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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
4 patients with hypertensive crisis (glomerulonephritis [n = 2], phaeochromocytoma [n = 1], reno-vascular hypertension [n = 1] combined with
encephalopathy
, showed a normalisation of blood-pressure up to 18 days during angiotensin-II-blockade with saralasin. Prior, blood pressure was treated insufficiently by intravenous diazoxide and Na-nitroprusside. Increased plasma-
renin
-activity and plasma levels of catecholamines pointed to an activation of the
renin
-angiotensin- and sympathico-adrenergic system. A trial of therapy with saralasin--especially, if blood-pressure response to diazoxide and sodium-nitroprusside is insufficient--could be indicated. Side-effects like pressor-reactions are excluded by very low priming doses (0,1 microgram/kg/min); rebound-hypertension at the end of the therapy is avoided by an overlapping therapy with
renin
suppressing drugs (beta-receptor blockers, clonidine, guanfacinum).
...
PMID:[Saralasin in resistant hypertensive crisis (author's transl)]. 3 82
Plasma
renin
activity has been measured daily in 36 patients suffering from self poisoning with acetaminophen. In 3 developing porto-systemic
encephalopathy
terminal renal failure developed with high plasma
renin
activity. In 2 who developed acute renal failure without porto-systemic
encephalopathy
, plasma
renin
activity was noted to rise before serum creatinine and to return to initial levels after 3 or 4 days while renal failure persisted. Six other patients with similar hepatic damage showed comparable rises in
renin
without developing renal failure. Our findings are consistent with but do not establish a pathogenetic role for
renin
in acetaminophen-induced acute renal failure. It is suggested that other factors may act with
renin
to bring about renal failure.
...
PMID:Plasma renin activity during the development of paracetamol (acetaminophen) induced acute renal failure in man. 45 18
The multisystem involvement in acute pancreatitis (AP) is a reflection of the pancreatic gland's capacity to produce a number of potent vasoactive peptides, hormones, and enzymes. The various prognostic criteria are early evaluations of these metabolic derangements. The pathogenesis of hypocalcemia, long recognized as an indicator of severity of AP, is multifactorial. Imbalances of parathyroid hormone (PTH)-calcitonin, the interactions of glucagon, gastrin and other pancreatic hormones with PTH-calcitonin, the role of free fatty acids in binding serum calcium with albumin, and the translocation of calcium ion in muscles and liver, have been recently described but remain conflicting theories. Yet, the time-honored theory of calcium-soap formation enjoys wide acceptance. Hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, and occasional ketoacidosis in acute pancreatitis have been studied thoroughly. The complex cause-and-effect relationship between hyperlipidemia with acute pancreatitis needs further study. The coagulation abnormalities seem to be initiated by activated trypsin, and their role in microvascular coagulation appears to form a unifying hypothesis for major organ dysfunction, but this requires further investigation. Adult respiratory distress syndrome may be the result of active enzymes that digest pulmonary surfactant and/or microvascular thrombosis. The depression of cardiac function and shock are suspected to be secondary to vasoactive peptides such as bradykinin, or myocardial depressant factor, whose structure has yet to be elucidated. The
renin
-angiotensin alterations and renal complications in acute pancreatitis have received scant attention in the literature. The onset of moderate visual disturbances, or even blindness, in a patient with acute pancreatitis as a result of retinal vessel thrombosis is fortunately uncommon. Rare but interesting are the manifestations such as subcutaneous fat necrosis, arthralgia, and pancreatic
encephalopathy
. Despite the extensive literature on the complexities of the pathogenesis of complications of acute pancreatitis, there have been very few advances in the prevention and management of specific complications. It is hoped that further work on modification of enzymatic disturbances induced in acute pancreatitis will result in its effective treatment and prevention of serious complications.
...
