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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To investigate the risk factors for glaucoma, we reviewed the clinical record of 361 primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) patients, 178 ocular hypertensives (OH), and 927 controls without POAG or OH, randomly selected from an urban medical center eye clinic. Old age defined as > or = 55 year, (odds ratio ratio (OR) = 3.13 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.06-4.76, P < .0001), black race (OR = 2.58, 95% CI: 1.79-3.74, p < .0001),
hypertension
(OR = 1.709, 95% CI: 1.15-2.51, P < .0108), and diabetes mellitus (OR = 1.83, 95% CI: 1.08-3.09, P = .0308) were identified as significant risk factors in POAG compared to OH. Old Age (OR = 4.94, 95% CI: 3.62-6.76, p < .0001), and black race (OR = 2.04, 95% CI: 1.59-2.61, P < .0001),
HTN
(OR = 1.63, 95% CI: 1.26-2.11, P = .0002), and DM (OR = 1.40 95% CI: 1.02-1.92 P = .0450) were also significant risk factors when compared to normal controls. However, when the 361 POAG patients were compared to 361 controls matched with respect to age, race, and sex,
hypertension
and diabetes mellitus did not appear to be independent risk factors. Family history of glaucoma was found to be a risk factors more significantly for OH (OR = 6.79, 95% CI: 4.39-10.50, P < .0001) than for POAG (OR = 2.83, 95% CI: 1.90-4.21, P < .0001) compared to the matched control subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Glaucoma risk factors in primary open-angle glaucoma patients compared to ocular hypertensives and control subjects. 130 52
1. The abilities of various serotonergic drugs to bind with the 5-HT receptor of Ascaris suum muscle and to affect cyclic AMP levels in muscle tissue were examined. 2. Ligands which selectively interact with either the 5-HT1 or the 5-HT2 receptor in mammalian systems interact with the 5-HT receptor from A. suum muscle and increase cyclic AMP levels. 3. No binding of 5-HT3 ligands to 5-HT receptors from A. suum muscle was observed. 4. The 5-HT receptor of A. suum muscle should be called the 5-
HTN
(for Nematoda) receptor because its pharmacological and biochemical behaviors were different from those of mammalian 5-HT receptors.
...
PMID:Identification of a novel 5-HTN (Nematoda) receptor from Ascaris suum muscle. 135 23
The purpose of this study was to determine if alpha 1-adrenergic receptor blockade alters the hemodynamic response to exercise in young (less than 25 yr) male borderline hypertensives differently than in young normotensives. Five hypertensive (
HTN
, MAP greater than 105 mmHg) and 7 normotensive (NTN, MAP less than 95 mmHg) college-age males underwent two 30 min bouts of cycle ergometry exercise at 50% VO2pk in a warm (25 degrees C, 50% rh) environment; one following alpha 1-receptor blockade with prazosin (PRAZ) and the other following placebo administration (PLAC). During resting PLAC and compared to NTN,
HTN
exhibited an elevated cardiac index (CI, p = .002), similar HR and elevated total peripheral resistance index (TPRI, p = .015). During resting PRAZ, CI and TPRI were similar but HR was higher (p = .013) in
HTN
than NTN. While reduced during PRAZ, resting MAP was higher in
HTN
than NTN (p = .007) for both trials. With exercise and PLAC, CI was higher (p = .029) while HR and TPRI were similar for
HTN
compared to NTN. With PRAZ, the exercise CI, TPRI and HR responses were similar for both groups. Exercise MAP was blunted in both groups with PRAZ. While not differing significantly between groups for each treatment, MAP was stable for NTN while it declined after 10 min of exercise in
HTN
. The elevated CI seen in exercising
HTN
with PLAC was removed with PRAZ; the exercise response was otherwise unaltered by alpha 1-blockade. Consequently, these data suggest that young male hypertensives have an elevated blood pressure due to an elevated CI incompletely offset by a reduced TPRI. While alpha 1-blockade lowers MAP by lowering CI, the MAP response to exercise remains unaltered.
