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Query: UMLS:C0085580 (
essential hypertension
)
14,686
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence of
essential hypertension
has been retrospectively studied in a group of sixty-four fatal cases of ruptured berry aneurysm, and compared with a non-fatal group. Hypertension is more frequent in the fatal group, and is associated with a higher incidence of multiple aneurysms, a smaller size of aneurysm at rupture and a poorer survival after two haemorrhages when comparison is made with normotensive patients. The possible role of hypertension in the development and rupture of aneurysms is discussed, and it is concluded that it may contribute to both. Following rupture it carries a poor prognosis with a resulting over emphasis of its significance in autopsy series. Possible mechanisms for this effect include diffuse vascular disease, and an increased liability to oedema or
spasm
following rupture of an aneurysm.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in ruptured aneurysms of the circle of Willis: the significance of systemic hypertension. 68 59
To ascertain an involvement of vascular endothelial cells in cardiovascular disease, we have determined plasma levels of two endothelium-derived substances, endothelin (ET) and thrombomodulin (TM), in
essential hypertension
(EH) and ischemic heart disease. Plasma ET was determined by radioimmunoassay (RIA) after extraction. Plasma TM levels were determined by enzymunoimmunoassay. Plasma ET levels were significantly elevated in patients with EH involving target organ damage, vasospastic angina pectoris (VSA), and acute myocardial infarction (AMI), especially in those associated with cardiogenic shock. There was a weak but significant correlation between plasma ET levels and serum creatinine concentration in patients with EH. Plasma ET levels were elevated even before the coronary
spasm
in patients with VSA, whereas they did not show any further increase during the
spasm
. In contrast, plasma TM levels in patients with EH and VSA did not show a significant difference from that in normal subjects. These results suggest that ET plays an important role in the pathophysiology of EH and ischemic heart disease, and also that increases in plasma ET cannot be simply attributed to a leakage of the peptide from the injured endothelial cells.
...
PMID:Plasma immunoreactive endothelin, but not thrombomodulin, is increased in patients with essential hypertension and ischemic heart disease. 172 16
Serotonin (5HT), discovered in the 1950s, has been the subject of renewed interest for several years, in particular due to the subdivision of 5HT receptors into various types. Concomitantly, several more or less selective agonists and antagonists for these various receptor subtypes have been developed. Although the physiologic relevance of 5HT remains largely unknown, its role in certain pathologic processes is widely accepted. Certain symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome, thromboembolic processes at the level of the microcirculation, and possibly also coronary
spasm
and peripheral vascular disease are likely to be associated, at least in part, with endogenous 5HT and serotonergic mechanisms. However, a primary and causative role for such mechanisms in
essential hypertension
seems unlikely. The blockade of peripheral 5HT2 receptors with drugs may offer advantages, in particular in those disorders where an interaction between predamaged blood vessels and platelets is involved. Such a therapeutic approach seems to be a more generally applicable principle than the lowering of blood pressure as such, which appears not to be a general phenomenon provoked by 5HT2-receptor blockade.
...
PMID:The role of serotonin in cardiovascular diseases and their treatment. 208 Nov 37
A simple non-invasive continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound system was used to record the flow velocity wave forms of the maternal uterine artery and the fetal umbilical artery in 113 normal pregnancies and 39 cases of PIH or
essential hypertension
complicating pregnancy. The systolic/diastolic (S/D) ratio of flow velocities was measured as an index of peripheral resistance. In normal pregnancy the umbilical artery velocity wave S/D ratio declined from 3.9 to 2.1 during the 20th to 40th week while the uterine artery S/D ratio remained constant between 1.8 to 1.9. After the 30th week, either an umbilical artery S/D ratio greater than or equal to 3, or uterine artery S/D ratio greater than 2.6 was defined as abnormal. In 32 PIH cases there were 9 with abnormal umbilical artery S/D ratio and 4 with abnormal uterine artery S/D ratio and the umbilical arterial change seemed to precede the uterine arterial. The rate of abnormal velocity wave forms in PIH was significantly higher than that in normal pregnancy. If both uterine and umbilical artery wave forms were abnormal the fetal outcome was usually poor. The results showed that the method is good for predicting the fetal outcome and once again supported the hypothesis that
spasm
of arterioles and venules in the placenta leading to high peripheral resistance especially in the fetal side may play an important role in the pathogenesis of PIH.