PMID:Systemic complications of acute pancreatitis. 328
It has recently been shown that repeated large-volume paracentesis associated with intravenous albumin infusion is a rapid, effective, and safe therapy of ascites in cirrhosis. To investigate whether intravenous albumin infusion is necessary in the treatment of cirrhotics with large-volume paracentesis, 105 patients with tense ascites were randomly allocated into two groups. Fifty-two patients (group 1) were treated with paracentesis (4-6 L/day until disappearance of ascites) plus intravenous albumin infusion (40 g after each tap), and 53 (group 2) with paracentesis without albumin infusion. After disappearance of ascites, patients were discharged from the hospital with diuretics. Patients developing tense ascites during follow-up were treated according to their initial schedule. Paracentesis was effective in eliminating the ascites in 50 patients from group 1 and in 48 from group 2, with the duration of the hospital stay being approximately 11 days in both groups. Paracentesis plus intravenous albumin did not induce significant changes in standard renal function tests, plasma
renin
activity, and plasma aldosterone. In contrast, paracentesis without albumin was associated with a significant increase in blood urea nitrogen, a marked elevation in plasma
renin
activity and plasma aldosterone concentration, and a significant reduction in serum sodium concentration. One patient from group 1 and 11 from group 2 developed renal impairment or severe hyponatremia after treatment, or both (chi 2 = 9.19; p less than 0.01). The development of these complications could not be predicted by clinical and laboratory data before treatment. Although the probability of survival after entry into the study was similar in patients from both groups, a multivariate analysis identified the development of hyponatremia or renal impairment, or both, following the first paracentesis treatment and the occurrence of other complications during the first hospitalization (
encephalopathy
, gastrointestinal bleeding, and severe infection) as being the only independent predictors of mortality. These results indicate that intravenous albumin infusion is important in avoiding renal and electrolyte complications and activation of endogenous vasoactive systems in cirrhotics with ascites who are treated with repeated large-volume paracentesis. The development of such complications may impair survival in these patients.
...
PMID:Randomized comparative study of therapeutic paracentesis with and without intravenous albumin in cirrhosis. 336 Feb 70
The patients with severe and 10 with accelerated or malignant hypertension were treated with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor captopril. Captopril acutely reduced blood pressure in all patients except two who had suppressed plasma
renin
activity. Four patients with
encephalopathy
showed immediate improvement after the first dose. Two patients could be withdrawn from nitroprusside infusion upon administration of captopril. Nineteen of 20 patients have remained on captopril for 12-32 months. Blood pressure is controlled in 18 and improved in two. Eleven required addition of diuretic and one addition of clonidine. The maximal antihypertensive effect of captopril with or without diuretics was evident after 3 months of continuous therapy and was associated with elevated plasma
renin
levels, normal aldosterone excretion and preservation of renal function. Captopril was well-tolerated, but produced occasional rash, loss of taste and proteinuria. We conclude that captopril, alone or in combination with other drugs, is effective in both the acute and long-term management of severe and malignant hypertension.
...
PMID:Acute and chronic treatment of severe and malignant hypertension with the oral angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor captopril. 616 12
Circulatory collapse and sudden death was defined retrospectively as one of the major critical problems among 23 respirator-dependent patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Six cases died from sudden cardiac arrest or anoxic
encephalopathy
following the circulatory collapse. In five among the six cases, sudden death or cardiac arrest occurred during sleep at night. Eight cases had had episodes of marked fluctuation of blood pressure before death, including paroxysmal elevation of blood pressure and heart rate, and successive sudden pressure fall without compensatory tachycardia. The spells of hypotension often occurred during sleep. In addition, the prospective study of diurnal variation of blood pressure, heart rate, plasma norepinephrine and plasma
renin
activity in nine respirator-dependent ALS patients showed continuous tachycardia and more remarkable nocturnal decrease of blood pressure compared with the control subjects. Plasma norepinephrine levels were constantly higher in the ALS patients particularly in a daytime. These indicate the continuous sympathetic hyperactivity in ALS. We discuss the cause of the circulatory collapse and sudden death in the respirator-dependent ALS patients in terms of the autonomic dysregulatory mechanism or the sympathetic hyperactivity.
...
PMID:Circulatory collapse and sudden death in respirator-dependent amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 793 21
Typical causes of renovascular hypertension include intramural atherosclerotic lesions of the main renal arteries or their branches and fibromuscular dysplasia of the renal arterial wall with luminal narrowing. We report a patient with new-onset, accelerated hypertension (blood pressure 220/140 mm Hg, status epilepticus, retinal hemorrhages) secondary to a dissection of the anterior division of the right renal artery that was accompanied by hyperreninemia, hyperaldosteronism, and hypokalemia. At presentation in the untreated state, unstimulated plasma
renin
activity and the serum aldosterone level were markedly elevated. Following right nephrectomy, blood pressure levels normalized without antihypertensive therapy, and plasma
renin
activity, serum aldosterone and potassium levels normalized. Histologic study of the right renal artery showed an isolated dissection of the anterior branch of the vessel between the muscularis and adventitia that created marked reduction in luminal diameter and renal ischemia. There was no evidence of any other vascular abnormalities, atherosclerosis, or fibromuscular dysplasia. These findings demonstrate that an isolated dissection of a branch of the renal artery may induce profound hyperreninemia and represents a rare, reversible etiology for accelerated hypertension associated with acute
encephalopathy
.
