upright posture is an important modulator of secretory activity and that the renin-angiotensin system may or may not influence the pattern of secretion. In addition, it underlines the necessity of recumbency in establishing the existence of a circadian rhythm of plasma
vasopressin
levels.
...
PMID:Plasma vasopressin variation and renin activity in normal active humans. 46 6
The concentration of blood
vasopressin
was investigated in apparently healthy persons and in patients with I--II degree
hypertension
, aged from 20 to 80 years. Vasopressin concentration was determined by the biological method according to the antidiuretic effect of ethanol-anesthetized and constantly hydrated rats on an original 5-channel apparatus. The results obtained showed the blood
vasopressin
concentration to increase with age. In patients with the I--II degree hypertensive disease the mentioned concentration was significantly higher than in healthy persons of the same age. Close correlation coefficient was revealed between the blood
vasopressin
concentration and minimal arterial blood pressure values.
...
PMID:[Blood vasopressin concentration is patients of different ages with hypertension]. 47 71
A 15 year old girl presented with excessive thirst and
hypertension
(170/110 mm Hg). Biochemical investigations revealed serum sodium 118 meq/liter, serum osmolality 238 mosmol/liter, urine sodium 90 meq/liter, urine osmolality 700 mosmol/liter, persistenly elevated serum
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) levels (5.8 to 11.9 pg/ml) and no obvious cause for the
hypertension
. The
hypertension
is, at least in part, volume-related, diminishing with fluid restriction. Features of gross water intoxication (e.g., confusion, coma) have not occurred. The etiology of the inappropriate secretion of
ADH
is not obvious but is not thought to be due to "resetting of osmoreceptors" as evidenced by failure to maximally dilute urine following a water load test and persistently elevated serum
ADH
levels. A similar patient described by Epstein and associates in 1962 is presently well with persistent features of inappropriate secretion of
ADH
.
...
PMID:Idiopathic, sustained, inappropriate secretion of ADH with associated hypertension and thirst. 47 98
The study of six patients with acute intermittent porphyria is reported. Clinical and biochemical studies have been performed during the long hospitalization of the patiets. The main disautonomic aspects were the arterial
hypertension
and the tachycardia in four patients, cardiac arrest in three patients and respiratory arrest in five patients. The cause of this problems is probably the involvment of the autonomic adrenergic system. The authors observed also three patients with hyponatremia probably resulting from inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
. The prognosis of the acute intermittent porphyria is worse if the patients have disautonomic symptoms; three patients died and two had neurological sequalae (motor tetraparesis).
...
PMID:[Dysautonomic aspects of acute intermittent porphyria. Apropos of 6 cases]. 49 3
In order to investigate the vasopressor role of ADH in the regulation of blood pressure, passive immunization experiments with an antibody to AVP were carried out in experimentally hypertensive rats. In hypertensive rats treated with deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA), spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats (SHR-sp), the intravenous injection of a specific
vasopressin
antibody resulted in a transient fall of blood pressure of 11 approximately 25mmHg, while in rats with two-kidney Goldblatt hypertension and normal rats, the blood pressure was not affected. This strongly suggests that ADH contributed to systemic vaso-constriction in DOCA
hypertension
and spontaneous
hypertension
in rats.
...
PMID:[The vasopressor role of ADH in the maintenance of blood pressure in experimentally hypertensive rats (author's transl)]. 49 16
1. Alterations in vascular reactivity were assessed in isolated artificially perfused kidneys from stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive (spSH) rats at different stages of
hypertension
and after neonatal sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). 2. During the pre-hypertensive stage, and the early and chronic stages of
hypertension
, the responses to noradrenaline,
vasopressin
, serotonin and angiotensin II were enhanced in renal vascular beds from spSH animals compared with age- and sex-matched Wistar-Kyoto (WK) rats; dose-response curves were shifted to the left, had steeper slopes, greater maximal responses and decreased thresholds. 3. With increasing severity and duration of
hypertension
, renal vascular resistance at maximal vasodilatation increased, the slopes of the dose-response curves were steeper and maximal responses were greater. 4. Neonatal sympathectomy with 6-OHDA greatly attenuated but did not prevent the eventual development of
hypertension
; furthermore, this treatment had no effect on the enhanced resistance or reactivity in renal vascular beds from spSH rats. 5. The appearance of enhanced resistance and reactivity in the early stages of
hypertension
and the inability to prevent these vascular changes by neonatal sympathectomy suggest that these alterations are a primary pathogenic mechanism in spSH rats.
...
PMID:Vascular reactivity in the pathogenesis of spontaneous hypertension. 54 Apr 70
Experiments were performed to determine the role of
vasopressin
in deoxycorticosterone (DOC)-salt
hypertension
. In order to determine if
vasopressin
is necessary for the development of DOC-salt
hypertension
, rats with hereditary diabetes insipidus (DI) and normal Long-Evans rats (LE) were unilaterally nephrectomized, treated with DOC Pivalate (30 mg/kg . week) and given saline to drink for 8 weeks. A second group of DI rats were unilaterally nephrectomized, but received no treatment. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) increased 40 mm Hg in the LE group (p less than 0.01) but failed to increase significantly in either DI group. Urinary excretion of
vasopressin
(UADHV) and SBP were measured in unilaterally nephrectomized LE rats treated with DOC and salt (DOC-LE), salt alone (NaCl-LE) and untreated rats (H2O-LE). The UADHV was elevated in DOC-LE (p less than 0.01) and NaCl-LE (p less than 0.05), but only the DOC-LE rats became hypertensive. Finally, the I.V. injection of analogs of
vasopressin
, which block its pressor but not antidiuretic activity, lowered mean arterial blood pressure 27 +/- 5 mm Hg in 11 conscious DOC-salt hypertensive rats. It is concluded that
vasopressin
plays a major role as a pressor agent in both the onset and maintenance of DOC-salt
hypertension
.
Hypertension
PMID:The importance of vasopressin in the development and maintenance of DOC-salt hypertension in the rat. 54 12
A laboratory model was developed in the dog to quantitate the effects of cerebral venous
hypertension
on inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) secretion. When cerebral venous pressure was abruptly increased during continuous water loading, there was a sharp rise in urine osmolality within 30 minutes. Urine osmolality continued to increase during, and ten minutes after, the period of
hypertension
. On lowering cerebral venous pressure, the osmolality returned to baseline within 60 minutes. The effects could be extended for at least three hours and presumably longer. A 50% response threshold for this
ADH
effect occurred at a cerebral venous pressure between 18 and 19 cm of water. The effect correlated with plasma
ADH
levels. The study paralled documented clinical observations. The results are discussed in light of the recognition and management of surgical states where increased cerebral venous pressure might produce a severe antidiuretic effect.
...
PMID:Reduction of free water clearance with cephalic venous hypertension. 64 15
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