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A survey was made on a sample of Italian practitioners to evaluate the diagnostic and therapeutic approach to arterial hypertension. A questionnaire was distributed containing thirteen questions, that was personally completed and restituted by 919 physicians. The first datum that was evidenced was that the hypertensive patient observed by the practitioner is, in the great majority of cases, in old age. The percentage of patients with concomitant diseases (dyslipidemia, diabetes, obesity, cardiac failure) is very high. The blood pressure measurement is correct, especially by expert physicians. By contrast, the younger physicians tend to prescribe further diagnostic instrumental measures. The antihypertensive therapy is prescribed very accurately. According to the sample studied, the first line drugs that are more often recommended are the ACE-inhibitors, especially by younger physicians. From this survey a prualently positive judgment by the physicians emerged in relation to the available drugs for the anti-hypertensive therapy, as consequence of the observation of satisfactory therapeutic efficacy and tolerability by the patients.
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PMID:[The diagnostic-therapeutic approach to hypertension. A study of 1000 Italian physicians]. 770 40

Insulin resistance and reactive hyperinsulinemia occur not only in patients with obesity, impaired glucose tolerance or non-insulin-dependent (Type 2) diabetes mellitus, but also in many non-obese, non-diabetic individuals with essentiell hypertension and their normotensive, lean young offsprings. The common coexistance of a genetic predisposition for hypertension with insulin resistance helps to explain the frequent occurrence of hypertension as well as dyslipidemia, obesity and diabetes Type 2 in a given individual. In the pathogenesis of hypertension, inappropriate vasoconstriction and/or a structural vasculopathy appears to be an important and ultimate causative event. Several pressor mechanisms are discussed and a distinct sodium retention appears to be almost obligatory associated with diabetes mellitus, while essential and particularly obesity-associated hypertension involves predominantly a tendency for sympathetic activation. Acute hyperinsulinemia on one hand causes arterial vasodilation and on the other hand enhances renal sodium reabsorption and sympathetic activity. Chronically, hyperinsulinemia may promote cardiovascular muscle cell proliferation and atherogenesis. Insulin resistance affecting certain transmembrane cation transporters might lead to an elevation of intracellular cytosolic calcium levels thereby inducing inappropriate vasoconstriction. Nevertheless, whether insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension per se is still unproven. Considering antihypertensive drugs, thiazide diuretics given in medium or high dosage as well as beta-blockers appear to promote insulin resistance, reactive hyperinsulinemia and dyslipidemia. Almost all calcium antagonists and the conventional sympthatolytics are metabolically neutral, while ACE-inhibitors and alpha 1-blockers tend to improve insulin resistance. In Type 2 diabetic patients, ACE-inhibitors exert in addition to their antihypertensive a potentially useful anti-diabetic effect. Nevertheless, the prognostic relevance of the metabolic side effects of antihypertensive drugs awaits further clarification.
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PMID:[Insulin resistance and arterial hypertension]. 771 73

The relationship between overweight and cardiovascular disease was a matter of debate for many years. Recent studies have demonstrated that obesity defined as body mass index of 30 kg/m2 or higher is associated with an exponential increase of cardiovascular complications. This effect is largely mediated by the induction of established risk factors such as dyslipidemia, hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Recently, there is growing evidence that the occurrence of most complications of obesity depends not only on the degree of overweight but also on the pattern of body fat distribution. Many data suggest that the anatomical localization of body fat is more important for the risk of developing complications than the adipose tissue mass per se. An abdominal, upper-body type of fat distribution, which can be easily determined by the measurement of waist and hip circumferences (waist/hip ratio = WHR), is also a confirmed risk factor for metabolic disturbances, hypertension and atherosclerosis, independent of body weight. However, the clinical appearance of these disturbances is frequently associated with the development of obesity. This network of metabolic disorders and their vascular complications is termed "metabolic syndrome" or "syndrome X" (Table 2). Abdominal obesity is now known to be closely associated with the metabolic syndrome and is regarded to represent its readily recognizable phenotypic feature. The components of the metabolic syndrome are characterized by varying forms and degrees of insulin resistance. It is assumed that insulin resistance, defined as diminished biological response to the action of insulin, represents the primary defect or at least the common pathogenetic link between these disturbances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Abdominal obesity and coronary heart disease. Pathophysiology and clinical significance]. 771 76

