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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of high dietary sodium (8%) on blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive (SHR), borderline hypertensive (BHR), and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats was determined weekly by tail cuff plethysmography for one week of baseline and four weeks of diet. After 4 weeks, significant elevations in systolic blood pressure were found in SHR and BHR groups, but not in WKY. BHR studied an additional 4 weeks showed a further progression of
hypertension
, reaching levels nearly equal to control SHR. Direct measurement of arterial pressure in conscious animals in their home
cage
confirmed the elevation in pressure in both SHR and BHR groups. Metabolic studies revealed that the high sodium diet reduced body weight in SHR and BHR strains, but not in WKY. Although both urinary volumes and sodium excretion values were significantly lower in SHR and BHR compared with WKY, this effect disappeared when adjustments for body weight were made. Plasma norepinephrine determinations revealed a significant response to cold stress in all groups. Plasma epinephrine was elevated in all strains in response to cold stress; however, a consistent statistical elevation was seen only in WKY. The BHR is discussed as a model for determining the triggers responsible for environmentally-induced
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Hypertension produced by a high sodium diet in the borderline hypertensive rat (BHR). 343 73
An increasing amount of anatomical, physiological, and pharmacological evidence suggest that pain inhibitory circuitry is linked with cardiovascular regulatory systems in man and laboratory animals. Induction of
hypertension
in rats by different methods (mineralocorticoid treatment, stenosis of renal artery, or social deprivation) is associated with reduced responsiveness to noxious thermal stimuli (hot-plate) or to noxious mechanical stimuli (paw pressure). Genetically
hypertension
-prone rats derived from the SABRA strain and spontaneously hypertensive rats derived from Wistar/Kyoto strain also display a similar hypoalgesia. Acute increases in blood pressure are associated with reduced sensitivity to painful stimuli. Additionally, the interaction between blood pressure and pain perception has also been supported by the demonstration that various experimental interventions that diminish the magnitude of
hypertension
also attenuate the hypoalgesia. Recent clinical findings are also in agreement with the laboratory animal findings since sensory and pain thresholds have been shown to be significantly higher in unmedicated essential hypertensive subjects compared to normotensive controls. Thus, the human data corroborate animal data and suggest that a relation between blood pressure and pain sensitivity is likely to be a general phenomenon. It is unlikely that damage to peripheral pain fibers caused by a change in blood pressure contributes to the observed hypoalgesia. Naloxone, which has no effect on blood pressure, returns the pain sensitivity to normal levels. Behavioral tests (open field and motor activity
cage
) of normotensive and of renal and genetically (SBH and SHR) hypertensive rats exclude the possibility of a general motor deficit in hypertensive rats. Endogenous opioid peptides in central and peripheral nervous systems as well as in endocrine organs are implicated, although non-opioid mechanisms are also evident. Activation of baroreceptor afferents by acute or chronic increases in arterial or venous blood pressure may play an important role in the somatosensory responses associated with the increase in blood pressure. Coordinated cardiovascular-pain regulatory responses may be part of an adaptive mechanism that helps the body to face stressful events.
...
