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)

Plasma levels of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) were measured in patients with normal renin essential hypertension (n = 12), low renin essential hypertension (n = 11) and primary aldosteronism due to aldosterone producing adenoma (APA, n = 8) and idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA, n = 3) after overnight rest in the supine position and after 4 h upright posture and furosemide administration. Plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone (Aldo) levels were also determined. Compared to normal renin essential hypertension (33.6 +/- 2.2 pg/ml), basal plasma ANP was significantly higher in low renin essential hypertension (66.8 +/- 6 pg/ml), IHA (54.1 +/- 6.3 pg/ml) and APA before (62.4 +/- 4.9 pg/ml) but not after adrenal surgery (22 +/- 3 pg/ml). After upright posture and furosemide administration plasma ANP was decreased (p less than 0.01) in patients with low renin and, less markedly, with normal renin essential hypertension, however not in IHA and APA. In about half of the patients with low renin essential hypertension, unchanged PRA after upright posture and furosemide administration was associated with increased plasma Aldo and decreased ANP levels. We conclude that (i) the relatively high basal plasma ANP levels in low renin essential hypertension, IHA and APA may reflect the presence of volume expansion in these patients; (ii) the hormonal responses to upright posture and furosemide administration in patients with normal and low renin essential hypertension may indicate a counterregulatory role of ANP during activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system; (iii) the high plasma ANP, which is unresponsive to upright posture and furosemide administration, in patients with APA and IHA may be a potentially interesting new finding whose pathophysiological significance remains to be established.
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PMID:Dissociation of plasma atrial natriuretic peptide responses to upright posture and furosemide administration in patients with normal-, low renin essential hypertension and primary aldosteronism. 183 96

1. The adrenal cortical 'hybrid' steroids 18-oxocortisol (18-OF) and 18-hydroxycortisol (18-OHF) are elevated in patients with typical angiotensin-unresponsive aldosterone-producing adenoma (AII-unresponsive APA) and fall to normal following surgical removal of the adrenal containing the tumour. Since 18-OF was six times the upper limit of normal pre-operatively, the tumour was the site of overproduction of hybrid steroids. 2. The failure of angiotensin-responsive APA to overproduce the hybrid steroids may be linked to their more 'normal' production of cortisol, which falls significantly on removal of the tumours. 3. Hybrid steroid levels were also normal in patients with idiopathic hyperplasia of the adrenals (IHA) and in low renin essential hypertension. 4. In AII-responsive APA, glucocorticoid-suppressible hyperaldosteronism (GSH) and IHA, the hybrid steroids showed brisk responses to stimulation by ACTH and suppression by dexamethasone of endogenous ACTH. 5. Long-term suppression by dexamethasone of hybrid steroids in GSH is consistent with ACTH dependence, rather than angiotensin dependence. 6. Studies of the regulation of hybrid steroid secretion in various categories of hypertension will further define the biosynthetic distinctiveness which is already useful diagnostically.
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PMID:Adrenal transitional zone steroids, 18-oxo and 18-hydroxycortisol, useful in the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism, are ACTH-dependent. 285 57

In the present study, effects of angiotensin on the adrenal steroidogenesis were studied in essential hypertension, primary aldosteronism and renovascular hypertension (RVH). Angiotensin III(A III), an analogue of angiotensin II, was administered to 17 normal volunteers (9 male and 8 female), 44 patients with essential hypertension (EH) (15 with high renin; HREH, 15 with normal renin; NREH and 14 with low renin; LREH), 8 patients with primary aldosteronism (5 with adrenal adenoma; APA and 3 with bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia; IHA) and 5 patients with renovascular hypertension. In all the patients with hypertension and normal subjects, blood pressure (BP) and plasma concentrations of progesterone (P), corticosterone (B), aldosterone (Aldo), 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone(17-OHP) and cortisol(F) were measured before and after intravenous administration of A III (0.1, 0.5, 1.0, 10, 20 and 40 ng/kg/min, for 15 min, respectively). 1) BP rose from 164 +/- 19/88 +/- 8 to 180 +/- 19/112 +/- 10 mmHg [systolic BP(SBP); P less than 0.01, diastolic BP(DBP); P less than 0.01] in HREH, from 162 +/- 12/96 +/- 7 to 186 +/- 11/118 +/- 8 mmHg in NREH(SBP; P less than 0.01, DBP; P less than 0.01), 165 +/- 12/94 +/- 8 to 202 +/- 12/126 +/- 9 mmHg in LREH(SBP; P less than 0.001, P less than 0.001) and 118 +/- 8/72 +/- 7 mmHg to 136 +/- 11/88 +/- 8 mmHg in controls (SBP; P less than 0.01, DBP; P less than 0.01). The elevation in NREH and LREH was greater than that in HREH and controls. The elevations of BP both in APA and IHA were remarkably greater than that in controls and as similar as LREH(APA; 174 +/- 21/103 +/- 12 to 204 +/- 18/136 +/- 8 mmHg, IHA; 176 +/- 10/104 +/- 4 to 206 +/- 17/138 +/- 10 mmHg). The elevation in RVH was similar to that in NREH(173 +/- 9/108 +/- 8 to 194 +/- 13/132 +/- 10 mmHg). 2) Plasma P increased from 25.5 +/- 7.5 to 39.5 +/- 13.8 ng/100 ml(P less than 0.001) in HREH, from 28.0 +/- 7.7 to 45.3 +/- 12.7 ng/100 ml(P less than 0.001) in NREH, from 23.8 +/- 8.2 to 47.2 +/- 19.4 ng/100 ml(P less than 0.001) in LREH and 26.6 +/- 11.0 to 43.4 +/- 14.6 ng/100 ml in controls. The increment in HREH or NREH was similar to that in controls(P less than 0.1, respectively), whereas greater than controls in LREH(P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Studies on abnormalities of adrenal steroidogenesis in essential hypertension, primary aldosteronism and renovascular hypertension: responses of plasma steroids to angiotensin III]. 341 Jan 45

