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Results 651 - 690 of 690
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Saito I - - 1978
In an attempt to evaluate the role of renin-angiotensin system in the contols of blood pressure and aldosterone secretion in the patients with cirrhosis and asictes, 7 patients were infused of an antagonist of angiotensin II, Sar-1 Ile-8 angiotensin II, intravenously to inhibit the action of renin-angiotensin system and to ...
Tan S Y - - 1978
Urinary Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), a known indicator of renal production, was measured by specific radioimmunoassay in 111 normal volunteers, 85 patients with essential hypertension, 6 with renovascular hypertension, and 23 patients with primary aldosteronism. Women excreted less PGE2 than men in both normotensive and hypertensive groups. When compared to normals, ...
Nakane H - - 1978
The renal metabolism and handling of [1,2-3H]aldosterone ([3H]A) was studied using isolated perfused rat kidney under different perfusion conditions. The metabolite production rate (MPR) and the urinary excretion of [3H]A together with its radiometabolites (UV/P3H) were studied. Among the formed metabolites, no acid-labile conjugate of aldosterone (ALC) was detected. The ...
Saruta T - - 1978
Hypertension in 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency was studied by comparing it with hypertension in Cushing syndrome or that in primary aldosteronism. Furthermore, the role of endogenous increases of ACTH, deoxycorticosterone, and 18 alpha-hydroxy-deoxycorticosterone upon blood pressure was studied in rats by administerating metopirone. Hypertension in 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency was considered to ...
Cristoveanu A - - 1978
Starting from the interference between the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (RAA) system and cardiovascular pathology in arterial hypertension (AH) we have made a correlative study of the cardiovascular system and plasmatic aldosterone in normal and hypertensive subjects under conditions of stimulation (ACTH) and inhibition (propranolol). After administration of ACTH (one of the physiologic ...
Mimran A - - 1978
The effect of an angiotensin II antagonist (saralasin) on arterial pressure, plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC) was assessed in seven dialysis-resistant hypertensive patients. During saralasin infusion performed before hemodialysis, mean arterial pressure fell by 8 to 18.3% in six out of the seven subjects; arterial pressure ...
Gordon R D - - 1977
Home blood pressure measurements were used to assess the effect of methyclothiazide in young essential hypertensive and normotensive males. Although plasma volume was reduced by approximately 10 percent, blood pressure was not reduced in either group. The lack of effect on blood pressure was probably not attributable to dosage employed, ...
Iams S G - - 1977
Young normotensive, male and female rats which develop hypertension spontaneously as they mature were gonadectomized when they were 30 days old. With time, intact controls and sham-operated controls showed a progressive increase in their blood pressure, attaining systolic pressure levels of 180 to 200 mm Hg when they were 120 ...
Brouhard B H - - 1977
The renal medulla is not often considered an endocrine organ, but recent evidence suggests that this part of the kidney may have important antihypertensive, endocrine functions. The antihypertensive factor(s) of the medulla have been localized to the interstitial cells and characterized as neutral and acidic lipids. The acidic lipids, or ...
Lawton W J - - 1977
The relationship between urinary kallikrein, urinary aldosterone, and plasma renin activity (PRA) was studied in hypertensive patients and normal subjects. Kallikrein was measured by a radiochemical esterolytic assay. Nine white males with normal renin, mild essential hypertension (25 +/- 5 [SD] yr; blood pressure [BP] 143 +/- 7 / 95 ...
Waldinger T - - 1977
Although the unique sensitivity of blood pressure to hemorrhage after adrenalectomy can be overcome by adrenocortical hormones the specificity of this steroid effect is not known. Under pentobarbital anesthesia five groups of six adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were bled into a 0.9% saline-primed pressure-balanced reservoir. A mean arterial pressure of ...
Clunie G J - - 1977
The increased understanding of the mechanisms leading to production of renal hypertension, and in particular the recognition of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis as an integrated capacity-volume system for the control of arterial blood pressure, now allows a rational approach to the diagnosis and management of patients suffering from this disease. In ...
Terragno N A - - 1977
Hypertension may result from excessive activity of one or more components of the blood pressure-elevating system. These include the adrenergic nervous system, the renin-angiotensin axis, and mineralocorticoids (aldosterone), which potentiate each other, reinforcing their effects on renal hemodynamics and electrolyte transport and thereby affecting extracellular fluid volume, vascular tone, and ...
