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

The review discusses the pathophysiology of the renal mechanisms of blood-pressure control. The physiology of the renin-angiotensin system is described and the mineralo-corticoid function has also been considered. The implications of alterations of these systems in various nephropathies are briefly summarized (renal artery stenosis, infarction, Page's syndrome, acute glomerulonephritis, essential hypertension a.o.).
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PMID:[Pathophysiology of renal hypertension (author's transl)]. 110 Dec 91

Thirty six symptomatic hospitalized hypertensive children were evaluated for clinical profile and etiology. They were divided into two groups of 23 and 13 patients, respectively of chronic persistent hypertension and acute transient hypertension. Headache, failure to thrive, dyspnea and edema were common clinical features. Renal parenchymal pathology was the commonest etiology in both groups with a tubulo-interstitial pathology being more common amongst chronic hypertensives and acute glomerulonephritis in acute transient hypertensives. Essential hypertension was uncommon, found in only two patients with chronic hypertension reflecting probably an asymptomatic status of most patients with essential hypertension.
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PMID:Pediatric hypertension: clinical profile and etiology. 205 28

The authors investigated the incidence of arterial hypertension during acute glomerulonephritis in adults and during the period after glomerulonephritis. Hypertension was recorded in 34% of 126 patients treated on account of acute glomerulonephritis (mean age 23 +/- 6 years). Only in six patients the diastolic pressure was higher than 15.3 kPa. At the end of hospitalization hypertension persisted in four subjects. After a three-year interval following glomerulonephritis hypertension was recorded in 15% of 119 examined subjects. In 7 subjects it was isolated, in another 11 associated with a pathological finding in urine. Four to twenty years after acute glomerulonephritis (mean 11.5 years) in a group of 81 subjects hypertension was recorded in 31%. In six patients it was an isolated finding, in 19 instances it was associated with a pathological finding in urine and possibly impaired renal function. In adult age transient hypertension is associated with about one third of all cases of acute glomerulonephritis. Subsequent presence of hypertension in these patients is frequent and increases with the follow up period. Without an invasive examination it is not possible differentiate secondary hypertension from essential hypertension, in particular in subjects with isolated hypertension or hypertension associated with mild proteinuria.
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PMID:[Incidence of arterial hypertension during and after acute glomerulonephritis]. 205 96

Seventy patients, aged 1-20 years, were seen at Jordan University Hospital with high blood pressure (BP) over a 3-year period. BP values ranged from 140 to 230 mmHg for systolic pressure and from 90 to 130 mmHg for diastolic pressure. Essential hypertension was seen in only 6 patients (8.6%); secondary hypertension (n = 64 or 91.4%) was due to renal parenchymal diseases (RPD) in 46 patients (65.7%), reno-vascular lesions in 8 (11.4%), renal transplantation in 5 (7.2%), teenage pregnancy in 4 (5.7%), and phaeochromocytoma in 1 patient (1.4%). The aetiologies of RPD were as follows: end-stage renal disease requiring dialysis in 14 patients, acute glomerulonephritis in 14, idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in 10, chronic renal insufficiency in 5, and polycystic kidney in 3 patients. Surgical cure of hypertension was achieved in 5 of the children with reno-vascular lesions and in the patient with phaeochromocytoma.
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PMID:Hypertension in Jordanian children: a retrospective analysis of 70 cases. 224 23

Erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio was examined in relation to a family history of essential hypertension (FH-HT) and plasma and urine electrolytes in 84 normotensive children (13-15 yrs old), and in relation to sodium intake in six children with acute glomerulonephritis or IgA nephropathy who had normal renal function (6-13 yrs old). Erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio was significantly lower in children with a family history of essential hypertension than in those without. Plasma and urine electrolytes (Na and K) showed no significant differences between children with and without a family history of essential hypertension, although erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio was negatively correlated with serum K level in the whole group. Furthermore, erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio was unchanged before and after the restriction of sodium intake in children with nephropathy. These findings suggest that the erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio may be suppressed in normotensive children with a family history of essential hypertension as previously reported in hypertensive adults, and that plasma K level should be considered first when evaluating the erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio.
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PMID:Erythrocyte Na/K flux ratio in relation to sodium intake and a family history of essential hypertension in normotensive children. 838 70