Although aldosterone (Aldo.) secretion is regulated by various humoral factors, evidence has accumulated to support an involvement of dopaminergic system in its regulation. The pathophysiological significance of the dopaminergic system in primary aldosteronism (PA) however remains unknown. In the present study, we examined the effects of metoclopramide (MCP) on Aldo. secretion in normal subjects (n = 11) and patients with essential hypertension (EH, n = 8), aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA, n = 10), and idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA, n = 6). Plasma Aldo., prolactin (PRL), renin, cortisol, serum sodium, and serum potassium levels were determined before and 30 min after i.v. bolus injection of 10 mg MCP at 9 a.m. Plasma Aldo. showed a significant increase after MCP in normal subjects, EH, and APA, but not in IHA. The incremental response of plasma Aldo. was largest in APA and smallest in IHA. The percentage increase in plasma Aldo. from the basal level was significantly attenuated in IHA, while no significant difference was seen among other groups. Although plasma PRL showed a significant increase in response to MCP, no difference of the change was seen among the groups. There was no significant change in plasma cortisol, renin, serum sodium, and serum potassium levels in response to MCP. In addition, the response of Aldo. to MCP was normalized in APA after unilateral adrenalectomy, while that of PRL did not change. These results indicate that the adrenal dopaminergic activity is enhanced in APA and attenuated in IHA and suggest an involvement of the dopaminergic system in the pathogenesis of IHA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Dopaminergic regulation of aldosterone secretion: its pathophysiologic significance in subsets of primary aldosteronism. 852 76

The basic clinical pathophysiology of primary aldosteronism (PAL) was described by Conn in terms of autonomous production of aldosterone, secondary suppression of renin and development of hypertension with hypokalaemic alkalosis. Conn recognised a normokalaemic form of the syndrome and suggested that it might masquerade as essential hypertension and be not uncommon. This was hotly disputed at the time, and normokalaemic PAL considered rare until recently, and, as a consequence, overlooked. The advent of a simple screening test, the aldosterone-renin ratio, led to recognition that normokalaemic forms are not uncommon. In fact, PAL may be the commonest specifically treatable and potentially curable form of hypertension so far identified. In all patients with PAL confirmed by lack of suppressibility ("autonomy") of aldosterone production, Familial Hyperaldosteronism Type I (FH-I, glucocorticoid-remediable hyperaldosteronism, reviewed elsewhere in this issue) should first be excluded by dexamethasone suppression or genetic testing. Capable of causing fatal stroke in young people affected by this dominantly inherited disorder, it can be reversed by doses of glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone which partially suppress endogenous ACTH without producing "steroid" side-effects. The remaining varieties of PAL may eventually also be shown to have a genetic basis, but are currently treated either by excision of a solitary aldosterone-secreting tumour or by antagonism of aldosterone's action in the renal tubule. It is possible that both adrenal cortices are genetically predisposed to overproduction of aldosterone in all varieties of PAL, whether because of anomalous regulation of aldosterone secretion or because of a tendency towards hyperplasia and neoplasia. Aldosterone-producing adenomas (APA's) can be divided into two main subtypes based on morphology and biochemical behaviour. The first subtype to be morphologically and biochemically characterised is composed predominantly of fasciculata-like cells and is unresponsive to angiotensin II (ALL-U-APA). The more recently characterised subtype is composed predominantly of glomerulosa-like cells, is responsive to angiotensin II (AII-R-APA) and could previously have been misdiagnosed as bilateral hyperplasia. The renin gene is often overexpressed in the second variety of adenoma, and in surrounding non-tumorous cortex, and the two subgroups show different allelic frequencies for RFLP's of the constitutive renin gene and the constitutive ANP gene locus. Unilateral, solitary, benign adrenal cortical adenomas producing aldosterone (APA's) represent a potentially surgically curable form of hypertension. Adrenal venous sampling (AVS) should always be performed because APA's are biochemically recognisable by adrenal venous steroid measurement before they are identifiable by computerised tomography or scintigraphy, and adrenal masses seen on CT may not be responsible for PAL. The secretory activity of adrenal masses must therefore be established by AVS before surgical removal. Discovery of an adrenal mass on CT requires formulation of a plan, whether or not it is found to be secreting hormones in excess. Independently of the treatment of the patient's hypertension, an apparently nonfunctioning adrenal mass ("incidentaloma") should be removed if 2.5 cm or more in diameter, because of the risk of cancer. Smaller masses require long-term follow-up. Primary aldosteronism not lateralising on AVS should be treated with low dose spironolactone, or with amiloride. For any such patients intolerant of medical treatment, laparoscopic removal of the adrenal showing higher production of aldosterone on AVS is an option worthy of consideration.The resultant reduction in mass of tissue autonomously secreting aldosterone should improve hypertension, as aldosterone productions falls below a critical level, and may even be curative in the short, medium or long term, depending on the rate of growth and activity of au
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PMID:Primary aldosteronism. 922 Dec 68

