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1.
COVID-19: Are Non-Communicable Diseases Risk Factors for Its Severity?
Bello, B, Useh, U
American journal of health promotion : AJHP. 2021;(5):720-729
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To identify and describe the mechanisms of lifestyle characteristics-obesity, DM, hypertension and physical inactivity-that may lead to the severity of illness among individuals with COVID-19. DATA SOURCE A scoping review was conducted by searching electronic databases of PubMed and Scopus from December 2019 to August 2020. INCLUSION/EXCLUSION CRITERIA inclusion criteria were studies that explicitly describe the mechanism of COVID-19 in relationship with either hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM), obesity and/or physical inactivity. Studies of epidemiological background, descriptive surveys and interventional studies were excluded. DATA EXTRACTION study characteristics were tabulated according to purpose, type of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), the hypothesis on the mechanism of infestation (MOI) and conclusion. DATA SYNTHESIS NCDs were categorized according to type and hypothesis on mechanisms of infestation. The interplay between COVID-19, type of NCDs and MOI leading to the severity of the disease was appraised. RESULTS Twenty-four (24) studies were identified from 357 unique records. Eight studies postulated the mechanism of infestation and interaction between COVID 19 illness severity and Obesity, while 7 studies described COVID-19 and DM. Five studies highlighted the interaction between COVID-19 and hypertension with 4 studies showing how physical activity restriction suppresses immunity. CONCLUSION The current review, identified and explicitly described the mechanisms of the lifestyle characteristics that may increase the severity of illness among people with COVID-19.
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2.
ACE inhibitor-mediated angioedema.
Montinaro, V, Cicardi, M
International immunopharmacology. 2020;:106081
Abstract
Angioedema (AE) occurring during ACE inhibitor therapy (ACEi-AE) is a rare complication involving between 0.1 and 0.7% of treated patients. AE can also complicate other therapeutic regimens that block the renin-angiotensin aldosterone system. Other drugs, such as immune suppressors, some type of antidiabetics or calcium antagonists, can increase the likelihood of ACEi-AE when associated to ACEi. There is a clear ethnic predisposition, since African-Americans or Hispanics show a higher prevalence of this condition compared to Caucasians. At least in African-Americans the genetic predisposition accounts for a general higher prevalence of AE, independently from the cause. People that experience ACEi-AE may have some recurrence when they are switched to an angiotensin-receptor blocker (ARB); however, epidemiological studies on large cohorts have shown that angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) do not increase the likelihood of AE compared to other antihypertensives. Clinical manifestations consist of edema of face, lips, tongue, uvula and upper airways, requiring intubation or tracheotomy in severe cases. Attacks last for 48-72 h and require hospital admission in most cases. Intestinal involvement with sub-occlusive symptoms has also been reported. The pathogenesis of ACEi-AE depends mainly on a reduced catabolism and accumulation of bradykinin, which is normally metabolized by ACE. Genetic studies have shown that some single nucleotide polymorphisms at genes encoding relevant molecules for bradykinin metabolism and action may be involved in ACEi-AE, giving a basis for the ethnic predisposition. Treatment of ACEi-AE is still a matter of debate. Corticosteroids and antihistamines do not show efficacy. Some therapeutic attempts have shown some efficacy for fresh frozen plasma or C1 inhibitor concentrate infusion. Interventional studies with the specific bradykinin receptor antagonist icatibant have shown conflicting results; there might be a different ethnic predisposition to icatibant efficacy which has been proven in caucasian but not in black patients.
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3.
Impact of radon and combinatory radon/carbon dioxide spa on pain and hypertension: Results from the explorative RAD-ON01 study.