...
PMID:[Doppler flow velocity wave forms of the maternal uterine artery and fetal umbilical artery in normal pregnancy and pregnancy induced hypertension]. 269 3
Vascular smooth muscle is activated through 2 major systems. One, which can be inhibited by calcium-entry blocking agents, involves the influx of calcium through potential-sensitive channels. The other, which can be inhibited by sodium nitroprusside, involves the entry of calcium through agonist-controlled channels and probably its mobilization from within the cell as well. Human veins, muscular arteries and resistance vessels show differing patterns of response to agents that selectively inhibit the 2 activation systems. The responses indicate that physiologic contractions of cutaneous veins and muscular arteries depend on the agonist-controlled system; contractions of veins induced by high concentrations of potassium depend on the potential-sensitive system as, probably, does local
spasm
in arteries. The tone of resistance vessels depends on a balance between the potential-sensitive and agonist-controlled systems. The forearm resistance vessels of men with
primary hypertension
respond to verapamil with larger-than-normal dilatation compared with that induced by nitroprusside. This is interpreted as showing an increased contribution to resistance vessel tone from the potential-sensitive system. This functional abnormality does not depend on the inhibition of sodium pump activity that is known to occur in hypertension, because it cannot be reproduced by local infusion of ouabain. It probably results from a primary disorder of calcium handling by the cell membrane.
...
PMID:Functional differences in blood vessels determined from studies with calcium-channel blockers. Functional changes in forearm resistance vessels of men with primary hypertension. 396 57
The paper deals with some aspects of the effects produced by dopegite on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of foridone from a group of calcium antagonists. Nineteen patients with
essential hypertension
received a single doses of foridone of 40 mg, then its course therapy in a dose of 90 mg/day for 2 weeks, then it was supplemented with dopegite in a dose of 750 mg/day for 2 weeks too. Supplementation of dopegite caused statistically significant changes as higher plasma concentrations of foridone and increased concentration-time curve areas, decreased total peripheral resistance and regional, and a lower
spasm
index. Dopegite can be used to enhance the antihypertensive effect of foridone.
...
PMID:[The pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics of foridon during interaction with the metabolic oxidation inhibitor dopegit]. 831 8
Increased resistance to blood flow in arteries is built up by blockade of transport of saturated fatty acids of triglycerides in VLDL to cell through apoE/B-100 receptor endocytosis (active transport). This way does not affect the structure of cell membrane. Blockade of the active transport stimulates the compensating activation of lipolysis increasing the level of free saturated fatty acids in the blood. These fatty acids are included into the cell membrane via passive transport. In the membrane fatty acids form local domains with unregulated permeability and nonspecific ion transport: Na+ and Ca2+ enter into cell without any control and K+ and Mg2+ leak out. Responding cells activate Na+, K(+)- and Ca(2+)-ATPase and cholesterol synthesis. Ion pumps activate Na+ and Ca2+ out-fluxes; cholesterol blocks nonspecific ion permeability, but increases membrane microviscosity and inhibits secondary activity of ion pumps, thus forming vicious circle of hypernatriemia and hypercalciemia disturbing functions of loose connective tissue. They increase cell size, promote synthesis and secretion of collagen and elastin. It has led to wail thickening, elasticity drop and artety clear cross section narrowing. The increase of sensitivity to contractility of smooth muscle cells, hyperreactivity towards pressor regulators and resistance to depressor regulators cause artery
spasm
, peripheral resistance increases and starts up pathogenesis of
essential hypertension
.
...
