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)

1. Propranolol was given to eight haemodialysed patients with resistant arterial hypertension for periods ranging from 6 to 16 months. 2. The treatment brought about an excellent control of blood pressure in all cases. 3. After withdrawal of propranolol plasma renin activity rose on average 40% compared with the value obtained during treatment. However, no significant relationship was found between the change in plasma renin activity and the change in the diastolic blood pressure. 4. Stopping propranolol resulted in a prompt rebound of arterial pressure toward pretreatment values. However, hypertension was always controlled on resuming drug treatment. 5. The results show that this form of hypertension can be controlled on a long-term basis with propranolol. However, the effect on blood pressure seems not to be mediated by suppression of renin secretion.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1975 Jun
PMID:Long-term propranolol treatment of resistant arterial hypertension in haemodialysed patients. 80 45

1. Catecholamine plasma concentrations and urinary excretion were measured together with plasma renin activity in ten patients with essential hypertension and in five normal control subjects before and after a frusemide challenge. 2. The same procedure was repeated in the same subjects 3--4 days later after pretreatment with oxprenolol. 3. Noradrenaline plasma concentrations and urinary excretion increased significantly after frusemide in all cases, returning to normal values at 30 and 60 min. Adrenaline plasma concentrations and urinary excretion were unchanged. 4. Plasma renin activity increased significantly in seven patients with hypertension and normal renin basal values, remaining unchanged in three hypertensive patients with low-renin basal values. 5. Oxprenolol suppressed the response of noradrenaline and plasma renin activity to frusemide in all cases.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1975 Jun
PMID:Effect of oxprenolol on catecholamines and plasma renin activity: acute response to frusemide in hypertensive patients. 80 48

1. We describe a new method of producing two-kidney hypertension in dogs by a two-step procedure with complete occlusion of a renal artery 2 weeks after it was partially constricted. 2. Control mean arterial pressure (96 +/- 3 mmHg) of nine conscious, trained dogs rose to 107 +/- 3 mmHg 2 weeks after partial constriction of a renal artery, and it stabilized at a sustained hypertensive plateau (124 +/- 7 mmHg) 3 weeks after complete occlusion. 3. Intravenous infusion of an angiotensin II antagonist (Sar1-Thr8-angiotensin II) caused arterial pressure to fall during the acute but not the chronic phase of renal hypertension. In this latter phase plasma renin activity had returned to control values. 4. We conclude that the renin-angiotensin system appears not to be directly involved in the chronic phase of two-kidney hypertension in the dog.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Feb
PMID:The course of arterial pressure and the effect of Sar1-Thr8-angiotensin II in a new model of two-kidney hypertension in conscious dogs. 84 49

1. Blood pressure and plasma renin activity were studied after bilateral nephrectomy in groups of rats with hypertension caused by unilateral renal ischaemia with the opposite kidney left intact. 2. Although blood pressure showed only a small fall in the first hour after bilateral nephrectomy, plasma renin activity fell rapidly with a half-life of 10 min. 3. Infusion of converting enzyme inhibitor (SQ20881) produced a 26-1% fall in blood pressure 1 h after nephrectomy, 24-% at 2 h and 4-6% at 6 h. 4. An angiotensin antagonist (Sar1-Ala8-angiotensin II) was infused into hypertensive rats 1 h after nephrectomy; this blocked the vasodepressor action of the converting enzyme inhibitor, indicating that the fall in blood pressure produced by the inhibitor was due to its action upon the renin-angiotensin system. 5. The renin-angiotensin system maintains blood pressure in this model even after plasma renin has fallen to insignificant levels. This supports the view that vascular renin activity has a longer half-life than circulating renin and is important in the control of blood pressure.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Mar
PMID:Blood pressure response of nephrectomized hypertensive rats to converting enzyme inhibition: evidence for persistent vascular renin activity. 84 62

1. In the early phase of hypertension produced by renal artery constriction with the opposite kidney intact, infusion of the angiotensin antagonist Sar1-Ala8-angiotensin II or bilateral nephrectomy lowered blood pressure. However, the extent of the fall was variable and some animals remained hypertensive after each procedure. 2. To assess whether sodium retention was the additional factor which maintained blood pressure when the renin-angiotensin system was suppressed, rats were maintained on a low-salt diet before and during the development of hypertension. The blood pressure-lowering effect of bilateral nephrectomy or antagonist infusion was not enhanced. 3. Infusion of antagonist or converting-enzyme inhibitor 6 h after bilateral nephrectomy had only a minor blood pressure-lowering action, indicating that, at this late stage after nephrectomy, the renin-angiotensin system makes only a very small contribution to blood pressure maintenance.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Apr
PMID:Sodium restriction and inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system in renovascular hypertension in the rat. 86 32