Rühle, PF, Klein, G, Rung, T, Tiep Phan, H, Fournier, C, Fietkau, R, Gaipl, US, Frey, B
Modern rheumatology. 2019;(1):165-172
Abstract
OBJECTIVES Therapies with low doses of radon have beneficial effects on patients suffering from chronic painful degenerative and inflammatory diseases. We already showed that this is accompanied by systemic immune modulations. We here focus on pain-reducing effects of very low doses of radon by adding carbon dioxide water and its impact on heart rate variability (HRV), blood pressure and free radicals. METHODS 97 of 103 patients receiving radon spa (1.200 Bq/l at 34 °C or 600 Bq/l, 1 g/l CO2 at 34 °C) were monitored before and at three different time points after therapy. Individual pain perception was analyzed and the capability to process radicals. At each time point, the hypertensive patients (n = 46) were examined over 24 h for blood pressure and HRV. RESULTS Long-term pain reduction was observed in the majority of patients. A modulation of superoxide dismutase was identified, presumably representing a priming effect for lowering radiation stress. Further, lowering of blood pressure, especially in those patients who additionally received carbon dioxide, was seen. Radon did in particular impact on HRV implying lasting relaxation effects. CONCLUSION Radon/carbon dioxide spa efficiently reduces pain. In particular, patients simultaneously suffering from painful and cardiovascular diseases should be treated by combination of radon and CO2.
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4.
[Development of therapeutic vaccine for life style-related diseases].
Nakagami, H
Nihon yakurigaku zasshi. Folia pharmacologica Japonica. 2019;(5):270-274
Abstract
In the 18th century, Edward Jenner proposed the vaccine for smallpox as a first vaccine therapy based on the legend that a vaccinia prevents the infection with smallpox. Recently, the therapeutic target of vaccine will expand from infectious diseases to various diseases, such as amyloid β or tau vaccine for Alzheimer's disease. We are now going to develop a therapeutic vaccine to lifestyle-related diseases (i.e. high blood pressure), and aim to realize a novel therapy which will be injected once or twice per year from a daily medication. For this purpose, the appropriate choice of an antigen, carrier and adjuvants should be required to activate hormonal immunity by the vaccine, leading to efficient antibody production without toxicity, because the therapeutic target of our vaccine is an endogenous protein (i.e. hormone). The clinical advantage of this therapeutic vaccine is to improve the medical adherence and drug management because the multiple drug users are increased in particular old patients, so called polypharmacy. If the vaccine will take place of a part of medicine in future, it may give us a novel therapeutic option with several social benefits.
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5.
Hypertension linked to allostatic load: from psychosocial stress to inflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction.
Mocayar Marón, FJ, Ferder, L, Saraví, FD, Manucha, W
Stress (Amsterdam, Netherlands). 2019;(2):169-181
Abstract
Although a large number of available treatments and strategies, the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases continues to grow worldwide. Emerging evidence supports the notion of counteracting stress as a critical component of a comprehensive therapeutic strategy for cardiovascular disease. Indeed, an unhealthy lifestyle is a burden to biological variables such as plasma glucose, lipid profile, and blood pressure control. Recent findings identify allostatic load as a new paradigm for an integrated understanding of the importance of psychosocial stress and its impact on the development and maintenance of cardiovascular disease. Allostasis complement homeostasis and integrates behavioral and physiological mechanisms by which genes, early experiences, environment, lifestyle, diet, sleep, and physical exercise can modulate and adapt biological responses at the cellular level. For example, variability is a physiological characteristic of blood pressure necessary for survival and the allostatic load in hypertension can contribute to its related cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Therefore, the current review will focus on the mechanisms that link hypertension to allostatic load, which includes psychosocial stress, inflammation, and mitochondrial dysfunction. We will describe and discuss new insights on neuroendocrine-immune effects linked to allostatic load and its impact on the cellular and molecular responses; the links between allostatic load, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction; the epidemiological evidence supporting the pathophysiological origins of hypertension; and the biological embedding of allostatic load and hypertension with an emphasis on mitochondrial dysfunction.
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6.
Renal effects of cytokines in hypertension.
