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Query: UMLS:C0085580 (essential hypertension)
14,686 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seventeen patients with labile hypertension received nitroglycerin and 18 received amyl nitrite. Twelve patients with established essential hypertension received nitroglycerin and 12 received amyl nitrite. Nitroglycerin reduced the systolic and mean arterial pressures and cardiac output in both groups, but had no effect on diastolic pressure and total peripheral resistance. Amyl nitrite decreased systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressures and peripheral vascular resistance and increased heart rate and cardiac output in labile hypertensives. In established hypertensive patients, amyl nitrite decreased systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressures and cardiac output, and had little effect on peripheral vascular resistance. Nitroglycerin reduced arterial pressure in labile and established hypertensives through venodilation and peripheral venous pooling. Amyl nitrite and effects similar to nitroglycerin in established hypertensives; in labile hypertensives it reduced arterial pressure through arterial dilation and a decrease in peripheral vascular resistance.
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PMID:Action of Nitroglycerin and amyl nitrite in labile and essential hypertension: hemodynamic differences. 41 75

The effects of an intravenous infusion of nitroglycerin were studied in 20 acutely hypertensive patients during coronary-artery surgery. Eight patients had histories of essential hypertension and six had been treated for it. They were anesthetized with morphine, diazepam, N2O, O2, pancuronium, and enflurane. Control measurements were obtained after sternotomy. Nitroglycerin was then administered until the blood pressure returned to normal, and the measurements then repeated. The mean dose of nitroglycerin was 80.0 +/- 4.7 mug/min, or 0.96 mug/kg/min. This produced significant decreases (P less than .05) in systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressures, central venous pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, systemic vascular resistance, and left ventricular stroke work index. Cardiac index, stroke index, and heart rate were unchanged. Two indices of myocardial oxygen demand (rate-pressure product and tension-time index) were significantly decreased by nitroglycerin (P less than .005). Fifty per cent of the patients had improvement in ST-segment depression on the electrocardiogram. These findings demonstrate that nitroglycerin can be safely administered intravenously during operation, and suggest that nitroglycerin decreases myocardial oxygen demand and relieves myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Nitroglycerin infusion during coronary-artery surgery. 82 Feb 17

Acute effects of coronary vasodilators (nifedipine, nicardipine, and nitroglycerin) on atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system were studied in normal subjects and patients with essential hypertension. Nifedipine lowered blood pressure both in normal subjects and in patients and elevated ANP, plasma renin activity, and angiotensin II in normal subjects but not in hypertensive patients. Nicardipine lowered blood pressure but failed to elevate ANP and angiotensin II in normal subjects. Nitroglycerin failed to elevate ANP in normal subjects.
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PMID:Effects of calcium antagonists and nitroglycerin on atrial natriuretic peptide in normal subjects and patients with essential hypertension. 252 Dec 84

We studied blood pressure, arterial diameter, and blood flow of the brachial artery in patients with sustained essential hypertension before and after administration of the vasodilating drugs nitroglycerin, captopril, dihydralazine, diltiazem, and isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN). The diameter and the blood flow of the brachial artery were measured with a pulsed Doppler device which allowed the angle between the ultrasound beam and the vessel axis to be determined with a precision better than 2%. Nitroglycerin and captopril decreased blood pressure slightly but increased arterial diameter markedly. Dihydralazine, diltiazem, and ISDN decreased blood pressure similarly and significantly and also reduced forearm vascular resistance. Dihydralazine reduced arterial diameter (p less than 0.001), but did not change brachial blood flow. Diltiazem and ISDN increased the arterial diameter markedly (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.01, respectively), but only the former increased brachial blood flow. We conclude that antihypertensive drugs that dilate small arteries can either reduce (dihydralazine) or increase (nitroglycerin, captopril, diltiazem, ISDN) the caliber of large peripheral arteries and thus have different effects on peripheral blood flow.
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PMID:Action of vasodilating drugs on small and large arteries of hypertensive patients. 619 61

Endothelium-dependent vasodilation is impaired in patients with essential hypertension. The objective of this study was to determine whether long-term treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors improves endothelium-dependent vasodilation in forearm resistance vessels of patients with hypertension. Furthermore, since tissue thiols may be relevant to nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation, we queried whether an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor with a sulfhydryl group preferentially augments endothelium-dependent vasodilation in these individuals. The study included 24 patients with essential hypertension (mean age, 45 +/- 2 years) and 20 normotensive subjects (mean age, 47 +/- 1 years). Methacholine chloride (0.3 to 10 micrograms/min) was infused via the brachial artery to assess endothelium-dependent vasodilation in forearm resistance vessels. Nitroglycerin (1 to 30 micrograms/min) was administered to evaluate endothelium-independent vasodilation. Forearm blood flow was determined by venous occlusion strain-gauge plethysmography. Forearm vascular function studies were performed in hypertensive patients before and 7 to 8 weeks after randomization to either captopril or enalapril, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors with and without a sulfhydryl moiety, respectively. Normotensive subjects were studied on only one occasion. Before treatment, the forearm vasodilative response to methacholine was attenuated in hypertensive compared with normotensive subjects (P < .01). The effects of nitroglycerin on forearm blood flow did not differ significantly between the two groups. Both captopril and enalapril reduced mean blood pressure in the hypertensive subjects (12 +/- 2 versus 15 +/- 3 mm Hg, respectively; P = NS).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of captopril and enalapril on endothelial function in hypertensive patients. 808 18

Whether endothelial dysfunction in essential hypertension is a cause or a consequence of structural vessel wall alterations is not known. The purpose of the present study was to compare flow-mediated vasodilation and mechanical vessel wall properties of large arteries between never treated mild essential hypertensive patients with normal intima-media thickness (IMT) and those exhibiting intima-media thickening. We measured brachial and carotid artery diameter and distension by Doppler frequency analysis of vessel wall movements in M-mode in ten essential hypertensive patients with normal carotid artery IMT (HYP1), in ten patients with increased IMT (HYP2), and in 13 normotensive control subjects (CON). Thereafter, we measured changes in brachial artery (BA) diameters during distal reactive hyperemia after 4 min of forearm occlusion. Nitroglycerin-mediated vasodilation was measured to assess endothelium-independent vasodilation, and BA blood flow was estimated using a pulsed Doppler system. Intima-media thickness of the carotid arteries was examined by high resolution B-mode ultrasound. IMT was 0.66 +/- 0.02 mm in the HYP1 group, 0.84 +/- 0.03 mm in the HYP2 group (P < .01 v HYP1, P < .01 v CON), and 0.71 +/- 0.04 mm in the CON group. Forearm occlusion was reduced in both the HYP1 group (3.4% +/- 3.6%, P < .01 v CON) and the HYP2 group (6.4% +/- 1.5%, P < .05 v CON) when compared with the CON group (16.5% +/- 2.8%). Nitroglycerin-mediated vasodilation and BA blood flow were not different between study groups. BA distension (as well as carotid artery distension) was significantly lower in the HYP1 group (52 +/- 6 microm, P < .05 v CON), but not in the HYP2 group (72 +/- 10 microm) when compared with the CON group (88 +/- 13 microm). The data suggest that endothelial dysfunction and reduced distensibility of large arteries in patients with essential hypertension occur in the absence of structural vessel wall alterations.
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PMID:Flow-mediated vasodilation and distensibility in relation to intima-media thickness of large arteries in mild essential hypertension. 1056 Jul 83