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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Amongst a group of 819 children and adolescents aged between 10 and 18 years and attending a public school, the distribution of blood pressure was determined in relation to age, sex, height-weight ratio and family history. Mean blood pressure values increased with age both sexes for both systolic and diastolic levels. Children outside the norms, blood pressure 2SD, should be considered to be hypertensive and be followed up. The prevalence of systolic hypertension was 3.95 per cent amongst the boys and 3,83 per cent amongst girls. That for
diastolic hypertension
was 7.33 per cent for boys and 6.97 per cent for girls.
Obesity
appeared to be the major factor associated with hypertension since half of the hypertensive individuals were overweight. Individual prevention is thus possible. The existence of a family history of hypertension and of
obesity
more particularly in obese hypertensive children should lead to steps aimed at the familial prevention of hypertension.
...
PMID:[Essential hypertension in the child and the adolescent. Epidemiological study in schools (author's transl)]. 66 41
In a retrospective survey of 1,118 admissions for acute ischemic heart disease (AIHD) at St. Luke's Hospital in Malta in 1963-72, there were 945 (84.5%) cases of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and 173 (15.5%) cases of acute coronary insufficiency (ACI). The proportion of patients with diabetes was 30.2% (30.7% in AMI, and 27.7% in ACI; age-corrected rates at greater than or equal to 40 years). This was significantly higher (P less than 0.01) than the corresponding rate of diabetes (20.2%) in the general population of Malta. There was a significantly greater prevalence of diabetes among women than among men with AIHD: the proportion with diabetes was 50.0% among women with AMI and 41.3 among women with ACI. The diabetes was mostly of the maturity-onset type. The high frequency of AIHD among diabetics seemed to be chiefly attributable to the effects of the diabetic state, either directly or indirectly through its association with other risk factors:
obesity
, physical inactivity, excessive eating and high plasma cholesterol levels.
Diastolic hypertension
and chronic bronchitis and emphysema associated withe heavy smoking were no more common in diabetics than in nondiabetics with AMI.
...
PMID:Diabetes as a coronary risk factor in Malta. 66 17
A longitudinal epidemiological study of ischaemic heart disease (IHD) in men aged 40-59 years showed that the five-year incidence of the manifest form was 7.8% in agricultural workers and 9.7% in industrial employees. The corresponding incidence of the latent form was 9.0% and 12.2%, respectively. The differences in the incidence of both forms between the population samples studied was at the border of statistical significance. The importance of risk factors was evaluated on the basis of the score represented by the difference between the respective five-year incidence of IHD in subjects with and without the risk factors concerned. The highest relative scores were found with systolic and
diastolic hypertension
, positive family history and
obesity
. For prognostic purposes, the total relative risk, represented by the sum of the scores of the risk factors proved to be useful. Autopsies confirmed that a total relative risk exceeding 40% was a sensitive indicator of morphological substrate of coronary heart disease.
...
PMID:Incidence of ischaemic heart disease and prognostic importance of risk factors in agricultural and industrial populations. 94 73
Diabetes mellitus is commonly associated with systolic and
diastolic hypertension
, and a wealth of epidemiological data suggest that this association is independent of age and
obesity
. Much evidence indicates that the link between diabetes and essential hypertension is hyperinsulinemia. Thus, when hypertensive patients, whether obese or of normal body weight, are compared with age- and weight-matched normotensive controls, a heightened plasma insulin response to a glucose challenge is found consistently. A state of cellular resistance to insulin action subtends the observed hyperinsulinism. Using the insulin/glucose clamp technique in combination with tracer glucose infusion and indirect calorimetry, it has been demonstrated that the insulin resistance of essential hypertension is located in peripheral tissues (muscle), is limited to nonoxidative pathways of glucose disposal (glycogen synthesis), and correlates directly with the severity of hypertension. The reasons for the association of insulin resistance and essential hypertension can be sought in at least four general types of mechanisms: sodium retention, sympathetic nervous system overactivity, disturbed membrane ion transport, and proliferation of vascular smooth-muscle cells. Physiological maneuvers, such as caloric restriction (in the overweight patient) and regular physical exercise, can improve tissue sensitivity to insulin; good evidence indicates that these maneuvers also can lower blood pressure in both normotensive and hypertensive individuals. Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia also are associated with an atherogenic plasma lipid profile. Elevated plasma insulin concentrations enhance very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) synthesis, leading to hypertriglyceridemia. Progressive elimination of lipid and apolipoproteins from the VLDL particle leads to an increased formation of intermediate density and low-density lipoproteins, both of which are atherogenic. Last, insulin per se, independent of its effects on blood pressure and plasma lipids, is known to be atherogenic. The hormone enhances cholesterol transport into arteriolar smooth-muscle cells and increases endogenous lipid synthesis by these cells. Insulin also stimulates the proliferation of arteriolar smooth-muscle cells, augments collagen synthesis in the vascular wall, increases the formation of and decreases the regression of lipid plaques, and stimulates the production of a variety of growth factors. In summary, insulin resistance appears to be a syndrome that is associated with a clustering of metabolic disorders, including type II diabetes mellitus,
obesity
, hypertension, lipid abnormalities, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, and coronary artery disease: a complex metabolic web. 128 37
Hypertension is quite common in the elderly population. Isolated systolic hypertension and
diastolic hypertension
are associated with cardiovascular complications. Like younger patients, the elderly may have labile hypertension. On the other hand, pseudohypertension, auscultatory gap, and postural hypotension are peculiar to the elderly.