The metabolic syndrome usually goes along with abdominal obesity: diabetes type II, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and gout are often associated. The common characteristic is the resistance to insulin action. Reasons for the metabolic syndrome are--besides a genetic determination--overnutrition, physical inactivity, and alcohol consumption. Therefore, a causal therapy aims at the elimination of these factors. Consequently, the non-pharmacological therapy of the metabolic syndrome should be emphasized. The most important treatment is the reduction of body weight in the presence of obesity which is relevant for almost 90% of the patients. Body weight can rapidly be diminished by hypocaloric diets. Both, conventional reducing diets or formula diets may be used for weight reduction. Total fasting should not be performed for several reasons. For minor weight reduction or weight maintenance following a period of rapid weight loss with a hypocaloric diet, increased physical activity also lowers weight or prevents relapsing. Aims of therapeutical procedures are the elimination or amelioration of insulin resistance and subsequently the diseases of the metabolic syndrome. Both methods, reducing diet and physical training, act on various factors related to insulin resistance. For example, hypocaloric diets activate thyroxine kinase of the insulin receptor and reduce glucose and insulin in plasma. Physical training reduces not only insulin and glucose in plasma but also free fatty acids in addition and increases capillary density in skeletal muscle. Using the glucose clamp technique, diets and training are equally effective in improving glucose metabolism. Compared to these non-pharmacological methods drugs are less convincing. Since the non-pharmacological treatment implies behavioral changes with regard to nutrition, physical activity and alcohol consumption, simple instructions are not sufficient. Usually long-lasting changes in life style are necessary in order to achieve health improvement. Therefore, health care programs on individual or social basis are required in order to improve nutrition and increase physical activity. However, long-acting effects are difficult to achieve in adults; more promising is the prevention of insulin resistance.
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PMID:[Non-pharmacological therapy of metabolic syndrome]. 771 78

The primary aim of the management of hypertension should be to prevent coronary heart disease. Antihypertensive treatment should have a beneficial effect on the risk factors associated with coronary heart disease, particularly hypertension, dyslipidemia, hyperinsulinemia, and/or glucose intolerance. Other important risk factors include central obesity, left ventricular hypertrophy, hypokalemia, and smoking. In patients genetically predisposed to essential hypertension, metabolic alterations characterized by insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, and dyslipidemia tend to occur already before the development of hypertension, obesity, or redistribution of body fat. In the treatment of normotensive or borderline hypertensive diabetic patients, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have shown superiority to other agents due to their antiproteinuric effect and their beneficial influence on the glomerular filtration rate. ACE inhibitor treatment of patients with overt diabetic nephropathy has been reported to reduce the risk of mortality and the need for dialysis or transplantation. Beta blockers and thiazide diuretics are still the 'gold standard' of antihypertensive therapy in non-diabetic patients, as they offer at least some prognostic benefit, while the influence of the newer antihypertensive drugs on morbidity and mortality in these patients is not yet known. Nevertheless, since practicing physicians have to treat patients rather than statistical numbers, the current trend towards a more individualized selection, including the newer antihypertensive drugs with consideration of their metabolic, cardiac, and renal action profile, is also difficult to rebut. ACE inhibitors and most calcium antagonists have already evolved as the preferred drugs for the treatment of hypertension in diabetics due to their favorable effects on some of the cardiovascular and renal risk factors.
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PMID:Differential effects of antihypertensive drugs on hypertension: associated risk factors. 774 40

Clinical factors associated with urinary albumin excretion (UAE) in type II diabetes are less well known than in type I diabetes. To examine the factors associated with UAE in type II diabetes, 933 Appropriate Blood Pressure Control in Diabetes Trial patients were classified according to UAE status: normoalbuminuria (< 20 micrograms/min), microalbuminuria (20 to 200 micrograms/min), and macroalbuminuria (> 200 micrograms/min). The class of UAE was then correlated with various clinical factors. Using univariate analyses, Hispanic ethnicity, African-American race, male gender, poor glycemic control, insulin use, long duration of diabetes, dyslipidemia, diastolic and systolic hypertension, smoking, and obesity were significantly correlated with microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria. Using multivariate logistic regression analyses controlling for diabetes duration, glycosylated hemoglobin, gender, and race, the most significant predictors of microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria were systolic hypertension, body mass index, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, insulin use, and smoking pack-years. Of these factors, several are potentially reversible with aggressive intervention.
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PMID:Clinical factors associated with urinary albumin excretion in type II diabetes. 777 79