The plasma aldosterone to renin activity ratio (A/PRA) was assessed retrospectively in 103 patients with primary aldosteronism including 74 patients with surgically proven adrenal cortical adenoma (APA) and 29 patients with idiopathic adrenal cortical hyperplasia (IHA). The results were compared with those obtained in 31 patients with essential hypertension (EH) and 45 healthy normotensive controls. The upper limit of normal A/PRA ratio, as obtained in the controls was 17.8. This value was exceeded in 89% of patients with APA; postoperatively it decreased in 97% of the APA group, and returned to normal in 81%. In the IHA group the A/PRA was elevated in 70% of patients. The normal ratios in patients with primary aldosteronism were associated with unsuppressed plasma renin activity (PRA). Although the mean values of the A/PRA ratio differed significantly between the groups, complete separation was not obtained. The serum potassium level at time of testing did not influence the diagnostic value of the A/PRA ratio, although an inverse correlation between serum potassium and the A/PRA ratio was found in the patients with APA. This study supports the high sensitivity of the A/PRA ratio in diagnosis of primary aldosteronism, however, a single determination with a normal result may not be sufficient for exclusion of the disease.
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PMID:Evaluation of plasma aldosterone to plasma renin activity ratio in patients with primary aldosteronism. 924 32

The aim of the study was to investigate the effect of therapy by rilmenidine on endothelial and platelet function in 23 patients with the early stages of untreated essential hypertension. The measurements were carried out before therapy, after 1 week of placebo administration, after 1 week, after 1 month and after 3 months of therapy. After 1 week of therapy both systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) were reduced (P < 0.001) all over the study period. Plasma thrombomodulin (TM) and von Willebrand factor (vWF) as indicators of endothelial dysfunction, and plasma beta-thromboglobulin (betaTG) as an indicator of in vivo platelet activation, were investigated. Fibrinogen as a risk factor for vascular changes was also assayed. Platelet aggregation without stimulation (spontaneous, SPA) and induced by adrenaline (APA) was measured. A decrease of plasma vWF level after 1 month (P < 0.05) and after 3 months (P < 0.05) of therapy was observed. We failed to find any changes of plasma TM and fibrinogen level. A reduction of platelet aggregation was evident after 1 week (SPA and APA, P < 0.05, respectively) but mainly after 1 month (SPA P < 0.01, APA P < 0.05) and after 3 months of therapy (SPA and APA, P < 0.01, respectively). It was accompanied by a decrease of plasma betaTG level after 3 months of therapy (P < 0.05). The vasculoprotective and antiplatelet effect of rilmenidine may be important in terms of the favourable role of antihypertensive drugs in cardiovascular morbidity.
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PMID:Effect of the new centrally acting antihypertensive agent rilmenidine on endothelial and platelet function in essential hypertension. 1214 57