Obesity
, atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis, baroreceptor insensitivity, decline in renal function, physical inactivity, and insomnia are factors that can lead to or aggravate hypertension in older patients. Secondary hypertension should be suspected if elevated blood pressure first appears late in life or becomes resistant to previously adequate treatment. Spontaneous hypokalemia can indicate primary aldosteronism. Elevation in the serum creatinine level of a patient taking an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor suggests bilateral renovascular hypertension. The goal of antihypertensive therapy is to prevent morbidity, disability, and death from complications and to maintain quality of life. Psychosocial factors may play an important role in controlling hypertension. Nonpharmacologic treatment, such as weight loss, salt restriction, and exercise, should always be tried prior to and in conjunction with medical therapy. Antihypertensive drugs often cause side effects and should be prescribed with caution. Always start with a low dose and gradually increase it if necessary. All drugs that reduce blood pressure in the younger individual also work in the elderly. ACE inhibitors and calcium blockers are particularly useful because of their low incidence of adverse effects.
...
PMID:Hypertension in elderly patients. The special concerns in this growing population. 154 24
A rare case of ACTH-independent Cushing's syndrome due to carcinoma is described. A thirty-year-old woman presented with systolic-
diastolic hypertension
, unsuccessfully treated for several months with ACE and beta-blockers. During this period physical changes such as centripetal
obesity
, rubeosis, and hair loss were observed. Elevated urinary and plasmatic cortisol levels were essential for the diagnosis. Alterations of the circadian rhythm with higher levels in the evening compared to the morning were registered. ACTH was found to be suppressed in several tests. Ultrasound and abdominal CT scan showed a mass involving the left adrenal gland. While waiting for surgery, the patient underwent ketoconazole therapy. The operation was carried out by bilateral chest laparotomy and consisted in a left adrenalectomy with regional lymphadenectomy. At 18 months from the operation the patient is in excellent health, the classic signs of Cushing's syndrome have disappeared and laboratory tests are normal.
...
