11 results on '"M. A. D. H. Schalekamp"'
Search Results
2. EFFECT OF UNNATURAL NORADRENALINE PRECURSOR ON SYMPATHETIC CONTROL AND ORTHOSTATIC HYPOTENSION IN DOPAMINE-BETA-HYDROXYLASE DEFICIENCY
- Author
-
M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, Frans Boomsma, A. J. Man In 'T Veld, and A. H. Van Den Meiracker
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Epinephrine ,Dopamine ,Tyramine ,Dopamine beta-Hydroxylase ,Substrate Specificity ,Hypotension, Orthostatic ,Norepinephrine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Orthostatic vital signs ,Internal medicine ,Biogenic amine ,Serine ,medicine ,Dopamine beta hydroxylase deficiency ,Humans ,Neurotransmitter ,Neurons ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Endocrinology ,Blood pressure ,Droxidopa ,chemistry ,Aromatic-L-Amino-Acid Decarboxylases ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A patient with severe orthostatic hypotension due to dopamine-beta-hydroxylase deficiency was treated with the unnatural aminoacid D,L-threo-3, 4-dihydroxyphenylserine (DOPS) in the hope that it would serve as a substrate of aromatic-L-aminoacid decarboxylase to produce (-)-noradrenaline. With a dose of 500 mg twice daily by mouth, blood pressure rose gradually from 100/55 to 145/85 mm Hg, and orthostatic hypotension disappeared. After 4 months' treatment the patient is free of symptoms and able to live a normal life. DOPS switched on the production of noradrenaline and reduced the excessive production of dopamine. During treatment plasma noradrenaline rose normally after standing and after infusion of tyramine, a biogenic amine that liberates stored neurotransmitter from sympathetic nerve terminals. These data demonstrate that in congenital dopamine-beta-hydroxylase deficiency dopamine instead of noradrenaline is released as the sympathetic neurotransmitter but that the integrity of the sympathetic neuron is otherwise intact.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. CONGENITAL DOPAMINE-BETA-HYDROXYLASE DEFICIENCY
- Author
-
M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, A. J. Man In 'T Veld, Frans Boomsma, and Peter Moleman
- Subjects
Denervation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Orthostatic vital signs ,Norepinephrine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Epinephrine ,chemistry ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Dopamine beta hydroxylase deficiency ,Catecholamine ,Neurotransmitter ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A woman was referred with severe orthostatic hypotension at the age of 21. Ptosis, skeletal muscle hypotonia, and recurrent hypoglycaemia had been noticed in early childhood. There was noradrenergic denervation and adrenomedullary failure but baroreflex afferents, cholinergic innervation, and adrenocortical function were intact. Noradrenaline and adrenaline were undetectable in plasma, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), but dopamine was 7-fold to 12-fold normal in plasma, 4-fold normal in urine, and 20-fold normal in CSF. Measurements of catecholamine metabolites showed further evidence for impairment of noradrenaline and adrenaline biosynthesis due to deficient dopamine-beta-hydroxylation. Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase was undetectable in plasma and CSF. Physiological and pharmacological stimuli of sympathetic neurotransmitter release caused increases in plasma dopamine rather than plasma noradrenaline.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. SUPPORT FOR ADRENALINE-HYPERTENSION HYPOTHESIS: 18 HOUR PRESSOR EFFECT AFTER 6 HOURS ADRENALINE INFUSION
- Author
-
FransH.M. Derkx, StevenJ. Lamberts, PeterJ. Blankestijn, Peter Moleman, ArieJ Man in 't Veld, Frans Boomsma, Joke H.M. Tulen, H. J. Ritsema Van Eck, A. H. Van Den Meiracker, M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, and Paul G.H. Mulder
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epinephrine ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Double blind ,Norepinephrine ,Double-Blind Method ,Heart Rate ,Internal medicine ,Renin ,medicine ,Humans ,Adrenaline infusion ,Infusions, Intravenous ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Crossover study ,Glucose ,Endocrinology ,Anesthesia ,Ambulatory ,Catecholamine ,business ,Perfusion ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In a double blind, crossover study 6 h infusions of adrenaline (15 ng/kg/min; 1 ng = 5.458 pmol), noradrenaline (30 ng/kg/min; 1 ng = 5.911 pmol), and a 5% dextrose solution (5.4 ml/h), were given to ten healthy volunteers in random order 2 weeks apart. By means of intra-arterial ambulatory monitoring the haemodynamic effects were followed for 18 h after the infusions were stopped. Adrenaline, but not noradrenaline, caused a delayed and protracted pressor effect. Over the total postinfusion period systolic and diastolic arterial pressure were 6 (SEM 2)% and 7 (2)%, respectively, higher than after dextrose infusion (ANOVA, p less than 0.001). Thus, "stress" levels of adrenaline (230 pg/ml) for 6 h cause a delayed and protracted pressor effect. These findings are strong support for the adrenaline-hypertension hypothesis in man.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. INACTIVE RENIN IN HUMAN PLASMA