Wen, Y, Crowley, SD
Current opinion in nephrology and hypertension. 2018;(2):70-76
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Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW Inflammatory cytokines contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension through effects on renal blood flow and sodium handling. This review will update recent advances that explore the renal actions of immune cells and cytokines in the pathogenesis of hypertension. RECENT FINDINGS Populations of cells from both the innate and adaptive immune systems contribute to hypertension by modulating functions of the vasculature and epithelial cells in the kidney. Macrophages and T lymphocytes can directly regulate the hypertensive response and consequent target organ damage. Dendritic cells and B lymphocytes can alter blood pressure (BP) indirectly by facilitating T-cell activation. Proinflammatory cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin 17, interleukin 1, and interferon-γ augment BP and/or renal injury when produced by T helper 1 cells, T helper 17 cells, and macrophages. In contrast, interleukin 10 improves vascular and renal functions in preclinical hypertension studies. The effects of transforming growth factor-β are complex because of its profibrotic and immunosuppressive functions that also depend on the localization and concentration of this pleiotropic cytokine. SUMMARY Preclinical studies point to a key role for cytokines in hypertension via their actions in the kidney. Consistent with this notion, anti-inflammatory therapies can attenuate BP elevation in human patients with rheumatologic disease. Conversely, impaired natriuresis may further polarize both T lymphocytes and macrophages toward a proinflammatory state, in a pathogenic, feed-forward loop of immune activation and BP elevation. Understanding the precise renal actions of cytokines in hypertension will be necessary to inhibit cytokine-dependent hypertensive responses while preserving systemic immunity and tumor surveillance.
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[Clinical study on effect of qingxuan tiaoya recipe in treating menopausal women with hypertension].
Tao, LL, Ma, XC, Chen, KJ
Zhongguo Zhong xi yi jie he za zhi Zhongguo Zhongxiyi jiehe zazhi = Chinese journal of integrated traditional and Western medicine. 2009;(8):680-4
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To investigate the effect and mechanism of Qingxuan Tiaoya Recipe (QXTYR) on depressing blood pressure in menopausal women with hypertension. METHODS Patients were randomly assigned to two groups, the 44 patients in the test group were administered with perindopril tablet and QXTYR granule, while the 43 in the control group were administered with the same program, but a simulator of QXTYR was used to replace for the real one. The treatment course for them all was 2 months. Before and after treatment, the ambulatory blood pressure (ABMP), heart rate, related clinical symptoms, blood lipids, serum estradiol (E2), high-sensitivity C-reactive protein ( Hs-CRP), homocysteine (HCY) and angiotensin II (Ang II) were measured. RESULTS The treatment in the test group showed an effect better than that in the control group in terms of reducing blood pressure variability and night-time blood pressure decrease rate (P <0.05), with the total effective rate and markedly effective rate in lowering blood pressure superior to the control group (P<0.05), alleviating symptoms as headache, soreness and weakness of the waist and knees, and insomnia (P <0.05), and decreasing levels of heart rate, total cholesterol (TC), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), Hs-CRP and Ang II (P <0.05), The plasma level of endogenous E2 was elevated after treatment in the test group (P< 0.05), but showed no statistical difference in the control group. CONCLUSIONS QXTYR shows favorable effect in depressing blood pressure of menopausal women with hypertension, it can reduce blood pressure variability, improve the symptoms of the menopause syndrome, blood lipid metabolism and plasma levels of Hs-CRP, E2, and Ang II in patients, suggesting that its mechanism may be related to the functional regulation of sympathetic-vagus nerve and neuro-endocrine-immune system, and also the inhibition on the circulatory renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system activity.
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The potential anti-inflammatory benefits of improving physical fitness in hypertension.