...
PMID:Effects of alpha 1-receptor blockade on the hemodynamic responses to exercise in young hypertensives. 135 66
A retrospective study was conducted evaluating the resting blood pressure (BP) of 160 patients at the onset and upon successful completion of a Phase II pulmonary rehabilitation program. Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exercise at submaximal loads. Patients with both
hypertension
and COPD would remain hypertensive after a course of pulmonary rehabilitation. The two-tailed t-test was utilized to compare BP at the onset to BP at the completion of the program. No significant differences were found in the following groups: (1) Start and end SBP or DBP of all patients; (2) Start and end SBP or DBP of the 40 (25%) hypertensive patients (HTN-Pts); (3) Start and end SBP or DBP of the 6 (4%)
HTN
-Pts on antihypertensive (anti-HTN) medications; (4) Start and end SBP or DBP of the 34 (21%)
HTN
-Pts off anti-
HTN
medications. This study supports the hypothesis that
HTN
-Pts with COPD participating in a Phase II pulmonary rehab program remain hypertensive.
Hypertension
in this population should be treated medically.
...
PMID:Blood pressure changes in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and hypertension completing phase II pulmonary rehabilitation. 140 44
An 18-year-old black woman presented with marginally compensated right heart failure, severe pulmonary hypertension, tricuspid incompetence, and right atrial myxoma. Catheterization suggested a substantial reactive component to her P-
HTN
, especially to nifedipine. Initial management consisted of excision of two right atrial myxomas and tricuspid annuloplasty, and postdischarge management with nifedipine, 30 mg four times daily. Emergency pulmonary thromboendarterectomy was required two weeks later for acute cor pulmonale. It is suggested that concomitant procedures are mandatory in this setting because of the otherwise accelerated adverse pathophysiology of obliterative pulmonary vascular obstructive disease.
...
PMID:Long-term severe pulmonary hypertension associated with right atrial myxoma. 162 75
The effect of phenylephrine-induced
hypertension
on CBF was investigated after 120 min of middle cerebral artery occlusion in rats. Blood pressure was manipulated by one of the following schedules during a 90-min period of reperfusion: 90/NORM, 90 min of normotensive reperfusion; 90/
HTN
, 90 min of hypertensive reperfusion (MABP increased by 30 mm Hg); or 15/
HTN
, the 90-min period of reperfusion was divided into 30 min of normotension, followed by 15 min of
hypertension
and 45 min of normotension. At the end of reperfusion, 100 microCi kg-1 of [14C]iodoantipyrine was given and an autoradiographic analysis of CBF performed. In the coronal brain section at the center of middle cerebral artery distribution, the area (percentage of hemisphere, mean +/- SD) with a CBF of 0-20 or 21-40 ml 100 g-1 min-1 was less (p less than 0.05) in the 15/
HTN
group (1 +/- 2 and 5 +/- 3%, respectively) versus the 90/
HTN
group (12 +/- 4 and 10 +/- 4%), which was in turn less than in the 90/NORM group (18 +/- 5 and 22 +/- 6%). These data are consistent with the hypothesis that during reperfusion a short interval of
hypertension
effectively augments CBF via an abrupt opening of collapsed vessels and that a more sustained interval of
hypertension
conveys no added benefit.
...
