Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Although graft survival for most primary disease processes are similar at one year, significant divergence occurs by 5 years. ALP, IGA, and PC had the highest 5-year graft survival rates (72.8%, 71.2%, and 68.5%, respectively) whereas HTN and NS, the lowest (51.8% and 46.0%, respectively). 2. When primary diseases are grouped by pathogenic, pathophysiologic, and clinical similarities, the group of diseases with systemic manifestations had the lowest 5-year graft survival (55%), and the group including cystic and inherited diseases had the highest 5-year graft survival (69%). Black recipients had a predominance of "systemic" primary diseases (57%). 3. Despite having overall lower graft survival than Whites (p < 0.00001), there was no significant difference between Black and White 3-year graft survival for recipients with PC, ALP, IGA, and SLE. 4. PC recipients enjoyed excellent long-term graft survival (69%). Black recipients with PC had a 5-year graft survival rate of 64.6%. Recipients with PC had decreased posttransplant dialysis need, decreased early rejection rate, and better HLA matching than most other recipients. 5. Recipients with SLE as their primary disease had among the highest fraction of grafts lost to rejection (45.4% of all grafts lost) and the highest pretransplant sensitization rate (59.6%). 6. Recipients with HTN as their primary disease had overall lower 5-year graft survival (58% versus 63% in Whites, 44% versus 47% in Blacks), a lower rate of early allograft function (10% versus 12%, p < 0.00001), and more posttransplant dialysis needs (28.8% of patients requiring dialysis vs 23.5%, p < 0.00001) than recipients without HTN. Blacks with HTN had the lowest long-term graft survival (44.4%) of any other single group. 7. IDDM patients who expressed DR3 and/or DR4 alleles had significantly higher graft survival than patients without these DR groups. Whites expressing DR3 and DR4 and DR3 or DR4 alleles had better overall HLA matching (p < 0.001) and graft survival (75.4% and 70.7% versus 58.5% and 65.1%, p < 0.00001) than Blacks with similar DR expression. 8. SPK recipients had better 5-year graft survival than KAT recipients (66.2% versus 54.6%, p < 0.000001). This effect is most likely due to the selection of "better" lower-risk patients for SPK grafts.
...
PMID:Primary disease effects and associations. 754 72

The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) has demonstrated that intensive diabetes treatment delays the onset and slows the progression of retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy in patients with IDDM. A detailed description of the effects of this treatment on diabetic nephropathy is presented here. In the primary prevention cohort, intensive treatment reduced the mean adjusted risk of the cumulative incidence of microalbuminuria (> or = 28 micrograms/min) by 34% (95% CI 2, 56%; P = 0.04). Furthermore, intensive treatment decreased the albumin excretion rate (AER) by 15% after the first year of therapy (6.5 vs. 7.7 micrograms/min, P < 0.001). Thereafter the rates of change for AER within each treatment group were no different from zero, retaining a constant difference in AER between groups in the trial. In the secondary intervention cohort with baseline AER < 28 micrograms/min, intensive therapy reduced the mean adjusted risk of microalbuminuria (> or = 28 micrograms/min) by 43% (95% CI 21, 58%; P < 0.0001); the risk of a more advanced level of microalbuminuria (> or = 70 micrograms/min) by 56% (95% CI 26, 74%; P = 0.002); and the risk of clinical albuminuria (> or = 208 micrograms/min) by 56% (95% CI 18, 76%; P < 0.01). In the secondary intervention cohort, values for AER at year 1 were identical at 9 micrograms/min, but the 6.5% change per year in the conventional group greatly exceeded the rate of change of -0.3% in the intensive group (P < 0.001). Among the 73 secondary cohort subjects with AER levels > or = 28 micrograms/min but < or = 139 micrograms/min at baseline, the reduction of progression to clinical albuminuria with intensive therapy was not statistically significant. The longitudinal treatment effect of conventional versus intensive therapy (11.0% vs. 2.5% per year, respectively, P = 0.087) was similar in magnitude to that among patients with AER < 28 micrograms/min at baseline. For the primary, secondary and combined cohorts, there were no significant differences in the rates of change in creatinine clearance (CCr) between treatment groups during the study. Only seven subjects in the entire study (2 intensive, 5 conventional) developed urinary AER > or = 208 micrograms/min coupled with a CCr < 70 ml/min/1.73 m2. Neither the rate of change of blood pressure nor the appearance of hypertension (BP > 140/90 mm Hg) differed significantly between treatment groups in the primary, secondary or combined cohorts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of intensive therapy on the development and progression of diabetic nephropathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial. The Diabetes Control and Complications (DCCT) Research Group. 764 40