...
PMID:Accelerated hypertension with encephalopathy due to an isolated dissection of a renal artery branch vessel. 820 71
Ascites becomes refractory to medical treatment in nearly 10% of cirrhotic patients, who then require repeated large-volume paracentesis. In this prospective study we evaluated the use of transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) in 30 patients with refractory ascites. TIPS was successful in all and resulted in a 54% reduction in portacaval gradient (from 22.8 +/- 0.8 to 10.4 +/- 0.6 mm Hg). Ascites became easily controlled with diuretics in 26 patients following TIPS. Ascites recurrence associated with shunt stenosis was observed during follow-up in eight patients; revision could be undertaken in five of them and resulted in good control of ascites. In responders, a marked decrease in plasma aldosterone and
renin
activity, a reduction in serum creatinine, and a rise in urinary sodium excretion were observed. Creatinine and inulin clearances improved significantly; PAH clearance remained unchanged. However, new-onset or worsening hepatic encephalopathy was seen in 14 patients. Severe disabling chronic
encephalopathy
occurred in five patients; it could be reversed successfully by balloon occlusion of the shunt in three. The cumulative survival rate was 41 and 34% at 1 and 2 years, respectively. In summary, TIPS can control refractory ascites in a majority of patients but is associated with a high rate of chronic disabling HE. In addition, the survival rate is poor. Randomized trials are needed to evaluate the exact role of TIPS in the management of refractory ascites. It is unlikely to improve survival but can ameliorate quality of life in nontransplant candidates and be useful as a bridge to transplantation, in particular, to improve denutrition associated with longstanding tense ascites.
...
PMID:Treatment of refractory ascites using transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS): a caution. 900 33
Prolonged ingestion of liquorice is a well-known cause of hypertension due to hypermineralocorticoidism. We describe 2 cases of hypertension
encephalopathy
(in addition to the classical symptoms of hypertension, hypokalemia and suppression of the
renin
-aldosterone system) which resulted in pseudohyperaldosteronism syndrome due to the regular daily intake of low doses of liquorice. Glycyrrhizic acid, a component of liquorice, produces both hypermineralocorticism and the onset of
encephalopathy
through the inhibition of 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. Hypertension
encephalopathy
due to the daily intake of low doses of liquorice, however, has not been previously documented. It is proposed that some people could be susceptible to low doses of glycyrrhizic acid because of a 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency.
...
PMID:Low doses of liquorice can induce hypertension encephalopathy. 1077 16
A hypertensive emergency is a situation in which uncontrolled hypertension is associated with acute end-organ damage. Most patients presenting with hypertensive emergency have chronic hypertension, although the disorder can present in previously normotensive individuals, particularly when associated with pre-eclampsia or acute glomerulonephritis. The pathophysiological mechanisms causing acute hypertensive endothelial failure are complex and incompletely understood but probably involve disturbances of the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system, loss of endogenous vasodilator mechanisms, upregulation of proinflammatory mediators including vascular cell adhesion molecules, and release of local vasoconstrictors such as endothelin 1. Magnetic resonance imaging has demonstrated a characteristic hypertensive posterior leucoencephalopathy syndrome predominantly causing oedema of the white matter of the parietal and occipital lobes; this syndrome is potentially reversible with appropriate prompt treatment. Generally, the therapeutic approach is dictated by the particular presentation and end-organ complications. Parenteral therapy is generally preferred, and strategies include use of sodium nitroprusside, beta-blockers, labetelol, or calcium-channel antagonists, magnesium for pre-eclampsia and eclampsia; and short-term parenteral anticonvulsants for seizures associated with
encephalopathy
. Novel therapies include the peripheral dopamine-receptor agonist, fenoldapam, and may include endothelin-1 antagonists.
...
PMID:Hypertensive emergencies. 1105 14
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