Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085580 (essential hypertension)
14,686 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical, experimental and pathologic studies strongly indicate that hypertension is a major factor in coronary heart disease, sudden death, stroke congestive heart failure and renal insufficiency. The deleterious effect of the elevated blood pressure on the cardiovascular system appears to be due mainly to the mechanical stress placed on the heart and blood vessels. Humoral factors and vasoactive hormones such as angiotensin, catecholamines and prostaglandins may play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertensive cardiovascular disease but this role has not yet been defined and is probably secondary. Hypertension and the resulting increase in tangential tension on the myocardial and arterial walls, leads to the development of hypertensive heart disease and congestive heart failure as well as hypertensive vascular disease that affects not only the kidneys but also the heart and brain. Hypertensive vascular disease involves both large and small arteries as well as arterioles and is characterized by fibromuscular thickening of the intima and media with luminal narrowing of the small arteries and arterioles. The physical stress of hypertension on the arterial wall also results in the aggravation and acceleration of atherosclerosis, particularly of the coronary and cerebral vessels. Moreover, hypertension appears to increase the susceptibility of the small and large arteries to atherosclerosis. Thus the patient with hypertension is a candidate for both hypertensive and atherosclerotic vascular disease of the coronary and cerebral vessels leading to occlusive disease of both the large and small arteries and resulting in myocardial infarction and stroke. Other major complications of hypertensive vascular disease include rupture and thrombotic occlusion of blood vessels, especially in the brain. Disease of the arterial media, which begins in childhood with the deposition of calcium in the vessels, may be an important cause of arterial hypertension. This form of hypertension may manifest itself in adults as arteriosclerotic hypertension and lead to cardiovascular complications very similar to those of essential hypertension. The relation of arteriosclerotic hypertension to nutritional factors, including dietary salt intake, deserves study.
...
PMID:Role of hypertension in atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. 13 91

Diastolic wall stress and compliance were determined in 74 patients with essential hypertension during diagnostic cardiac catheterization. Ventricular compliance was normal in compensated essential hypertension without coronary artery disease even at severe left ventricular hypertrophy. In contrast, additional coronary stenosis and ventricular dilatation due to cardiac decompensation was asscociated with considerable decrease in ventricular compliance. Thus, left ventricular hypertrophy in essential hypertension does not imply per se a change in ventricular compliance. A decrease in ventricular compliance was followed by a decrease of forward pump function of the left ventricle. whereas ventricular work index (as estimated as the product out of systolic wall stress and the stroke volume) increased. This disproportion between external and internal ventricular work increased with increasing ventricular dilatation and was greatest in decompensated essential hypertension. Accordingly, decompensated essential hypertension had largest ventricular work load and lowest forward pump function in comparison to all other patient groups with essential hypertension. The mass to volume ratio may be considered an important determinant of the degree of left ventricular hypertrophy in essential hypertension. The relationship between the mass to volume ratio and the systolic wall stress may provide a diagnostic and prognostic evaluation of the left ventricle in essential hypertension on the basis of dynamic ventricular geometry.
...
PMID:[The heart in hypertension. III. Determinants of left ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic left ventricular compliance (author's transl)]. 15 7

A salt-free diet is usually useless or dangerous in the elderly subject. It has at present only rare indications, such as after acute pulmonary oedema or congestive heart failure during initial treatment. In all other cases, it may be replaced by a reasonable diet; sodium intake remains permitted, but naturally one should not fall in the opposite extreme. As in younger subjects, and provided one takes into consideration the subjacent renal condition, properly prescribed diuretics have transformed the situation in the treatment of heart failure as in essential hypertension. Naturally the patient still requires regular clinical supervision and laboratory tests which may in practice be limited to periodical estimation of blood urea and serum potassium, less regularly, blood sugar and uric acid.
...
PMID:[Salt-free diet and diuretics in the elderly (author's transl)]. 21 98

1. The kinetics of plasma noradrenaline have been determined in normal and essential hypertensive patients by intravenous injection of tritiated noradrenaline and serial mixed venous sampling. 2. The metabolic clearance rate of plasma noradrenaline in normal subjects was approximately 1 1 min-1 m-2, whereas in essential hypertensive patients it was significantly reduced to approximately 0.6 1 min-1 m-2. 3. Metabolic clearance rate was negatively correlated to mean arterial blood pressure and total peripheral resistances. 4. Particularly low values of metabolic clearance rate were found in two patients with congestive heart failure and one with phaeochromocytoma. 5. We propose that the access of plasma noradrenaline to the main removal mechanisms takes place in competition with the flow of unlabelled endogenous noradrenaline directly released by nerve endings. The slower removal of plasma noradrenaline in essential hypertension could then express a larger release of endogenous noradrenaline in this condition.
...
PMID:The kinetics of plasma noradrenaline in normal and hypertensive subjects. 28 6

The case files of 4,456 medical admissions in 1975--1976 at Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Kaduna, Nigeria, included 354 cardiovascular patients. The most common causes were hypertension (45.5%), cardiomyopathy (20.6%) and chronic rheumatic heart disease (14.4%). The mean age of hypertensive and cardiovascular patients was lower than in Europe. The majority of hypertensive patients suffer from essential hypertension. Congestive cardiac failure is the commonest complication of hypertension and cardiomyopathy. Rheumatic valvular disease with mitral incompetence is frequent and sometimes severe in young people. Other cardiovascular diseases included pericardial disease, bacterial endocarditis, cor pulmonale, anaemic heart failure, congenital and syphilitic heart disease. Coronary heart disease was only encountered in non-Africans. Cardiovascular mortality in hospital was high (20%).
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease in Northern Nigeria. 31 94

