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Title: [New data on hormone-dependent hypertension and their significance for the practice]. Author: Horký K, Petrásek J, Marek J. Journal: Cas Lek Cesk; 1973 Jan 05; 112(1):3-11. PubMed ID: 4345613. Abstract: Among the forms of endocrine hypertension, attention has recently been turned, apart from pheochromocytoma, to hypertensions caused by overproduction of mineralocorticoids. In this category are included, in addition to the classic Conn syndrome, aldosteronism associated with bilateral adrenal hypertrophy, dexamethasone-suppressible aldosteronism, and overproduction of mineralocorticoids (other than aldosterone) in the case of defects in the steroidogenesis enzyme system. In these cases, mineralocorticoid overproduction is accompanied by a low level of renin, by hypokalemic alkalosis. Secondary hyperaldosteronism, due to the stimulation of aldosterone secretion by increased activity of the renin-angiotension system, occurs during the malignant phase and in cases of renovascular hypertension. Estrogens, in cyclically secreted physiological quantities, have rather a protective effect on the origination of hypertension. At high dosages (as in contraceptives), estrogens can induce or aggravate hypertension in susceptible women by their effect on the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, notably by increasing the renin substrate. In the case of essential hypertension, deviations were found in the functioning of catecholamine storage granules in the sympathetic nerve endings. The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system functions as an accelerating factor only in the advanced phase of essential hypertension, and the possibility of its participation in development of malignancy cannot be eliminated. A special group is comprised of essential hypertension with renin suppression, which is associated with a relatively high level of urinary excretion of dopamine as compared with noradrenalin. In renovascular hypertension, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system most often functions as an etiopathogenetic factor at the onset of the disease. In advanced stages, increased blood pressure levels must be considered to be attributable to other factors. Blood pressure regulati on and idiopathogenesis in hypertension cases are complex processes induced by the interaction of several different hemodynamic, nervous, and humoral factors. The study of humoral factors contributes to etiopathogenetic understanding and to the differential diagnosis of the various kinds of hypertension.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]