Sentences with phrase «between hypertension»

Topics will include diagnosis of hyperthyroidism in presence of concurrent illness, diagnosis and management of treatment associated hypothyroidism, association between hypertension and hyperthyroidism, and nutritional management of feline hyperthyroidism.
The most common cause of secondary hypertension in cats is chronic kidney disease but other diseases can also predispose its development and there is a relationship between hypertension and hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid gland) in cats too.
«However, what we really need is a trial that specifically addresses the link between hypertension and cognition.
The connection between hypertension and heart disease, he noted, is somewhat different among blacks and whites.
It is worth noting that the largest cost — effect in our simulation involves the association between hypertension and breastfeeding.
The difference between hypertension in pregnancy and pre-E is that [1] in HIP, the woman often has a history of hypertension when not pregnant while in pre-E, onset is extremely rare before the 28th week, and never before 20 weeks, [2] her blood pressure remains consistently high for weeks after delivery, but in pre-E it usually goes back to normal within a short time after delivery, and there isn't any protein in the urine.
The lay public doesn't really understand the difference between hypertension in pregnancy [HIP] and pre-eclampsia, but both are dangerous.

Not exact matches

In addition, a logo was launched for the World Salt Awareness Week which has been celebrated yearly with a different theme, eg on salt and stroke prevention (2012), salt consumption when eating out - of - home (2015) and salt hidden in processed food as well as the link between salt and hypertension (2016).
RESULTS: If observed associations between breastfeeding duration and maternal health are causal, we estimate that current breastfeeding rates result in 4,981 excess cases of breast cancer, 53,847 cases of hypertension, and 13,946 cases of myocardial infarction compared with a cohort of 1.88 million U.S. women who optimally breastfed.
To account for potential overlap among hypertension, diabetes, and MI, we modeled transitions over time between comorbid disease states using a first - order Markov process.
Our Monte Carlo simulations indicate that if observed associations between lactation and maternal health are causal, optimal breastfeeding1, 2 could significantly reduce rates of breast cancer, hypertension, and MI for U.S. women.
Breastfeeding is also associated with maternal health outcomes.5 Shorter duration of lactation is associated with increased maternal breast cancer, 6 ovarian cancer, 7,8 hypertension, 9 — 11 type 2 diabetes mellitus, 9,12 and myocardial infarction (MI).9, 13 We estimate the burden of maternal disease that might be averted if more mothers were able to adhere to infant feeding recommendations, assuming a causal association between breastfeeding and maternal health.
Our source data on this relationship18 considers the potential effect of unobserved confounding and argues that such confounding is unlikely to explain the adjusted association between breastfeeding and hypertension.
Of note, our models may underestimate the true maternal costs of suboptimal breastfeeding; we modeled the effects of lactation on only five maternal health conditions despite data linking lactation with other maternal health outcomes.46 In addition, women in our model could not develop type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, or MI before age 35 years, although these conditions are becoming increasingly prevalent among young adults.47 Although some studies have found an association between lactation and rates of postmenopausal diabetes22, 23 and cardiovascular disease, 10 we conservatively limited the duration of lactation's effect on both diabetes and MI.
Some studies suggest that there's a connection between severe nutritional deficiencies in calcium and antioxidants as well as too much salt is connected with preeclampsia and hypertension.
Overall, there was little evidence of association between ever - breastfeeding and incident hypertension (Odds ratio 0.97, 95 % CI: 0.92, 1.02).
We found a direct association between never or curtailed lactation and incident hypertension in a large, prospective cohort of parous women.
We found that adjustment for ever - history of preeclampsia slightly attenuated associations between lactation duration and incident hypertension.
Such confounding is a potential limitation of the 3 prior studies that have measured the association between lactation and hypertension.
An epidemiological study of PFOA effects in West Virginia communties found a «probable link» between exposure to the chemical and the following illnesses: diagnosed high cholestorol, ulcerative colitis, thyroid disease, testicular cancer, kidney cancer, and pregnancy - induced hypertension.
Intersalt, a large study published in 1988, compared sodium intake with blood pressure in subjects from 52 international research centers and found no relationship between sodium intake and the prevalence of hypertension.
of the University of California, Irvine and colleagues investigated the relationship between risk of dementia, age of the onset of hypertension, and blood pressure measurements in the oldest old, and reported the results at AAIC 2014.
For the study, investigators tested and followed 412 adults, including 234 women, ranging in age from 23 to 76 years and with a systolic blood pressure of 120 - 159 mm Hg and a diastolic blood pressure between 80 - 95 mm Hg (i.e., prehypertension or stage 1 hypertension).
Researchers found no link between PTSD and well - documented heart disease risk factors such as a history of hypertension, diabetes or obesity, suggesting that the disease may be due to physiologic changes, not lifestyle factors.
After factors such as diet, education, tobacco use, alcohol consumption, and hypertension were statistically controlled to isolate the effect of exercise, the team found a clear correlation between greater fitness and greater brain - tissue density.
Researchers analyzed wastewater in Athens between 2010 and 2014 and found alarming jumps in levels of ulcer and hypertension medications, along with antipsychotics, antidepressants, and other psychoactive drugs.
