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)

The subjects were 15 patients, aged 53 to 74 years, with noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and mild to moderate hypertension. Each received 20 to 40 mg of nitrendipine daily for six months. Mean supine blood pressures decreased significantly from 177/102 mmHg before treatment to 164/95 mmHg at three months and continued to decline during the following three months. Diastolic blood pressure was reduced to less than 90 mmHg in eight of the 15 patients. No changes in heart rate, glycemic control (serum levels of glucose, C-peptide, glycosylated hemoglobin, and fructosamine), or serum lipid levels (cholesterol and its lipoprotein fractions, triglycerides, and apolipoproteins A1 and B) were noted. It is concluded that nitrendipine is safe and effective in the treatment of hypertension in diabetic patients.
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PMID:Antihypertensive and metabolic effects of nitrendipine in hypertensive diabetic patients. 226 64

One hundred and fourty seven diabetic patients of both sexes with ages between 40 and 65 (44% Type 1 and 56% Type II), were studied and followed for a period of five years in order to evaluate the possible association between blood glucose control and the appearance and progression of vascular complications. A clinical metabolic characterization was performed in all patients both at the beginning and at the end of the study. Process of the results after 5 years was carried out dividing the total study sample in two groups, A and B, according to the level of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1) at the beginning of the study (HbA1 less than 10% or greater than 10%). The most frequent vascular complications both at the beginning and at the end of the study were retinopathy, hypertension, and angina pectoris, outstanding the high incidence of retinopathy (83%) found at the end of the study in the group of patients who were considered poorly controlled given the initial HbA1 values. A subset of 111 patients who did not present retinopathy at the beginning of the study were particularly analyzed, demonstrating in these cases a significant association between HbA1 levels at the beginning of the study and the appearance of retinopathy five years later. Type II diabetics particularly showed a 3 fold risk of developing this complication if their initial HbA1 levels were equal to or higher than 10%. This finding gives HbA1 determination a predictive value for the development of retinopathy and highlights the influence of glycemic control on the appearance and progression of this complication in diabetic patients.
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PMID:[Glycosylated hemoglobin as a prognostic index of the appearance of vascular complications in diabetic patients]. 228 83

Results of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) in the acute phase are represented by the direct threat of vasospasm. The first step still is to recognise SAH, so that all misleading clinical aspects of arterial aneurysm rupture do not misguide, or even fail to do the right diagnosis. If so, rebleeding still remains a real danger. Among biological patterns, hyponatremia is an important factor of vasospasm. Cardiovascular symptoms are represented by a sudden and transient arterial hypertension which can drive to a diagnostic error and electrocardiographic abnormalities, which are directly related with the degree of vasospasm; their evolution is completely regressive. Main intracranial consequences are early hydrocephalus, worsening of consciousness and progressive ventricular distension on CT scan and vasospasm, which occurs between the 4th and the 12th day, may be asymptomatic or symptomatic, responsive for delayed ischemia, followed by deterioration of consciousness and focal neurological signs. The main factors responsible for the vasospasm are a high amount of blood in basal cisterns on CT scan; an increase of substances released by the lysis of hemoglobin in CSF; hyponatremia, hypovolemia, and decrease in cerebral blood flow. Consequences of these disorders have to be well known in the medical treatment before and after operation.
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PMID:[Consequences of meningeal hemorrhage during the first days after its onset]. 228 34

Seven hundred and sixty seven Doppler umbilical artery velocity waveform analyses were performed in 108 pregnant insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) women. No significant correlation between mean third trimester systolic to diastolic (S/D) ratio and either mean blood glucose (r = 0.19) or glycosylated hemoglobin levels (r = 0.28) was found. Mean second and third trimester S/D ratios differed significantly in patients with or without vascular disease (P less than 0.05). Furthermore, women without vasculopathy who demonstrated an elevated S/D developed preeclampsia and delivered appropriate for gestational age infants while patients with vascular disease or chronic hypertension and elevated third trimester S/D (greater than 3) delivered intra uterine growth retarded (IUGR) infants. Moreover, in most of the latter group elevated S/D ratios were recorded in the second trimester prior to ultrasound documentation of IUGR. Our data suggest that in the absence of vasculopathy normal fetal placental resistance can be expected in most pregnancies complicated by diabetes. Patients with vasculopathy are at higher risk for fetal IUGR, which may be identified by early umbilical artery velocimetry.
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PMID:Umbilical artery velocimetry in insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) pregnancies. 229 61