Recent evidence demonstrates an increased incidence of primary aldosteronism (PA) in approximately 10% of the hypertensive population, making noninvasive and simple screening methods necessary. The aim of the present study was to apply a time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for the measurement of aldosterone in saliva and the establishment of a cut-off to identify patients with a high likelihood for PA requiring subsequent screening with the aldosterone to renin ratio. Saliva was collected (AM and PM) to ascertain an optimum time with best discriminating power between healthy and disease states. Plasma aldosterone, after overnight recumbency and 4 h later, was collected for posture testing. The participants included 53 PA patients (aged 14-78), 54 with essential hypertension (EH, aged 19-82), and 38 healthy volunteers (aged 19-56). Saliva aldosterone (SA) (median, 25-75(th)%) in PA was found at 90 pg/ml (61-139) compared to 53 pg/ml (40-85) in EH, with discrimination between PA versus EHs best in the morning (cutoff: 81 pg/ml, 77% sensitivity, 82% specificity). Saliva aldosterone decreases throughout the day in patients with adenomas [APA AM: 123 pg/ml (92-213) vs. PM: 79 pg/ml (41-116)], but not in those with bilateral hyperplasia [BAH AM: 85 pg/ml (59-115)] vs. pm 69 pg/ml (57-114). Morning SA alone allows discrimination between PA and controls, though with significant overlap against EHs, leading to a high number of false positives. More promising is the use of diurnal variation in SA in distinguishing between APA and BAH. The decline in SA seen in patients with APA presents a more constant finding compared to posture testing, which fails to correctly classify a large number of patients.
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PMID:Salivary aldosterone as a diagnostic aid in primary aldosteronism. 2021 32

Brain renin-angiotensin system hyperactivity has been implicated in the development and maintenance of hypertension. We reported previously in the brain that aminopeptidase A and aminopeptidase N are involved in the metabolism of angiotensin II and angiotensin III, respectively. By using in vivo specific and selective aminopeptidase A and aminopeptidase N inhibitors, we showed that angiotensin III is one of the main effector peptides of the brain renin-angiotensin system, exerting a tonic stimulatory control more than blood pressure in hypertensive rats. Aminopeptidase A, the enzyme generating brain angiotensin III, thus represents a potential target for the treatment of hypertension. We demonstrated here the antihypertensive effects of RB150, a prodrug of the specific and selective aminopeptidase A inhibitor, EC33, in spontaneously hypertensive rats, a model of human essential hypertension. Oral administration of RB150 in conscious spontaneously hypertensive rats inhibited brain aminopeptidase A activity, demonstrating the central bioavailability of RB150 and its ability to generate EC33 into the brain. Oral RB150 treatment dose-dependently reduced blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats with an ED(50) of 30 mg/kg, lasting for several hours. This decrease in blood pressure is partly attributed to a decrease in sympathetic tone, reducing vascular resistance. This treatment did not modify systemic renin-angiotensin system activity. Concomitant oral administration of RB150 with a systemic renin-angiotensin system blocker, enalapril, potentiated the RB150-induced blood pressure decrease achieved in <2 hours. Thus, RB150 may be the prototype of a new class of centrally active antihypertensive agents that might be used in combination with classic systemic renin-angiotensin system blockers to improve blood pressure control.
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PMID:Central antihypertensive effects of orally active aminopeptidase A inhibitors in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 2271 Jun 44

Essential hypertension is one of the major contributors to premature morbidity and mortality due to the incresased risk for coronary heart disease, stroke, renal disease, peripheral vascular disease and vascular dementia for both men and women. However, its basic causes remain unknown. In the present work we studied the activity of several proteolytic regulatory enzymes related to renin-angiotensin-system (RAS) (aminopeptidase A, APA; aminopeptidase N, APN; aminopeptidase B, APB; and insulin-regulated aminopeptidase, IRAP); with oxytocin regulation (oxytocinase); with the metabolism of GnRH and TRH (pyrrolidone carboxypeptidase, Pcp); and with enkephalins metabolism (enkephalindegrading activity, EDA), to elucidate their role in the mechanisms responsible of essential hypertension and to discuss the possible gender differences. Serum samples of 53 individuals with essential hypertension and 60 healthy volunteers were collected and used to assay enzyme activities, gonad hormones testosterone and estradiol, TSH and free thyroxin (fT4). Differences were observed in APA, APN, Pcp and EDA specific activities, and in serum gonad hormone levels between hypertensive and control groups. Only Pcp activity showed gender differences. Regarding the RAS, APA is reduced while APN is increased, suggesting increased levels of angiotensin II and a facilitation of the conversion of angiotensin III in angiotensin IV. Thus, the changes in several RAS-regulating specific activities and other enzyme activities involved in the neuroendocrine modulation of gonad and stress-related functions are related to essential hypertension with minor gender differences. Therefore, aminopeptidases constitute new elements for the knowledge of the causes of essential hypertension and an alternative as therapeutic targets against the illness.
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PMID:Circulating aminopeptidase activities in men and women with essential hypertension. 2393 Dec 76


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