Edwards, KM, Ziegler, MG, Mills, PJ
Journal of hypertension. 2007;(8):1533-42
Abstract
Hypertension is associated with an increased risk of stroke and atherosclerosis. In addition to elevated blood pressure, hypertension is characterized by neuroendocrine and immune activation, including elevated levels of C-reactive protein, inflammatory cytokines, and soluble adhesion molecules, which are predictive of morbidity and mortality outcomes. Pharmacological treatment for hypertension reduces blood pressure, but has limited effectiveness in reducing the accompanying inflammation and its associated morbidity and mortality. Exercise and diet interventions regularly show reductions in blood pressure in hypertensive individuals. Similar interventions in other populations show reductions in many inflammatory markers, but these effects have not been routinely examined in hypertensive individuals. The mechanisms through which exercise might exert an anti-inflammatory action include the sympathetic nervous system, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, as well as direct effects of blood pressure. Here, exercise is promoted as a potentially effective treatment for both the elevated blood pressure and chronic inflammation found in hypertension.
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Effect of interleukin 8 and ICAM-1 on calcium-dependent outflow of K+ in erythrocytes from subjects with essential hypertension.
Buemi, M, Marino, D, Floccari, F, Ruello, A, Nostro, L, Aloisi, C, Marino, MT, Di Pasquale, G, Corica, F, Frisina, N
Current medical research and opinion. 2004;(1):19-24
Abstract
INTRODUCTION The pathogenic mechanisms underlying the increase in peripheral resistance and the contraction of smooth muscular fibre cells in essential hypertension are not yet clearly understood. However, it is now known that immune system activation plays a role in the pathogenesis of some forms of arterial hypertension, and recent data show that the Ca2+ influx in some cells (i.e. red blood cells, leukocytes, platelets, smooth muscular fibre cells) is increased in subjects with essential hypertension, thus revealing a possible alteration in cellular membrane. The end-points of this study were therefore to ascertain whether red blood cells used as a cellular membrane model have a greater Ca2+ dependent K+ flow (Gardos effect) in hypertensive patients than in normotensive controls, to point out a different regulation of ionic channels, and whether IL-8 and the adhesion molecule ICAM-1 influence the membranous outflow. MATERIAL AND METHODS The study was conducted on 87 Caucasian subjects. Of these, 50 (25 men, 25 women; mean age 43 +/- 3 years, mean body mass index (BMI) 27 +/- 0.5 and 22.3 +/- 0.3 kg/m(2), respectively) had mild-to-moderate hypertension (mean arterial blood pressure 120 +/- 8 mmHg ). The other 37 (18 men, 19 women; mean age 39 +/- 3 years; BMI 23.8 +/- 0.5 kg/m(2) and 22.8 +/- 0.5 kg/m(2), respectively were normotensive healthy volunteers (mean arterial blood pressure 89 +/- 2 mmHg). All the patients and subjects were untreated for at least 4 weeks before blood sampling. RESULTS Ca2+-dependent K+ outflow was found to be greater in samples from patients with essential hypertension than in those from normotensive controls. lL-8 and ICAM-1 significantly enhanced the Ca2+-dependent K+ outflow in red blood cells from hypertensive subjects but had an inhibitory effect on cells from controls. In the experimental model, the presence of TMB-8, a membrane calcium antagonist, significantly reduced the Ca2+-dependent K+ efflux. CONCLUSION Vasoconstriction in subjects with essential hypertension may therefore depend on a different regulation of ionic flow that probably supports an increased Ca2+ inflow in smooth muscle fibre cells. Under certain pathological conditions, some immune system components (i.e. interleukins, adhesion molecules) may directly enhance membrane permeability to Ca2+, thus inducing vasoconstriction in the smooth muscle cells.
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10.
Olive oil as a functional food: epidemiology and nutritional approaches.
Stark, AH, Madar, Z
Nutrition reviews. 2002;(6):170-6
Abstract
Olive oil is an integral ingredient of the Mediterranean diet and accumulating evidence suggests that it may have health benefits that include reduction of risk factors of coronary heart disease, prevention of several varieties of cancers, and modification of immune and inflammatory responses. Olive oil appears to be an example of a functional food, with varied components that may contribute to its overall therapeutic characteristics. Olive oil is known for its high levels of monounsaturated fatty acids and is also a good source of phytochemicals including polyphenolic compounds, squalene, and alpha-tocopherol.