To determine causal mechanism(s) of microalbuminuria seen in patients with noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), multivariate analysis (principal component analysis) was applied, using patient's age, disease length, fasting blood sugar level (FBS), hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c %), and presence of hypertension as variables. Albumin concentration in the first morning urine was determined by the Latex Photometric Immunoassay (LPIA), and was expressed as albumin index (AI, albumin excretion per gram creatinine). Sixty five cases who had been continuously negative or equivocal (+/-) for urinary protein by an usual paper test method were analysed. The result indicated these patients could be separated into following three groups. Group A (12 cases) showed the highest AI value, was characterized by longer disease length (greater than 10 yrs), and was thought to be in transitional phase into clinical proteinuric stage. Group B (7 cases) was characterized by poor diabetic control and normalization of the microalbuminuria might be possible by strict control measures. In Group C (14 cases), patients were in relatively early stage of the disease, and were under good diabetic control, but presence of hypertension was thought to be a provocative factor.
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PMID:[Principal component analysis for microalbuminuria in patients with noninsulin-dependent, maturity-onset diabetes mellitus]. 230 26

Anemia is a common complication of multiple myeloma. It resolves early in the disease if chemotherapy induces a complete remission, but persists if the disease progresses, causing disabling symptoms and often requiring blood transfusions. We treated 13 patients with myeloma-associated anemia by administering recombinant human erythropoietin three times a week for six months. Eleven patients (85 percent) had steady increases in hemoglobin levels and eventual correction of the anemia. Their symptoms of anemia subsided, and they reported a heightened sense of well-being. No patient had any adverse side effects, particularly episodes of hypertension. Monitoring of the serum M component showed a predominantly stable tumor load without apparent interaction between the underlying disease and the response to erythropoietin therapy. The number of erythroid burst-forming units in the bone marrow and peripheral blood and the level of erythropoiesis in bone marrow smears increased significantly during therapy. Pretreatment serum levels of erythropoietin were higher in the patients who did not respond and in those who required more than two months of treatment before they responded. Serum iron, ferritin, and transferrin concentrations reflected responses to treatment. We conclude that recombinant human erythropoietin is a promising therapeutic tool for treating myeloma-associated anemia.
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PMID:Erythropoietin treatment of anemia associated with multiple myeloma. 198 68

This study was performed in order to evaluate the effects of ketanserin monotherapy on blood pressure and glucose metabolism in essential hypertensives with type 2 diabetes. Twenty-nine patients, 17 males and 12 females, aged 45 to 78 years, with mild hypertension (DBP greater than or equal to 95 and less than or equal to 105 mmHg) and type 2 diabetes were studied. After a 4 week run-in period on placebo, each patient received ketanserin 20 mg b.i.d. for 6 months, with no modification in previous antidiabetic therapy. SBP, DBP, HR, fasting and post-prandial glycemia were monitored monthly. An oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), glycosilated hemoglobin (HbA1c), urinary C-peptide, serum electrolytes, creatinine, uric acid, total cholesterol and 24 h protein and glucose urinary excretion were evaluated before and after 3 and 6 months of treatment. Ketanserin significantly reduced both SBP and DBP (p less than 0.005) with no changes in HR. No significant modifications of fasting and post-prandial glycemia, HbA1c and C-peptide were observed. Besides, ketanserin did not affect glucose tolerance, the levels of glucose during the OGTT were not significantly different before and after treatment. None of the patients required any change in antidiabetic therapy. In conclusion, ketanserin was effective in the treatment of mild hypertension in patients with type 2 diabetes. The absence of effects on glucose metabolism makes it an especially interesting drug in such patients.
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PMID:Ketanserin in chronic treatment of hypertension in type 2 diabetes mellitus. 236 39