In a new study, the researchers have identified another clear connection between the use of hypertension medicine and the chance of developing skin cancer.
Recently published research from The University of Southern Denmark and the Danish Cancer Society shows a connection between one of the most common medications for hypertension and skin cancer.
In the study, published online in CHEST, researchers analyzed death rates from the National Vital Statistics System and data from the National Hospital Discharge Survey between 2001 and 2010 to analyze trends in hospitalizations and death rates related to pulmonary hypertension.
As it is well known that hypertension is a complex, multifactorial, quantitative trait under a polygenic control, 30 % to 50 % of the variation in blood pressure between individuals is attributed to genetic factors, and the genes responsible for susceptibility and blood pressure variation are mostly unknown.
Pulmonary hypertension is rare — with only about 15 to 50 cases per million people — but the total number of deaths attributed to the disease increased by more than 40 percent in the U.S. between 1980 and 2002, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Mads E. Jørgensen, M.B., of Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and coauthors examined in - hospital records and out - of - hospital pharmacotherapy use in Danish patients with uncomplicated hypertension treated with at least two antihypertensive drugs (β - blockers, thiazides, calcium antagonists or renin - angiotensin system [RAS] inhibitors) undergoing noncardiac surgery between 2005 and 2011.
But after adjustment for other stroke risk factors, there was no association between the level of the neighborhood advantage and stroke risk, suggesting that those living in more disadvantaged neighborhoods are more likely to develop risk factors including hypertension, diabetes and smoking.
Since the chemicals were discovered, researchers have found a relationship between PCB concentrations in blood and decreased cognitive and thyroid function, and elevated risk of diabetes, cardiovascular disease and hypertension among the Mohawk Nation, said David Carpenter, director of the Institute for Health and the Environment at the University at Albany.
· there is limited evidence addressing the association between low sodium intake and health outcomes in population subgroups (i.e., those with diabetes, kidney disease, heart disease, hypertension or borderline hypertension; those 51 years of age and older; and African Americans).
By contrast, in the EHDIC sample, a larger proportion of African American men than white men had health insurance, and there were no differences between African American and white men with respect to being physically inactive, being a current smoker, being a current drinker, being obese or reporting fair / poor health, hypertension, diabetes or heart disease.
Bhatt commented on the value of the study's cooperation between interventional and non-interventional blood pressure doctors, which demonstrated that a «good proportion» of patients with resistant hypertension in this study responded to expert medical therapy.
The researchers found that the association between DDT and high blood pressure held after accounting for some factors known to raise the risk of hypertension, including age, race, body mass and diabetes status.
Indeed, research doesn't always support the notion that salt causes high blood pressure: A large, multicenter study known as INTERSALT compared urinary sodium levels — an accurate indicator of prior sodium consumption — with hypertension in more than 10,000 people in 1988 and found no statistically significant association between them.
«To my knowledge,» noted Kim, «there has been no detailed research that has analyzed the relationship between drinking and hypertension while considering individual responses to alcohol.»
A study of the relationship between drinking and these two conditions has found that drinking - related hypertension has a lower threshold value and higher risk in flushers than in non-flushers.
Reported in the Dec. 12, 2013, issue of the journal Hypertension, this is the first study of an African - American population to document an association between childhood family living arrangements and blood pressure.
In August of this year, Kaiser Permanente researchers published findings showing that Kaiser Permanente Northern California had nearly doubled the rate of blood pressure control among adult members with diagnosed hypertension between 2001 and 2009, going from 43.6 percent in 2001 to 80.4 percent in 2009.
Another interesting finding from this study was the correlation between twin pregnancies, cesarean delivery, gestational hypertension and a PPCM diagnosis.
Andersson's research is based on the well - known fact that vessel dysfunction is associated with oxidative stress, and that certain «molecular messengers» between cells promote inflammation and are a risk factor for atherosclerosis and hypertension.
August 16, 2016 Study suggests ways to block hypertension in those with sleep apnea Obstructive sleep apnea — a disorder that affects nearly one out of four people between the ages of 30 and 70 — is a common cause of high blood pressure.
As the form of hypertension can differ between strains, researchers need to not only be aware of the form of hypertension that the individual strain exhibits but also the impact that a particular type of diet may have on the phenotypic response.
Women show a closer association between educational level and hypertension or diabetes mellitus than males: a secondary analysis from the Austrian HIS
In the Nurses» Health study, a close link between less than 5 hours of sleep and incidence of hypertension was found in younger women (114), and sleep deprivation also exerted more detrimental cardiovascular effects among women in the Whitehall II cohort.
BETHESDA, Md. (June 18, 2012)-- The latest conference to be sponsored by the American Physiological Society (APS) focuses on the relationship between certain molecular mechanisms that are involved in the development of hypertension, heart failure, and diabetes.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z