Sixty-four insulin-dependent (Type 1) diabetic patients (IDDM) in Soweto, South Africa were followed over a 10-year period. Patients were assessed in 1982 and again in 1992. There were 10 deaths (16%), half of which were due to renal failure. Ketoacidosis, hypoglycaemia, and sepsis accounted for the rest. At the 10-year follow-up mean age (+/- SD) was 32.4 +/- 5.0 years and diabetes duration 13.6 +/- 2.6 years. Retinopathy affected 52%, peripheral neuropathy 42%, and nephropathy 28% (all significantly increased from the 1982 assessment). Microalbuminuria and autonomic neuropathy were also common. Serum cholesterol was over 6.5 mmol l-1 in 19%, hypertension affected 22%, and 28% were cigarette smokers; though no patient had evidence of macroangiopathy. We conclude that IDDM in South Africa is associated with excess mortality, a significant proportion of which is related to nephropathy. Diabetes of long duration is now not uncommon in South Africa, and although diabetic complications frequently occur, most patients have good life quality and freedom from large vessel disease.
...
PMID:Mortality and outcome of insulin-dependent diabetes in Soweto, South Africa. 764 31

This review has demonstrated that DN is common and can occur in one-third to one-half of IDDM patients. DN has a strong metabolic component, but there is also a component of genetic susceptibility. Persistent microalbuminuria is currently the most convenient and reliable predictor of nephropathy. Finally, Na/LiCTT, an experimental (and not yet commercially available) blood test, is felt to be a predictor of familial susceptibility to hypertension, and may be a marker of the risk of nephropathy in IDDM.
...
PMID:Predicting renal disease in type I diabetics: smoke and fire or smoke and mirrors? 765 99

Cross-sectional data from the Epidemiology of Diabetes Complications Study were used to examine the relationships between waist to hip circumference ratio (WHR) and the presence of diabetes complications in IDDM adults ages 18-45 years (N = 586). Significantly higher WHRs were observed among both genders with proliferative retinopathy or peripheral vascular disease and only among males with either neuropathy or nephropathy compared to those free of these complications. Logistic regression to determine the strength of association between WHR and each complication demonstrated that although WHR was significantly related to each complication (except nephropathy among females), WHR was only independently related to neuropathy in males and PVD in females in the final model when hypertension, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol and fibrinogen were included. These findings suggest that WHR acts as a marker of risk for diabetes complications mainly through an influence on other complication risk factors.
...
PMID:The association of waist/hip ratio with diabetes complications in an adult IDDM population. 773 Aug 70

The effect was studied of blood pressure lowering treatment on renal failure and albuminuria (UAE) in patients with type I diabetes (IDDM) and imminent nephropathy as well as in patients with over diabetic nephropathy. The group of 24 patients with imminent nephropathy was subdivided: 1. twelve patients with borderline or overt hypertension with mean BP lowered not below 100 mmHg, and 2. twelve patients with BP within the normal limits, taking no hypotensive agents. In the other group of 12 patients with overt diabetic nephropathy hypertension was lowered below 105 mmHg and kept so for at least two years. All patients estimated their glycemia and glycosuria by themselves, ate 0.8 g protein/kg/24 h and about 100 mmol Na/24h. Under hospital conditions the following were estimated: albuminuria, glomerular filtration rate (51Cr EDTA) and effective renal blood flow (131I hippurate). The same examinations were repeated 1 year and 2 years later. The lowering of BP below 100 mmHg in patients with imminent diabetic nephropathy significantly lowered microalbuminuria without changing GFR, ERPF despite good or satisfactory compensation of diabetes. Maintaining BP below 105 mmHg for 2 years did not prevent the patients with overt nephropathy to develop progressive renal failure despite the rate of GFR deterioration and of the increase of albuminuria slowed down.
...
PMID:[Effect of treatment of arterial hypertension on renal function in patients with imminent and overt diabetic nephropathy]. 773 1