The general practitioner man be confronted with the X syndrome, which includes central obesity, impaired glucose tolerance or type II diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia and eventually hypertension. Insulinoresistance and hyperinsulinaemia contribute to the pathogenesis of these disorders. The syndrome X, which leads to important cardiovascular morbidity, needs appropriate treatment, which has to take into account the actions of drugs on glucose and lipid profiles. Syndrome X is rarely treated as a whole, but to treat separately each of its manifestations would be a mistake. The necessity of a global approach, a complete understanding of the familial environment and also the duration of the development of syndrome X justify the prominent part of the family doctor in the follow-up.
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PMID:[Syndrome X and general medicine]. 778 42

Risk factor profile of 142 patients with normal epicardial coronary arteries (86 males, 56 females, mean age 47 +/- 11 years) out of 1,508 consecutive patients undergoing coronary angiography was analysed. The mode of presentation in these patients was old or recent myocardial infarction (16.1%), unstable angina (12.0%), angina on effort (43.7%), atypical chest pain (8.5%), and anginal equivalent (19.7%). One or more stress test was positive in the majority (88%) of patients. Though the majority (39.5%) of patients had one risk factor, multiple (two or more) risk factors were not uncommon. Risk factor profile in patients with normal coronaries included hypertension (45.7%), dyslipidemia (33.8%), obesity (19.7%), positive family history of coronary artery disease (18.3%), cigarette smoking (16.1%), and minor risk factors (hyperuricemia, sedentary life style, Type A personality, oral contraceptive intake -15.4%). The mechanism of myocardial ischemia in patients with normal coronary arteries is not fully understood. We conclude that approximately one tenth of patients with clinically manifest coronary artery disease and one or more conventional risk factors do not have atherosclerotic changes in their epicardial coronary arteries as seen on coronary angiography.
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PMID:Profile of coronary risk factors in patients with manifest ischaemia and normal coronary arteries. 779 18

The early lesions of atherosclerosis in youth are strongly related to antemortem levels of total and low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) cholesterol, and triglyceride, to ponderal index and to systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The major apolipoproteins of LDL and high density lipoprotein (HDL), apo B and apo A1, respectively, as well as levels of Lp(a) lipoprotein are often abnormal in children born to a parent with coronary artery disease (CAD). Other risk factors for CAD include obesity, high blood pressure, cigarette smoking, diabetes mellitus, positive family history of CAD and physical inactivity. Children from families with premature CAD, familial dyslipidemia or hypertension, and/or two other risk factors should have a lipoprotein profile determined. The first form of treatment is a diet low in total fat, saturated fat and cholesterol, combined with treatment of overnutrition and obesity, if necessary, and regular habits of aerobic physical activity. Children with inherited disorders of LDL metabolism may require the addition of lipid lowering therapy. The early detection and treatment of youth at risk for premature CAD offers the greatest promise to decrease morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Dyslipoproteinemia and other risk factors for atherosclerosis in children and adolescents. 780 29

Syndrome X is a constellation of abnormalities; it appears to be strongly linked to insulin resistance and the risk of atherosclerosis. It consists of hypertension, glucose intolerance, obesity, dyslipidemia and, observed more recently, coagulation abnormalities. It is possible that treating blood pressure levels alone while ignoring or worsening other strongly associated risk factors has resulted in minimal effects on the incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD). Syndrome X has raised the awareness of these associated risk factors and has further led to the consideration of hypertension as a metabolic disease. The epidemiologic evidence in support of the link between insulin resistance and hypertension is reviewed, and the public health implications of these data are outlined.
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PMID:Reducing the incidence of coronary heart disease by managing hypertension: implications of syndrome X. 780 51


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