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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three hundred and eighty-nine subjects, ages 21-55, with diastolic blood pressures between 90 and 115 mm Hg were studied prospectively for 7-10 years in a controlled intervention trial to determine whether pressure lowering reduces the incidence of cardiovascular complications and death. The assignment to therapy, either a combination of a diuretic and rauwolfia serpentina, or an identical placebo, was random. Adverse effects required termination in only 23 (5.9%) cases. Diastolic blood pressure (DBP) was reduced an average of 10 mm Hg (systolic equals 16 mm Hg) in the active treatment group with no change in the placebo group. The major end points of death, myocardial infarction, and stroke totaled 17 and were nearly equally divided between treatment and placebo. Other manifestations of coronary disease were also equally distributed. Complications such as electrocardiographic hypervoltage, left ventricular hypertrophy, radiogrpahic cardiomegaly, and retinopathy occurred in the placebo group at a rate of 53.1 per 100 subjects compared to 23.8 per 100 in those on active drugs. Treatment failure occurred in 24 placebo-treated cases and none of the active group. The overall effectiveness of pressure lowering in reducing these complications and treatment failure was 60%. It is concluded that given the lower level of excess risk in mild uncomplicated hypertension, and the failure of active drug therapy to protect against coronary disease, systematic follow-up without drugs while attempting hygienic intervention and control of other risk factors may be a reasonable alternative for this large group.
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PMID:Treatment of mild hypertension: results of a ten-year intervention trial. 14 29

Present methods of management of juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus do not prevent serious and debilitating complications affecting multiple organ systems. In an effort to reverse advanced forms of these complications, segmental transplantation of the pancreas has been performed on 10 patients, seven of whom simultaneously or subsequently received renal transplants. Long periods of normoglycemia (two to four and one-half years) were achieved in two patients who also maintained transplant kidney function. The course of these two patients is described to illustrate the possible value and limitations of the procedure. These patients had normal blood glucose levels, exhibited repeated normal intravenous glucose tolerance curves, and had repeated normal endogenous insulin levels. Their courses were characterized by (1) absence of problems related to pancreatic exocrine secretions into the bladder; (2) stable eye changes despite some episodes of hemorrhage from preexisting retinopathy; (3) vascular complications, including stroke and gangrene of extremities necessitating amputation despite successful femoropopliteal bypass grafting; (4) peripheral neuropathy; and (5) repeated infections. Both patients succumbed to vascular complications. Thus, pancreatic transplantation can maintain blood glucose and insulin at normal levels for extended periods of time. However, it does not reverse such complications as advanced retinopathy or atherosclerosis. Since the procedure may have value in preventing progression of these complications, it should be evaluated in patients with less advanced complications of diabetes.
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PMID:Long-term effects of pancreatic transplant function in patients with advanced juvenile-onset diabetes. 40 Jan 24

Comparison of the clinical features, especially prognosis, in cerebral infarction was made between nine normotensive subjects and 16 hypertensive patients with an 80% stenosis or occlusion of the intracranial or extracranial arteries. Our own criteria for evaluating hypertension were employed on the basis of the following items: a past history of hypertension, blood pressure levels on admission and during hospitalization, degree of retinopathy, and ECG changes. In 17 of 25 cases, brain circulation was measured by the intravenous RISA technique. Abnormalities of the EEG and reduction of cranial blood flow were greater, and an early prognosis for neurological deficits in the first two months after the onset of stroke was poorer in the hypertensive group than inthe normotensive group. These results are contradictory to the observations of others.
Stroke
PMID:Prognosis of occlusive cerbrovascular diseases in normotensive and hypertensive subjects. 96 Jan 69

Alcohol abuse is a frequent contributor to elevated blood pressure. 710 chronic alcoholics, aged 26-60 years, admitted for detoxification were studied. We compared hypertension prevalence in alcoholics with that in a similar group of non-alcoholics matched for age, sex, and miscellaneous diseases. The prevalence of hypertension was higher in heavy drinkers (11.4%) than in non drinker subjects (3.4%). Abstinence from alcohol during hospitalization was followed by normalization of hypertensive status in a high percentage of patients (70%). The majority of hypertensive alcoholics (75%) developed target organ damage ranging from retinopathy to hypertensive cardiomyopathy and renal lesion. In a 4.6 +/- 2.8 years follow-up study of 42 hypertensive alcoholic subjects, we observed that hypertension was 26% in those who abstained alcohol ingestion versus 84% in those who remained actively alcoholics. Four patients died of liver failure and two of stroke.
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PMID:[Chronic alcoholism and arterial hypertension. Contribution to the comprehension of the phenomenon and practical implications]. 143 15