In conduit arteries, nitric oxide is formed from L-arginine in the endothelium and released after stimulation with acetylcholine. The contribution of the L-arginine pathway and the effects of age and hypertension on endothelium-dependent vascular regulation were studied, using a video dimension analyzer, in pressurized and perfused mesenteric resistance arteries of 8- and 16-20-week-old Wistar-Kyoto and spontaneously hypertensive rats. Norepinephrine and phenylephrine caused contractions, which were similarly augmented after removal of the endothelium. NG-Monomethyl-L-arginine, an inhibitor of nitric oxide formation, augmented the contraction, but less than endothelial removal. Acetylcholine caused endothelium-dependent relaxations that were much more pronounced with intraluminal than with extraluminal application. NG-Monomethyl-L-arginine, methylene blue, and hemoglobin only partially inhibited the response. With aging, the endothelium-dependent inhibition of the response to norepinephrine decreased in Wistar-Kyoto rats; in spontaneously hypertensive rats this inhibition was smaller as compared with age-matched Wistar-Kyoto rats. In Wistar-Kyoto rats, the difference between intraluminal and extraluminal activation became more pronounced in adult rats. In the adult but not the young spontaneously hypertensive rats, the response to intraluminal but not extraluminal acetylcholine was reduced as compared with Wistar-Kyoto rats. Thus, in mesenteric resistance arteries of the rat, nitric oxide is released from L-arginine under basal conditions and after stimulation with acetylcholine but only in part accounts for endothelium-dependent responses. With aging and hypertension, the inhibitory effects of the endothelium against norepinephrine-induced contractions decrease. In hypertension, the intraluminal but not extraluminal activation of the release of endothelium-derived relaxing factors is impaired.
Hypertension 1990 Aug
PMID:Activation of endothelial L-arginine pathway in resistance arteries. Effect of age and hypertension. 237 50

Despite prophylaxis with low-dose heparin (LDH), postoperative thromboembolism (TE) still occurs in 10 per cent of patients undergoing abdominal operations. To identify predictors of TE in spite of LDH, 171 patients undergoing abdominal operations and receiving LDH were screened with the fibrinogen uptake test. Diagnosis of TE was confirmed in 24 (14 per cent; 95 per cent confidence limits of 9 to 20 per cent) by either venography or pulmonary scintigraphy, or both, or autopsy. As analyzed by multiple logistic regression, only age, body mass index, preoperative hemoglobin concentration and colorectal operations (yes or no) contributed to the prediction of failure of LDH, whereas sex, malignant lesion, previous TE, hypertension, diabetes mellitus and varicose veins did not. Based on the first 81 patients, an index was constructed that was able to identify 11 of 13 patients with TE and exclude 34 of 68 without TE. This index was then applied on a second series of 90 patients in whom it correctly identified ten of 11 patients with TE and excluded 40 of 79 patients without TE. It is concluded that, with the use of the index, it is possible to identify a group of patients undergoing elective abdominal operations in whom LDH is not sufficient prophylaxis. A practical approach to bedside prediction of failure of LDH prophylaxis by use of a simple score table is suggested.
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PMID:Predicting failure of low-dose prophylactic heparin in general surgical procedures. 238 89

A high maternal hemoglobin level during pregnancy has been correlated to a low birth weight and a low placental weight, but has not been investigated in relation to placental factors. In 330 consecutive deliveries, placental lesions, birth weight and placental weight were studied in a multiple regression analysis in relation to maternal hemoglobin concentration, taking into consideration possible confounding factors such as smoking, hypertensive disorders, weight gain, primiparity, gestational age and sex. A high maternal hemoglobin concentration (greater than 130 g/l) was correlated with a low birth weight, acute infarcts and syncytial knots. Intervillous thrombosis was more common in non-smokers and multiparous women, increasing in incidence as gestational age advanced. Infarcts and microscopic perivillous fibrin were correlated with hypertension. Microscopic perivillous fibrin was slightly associated with a high hemoglobin level (greater than 130 g/l) in a bivariate analysis. These findings may indicate that a high maternal hemoglobin level impairs the uteroplacental circulation.
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PMID:Placental lesions and maternal hemoglobin levels. A comparative investigation. 238 16


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