PMID:The relationship between cardiovascular and pain regulatory systems. 352 85
To determine which clinical and radiographic findings are valuable in selecting patients with blunt chest trauma for aortography, we analyzed the medical records and admission chest radiographs of 76 consecutive victims of blunt chest trauma with suspected thoracic aortic rupture during the past 7 years. All patients were evaluated by history, physical examination, chest radiography, and aortography; a total of 70 clinical and radiographic findings were independently assessed in each patient. The following occurred with significantly greater frequency in patients with thoracic aortic rupture than in those without: history of significant hypotension (mean arterial pressure less than 80 mm Hg) (p less than 0.04); the presence of upper extremity
hypertension
, bilateral lower extremity pulse pulse deficits, or an initial chest tube output greater than 750 ml of blood (p less than 0.05); and greater incidence of myocardial contusions, intra-abdominal injuries, and pelvic fractures compared with patients without thoracic aortic rupture (p less than 0.05). Mediastinal widening (equal to or greater than 8 cm) shown on anteroposterior chest radiography occurred in all patients with thoracic aortic rupture; however, its specificity was only 10.6%. Radiographic signs that were helpful in indicating the presence of thoracic aortic rupture included paratracheal stripe greater than 5 mm, rightward deviation of the nasogastric tube or central venous pressure line, blurring of the aortic knob, and an abnormal or absent paraspinous stripe. Upper rib fractures and mediastinal to thoracic
cage
width ratios at any level did not increase diagnostic accuracy for thoracic aortic rupture in the present series. Six patients in the series died, two of whom had thoracic aortic rupture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical and radiographic indications for aortography in blunt chest trauma. 361 65
The behaviour of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR strain), rats with inherited stress induced arterial
hypertension
(ISIAH, a new developed strain), and of their normotensive Wistar progenitors was studied. The open-field arena and a device for measuring the total activity in the home
cage
were used in the behavioural studies. The SHR were much more active in the open--field and home
cage
tests than the Wistar and ISIAH rats. The basal locomotor activity of the ISIAH strain was lower than that of the Wistar rats, but the ISIAH strain had an index of behavioural reactivity 2.7 fold higher than the Wistar or SHR strains. These behavioural characteristics corresponded to the
hypertension
patterns of the strains compared. Enhanced spontaneous locomotion of the SHR rats was associated with spontaneous increase in arterial blood pressure. The ISIAH rats showed low spontaneous locomotor activity, but high behavioural and blood pressure reactivity under conditions of mild emotional stress.
...
PMID:[Features of the behavior of the rat with hereditarily determined arterial hypertension]. 379 74
The naturally occurring tendency to compete with other rats for territorial space has been used to study individual behavior characteristics and blood pressure reactivity to social stimuli in adult male TMD-S3 rats. The competitive characteristics of the individual rats are consistent in two different social situations (victory and defeat). Blood pressure responses during the victory of home territory rats over intruders was more pronounced in the more competitive animals. In addition to defeat by a trained fighter rat, the experimentals were also psychosocially stimulated by the fighter while it was confined in a small wire mesh
cage
. The blood pressure response to this event was enhanced by the prior defeat of the test animal by the one now confined to the small
cage
. This response was more pronounced in competitive rats. This approach has potential as an animal model of etiological processes in socially induced
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Acute and conditioned blood pressure changes in relation to social and psychosocial stimuli in rats. 404 Oct 50
This study investigated a model of psychosocial stress-induced
hypertension
in the rat, and examined effects of the prostaglandin E precursor, gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) on the development of
hypertension
during psychosocial stress. In the first study, male rats were housed four/
cage
for an acclimation period of 21 days, followed by a 14-day control period. An experimental group (N = 12) was then placed in isolation cages for 14 days, then regrouped for a 7-day recovery period. Controls (N = 12) remained group-housed. Eight animals per group were sacrificed after the experimental period, and four per group after recovery for organ weight analysis. Mean systolic blood pressure (BP) was similar between groups during the control period (126 +/- 2 and 125 +/- 2 mm Hg), but increased during isolation, reaching 140 +/- 2 mm Hg (P less than 0.001) by Day 14. During recovery BP returned to control levels. No changes in heart rate, heart weight/body weight or adrenal weight were seen. The second study utilized a protocol similar to that of the experimental group of the first study, minus the recovery period. On Day 1 of the control period 28-day osmotic pumps were implanted ip, releasing olive oil or GLA in olive oil. Four groups of rats (N = 8/group) received either (i) olive oil (controls), (ii) 0.018 mg GLA/hr, (iii) 0.040 mg GLA/hr, or (iv) 0.040 mg GLA/hr with no stress. Organ weights were obtained following stress in groups 1-3. Controls developed a sustained elevation in BP within 24 hr of isolation. Animals receiving 0.018 mg GLA/hr developed elevated BP upon isolation, but the BP was less than that of controls on Days 1 (P less than 0.05) and 14 (P less than 0.001) of isolation. Animals receiving 0.040 mg GLA/hr demonstrated a greatly attenuated rise in BP vs controls (P less than 0.001) on all isolation days. GLA in unstressed rats had no effect on BP. Heart rate, heart weight/body weight, and adrenal weight were unchanged in all groups. These data suggest that (i) isolation is a useful tool for investigating reversible psychosocial stress-induced
hypertension
, and (ii) GLA, while not affecting BP in unstressed animals, produces a dose-dependent attenuation of the BP response to chronic stress.
...