PMID:[A case report of Cushing's syndrome due to an adrenal carcinoma]. 158 Nov 62
This paper attempts to define the theory and practice of a modern approach to the initial workup of the patient with hypertension. The process includes a complete general medical evaluation along with special measures to enable the fullest characterization and clinical differentiation of the disease. The initial workup aims to (a) establish that the hypertension is sustained and should be treated; (b) identify all definable and curable causes for the hypertension; (c) identify the presence and degree of attendant risk factors such as smoking, alcohol use,
obesity
, diabetes, and abnormal lipid metabolism; (d) characterize the hypertension in terms of its pathophysiology; and (e) assess the presence and degree of target organ damage to the heart, brain, and kidneys. Because all
diastolic hypertension
is due to arteriolar vasoconstriction, a fundamental strategy of this process is to distinguish between renin-mediated and sodium-related vasoconstrictive forces and to evaluate which is preponderant. The chief instruments of this strategy are the renin-sodium profile and the response of plasma renin activity and blood pressure to specific antirenin system drugs. The captopril test, an important protocol in making this distinction, is primarily a powerful screening tool for confirming the possible presence or absence of curable renovascular disease or curable primary aldosteronism. That renin profiling cannot accurately discriminate between the contributions of either the renin or sodium-volume factors in that large fraction of medium-renin patients is not a viable reason for not performing the test. The test has its greatest strength for identifying sizable numbers of otherwise unrecognizable patients with very high or very low renin concentrations who might have curable disorders and who likely reflect different pathophysiologic vasoconstrictive mechanisms for which entirely different drug therapies are appropriate. However, the baseline renin test is also useful for assessing prognosis and the likelihood of a heart attack and it is valuable for deciding whether to use an anti-renin system drug (for medium and high renin concentrations) as opposed to natriuretic agents (low-renin patients) such as a diuretic or calcium antagonists as the primary step. In our present state of knowledge, the basic diagnostic biochemical workup includes the renin-sodium profile and the 24-h urinary sodium, potassium, and microalbumin excretion rates. This package is further enriched by baseline electrocardiography and echocardiography and the evaluation of glucose and lipid patterns.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation and differential diagnosis of the individual hypertensive patient. 191 3
Diabetes mellitus is commonly associated with systolic/
diastolic hypertension
, and a wealth of epidemiological data suggest that this association is independent of age and
obesity
. Much evidence indicates that the link between diabetes and essential hypertension is hyperinsulinemia. Thus, when hypertensive patients, whether obese or of normal body weight, are compared with age- and weight-matched normotensive control subjects, a heightened plasma insulin response to a glucose challenge is consistently found. A state of cellular resistance to insulin action subtends the observed hyperinsulinism. With the insulin/glucose-clamp technique, in combination with tracer glucose infusion and indirect calorimetry, it has been demonstrated that the insulin resistance of essential hypertension is located in peripheral tissues (muscle), is limited to nonoxidative pathways of glucose disposal (glycogen synthesis), and correlates directly with the severity of hypertension. The reasons for the association of insulin resistance and essential hypertension can be sought in at least four general types of mechanisms: Na+ retention, sympathetic nervous system overactivity, disturbed membrane ion transport, and proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells. Physiological maneuvers, such as calorie restriction (in the overweight patient) and regular physical exercise, can improve tissue sensitivity to insulin; evidence indicates that these maneuvers can also lower blood pressure in both normotensive and hypertensive individuals. Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia are also associated with an atherogenic plasma lipid profile. Elevated plasma insulin concentrations enhance very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) synthesis, leading to hypertriglyceridemia. Progressive elimination of lipid and apolipoproteins from the VLDL particle leads to an increased formation of intermediate-density and low-density lipoproteins, both of which are atherogenic. Last, insulin, independent of its effects on blood pressure and plasma lipids, is known to be atherogenic. The hormone enhances cholesterol transport into arteriolar smooth muscle cells and increases endogenous lipid synthesis by these cells. Insulin also stimulates the proliferation of arteriolar smooth muscle cells, augments collagen synthesis in the vascular wall, increases the formation of and decreases the regression of lipid plaques, and stimulates the production of various growth factors. In summary, insulin resistance appears to be a syndrome that is associated with a clustering of metabolic disorders, including non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus,
obesity
, hypertension, lipid abnormalities, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance. A multifaceted syndrome responsible for NIDDM, obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. 204 34
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the major cause of mortality in the elderly. Important risk factors include hypercholesterolemia, systolic and
diastolic hypertension
, cigarette smoking, hyperglycemia, and
obesity
. Elderly patients with existing CHD should be treated aggressively to control these risk factors, along with other medical therapies to treat myocardial ischemia. For elderly patients without recognized CHD, however, a more conservative approach is recommended and includes behavioral interventions when appropriate and pharmacologic therapy for higher risk patients with persistent, uncontrolled risk factors.
...
PMID:Preventive maintenance of the aging heart. 206 Aug
Shown to be associated with new coronary events in elderly men and women are cigarette smoking, systolic or
diastolic hypertension
, hypercholesterolemia, low serum HDL cholesterol, increased ratio of serum total cholesterol to serum HDL cholesterol, hypertriglyceridemia, diabetes mellitus,
obesity
, physical inactivity, increased age, prior coronary artery disease, and electrocardiographic and echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy. The greater the number of major coronary risk factors, the higher the incidence of new coronary events. Risk factor modification should therefore be considered in elderly persons.
...
PMID:Cardiac risk factors: still important in the elderly. 213 42
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