PMID:[Disruption of saturated fatty acids in cells in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension]. 984 18
The aim of our study was to describe anatomical variability of the root entry zone (REZ), also called the Obersteiner-Redlich zone, that represents the "junction zone" of glia and Schwann sheath of the cranial nerves. This zone has some clinical implications. The pulsatile compression of REZ by a vessel may produce clinical symptoms, such us trigeminal neuralgia, hemifacial
spasm
, glossopharyngeal neuralgia torticollis spasmodicus or even symptoms of
essential hypertension
when a vascular cross compression of REZ of a left vagus nerve is present. The vessel--cranial nerve contact in the skull base cysterns may be visualized in radiologic examinations, most accurately in magnetic resonance imaging. Because, we cannot distinguish the REZ from the rest of the vagus nerve in radiologic examinations we decided to measure the length of its REZ. The microanatomical study of the length of REZ zone of the vagus nerve was performed on 21 nerves taken from 17 human brain stems (12 men, 5 women, 14 left, 7 right), fixed with 8% buffered formalin solution. Paraffin embedded tissue was cut into 10-micron-thick sections parallel to the nerve longitudinal axis and stained with hematoxilin & eosin. Each of the nerves showed the presence of a zone of oligodendrocyte myelination, mean length 2 +/- 0.3 mm. In 17 nerves the transitional zone formed a cone-like process, in 4 nerves was shaped irregularly. The length of REZ (oligodendrocyte myelination plus "glial dome") had the mean length 3.5 +/- 0.9 mm.
...
PMID:Measurements of the Obersteiner-Redlich zone of the vagus nerve and their possible clinical applications. 1050 81
The term dysautonomia refers to a change in autonomic nervous system function that adversely affects health. The changes range from transient, occasional episodes of neurally mediated hypotension to progressive neurodegenerative diseases; from disorders in which altered autonomic function plays a primary pathophysiologic role to disorders in which it worsens an independent pathologic state; and from mechanistically straightforward to mysterious and controversial entities. In chronic autonomic failure (pure autonomic failure, multiple system atrophy, or autonomic failure in Parkinson disease), orthostatic hypotension reflects sympathetic neurocirculatory failure from sympathetic denervation or deranged reflexive regulation of sympathetic outflows. Chronic orthostatic intolerance associated with postural tachycardia can arise from cardiac sympathetic activation after "patchy" autonomic impairment or blood volume depletion or, as highlighted in this discussion, from a primary abnormality that augments delivery of the sympathetic neurotransmitter norepinephrine to its receptors in the heart. Increased sympathetic nerve traffic to the heart and kidneys seems to occur as
essential hypertension
develops. Acute panic can evoke coronary
spasm
that is associated with sympathoneural and adrenomedullary excitation. In congestive heart failure, compensatory cardiac sympathetic activation may chronically worsen myocardial function, which rationalizes treatment with beta-adrenoceptor blockers. A high frequency of positive results on tilt-table testing has confirmed an association between the chronic fatigue syndrome and orthostatic intolerance; however, treatment with the salt-retaining steroid fludrocortisone, which is usually beneficial in primary chronic autonomic failure, does not seem to be beneficial in the chronic fatigue syndrome. Dysautonomias are an important subject in clinical neurocardiology.
...
PMID:Dysautonomias: clinical disorders of the autonomic nervous system. 1241 49
Nitric oxide(NO), a potent vasodilator produced by endothelial cells, plays an important role in the regulation of blood pressure and regional blood flow, and also inhibits platelet aggregation and leukocyte adhesion to vascular endothelium and inhibits vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation. Various genetic polymorphisms of the endothelial nitric oxide synthase(eNOS) gene have been reported as susceptibility genes in a number of cardiovascular diseases. The functional significance of these polymorphisms has not yet been demonstrated, but recent study revealed that eNOS Glu298Asp variant is likely to have a functional effect on the eNOS protein. The missense Glu298Asp variant was correlated with increased coronary
spasm
, myocardial infarction,
essential hypertension
, left ventricular hypertrophy, carotid atherosclerosis, and cerebral infarction.
...
PMID:[NOS gene polymorphism]. 1473 42
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