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Query: UMLS:C0085580 (
essential hypertension
)
14,686
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
BACKGROUND AND METHODS. To determine the effects of hypertension on brain function, positron emission tomography (PET) studies using (18F)-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) were performed on a group of 17 otherwise healthy older hypertensive men (mean age +/- SD = 69 +/- 8 yr) and 25 age- and gender-matched controls. Subjects had medically treated
essential hypertension
for a minimum of 10 years (range = 10 to 24 yr) with no evidence of end-organ impairment from hypertension by routine clinical screening and by history. All hypertensive and control subjects were determined to be cognitively normal by extensive neuropsychological testing. The hypertensive subjects previously had been reported to have lateral ventricle enlargement and left hemisphere
brain atrophy
by quantitative MRI. PET data were analyzed using t-tests to look at group differences.
...
PMID:Brain metabolic function in older men with chronic essential hypertension. 774
In order to clarify the relationship between
brain atrophy
and asymptomatic cerebral lesions, total of 235 subjects (130 males and 105 females), who had neither neurologic deficits nor organic lesions on cerebral computed tomography, were studied. The subjects' ages ranged from 40 to 86 years (mean 66). They were divided into two groups: 90 controls without hypertension or diabetes mallitus (Group C), and 145 patients with
essential hypertension
(Group H).
Brain atrophy
was diagnosed using the caudate head index (CHI). Asymptomatic cerebral lesions on magnetic resonance imaging were defined as asymptomatic lacunae and white matter lesions. Caudate head index was higher in Group H than it was in Group C, and CHI in both groups was significantly correlated with the number of asymptomatic lacunae and the severity of white matter lesions on magnetic resonance imaging. These results indicate that
brain atrophy
may progress along with asymptomatic cerebral lesions.
...
PMID:[The relationship between brain atrophy and asymptomatic cerebral lesions]. 948 51
To evaluate the relationship between blood pressure control and the progression of
brain atrophy
in the elderly, patients with
essential hypertension
and
brain atrophy
were longitudinally evaluated using computerized tomography (CT). The study evaluated 48 patients with
essential hypertension
aged 46-78 years, and 30 sex- and age-matched normotensive control subjects. The extent of
brain atrophy
as determined by caudate head index (CHI), the inverse cella media index (iCMI), and Evans' ratio (ER) was estimated twice at an interval of 5-9 years (mean, 6.9 years). The mean annual increases in CHI (deltaCHI), iCMI (delta iCMI), and ER (deltaER) were evaluated. Mean blood volume in the common carotid artery (BF) and the decrease in BF per year (deltaBF) were also determined. The deltaCHI, delta iCMI, and deltaER increased with age in the hypertensive subjects as well as the control group across all age groups evaluated. The deltaCHI, delta iCMI, and deltaER were significantly greater in the patients with
essential hypertension
in their 50 s as compared with the controls. In patients with
essential hypertension
aged 65 years or older, the deltaCHI, delta iCMI, and deltaER were significantly lower in the group in whom the blood pressure was controlled within the range of borderline hypertension than the groups in which it was controlled in the range of normal or mild hypertension. In the younger patients under the age of 65 with
essential hypertension
, blood pressure control did not affect the deltaCHI, delta iCMI, and deltaER. The deltaCHI, delta iCMI, and deltaER were significantly correlated with deltaBF in both groups. These findings indicate that control of systolic blood pressure within the range of borderline hypertension may delay the progression of
brain atrophy
in elderly patients with
essential hypertension
.
...
PMID:Relationship between brain atrophy estimated by a longitudinal computed tomography study and blood pressure control in patients with essential hypertension. 1008 68
We measured 366 microsatellite markers genome-wide to search for loci contributing to subcortical white matter ischemic damage (leukoariosis) and
brain atrophy
in 488 non-Hispanic white subjects (193 men, 295 women; mean age+/-SD=64.1+/-7.7 years; 79% hypertensive) from 223 sibships recruited through > or =2 members with
essential hypertension
diagnosed before age 60. Leukoariosis was quantitated by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),
brain atrophy
by the difference between intracranial and brain volumes, and calculated mean arterial pressure and pulse pressure provided measures of steady-state level and pulsatile components of blood pressure. After adjustment for sex and age, variance components models estimated significant heritability of leukoariosis (0.72),
brain atrophy
(0.52), mean arterial pressure (0.084), and pulse pressure (0.294) (P<0.0001 for each trait). Univariate maximum logarithm of odds scores (MLS) were observed for leukoariosis on chromosome 5 (MLS=1.91; P=0.00150); for
brain atrophy
on 1q and 17p (MLS=2.76, P=0.00018); for mean arterial pressure on 11p (MLS=1.57; P=0.00354); and for pulse pressure on 11p (MLS=3.02; P=0.00070). Bivariate linkage analyses provided evidence of loci with pleiotropic effects on
brain atrophy
and pulse pressure on chromosomes 11p (MLS = 5.07 at 16 cM; P=0.00001) and 16q (MLS of 4.56 at 124 cM; P=0.00003). These results demonstrate usefulness of multivariate linkage analyses to detect loci with pleiotropic effects on genetically correlated traits and suggest overlap between the genes influencing blood pressure and those contributing to
brain atrophy
.
...
PMID:Genomic susceptibility loci for brain atrophy in hypertensive sibships from the GENOA study. 1569 67