In a population-based study in Taiwan, 11,478 subjects aged 40 years or older were screened for diabetes in one urban and five rural areas. Among the 715 subjects proven to have diabetes, 527 subjects underwent ophthalmoscopy. Diabetic retinopathy was present in 184 of the 527 subjects (35.0%), including background diabetic retinopathy in 157 subjects (30.0%), preproliferative diabetic retinopathy in 15 subjects (2.8%), and proliferative diabetic retinopathy in 12 subjects (2.2%). Diabetic retinopathy was correlated with the duration of diabetes and age at onset of diabetes, type of diabetes treatment, higher serum creatinine levels, and lower serum cholesterol levels. Several other factors, including gender, age, residential area, family income, educational level, control and family history of diabetes, body mass index, physical activity, exercise, cigarette smoking, stroke, ischemic heart disease, leg vessel disease, hypertension, and proteinuria, had no significant association with retinopathy. By multiple logistic regression analysis, duration of diabetes was the most important risk factor related to retinopathy. Diabetic subjects treated with insulin had a higher risk of developing retinopathy than those treated with dietary control (relative risk, 1.57; .05 < P < .10). The univariate analysis disclosed that proliferative diabetic retinopathy was related to older age at examination, older age at onset of diabetes, type of diabetes treatment, and presence of leg vessel disease. Insulin-treated diabetic subjects also had a higher risk of proliferative diabetic retinopathy than patients in whom diabetes was controlled by diet, with a relative risk of 2.51 (.05 < P < .10) in the multiple logistic regression analysis.
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PMID:Prevalence and risk factors of diabetic retinopathy among noninsulin-dependent diabetic subjects. 146 42

Patients presenting with symptoms suggestive of amaurosis fugax, or with findings of Hollenhorst plaques on fundoscopy are frequently referred for duplex evaluation to detect possible carotid artery disease. To better determine the reliability of monocular visual loss and the presence of Hollenhorst plaques for predicting the presence or significance of carotid artery stenosis, we prospectively studied 66 patients with these ocular signs and symptoms. After evaluation, the patients were categorized as follows: 34 of 66 (52%) patients had amaurosis fugax, 23 (35%) had asymptomatic Hollenhorst plaques, 7 (11%) had retinal artery occlusion, and 2 (3%) had venous stasis retinopathy. All patients were evaluated ophthalmologically, with carotid duplex scanning and spectral analysis. A stenosis of greater than 60% was regarded as significant. The presence of risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, a history of CVA or TIA's, tobacco use and hyperlipidemia was recorded. There were no statistically significant differences (p greater than 0.05) in the incidence of atherosclerotic risk factors between the four groups. Patients with amaurosis fugax were more likely to have a significant carotid artery stenosis than those with asymptomatic Hollenhorst plaques or retinal artery occlusion (53% vs 9% vs 0% respectively) (p less than 0.006). We conclude that routine carotid duplex scanning is indicated in all patients with amaurosis fugax in view of the frequent association with significant carotid stenosis (53%). However, the presence of Hollenhorst plaques in the absence of visual symptoms appears not to have a significant association with carotid disease and may not necessarily require routine screening unless other risk factors for carotid stenosis are present.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Correlation of ophthalmic findings with carotid artery stenosis. 152 43