PMID:Attenuation of psychosocial stress-induced hypertension by gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) administration in rats. 632 24
A method is described for implanting arterial and venous cannulas in rats that requires only minor surgery. Catheters are introduced into the abdominal aorta through the ventral tail artery and into the vena cava through a lateral tail vein. The wounds are covered with an acrylic cuff and the catheters are brought out through a stainless steel spiral connected to the cuff and then attached to top of a metabolism
cage
used to house the rat. This method makes possible continuous access to the catheters in undisturbed, mobile animals. Using this model we compared mean arterial pressure, heart rate, plasma renin activity, and plasma catecholamine levels in freely moving Long-Evans rats and in Brattleboro homozygous rats.
Hypertension
PMID:Chronic arterial and venous catheterization of conscious, unrestrained rats. 639 88
Three patients who underwent aortic valve replacement had dissection of the ascending aorta 7 months, 2 years and 15 years after surgery. This is a rare complication of aortic valve replacement (11 reported cases). Its incidence estimated from the literature would appear to be less than 1% of all aortic valve replacements. It occurs in both cases of stenosis and regurgitation (4 aortic regurgitations, 2 aortic stenosis, 5 mixed aortic valve disease) and is seen in ball and
cage
(7 cases), tilting disc (3 cases) and bioprosthesis (1 case). Six of these patients had
hypertension
. The role of the initial surgery for valve replacement in secondary aortic dissection is discussed. Aortic clamping and cannulation can cause immediate dissection but may also damage the aortic wall, leading to the risk of secondary dissection. An aneurysm of the ascending aorta was observed in 5 Cases at surgery; in 3 cases, the aorta was dilated without true aneurysm; in 3 other cases the aorta was considered to be macroscopically normal. The integrity aorta is sometimes difficult to confirm and a macroscopically normal of the aorta may have fragile aortic walls, especially in cases of aortic regurgitation due to valvular dysplasia and forms frustres of Marfan's syndrome, and are associated with a risk of secondary dissection. The appearances of the aorta at aortic valve replacement influence the choice of treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Dissection of the ascending aorta after aortic valve replacement]. 641 4
The effects of decaffeinated green tea on CBA mice have been contrasted with those of water during 3 to 5 months of exposure to various intensities of social stress. Intensity was modified by using different types of caging: Henry-Stephens complex population cages for maximum stress, open field population cages for intermediate levels, and siblings in standard mouse boxes for minimal stress. Two population densities were used: high, with 16 males and 16 females per population
cage
; and low, with approximately half this number. In three sets of experiments, 58 comparisons were made between body weight, blood pressure, pulse rate, scarring, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), adrenal and heart weights, plasma corticosterone, adult male mortality, and number of weanlings of those on decaffeinated green tea and matched groups on water. Twenty-five of the comparisons indicated less arousal with the decaffeinated green tea and in none was the water favored. Blood pressure fell from 150 to 133 mm Hg. These results support the proposal that the polyphenols (bioflavonoids) of tea may have a beneficial sedative action.
Hypertension
PMID:Reduction of chronic psychosocial hypertension in mice by decaffeinated tea. 653 55
The effect of psychosocial stress produced by aggregation in a special
cage
designed by Henry was investigated in three separate experiments using Wistar-Kyoto (WKY), Sprague-Dawley (SD) and F1 hybrids of the Japanese spontaneously hypertensive and Wistar-Kyoto (SHR-WKY F1) rats. Each aggregated group displayed typical 'stressed' behavioural disturbances. Adrenal hypertrophy, elevation of plasma renin activity and gastric erosions were noted in male aggregated SD rats; while adrenal enlargement, elevation of plasma noradrenaline and gastric erosions were found in male aggregated SHR-WKY F1 rats. Sustained
hypertension
, however, did not develop in any strain nor in any subgroup within each strain. Gastric erosions were also noted in isolated SD and SHR-SKY F1 rats suggesting that long term isolation of rats also induces stress. Isolated rats also remained normotensive throughout. Reduced haematocrit was found in both aggregated and isolated male SHR-WKY F1 rats suggesting increased plasma volume. We conclude that neither stress due to psychosocial disturbances nor that due to isolation produces chronic
hypertension
in the three strains of rat studied.
...
PMID:Failure of psychosocial stress to induce chronic hypertension in the rat. 654 22
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