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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Intra-arterial pressure was recorded continuously in 26 patients with uncomplicated
essential hypertension
under standardized conditions. Pressure was analysed beat by beat by computer and variability measured as the standard deviation of the normally distributed frequency histogram. 2. Variability was strongly influenced by physical activity, being least during sleep and increasing progressively with bed rest and ambulation. Variability during daytime was not related to time. 3. Systolic variability correlated directly with systolic pressure. An independent inverse relationship with baroreflex sensitivity was observed. Systolic variability tended to increase with
obesity
. 4. None of the following were related independently with variability: age; race; sex; plasma renin activity; plasma angiotensin II; plasma noradrenaline; plasma adrenaline.
...
PMID:Factors determining the variability of arterial pressure in hypertension. 39 78
Essential hypertension
is a quantitative abnormality, the pathological effects and risks increasing with the blood pressure level. In Western countries blood pressure rises with age in most individuals, so
essential hypertension
is more frequent in middle and older age groups. It is likely that an individual's blood pressure level is determined by many interacting factors. These include heredity, which probably acts multifactorially, and many environment influences, including psychological stress and
obesity
. Specific factors may be of varying importance in different individuals and in different populations. Several physiological mechanisms control the blood pressure level and may be altered in
essential hypertension
. In early hypertension sympathetic nervous activity is sometimes increased, although in long-standing hypertension this is less marked. Cardiac output may be increased in borderline hypertension but is normal in established hypertension, when total peripheral resistance is increased. Total exchangeable sodium is normal, while the renal pressure-natriuresis balance is altered, so that for a given pressure the hypertension kidney excretes less sodium. In some patients, plasma renin is low, probably as a result of renal adaption to prolonged hypertension. The pathogenic sequence in
essential hypertension
is uncertain. Increased autonomic activity may cause vasoconstriction in renal and other arterioles and increase cardiac output, leading to a rise in blood pressure. Elevated pressure itself produces structural changes in the resistance vessels, including those of the kidney, which eventually maintain the hypertension even when the initiating stimulus is removed. The way in which heredity and environment influence pathogenic mechanism is also uncertain. Heredity might, for example, influence the autonomic response to stress or the liability to irreversible changes in the resistance vessels or in the kidney. Environmental factors may also increase autonomic activity, enhance vascular reactivity or alter renal function.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of essential hypertension. 40 33
Computer-assisted static/dynamic renal imaging with [197Hg] chlormerodrin and [99mTc]pertechnetate was evaluated prospectively as a screening test for renovascular hypertension. Results are reported for 51 patients: 33 with benign
essential hypertension
and 18 with renovascular hypertension, and for 21 normal controls. All patients underwent renal arteriography. Patients with significant
obesity
, renal insufficiency, or renoparenchymal disease were excluded from this study. Independent visual analyses of renal gamma images and time-activity transit curves identified 17 of the 18 patients with renovascular hypertension; one study was equivocal. There were five equivocal and three false-positive results in the
essential hypertension
and normal controls groups. The sensitivity of the method was 94% and the specificity 85%. Since the prevalence of the renovascular subset of hypertension is approximately 5%, the predictive value is only 25%. Inclusion of computer-generated data did not improve this result. Accordingly, this method is not recommended as a primary screening test for renovascular hypertension.
...
PMID:Computer-assisted static/dynamic renal imaging: a screening test for renovascular hypertension? 43 Jan 72
One-hundred-fourteen hypertensive high school students were evaluated to determine whether a distinctive clinical profile could be identified; 71 normotensive students served as controls. Selected blood chemistry determinations, urinalysis, and chest roentgenograms were done to help rule out secondary causes of hypertension. Left ventricular function was assessed by echocardiography and systolic time intervals. The hemodynamic response to exercise was also evaluated. A significant number of the subjects 14 to 18 years of age with persistent systolic and/or diastolic pressure 1.65 SD above the mean for age and sex showed the following:
obesity
; elevated serum triglyceride concentration; basilar hypertrophy by electrocardiogram/vectorcardiogram; electromechanical systole and pre-ejection period shorter, and the ratio of the pre-ejection period over the left ventricular ejection time lower, than mean for age and sex as determined by systolic time intervals; volume indices depressed and cardiac contractile functions elevated as determined by echocardiography; higher blood pressure at start of exercise stress test and higher peak systolic and diastolic pressures during test, and a slower return of heart rate to base line level after the test. The above findings should be useful in following the course of a young individual with
essential hypertension
and may provide a means of evaluating therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:Blood pressure in a high school population. II. Clinical profile of the juvenile hypertensive. 44 74
Twenty-seven women with varying degrees of
obesity
were physically trained for 6 mo on an ad lib. diet. Body fat changes were positively correlated with the number of fat cells in adipose tissue.