McCaa R E - - 1977
The aldosterone and arterial pressure response to long-term infusion of two angiotensin II inhibitory analogues, [Sar1,Ala8]angiotensin II and [Sar1,Ile8]angiotensin II, and the angiotensin I-converting enzyme inhibitor, SQ 20,881, was studied in conscious dogs during sodium deficiency. Plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC), plasma cortisol concentration (PCC), and plasma renin activity (PRA) were ...
Freeman R H - - 1977
Changes in plasma renin activity (PRA) and sodium balance were studied in hypertensive rabbits and dogs with one renal artery constricted and the other kidney intact (two-kidney hypertension); aldosterone secretion was measured also in the chronic hypertensive rabbits. Both PRA and aldosterone secretion were normal in some chronic hypertensive rabbits ...
Hollifield J W - - 1977
The blood pressure elevation of primary aldosteronism is caused by excessive production of the known mineralocorticoid, aldosterone. The blood pressure elevation of low-renin essential hypertension may also be caused by mineralocorticoid excess, but which which mineralocorticoid is responsible is uncertain. Normal levels of aldosterone, found in this disorder despite suppressed ...
Sen S - - 1977
A protein fraction has been isolated from normal human urine which, when injected over a period of 10-15 days in normal rats, produced sustained hypertension. On cessation of injection, the blood pressure fell to normal level within 7-10 days. The hypertension was accompanied by expansion of plasma volume, retention of ...
Terris J M - - 1976
1. Deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA) implantation (100 mg/kg) caused mean arterial pressure to rise in 5-10 days from control pressures of 100-115 mmHg to stable hypertensive values of 140-160 mmHg in approximately 1 month. In six of seven pigs elevations of mean arterial pressure were entirely the result of increased total ...
Kosunen K J - - 1976
Plasma renin activity (PRA), angiotensin II, and aldosterone levels, arterial blood pressure, and heart rate of six male students were investigated during and after heat stress in a sauna bath. Increased PRA, angiotensin II, and aldosterone levels were found both during and after sauna. The greatest mean increases in PRA ...
Trust P M - - 1976
1 The actions of labetalol 1.0-2.0 mg/kg intravenously on blood pressure, heart rate, plasma angiotensin II and aldosterone concentrations have been studied in 20 recumbent hypertensive patients. 2 In all subjects there was a reduction in systolic and diastolic blood pressures within 5 min of completion of injection. 3 Severe ...
Hollifield J W - - 1976
Aspirin has been shown to acutely block the natriuretic effect of spironolactone in the mineralocorticoid-treated normal rat, dog, and man. It has been suggested that aspirin is contraindicated in hypertensive patients receiving spironolactone. Five patients with low-renin essential hypertension and two with hypertension due to primary aldosteronism, all of whom ...
Vetter W - - 1976
To investigate the role of the renin angiotensin system in the pathogenesis of hypertension in Cushing's syndrome two patients with hypercorticism were infused with 20 mg saralasin (1-sar-8-ala-angiotensin II) over a period of 30 minutes under constant blood pressue control. In addition, one patient with primary aldosteronism, an established form ...
Biglieri E G - - 1976
Not all the varied clinical disorders in which aldosterone and the mineralocorticoid hormones are involved have been reviewed. Only those disorders in which the mineralocorticoid hormones and their regulatory factors are the principal cause of the biochemical and clinical abnormalities have been examined. These are many and varied. Appreciation of ...
Walker W G - - 1976
Plasma renin activity, arterial and venous angiotensin II (A II), plasma aldosterone, and sodium excretion were measured in a group of 101 patients with mild essential hypertension. For the total hour; arterial A II was 5.2 +/- 1.0 pg/ml; venous A II was 4.2 +/- 0.6 pg/ml; and plasma aldosterone ...
Keim H J - - 1976
The effect of triamterene, a potassium-retaining natriuretic and diuretic agent, on arterial blood pressure was studied in 31 patients with essential hypertension; there were seven patients with low plasma renin activity and 24 patients with normal plasma renin activity. Triamterene exhibited mild antihypertensive action, somewhat more pronounced in the low-renin ...
Drayer J I - - 1976
The blood pressure response to propranolol treatment was analyzed retrospectively in 187 patients with benign essential hypertension. In most patients (102 patients, 54 per cent) systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure was decreased by more than 10 per cent (responders). No significant change in blood pressure occurred in 35 per cent ...
