Cases reported "Nephrosclerosis"

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1/3. Severe hypertensive sequelae in a child with Seckel syndrome (bird-like dwarfism).

    We report a 19-year-old male with Seckel syndrome (bird-like dwarfism) who presents with malignant hypertension associated with hypertensive nephrosclerosis, dilated cardiomyopathy, and a ruptured cerebral artery aneurysm. Although end-organ injury due to chronic hypertension occurs frequently in adults, no previous reports of renal insufficiency due to hypertension exist in children or adolescents. We speculate that this patient may have been particularly prone to hypertensive end-organ injury due to his extreme short stature.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cerebral
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2/3. Pathological changes in the cerebral medullary arteries of five autopsy cases of malignant nephrosclerosis: observation by morphometry and reconstruction of serial sections.

    hypertension (HT) is a serious risk factor of not only cerebral infarction and bleeding, but also Binswanger's encephalopathy (BE). In BE especially, severe stiffening of the cerebral medullary arteries because of hypertensive changes with loss of medial smooth muscle cells (SMC) occurs, which induces diffuse atrophy of the cerebral white matter. But, it is not yet ascertained whether HT is particularly severe in BE. Therefore, a spectrum of the pathological changes of the cerebral arteries were investigated by reconstruction of serial sections and morphometry of the medial thickness in five autopsied patients with malignant nephrosclerosis (MN) of exacerbated form. Each presented clinically acute progression of long-standing HT at the terminal stage and pathologically typical renal changes. The heartweight was 380-900 g. Morphometry of the medial thickness of the arachnoid arteries presented significant medial hypertrophy in four cases of MN, but in the medullary arteries it presented in only two cases with marked cardiomegaly of 700 g and 900 g. In four cases of MN, only a few medullary arteries showed slight pathological changes. However, in another case with cardiomegaly of 900 g, all 10 medullary arteries showed multiple segments of atheroma, medial SMC loss, and prominent dilatation; edematous concentric intimal fibrosis with luminal obstruction and atrophy of the white matter were absent. In conclusion, only one case of MN showing marked cardiomegaly of 900 g presented severe pathological changes of the cerebral medullary arteries comparable with those of BE, although other MN-cases showing severe cardiac hypertrophy presented only trivial arterial changes. Therefore, the cerebral medullary artery seems to be protected from HT, yet it is involved in a case of severe and long-standing HT inducing an extreme cardiomegaly.
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ranking = 10
keywords = cerebral
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3/3. An accelerated hypertension with neither malignant nephrosclerosis nor elevation of plasma renin activity.

    A case of accelerated hypertension, which was unique in a resistance to an angiotensin antagonist, and a lack of the elevation of plasma renin activity (PRA) is reported. Non-elevated PRA was coincided with non-malignant nephrosclerosis in renal histology. The acceleration was attributed to the neurological cause i.e., cerebral hemorrhage in the right hypothalamus which extended to the ventricle and subarachnoid space. The case therefore clinically seemed malignant-like, but it was not malignant hypertension in the sense of Volhard's classical definition. This does not conflict with the usefulness of the determination of PRA in the diagnosis of malignant hypertension with nephrosclerosis.
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ranking = 1
keywords = cerebral
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