An endogenous sodium pump inhibitor, or digitalis-like factor (DLF), has been postulated to mediate essential hypertension. It may also play a role in preeclampsia. However, studies of this factor in hypertensive pregnancy have not provided consistent findings. Part of this may be due to the absence of subclassification of pregnant women with pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) when assessing these parameters. In this study we explored serum DLF and digoxin-like immunoreactive factor (DLIF) in insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) women with normotensive pregnancies or PIH, comparing them to each other and to nondiabetic pregnant women. Our results demonstrated that nondiabetic women with preeclampsia (PE, PIH with proteinuria) had significantly increased serum DLF and DLIF compared to normotensive pregnant women (NL BP). Women with transient hypertension of pregnancy (THP, PIH without proteinuria) had intermediate values (DLF. NL BP: 3.3 +/- 0.6, THP: 4.8 +/- 1.1, PE: 7.6 +/- 1.3% inhibition [Na,K]-ATPase, P < .05 ANOVA; DLIF. NL BP: 0.22 +/- 0.02, THP: 0.28 +/- 0.03, PE: 0.35 +/- 0.02 ng digoxin equivalents/mL, P < .05 ANOVA). Pregnant normotensive IDDM women had significantly higher serum DLF and DLIF activity than their nondiabetic counterparts (DLF. non-IDDM NL BP: 3.3 +/- 0.6 v IDDM NL BP: 8.8 +/- 1.2% inhibition [Na,K]-ATPase, P = .0008; DLIF. non-IDDM NL BP: 0.22 +/- 0.02 v IDDM NL BP: 0.31 +/- 0.02 ng digoxin equivalents/mL, P = .005).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Digitalis-like factor and digoxin-like immunoreactive factor in diabetic women with preeclampsia, transient hypertension of pregnancy, and normotensive pregnancy. 873 86

34 patients with IDDM (17 normotensive and 17 hypertensive) were studied over a 24 hour period by monitoring blood glucose level at 1 h frequencies during waking hours, ambulatory blood pressure using the accutracker and urinary free catecholamine by HPLC. Hypoglycemia appeared to lead to elevated blood pressure in 4 patients (23.5%) both normotensive and hypertensive. The average blood glucose levels were 2.4 +/- 0.72mmol/L and 3.3 +/- 0.62mmol/L, and the average blood pressure increase was 2.53 +/- 1.43/1.60 +/- 1.65 kPa and 4.66 +/- 2.60/1.73 +/- 1.55 kPa for normotensive and hypertensive groups, respectively. Significant difference appeared (P < 0.05) between the two groups (normotensive and hypertensive). This shows that hypertensive patients with IDDM are more liable to have high blood pressure. This study suggested that stable blood glucose level is necessary for stable blood pressure for patients with IDDM.
...
PMID:[Increased blood pressure during hypoglycemia in patients with IDDM]. 780 68

The Eurodiab Insulin Dependent Diabetes (IDDM) Complications Study was a cross-sectional investigation of a stratified random sample of IDDM patients attending 31 clinics in 16 European countries. We compared the findings in the only participating Irish centre (Cork Regional Hospital) with those of the study group as a whole. There were fewer episodes of ketosis but severe hypoglycaemia occurred more frequently in Cork patients, when compared to the full study group. There were no significant differences in the prevalence of background retinopathy, proliferative retinopathy, microalbuminuria, macroalbuminuria or peripheral neuropathy, when the two groups were compared. However, autonomic neuropathy was significantly less common in Cork. The prevalence of cardiovascular disease was slightly lower than the Eurodiab average in Cork patients, and cardiovascular risk factors were more favourable. Waist-hip ratio and total plasma cholesterol were significantly lower than in the full study group. The prevalence of hypertension was similar, but there were fewer smokers in Cork than in most other centres.
...
PMID:Complications and cardiovascular risk factors in insulin-dependent diabetes--findings in an Irish clinic and in other European centres. 780 41

In November 1990, we carried out a survey of chronic complications of diabetes in more than 2000 diabetic patients who were seen on one day in 35 medical institutions including university hospitals, other hospitals and small clinics. More than 60% were aged 55-74 years. About 7% of patients had IDDM. Hypertension was present in 38.5%. Proteinuria was positive in 20% and 1% of patients were on dialysis therapy. 28% had visual disturbance and 2.9% had blindness in one or both eyes. Retinopathy was observed in 38% and proliferative retinopathy in 10%. The prevalences of myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, cerebral infarction and foot ulcer and gangrene were 2.1%, 4.7%, 5.7% and 2%, respectively, including the histories of these complications. Amputation of lower extremities was seen in only 0.6%. Microangiopathies were generally more frequent and more severe in IDDM than NIDDM. The prevalence of microangiopathy was as common as, but macroangiopathy seems less frequent than, the figures given in 'Diabetes in America'.
...
PMID:Prevalence of chronic complications in Japanese diabetic patients. 785


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>