Annual age-specific incidence rates of Streptococcus pneumoniae or Haemophilus influenzae bacterial septicemia in sickle cell anemia (SS) were determined for the years of 1957 through 1989. Forty-nine patients had 64 episodes of septicemia among a population of 786 SS patients observed for 8,138 person-years. Peak frequency of infection occurred between 1968-1971 and 1975-1981 with a conspicuous absence of episodes in 1972, 1973, 1982-1984, and 1986-1987, thus demonstrating cycles of high and low attack rates. The annual age-specific incidence rate of septicemia varied from 64.5 (1965) to 421.1 (1980) per 1,000 person-years for those under 2 years of age and never exceeded 10.2 per 1,000 in those over 4 years of age. Following the introduction of pneumococcal polyvalent vaccine in 1978, incidence of infection decreased in SS children greater than 2 years of age. No modification of the risk of infection was observed in immunized children less than 2 years of age. During these three decades, there has been a ten-fold increase in the number of SS adults over 20 years of age. The relative risk of chronic sickle complications comparing the survivors of septicemia to the non-infected patients was: subsequent death 1.76, retinopathy 4.06, avascular necrosis 1.95, symptomatic cholelithiasis 1.33, stroke 1.30, and priapism 1.26. These data suggest that prognosis for lifetime severe SS is initially manifested as an increased risk of septicemia during childhood.
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PMID:Polysaccharide encapsulated bacterial infection in sickle cell anemia: a thirty year epidemiologic experience. 154 14

Despite multiple, interdisciplinary group recommendations, we are still on uncertain ground when it comes to treatment of most aspects of hypertension. Seven major areas of controversy include mild hypertension, the relevance of hypertension and lipids, hypertensive agents and electrolyte imbalance, treatment and regression of left ventricular hypertrophy, isolated systolic hypertension, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and overtreatment of hypertension--the "j shaped curve." Although our knowledge of these aspects has advanced tremendously, significant doubts exist as to our present approach. Key publications are reviewed to evaluate our present knowledge and recommendations are made. The 1988 recommendations of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of Hypertension both answered and raised some questions regarding treatment of high blood pressure. We lack information on the treatment outcomes and many of us remain unconvinced that our present approach is the best we can do. Many other questions abound. Should the treatment of mild hypertension be as aggressive as it is at present or should systolic hypertension in the elderly be treated at all? There are striking variations and recommendations of other groups outside the United States which reaffirm our lack of evidence. Ideally, we ought to be able to reduce or abolish the recognized poor outcomes of treated hypertension: heart attack, heart failure, stroke, renal failure and retinopathy. Adequate control of blood pressure has gone a long way towards preventing stroke, accelerated hypertension and hypertensive encephalopathy. Congestive heart failure has also been reduced. There is a singular lack of evidence of the influence on either total mortality or morbidity from coronary events.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:New controversies in hypertension: questions answered, answers questioned. 154 98

Diabetes mellitus and hypertension are common diseases that coexist at a greater frequency than chance alone would predict. Hypertension in the diabetic individual markedly increases the risk and accelerates the course of cardiac disease, peripheral vascular disease, stroke, retinopathy, and nephropathy. Our understanding of the factors that markedly increase the frequency of hypertension in the diabetic individual remains incomplete. Diabetic nephropathy is an important factor involved in the development of hypertension in diabetics, particularly type I patients. However, the etiology of hypertension in the majority of diabetic patients cannot be explained by underlying renal disease and remains "essential" in nature. The hallmark of hypertension in type I and type II diabetics appears to be increased peripheral vascular resistance. Increased exchangeable sodium may also play a role in the pathogenesis of blood pressure in diabetics. There is increasing evidence that insulin resistance/hyperinsulinemia may play a key role in the pathogenesis of hypertension in both subtle and overt abnormalities of carbohydrate metabolism. Population studies suggest that elevated insulin levels, which often occurs in type II diabetes mellitus, is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Other cardiovascular risk factors in diabetic individuals include abnormalities of lipid metabolism, platelet function, and clotting factors. The goal of antihypertensive therapy in the patient with coexistent diabetes is to reduce the inordinate cardiovascular risk as well as lowering blood pressure.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus and hypertension. 156 57

Fifty-four patients hospitalized in Niger for complications from hypertension between September 1988 and October 1989 were studied. The following complications were observed: left ventricular hypertrophy (56%), coronary vascular defect (35%), left heart deficiency (26%), cardiac failure (32%), retinopathy (56%), renal insufficiency (35%), and stroke (24%). The most frequent risk factor was Type A personality (76%), followed by stress (48%), excess weight (37%), tobacco use (35%), hyperuricemia (35%), hypercholesteremia (17%), and diabetes (15%). Complications from hypertension may well become a major problem for African countries as they develop.
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PMID:Hospitalizations in Niger (West Africa) for complications from arterial hypertension. 158 Oct 14


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