Obese
women with fewer fat cells decreased in weight during training whereas women with severe
obesity
and an increased number of fat cells even gained weight. Blood pressure decreased consistently after training. Blood pressure elevation was not associated with body fat mass, nor was a decrease in blood pressure associated with a decrease in body fat or with pretraining blood pressure level. There were, instead, correlations between decreases in blood pressure on the one hand and initial concentrations and decreases in plasma insulin and triglycerides and blood glucose on the other. These results suggest an association between elevated blood pressure and metabolic variables. The possibility of treating and preventing early
essential hypertension
with methods that also correct the metabolic derangement, such as diet and exercise, should be given high priority in further research.
...
PMID:Effects of long-term physical training on body fat, metabolism, and blood pressure in obesity. 44 4
Brunner, Laragh et al. have suggested that essential hypertensives with low plasma renin activity (PRA) are at lower risk of myocardial infarction or cerebrovascular accidents than those with high or normal PRA levels. In this paper we report on 63 patients with
essential hypertension
in whom the relation between PRA and the ocurrence of cardiovascular events was studied. The patients were categorized in high (11%), normal (70%) or low (19%) PRA subgroups, according to their 24-hour sodium excretion. Coronary angiogram was performed in 24 subjects. The three subgroups showed no significant differences in diastolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol levels, smoking habits or
obesity
. The incidence of cardiovascular complications was similar in patients with high or low PRA levels (28.5% and 33.3% respectively). In those hypertensives in whom coronary angiogram was done, coronary lesions were observed in 80% of the low renin subjects and in 37.5% of those patients with normal PRA. Therefore, no relation between PRA levels and vascular complications was observed in this series of patients. It is conclude that patients with
essential hypertension
must be treated as soon and effectively as possible regardless of their PRA value.
...
PMID:[Arterial damage and the renin-angiotensin system in essential hypertension. Study of 63 cases]. 61 Jun 33
Weight reduction is almost always successful in cases of
essential hypertension
if and when the weight loss is accompanied by a drastic sodium reduction. (2) Weight normalization is of remarkable help in complete reversal of abnormal glucose tolerance, decrease in insulin requirement in manifest diabetes mellitus, and - in many patients with mild diabetes - discontinuation of oral hypoglycemic agents. (3) Weight loss will occasionally relieve gout patients of their symptoms. The majority of hyperuricemic patients will benefit with a lowering of serum uric acid levels. (4) An unresolved issue is the influence of weight reduction on the cholesterol metabolism - short- and long-term results are by no means predictable. Whereas the triglycerides in obese patients almost always return to lower serum concentrations, and with them the hyperlipoproteinemias of type IIB, III and IV, the type IIA is only rarely seen in association with
obesity
. Therefore, information on this lipid abnormality is very limited regarding the effect of weight loss.
...
PMID:The workinghman's diet. II. Effect of weight reduction in obese patients with hypertension, diabetes, hyperuricemia and hyperlipidemia. 63 8
For the past several decades, treatment of
primary hypertension
has relied chiefly upon the use of pharmacologic agents. Many hypertensive patients are obese. Evidence is accumulating that their hypertension may be reversed by aggressive and comprehensive regimens for weight reduction. Controlled studies are needed to determine whether there may be particular subtypes of
obesity
which respond more favorably to such management and to evaluate the long-term benefits of the dietary approach.
...
PMID:The management of hypertension associated with obesity. 71 66
Hereditary and environmental factors are involved in the pathogenesis of
essential hypertension
.
Obesity
, salt intake and stress are predominant among the environmental influences. Autonomous nervous dysfunction, increased contractility of vascular smooth muscle cells and impaired renal handling of sodium are major abnormalities in
essential hypertension
. At present it cannot be decided if alterations in the activities of systemic or renal hormonal systems reflect primary defects or adaptive changes in the regulation of blood pressure. In any case the kidney is regarded to have a key position in the long term increase of blood pressure in
essential hypertension
. Recent studies in essential hypertensive patients suggest that renin release decreases as renal vascular resistance increases. Studies from our laboratory have shown that renal prostaglandins are intrinsic to the renin release mechanism from the kidney. Additionally, there is evidence that renal prostaglandin synthesis is disturbed in
essential hypertension
, either primarily or secondarily, leading to unresponsive renin secretion. Further studies on the interrelationships of other hormonal systems and on hormone-receptor interactions in the vascular wall are necessary to delineate more precisely the mechanisms which are operative in the pathogenesis and manifestation of
essential hypertension
.
...
PMID:[Pathogenetic, pathophysiological and biochemical aspects of essential hypertension (author's transl)]. 72 Oct 54
Insulin resistance is seen in several pathophysiological conditions, such as
obesity
, diabetes mellitus, and
essential hypertension
. This means that a greater than normal amount of insulin is needed to give a normal biological response. A major biochemical defect in insulin resistance seems to be a defect in the intracellular nonoxidative metabolism of glucose in muscle cells. However, in many individuals, there is also increased hepatic glucose output. The result of insulin resistance in individuals with normal insulin-secreting capacity is hyperinsulinemia, a potential risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism, insulin resistance, and metabolic cardiovascular syndrome. 128 63
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