Publications by authors named "CHANNICK B"

Purpose: To determine if bone mineral density is decreased in postmenopausal women treated with 1-thyroxine, and, if any decrease is observed, whether it is related to overtreatment with thyroid hormone, to deficiency of calcitonin, or to other factors.

Patients And Methods: The study consisted of 19 postmenopausal women between 50 and 75 years of age treated with 1-thyroxine for 5 years or longer, and 19 matching control subjects with no thyroid disease. Bone mineral density of the spine and hip was measured by dual-photon absorptiometry.

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Thirty emergency-room patients, 15 men and 15 women, from 27 to 64 years old with diastolic blood pressures (DBP) greater than 115 mm Hg, were admitted to an open-label, oral loading trial of clonidine. At this time, their supine mean arterial pressures (MAP) averaged 150 +/- 2 mm Hg. An initial clonidine dose of 0.

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Mitral valve prolapse is more prevalent in patients with autoimmune diffuse toxic goiter, suggesting a possible etiologic association. The prevalence of mitral valve prolapse was determined in 75 patients with chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, another autoimmune thyroid disorder, and in 50 healthy control subjects. Mitral valve prolapse was found in 31 of 75 (41%) patients with chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis and in 4 of 50 (8%) controls (odds ratio, 8.

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This long-term follow-up study of 83 patients with Grave's disease who were treated by subtotal thyroidectomy reemphasizes the fact that postoperative hypothyroidism occurs primarily in the first postoperative year (27 percent of the study patients). In addition, there was no evidence of progressive increase in the incidence of hypothyroidism in subsequent years. Patients treated with radioactive iodine have a reported incidence of hypothyroidism of 70 percent 10 years postoperatively [4].

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We have studied the relationship between plasma renin activity (PRA) and the salivary sodium-potassium (Na-K) ratio, an index of mineralocorticoid effect, in 223 patients with essential hypertension. In 24 white patients with low PRA, the median Na-K ratio was 0.74, which was significantly lower than the ratio of 1.

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We have studied the relationship between plasma renin activity (PRA) and the salivary Na:K ratio, an index of mineralocorticoid effect, in 223 patients with essential hypertension. In 24 white patients with low PRA the median Na:K ratio was 0.74, which was significantly lower than the ratio of 1.

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Two fixed-combination drugs commonly used in the step 2 treatment of hypertension, chlorthalidone plus reserpine and hydrochlorothiazide plus methyldopa, were compared in an evaluation of efficacy and adverse reactions. Ninety-one percent of the chlorthalidone-reserpine group achieved diastolic blood pressures of 90 mmHg or lower compared with 55% of the hydrochlorothiazide-methyldopa group. The incidence of adverse reactions in the chlorthalidone-reserpine group was 31% compared with an incidence of 64% in the hydrochlorothiazide-methyldopa group.

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We measured serum immunoglobulins in 52 persons whose blood pressure was higher than 140/90 mm Hg, and 52 normotensive controls matched for age, sex and race. All were selected from a population of actively employed persons undergoing a routine health evaluation. Contrary to previous reports, the hypertensive subjects did not have higher levels of IgG or IgA than the controls.

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The plasma aldosterone response to infused angiotensin II was determined in normal controls and in patients with normal renin and with low renin essential hypertension. The patients with low renin essential hypertension showed an enhanced plasma aldosterone response when compared to the other two groups. This finding may explain why plasma aldosterone levels remain within normal limits in the face of suppressed plasma renin and angiotensin II concentrations in low renin essential hypertension.

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The etiology of low renin essential hypertension (LREH) has not been established with certainty, but mineralocorticoid excess has been implicated frequently in its pathogenesis. The finding of several investigators of a normal exchangeable sodium space and extracellular fluid volume, however, does not support this hypothesis. To evaluate the possible role of sodium and water retention in LREH, the pressor response to infused angiotensin II (A II) was determined and compared to that of normal subjects and that of subjects with normal renin essential hypertension (NREH).

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Thirty patients with hyperthyroidism were were prepared for subtotal thyroidectomy with propranolol. Rapid control of thyrotoxic symptoms occurred in all, and there were no undesirable drug reactions. There were no instances of post-operative thyroid storm.

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Two hundred one patients with essential hypertension, who had studies of their renin-aldosterone system performed between April 1967 and December 1972, were surveyed for myocardial infraction or cerebrovascular accident. Of the patients, 42% had low plasma renin activity. Myocardial infractions or cerebrovascular accidents were documented in 15% of those with low plasms renin activity and in 5% of those with normal plasma renin activity.

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