PMID:Focal cerebral ischemia in rats: effects of induced hypertension, during reperfusion, on CBF. 172 43
After 180 min of temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion in rats, the affect of phenylephrine-induced
hypertension
on blood-brain barrier permeability was assessed. One of the following blood-pressure regimens was maintained during either a 30- or 120-min period of reperfusion: (a) 30/Norm, 30 min of normotensive reperfusion was allowed; (b) 30/
HTN
, mean arterial blood pressure was increased by 35 mm Hg during 30 min of reperfusion; (c) 120/Norm, 120 min of normotensive reperfusion was allowed; or (d) 120/
HTN
, mean arterial blood pressure was increased by 35 mm Hg during 120 min of reperfusion. Evans blue (30 mg/kg) was given, and brains were analyzed for Evans blue by spectrophotometry. Evans blue (microgram/g brain tissue, mean +/- SD) was greater (P less than 0.05) in both hypertensive groups versus their time matched normotensive groups (30/
HTN
: 80 +/- 16 versus 18 +/- 6 in the 30/Norm group; 120/
HTN
: 17 +/- 6 versus 8 +/- 3 in the 120/Norm group). In addition, Evans blue was greater (P less than 0.05) in both 30-min groups versus their pressure matched 120-min groups (30/Norm: 18 +/- 6 versus 8 +/- 3 in the 120/Norm group; 30/
HTN
: 80 +/- 16 versus 17 +/- 6 in the 120/
HTN
group). The data are consistent with previous studies which have demonstrated an opening of the blood-brain barrier at the onset of reperfusion. In addition, the data support a hypothesis that changes in blood-brain barrier permeability are more sensitive to
hypertension
in the early period of reperfusion.
...
PMID:Time- and pressure-dependent changes in blood-brain barrier permeability after temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion in rats. 175 59
Activation kinetics of single high-threshold inactivating (HTI or N-type) calcium channels of cultured dorsal root ganglion cells from mouse embryos was studied using a patch-clamp method. Calcium channels displayed bursting activity. The open-time histogram was single exponential with an almost potential-independent mean open time tau op = 1.2 msec. The closed-time histogram was multicomponent; at least three of the components were associated with the activation process. The "fast" exponential component with the potential-independent time constant tau fcl = 0.9 msec included all intraburst gaps, while two "slower" ones with potential-dependent time constants tau scl and tau vscl described shut times between bursts and between clusters of bursts. The burst length histogram was biexponential. The "fast" component with a relatively potential-independent time constant tau fbur = 0.6 msec described short, isolated channel openings while the "slow" component characterized real bursts with a potential-dependent mean life time. The waiting-time histogram could be fitted by a difference of two exponentials with time constants being the same as tau scl and tau vscl. The data obtained were described in the frame of a 4-state sequential model of calcium channel activation, in which the first two stages are formally attributed to potential-dependent transmembrane transfer of two charged gating particles accompanying the channel transitions between three closed states, and the third one to fast conformational changes in channel protein leading to the opening of the channel. The rate constants for all transitions were defined. The validity of the proposed model for both low-threshold inactivating (LTI or T-type) and high-threshold noninactivating (
HTN
or L-type) calcium channels is discussed.
...
PMID:Activation kinetics of single high-threshold calcium channels in the membrane of sensory neurons from mouse embryos. 255 26
We used the Lehigh Valley Stroke Register and a logistic regression model for the odds ratio to study the relative contribution of several factors, considered jointly, to the risk of recurrent ischemic stroke. The factors were
hypertension
(HT), transient ischemic attack (TIA), myocardial infarction (MI), other heart diseases (OHD), diabetes mellitus (DM), age, and sex. Among these factors MI, OHD, and TIA constituted significantly greater risk than
HTN
, DM, age, or sex for ischemic stroke recurrence.
...
PMID:Stroke in the Lehigh Valley: combined risk factors for recurrent ischemic stroke. 271 Mar 58
Hypertension
-aid in physician treatment (HTN-APT) is an expert computer system that assists the physician in determining the best form of treatment for the individual hypertensive patient. The
HTN
-APT system aids the physician in managing the hypertensive patient by keeping a record of the patient's progress, allowing easy access to drug information, and generating recommendations and critiques about treatment options. The treatment recommendations are ranked by an analogue indication-contraindication scheme whereby each drug both singly and in combination is evaluated for patient suitability on the basis of more than 30 possible patient factors. When the computer-generated recommendations were evaluated by a group of family physicians, the
HTN
-APT system was found to make beneficial treatment recommendations without major judgmental error.
...
PMID:HTN-APT: computer aid in hypertension management. 381 71
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