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 acute blood pressure response to an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (enalaprilat) was compared in patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension with that obtained under similar conditions with a calcium entry blocker (nifedipine). The patients were studied after a 3 week washout period. At a 48 h interval, each patient received in randomized order either enalaprilat (5 mg i.v.) or nifedipine (10 mg p.o.). Enalaprilat and nifedipine were equally effective in acutely lowering blood pressure. However, good responders to one agent were not necessarily good responders to the other.
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PMID:Acute antihypertensive effect of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition and calcium entry blockade. 245 52

Thirteen subjects with essential hypertension controlled on oral enalapril (20 mg/day) therapy were entered into a protocol to assess serially 24-hour blood pressure, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, angiotensin-converting enzyme activity, and plasma and urine enalaprilat drug levels, following both chronic oral administration of enalapril and its replacement with intravenous enalaprilat. Results indicate that systolic and diastolic blood pressures remain well controlled following cessation of oral enalapril and replacement with intravenous enalaprilat. Enalaprilat drug levels, following oral enalapril and intravenous enalaprilat, remained above the therapeutic levels required for angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition. However, therapeutic enalaprilat levels can probably be achieved with one fourth of the total cumulative dose of enalapril, administered as enalaprilat at 6-hour intervals. Intravenous enalaprilat stimulated plasma renin activity and decreased immunoreactive plasma angiotensin II and plasma aldosterone concentrations. However, immunoreactive plasma angiotensin II concentrations were not suppressed below pretreatment values, suggesting that chronic enalapril/acute enalaprilat therapy controls blood pressure through a nonangiotensin-mediated antihypertension mechanism.
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PMID:Enalaprilat: an intravenous substitute for oral enalapril therapy. Humoral and pharmacokinetic effects. 302 55

1. Endothelial dysfunction is seen in patients with essential hypertension or congestive heart failure (CHF). The present study aimed to evaluate the direct effect on endothelium- dependent vasodilation (EDV) of different pharmacological drugs commonly used in the treatment of these conditions. 2. Forearm blood flow (FBF) was measured in 37 young healthy normotensive subjects with venous occlusion plethysmography during local intra-arterial infusions of methacholine (MCh; 2-4 microg/min), evaluating EDV, and sodium nitroprusside (SNP; 5-10 microg/min), evaluating endothelium-independent vasodilation (EIDV). The measurements of EDV and EIDV were undertaken under baseline conditions and were repeated after 1 h intra-arterial infusion of digoxin (0.1 mg/h), furosemide (5.0 mg/h), enalaprilat (2,4 mg/h), metoprolol (1.2 mg/h) or saline (controls). 3. Enalaprilat and digoxin improved the FBF response to MCh at 4 microg/min (from 22.7+/-2.3 to 25.5+/-2.1 mL/min per 100 mL tissue (P < 0.01) and from 18.2+/-2.4 to 22.2+/-2.0 mL/min per 100 mL tissue (P < 0.05), respectively). No significant changes where induced by furosemide or metoprolol in response to MCh at 4 microg/min (from 19.4+/-2.0 to 22.9+/-2.8 and from 15.3+/-2.4 to 14.7+/-1.1 mL/min per 100 mL tissue, respectively). No significant changes in basal FBF or EIDV were induced by the different drugs. When the endothelial function index was calculated as the MCh: SNP FBF ratio, a significant improvement was seen only with enalaprilat (1.1+/-0.1 to 1.2+/-0.1; P < 0.01) and furosemide (1.0+/-0.1 to 1.3+/-0.4; P < 0.05). 4. In conlusion, the results of the present study show that enalaprilat and furosemide improve endothelial vasodilatory function, while no major effect was induced by digoxin or metoprolol. Thus, different direct effects on the endothelium in young normotensive subjects were induced by drugs commonly used in the treatment of hypertension or CHF.
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PMID:Effects of digoxin, furosemide, enalaprilat and metoprolol on endothelial function in young normotensive subjects. 1138 May 10