Wilkins G E - - 1976
A 51-year-old woman with a 20-year history of severe hypertension and target organ damage had nondiuretic hypokalemia, kaluresis, suppressed plasma renin activity and elevated urinary excretion of aldosterone. Renal arteriography demonstrated unilateral renal artery stenosis secondary to fibromuscular hyperplasia. Blood pressure responded only minimally to almost all antihypertensive agents. Spironolactone, ...
Matsuki A - - 1976
In a 31-year old woman with a six year history of headache and hypertension a diagnosis of primary aldosteronism was made on the basis of urine samples containing 45 mug/day of aldosterone. The preoperative systemic blood pressure was 240 mm Hg systolic and 120 mm Hg diastolic. The serum potassium ...
Brown J J - - 1976
The effect of saralasin in lowering blood pressure and plasma aldosterone concentration in normal subjects, both sodium-replete and sodium-deplete, and in patients with various forms of hypertension, is closely related to the basal plasma angiotensin II concentration. These findings confirm and extend earlier studies of angiotensin II/arterial pressure and angiotensin ...
Guyton A C - - 1976
In this chapter we have emphasized especially the intrinsic controls of the circulation, such as the autoregulation mechanism for control of local blood flow, automatic control of cardiac output, long-term control of arterial pressure, long-term control of blood volume, and automatic distribution of fluids between the circulation and the interstitial ...
Drayer J I - - 1975
The effects of chlorthalidone, spironolactone and propranolol in reducing blood pressure were compared in the same 11 normoreninemic hypertensive patients. All three drugs decreased the blood pressure significantly and no agent had a superior blood pressure-lowering effect. The blood pressure did not normalize. The data suggest that no one variable--volume ...
Abe K - - 1975
The effects of prostaglandin E1 on fluid and sodium excretion, creatinine clearance and renin release were examined in 26 hypertensive patients including 9 cases of essential hypertension, 10 of renovascular hypertension and 7 of primary aldosteronism. When prostaglandin was infused intravenously in a total dose of 120 mug in 60 ...
Angell-James J E - - 1975
1. Hypertension was produced in rabbits by unilateral renal encapsulation combined with contralateral nephrectomy or by the administration of calciferol and calcium lactate. 2. Weighed post mortem, the adrenal glands from the two hypertensive groups were significantly heavier than those from normotensive animals of similar weight. There was a direct ...
Ferriss J B - - 1975
Fifty patients with hypertension, aldosterone excess, and low plasma renin concentration underwent adrenal surgery. There was a highly significant fall in mean systolic and diastolic pressures after the operation. The mean postoperative diastolic pressure fell to strictly normal levels, however, in only 19 out of 38 patients from whom an ...
Lockett M F - - 1970
1. Previous work has demonstrated that the cat heart secretes a substance which resembles the 18-monoacetate of D-aldosterone (18 MA) in chromatographic properties and biological actions. This substance (HS) releases ADH from the neurohypophysis and, in higher concentration, causes renal retention of salt and water. HS is extracted from blood, ...
Lottermoser K
Numerous studies have provided insight into the possible role of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) in the pathophysiology of atherosclerotic vascular disease and its thromboembolic complications. This article reviews mechanisms of the RAAS reaching beyond blood pressure control and extracellular fluid volume regulation which may contribute to the development of cardiovascular ...
Greven, Wendela L.
<b>Background.</b> Symptoms of mountain sickness are due to hypoxia of the brain. The pathogenesis is complex, but acid–base disturbances certainly play a role. When arterial oxygen levels drop, hyperventilation is induced, resulting in a respiratory alkalosis. However, this alkalosis inhibits the hyperventilation necessary for maintaining oxygen pressure. We present a ...
Davis W W - - 1969
The pressor octapeptide, angiotensin II, can stimulate the production of aldosterone by the adrenal cortex. The present results show that in the dog a high-sodium diet can eliminate the steroidogenic action of angiotensin II, which is thus dissociated from the pressor action which remains. Angiotensin II was infused intravenously for ...
Ilett K F - - 1968
1. A steroid-like compound has been isolated from cat heart muscle by thin-layer chromatography.2. This compound has been characterized by measurement of its R(F) values in two solvent systems.3. No similar substance could be detected in the 1 hr venous outputs of cat adrenals.4. It could not be detected in ...
DAVIS H A - - 1952
Tumors of the adrenal glands produce hormones which cause a variety of symptoms and signs including high blood pressure, excessive growth of hair on the body and precocious sexual development. By recently developed tests, it has been possible to differentiate high blood pressure due to these tumors from hypertension due ...
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