1. Intra-arterial pressure, cardiac output, renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate were measured in 19 patients with low-renin hypertension and in 30 patients with normal-renin hypertension. 2. Cardiac output and renal blood flow were significantly lower in low-renin hypertension. Total peripheral and renal vascular resistance were markedly higher in this group. 3. Plasma renin concentration correlated inversely with both total peripheral and renal vascular resistance as well as with age. Multiple regression analysis indicated that part of the relationship between renin and haemodynamic variables did not depend on age. Furthermore, plasma renin concentration did not decrease with age in a group of 40 normotensive control subjects of similar age to the hypertensive patients. 4. The results provide further confirmation that renin decreases as hypertension progresses.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Apr
PMID:Haemodynamic characteristics of low-renin hypertension. 86 36

1. Plasma noradrenaline concentrations and dopamine beta-hydroxylase activity have been measured at various stages in the development of hypertension in the one-kidney Goldblatt rat (unilateral renal arterial constriction and contralateral nephrectomy). 2. Although plasma noradrenaline concentrations were significantly elevated from control values at 7, 14 and 28 days, plasma dopamine beta-hydroxylase activity was not significantly different from control values except at 24 h. 3. These findings suggest that peripheral sympathetic activity is increased in the one-kidney Goldblatt model of experimental hypertension but that plasma dopamine beta-hydroxylase activity is poor index of this increase. 4. Both the rise in blood pressure and the rise in plasma noradrenaline concentrations were prevented by pretreatment with intracisternal 6-hydroxydopamine, suggesting that the increased sympathetic activity is at least in part centrally mediated.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 May
PMID:Plasma noradrenaline concentrations in experimental renovascular hypertension in the rat. 86 41

1. In 29 patients with acromegaly, plasma renin activity and growth hormone were measured during fasting and recumbency on free diet. Exchangeable sodium was measured in all cases and expressed as a percentage of the expected value on the basis of lean body mass. 2. Twenty-two control subjects without evidence of cardiovascular, renal or endocrine disease were studied in the same way. 3. There was a significant increase in exchangeable sodium and suppression of plasma renin activity in the acromegalic patients in comparison with control subjects. 4. There was a significant positive correlation between exchangeable sodium and plasma growth hormone. 5. Hypertensive acromegalic patients (diastolic blood pressure larger than or equal to 100 mmHg) tend to have a lower (although not significantly so) exchangeable sodium than normotensive subjects. 6. We conclude that (a) suppression of plasma renin activity in acromegaly can be explained by sodium retention, (b) hypersecretion of growth hormone is probably responsible for the increased exchangeable sodium, and (c) sodium overload cannot be directly related to blood pressure but may contribute to the increased occurrence of hypertension in acromegaly.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Jul
PMID:An investigation into the pathogenesis of hypertension in acromegaly. 87 24

1. Plasma renin concentration, intra-arterial pressure, cardiac output and total peripheral resistance have been studied in 50 patients with essential hypertension and normal renal function. 2. Total peripheral resistance and plasma renin were negatively correlated (r = -0-45), indicating that 'high-renin' essential hypertension is not necessarily associated with arteriolar vasoconstriction. 3. The inverse relation between mean arterial pressure and plasma renin (r = -0-46) suggests a role for the renal baroreceptor mechanism in the suppression of renin in 'low-renin' hypertension. 4. Cardiac output was positively related to plasma renin concentration (r = +0-42). 5. Multiple regression analysis indicates that the described relationships were independent of age.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1977 Jun
PMID:Plasma renin levels and systemic haemodynamics in essential hypertension. 88 30

1. Blood pressure, blood volume and renal blood flow were determined in 101 men; forty-three were normal subjects and fifty-eight were untreated permanent essential hypertensive patients with normal renal function and equilibrated sodium balance. 2. A significant negative pressure-volume relationship was observed overall. The relationship could be expressed as a hyperbola whose slope expressed the reduction in blood volume per unit rise in pressure: the higher the blood pressure, the lower the slope. Thus essential hypertensive subjects have a smaller decrement in blood volume per unit rise in pressure than normal subjects. 3. The relation between change in blood volume and change in pressure was confirmed in each individual by defining for each a ration deltaV/deltaP, statistically identical with the hyperbolic slope dV/dP. The deltaV/deltaP ratio was found to be well correlated with the renal blood flow and the creatinine clearance. No correlation existed between the total blood volume and these two renal parameters. 4. It is concluded that the present study demonstrates a blood volume regulation disturbance in essential hypertension and provides evidence from human studies that a renal defect accompanies high blood pressure.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1976 Mar
PMID:The pressure-volume relationship in normotensive and permanent essential hypertensive patients. 94 74


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