With advancing age blood pressure rises in most populations with the exception of some isolated tribes. In western countries 30 to 40% of the people above the age of 60 years have casual blood pressure levels greater than or equal to 160/95 mm Hg. Advancing age per se produces a number of physiological changes related to blood pressure, such as a decrease in cardiac output, an increase in peripheral vascular resistance and a decrease in plasma renin-angiotensin-aldosterone levels. The mechanism causing the elevation in pressure with age are unknown though increased rigidity of the great vessels contributes to the rise in systolic pressure. There is a decline in the sensitivity of the baroreceptor reflex, but the contribution of this to the elevation of pressure has not be elucidated. Elderly patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension have a low cardiac output and high peripheral vascular resistance. The rise in blood pressure is associated with an increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality even in the elderly hypertensives. The available data on the efficacy of hypotensive treatment in the elderly is scanty. There are no data proving that hypotensive therapy prolongs life. Controlled studies on the prevention of organ damage especially cerebrovascular accidents are inconclusive, showing either a significant decrease or no effect. Isolated reports illustrate, however, that drastic blood pressure reduction can provoke serious side effects, thus decreasing the quality of life. Hypotensive treatment is indicated in elderly hypertensive patients with hypertensive retinopathy grade III or IV, congestive heart failure or cerebral haemorrhage, in elderly patients with a markedly elevated diastolic blood pressure (greater than or equal to 120 mm Hg) and a trial of hypotensive therapy should be offered in milder forms of hypertension when it is accompanied by certain specific symptoms such as angina, headache and dyspnoe. The management of elderly hypertensive patients is more difficult than in the young. General measures are often not well accepted. The dose adjustment of the hypotensive agent is more critical and volume depletion or orthostatic hypotension are more likely to occur.
...
PMID:Aging and the cardiovascular system. 37 49

526 patients with essential hypertension or congestive cardiac failure were treated with ticrynafen (250--500 mg/day) or hydrochlorothiazide (50--100 mg/day) for 6 weeks to 6 months. There was no appreciable effect on renal function, as measured by changes in blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine levels. Both drugs exhibited similar antihypertensive activity and ability to control signs and symptoms of congestive cardiac failure. Side effects were mild and reversible. A notable difference is the marked reduction in serum uric acid in patients treated with ticrynafen, unlike the elevated urate levels occurring after treatment with hydrochlorothiazide.
...
PMID:Renal function during ticrynafen therapy. 38 57

The safety and efficacy of tienilic acid have been evaluated in studies of patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension, salt and water retention states and hyperuricaemia associated with gout. During the course of these studies 675 patients were treated with tienilic acid, 310 were treated with hydrochlorothiazide, 43 were treated with probenecid and 34 were treated with placebo. Overall, adverse reactions characterized as probably drug-related or questinably drug-related were reported in 28% of patients treated with tienilic acid, 24% treated with hydrochlorothiazide, 25% of patients treated with probenecid and 33% treated with placebo. The side effects encountered were mild in severity, reversible and represented extensions of the pharmacological activity of tienilic acid, hydrochlorothiazide and probenecid. These initial studies demonstrate that tienilic acid is safe and effective in the treatment of mild to moderate essential hypertension, salt and water retention states, including oedema associated with congestive cardiac failure or mild to moderate renal dysfunction, and in the management of elevated serum uric acid levels associated with gout.
...
PMID:Safety of tienilic acid. 38 98

We have studied serum glycyl-prolyl-p-nitroanilidase (GPNAase) activity and its distribution in various parts of the body in patients with acute myocardial infarction, chronic ischemic heart disease, valvular heart disease with or without congestive heart failure and essential hypertension. Serum GPNAase activity in patients with acute myocardial infarction was significantly lower as long as 12 days after the onset as compared with normal controls. The serum enzyme activity in patients with congestive heart failure was also significantly lower than that of controls and there was a tendency of its gradual decrease with the progress of the disease. There was no significant difference between the activity in control group and that in age-matched patients with essential hypertension. There was no significant change of the activity in patients with chronic ischemic heart disease. The GPNAase activities in sera obtained from various parts of the body by cardiac catheterization were essentially similar.
...
PMID:Glycyl-prolyl-p-nitroanilidase (GPNAase) activity in cardiovascular diseases. 47 Jan 43

Tienilic acid (TA) is a common new diuretic agent with a potent uricosuric action. In a double-blind cross-over study its antihypertensive effect was compared to that of hydrochlorothiazide (HCT). 20 patients with essential hypertension were studied: after I weeks of placebo wash-out 10 patients received TA (dose range 250-750 mg/die) and 10 HCT (dose range 50-150 mg/die), for 5 weeks. Systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly and equally reduced (p < 0.001) after the first week of treatment in both groups. While serum uric acid concentration increased after HCT, it was significantly reduced (p < 0.001) after TA treatment. Serum potassium was slightly reduced with both treatments. Serum tryglicerides, unchanged after HCT, showed a slight tendency to reduction on TA treatment. Ten patients with congestive heart failure, on full digitalis treatment, were given TA (dose range 250-1000 mg/die): in each patient a prompt diuretic effect was observed, associated to a significant reduction of body weight and to a marked improvement of the clinical signs of heart failure. Therefore, TA is an effective diuretic agent which may be conveniently used in the treatment of arterial hypertension and congestive heart failure, as it induces a diuretic effect comparable to that obtained with HCT, reducing at the same time, serum uric acid levels.
...
PMID:[Tienilic acid in the treatment of arterial hypertension and congestive cardiac insufficiency]. 54 82


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>