- Author
-
R. P. Verhoeven, Frans H.M. Derkx, G. J. Wenting, Jeanette M.G. van Gool, M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, and A. J. Man In 'T Veld
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Posture ,Stimulation ,Propranolol ,In Vitro Techniques ,Renal Artery Obstruction ,Essential hypertension ,Renal Veins ,In vivo ,Isoprenaline ,Internal medicine ,Renin ,Renin–angiotensin system ,medicine ,Diazoxide ,Humans ,Kidney ,Chemistry ,Isoproterenol ,General Medicine ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,medicine.disease ,Stimulation, Chemical ,Enzyme Activation ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hypertension ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Human plasma contains renin, which is enzymatically active at neutral pH (active renin), and a non-dialysable factor, which has renin-like activity after treatment at low pH (inactive renin). In vitro activated plasma-renin and purified human renal renin showed identical enzyme-kinetic properties. Quantitative estimations of inactive renin in renal venous plasma from 5 patients with renal-artery stenosis demonstrated its release by the kidney. Acute stimulation of renin release by isoprenaline, tilting, or diazoxide in 13 normotensive individuals and in 9 patients with essential hypertension increased active plasma-renin and reduced inactive plasma-renin. Inactive plasma-renin was increased and active plasma-renin decreased during suppression of renin release by propranolol in 12 patients with essential hypertension. In 55 patients with various disorders, inactive and active plasma-renin were directly correlated. However, the concentration of inactive renin, for a given value of active renin, varied widely from patient to patient. These results indicate that so-called inactive renin is indeed physiologically related to active renin. They also suggest that inactive renin can be activated not only in vitro, but also in vivo. Different renin assays measure different relative amounts of active and inactive renin. This may call for reinterpretation of results obtained by various methods, especially in situations where changes in plasma concentrations of the two forms of renin are in opposite directions.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. CONSECUTIVE HÆMODYNAMIC PATTERNS IN ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION
- Author
-
M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, X. H. Krauss, G. Kolsters, W.H. Birkenhäger, and G. A. Zaal
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac output ,Time Factors ,Myocardial Infarction ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Blood volume ,Kidney ,Essential hypertension ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiac Output ,Plasma Volume ,Aged ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Blood Volume ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Filtration fraction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood pressure ,Creatinine ,Hypertension ,Vascular resistance ,Cardiology ,Female ,Vascular Resistance ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Glomerular Filtration Rate - Abstract
Fifteen patients with essential hypertension were investigated twice (and in three cases three times), the average interval between the first and the final examination being 31 months (range 11-54 months). Arterial pressure and one or several of the following variables were measured or calculated: cardiac output, renal plasma-flow, glomerular filtration-rate, plasma volume, variability of blood-pressure, renal blood-flow, total peripheral resistance, renal vascular resistance, filtration fraction, and blood volume. In twelve patients no complications were observed. The other three had a myocardial infarction during the observation period. Patients were taken off treatment before the investigations were done and sodium intake was controlled. Even within this rather short follow-up period some radical changes in haemodynamic patterns were demonstrated. In eight of the twelve uncomplicated cases either total peripheral resistance or renal vascular resistance or both increased. The three patients who sustained a myocardial infarc tion all showed a shift towards increased vascular resistance.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. ENDOGENOUS ACTIVATOR OF PLASMA-INACTIVE-RENIN
- Author
-
H. L. Tan-Tjiong, B Leckie, Frans H.M. Derkx, and M. A. D. H. Schalekamp
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,Chemistry ,Activator (genetics) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Endogeny ,General Medicine ,Inactive renin - Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. PINDOLOL IN POSTURAL HYPOTENSION
- Author
-
ArieJ Man in 't Veld, David Robson, and M. A. D. H. Schalekamp
- Subjects
business.industry ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Pindolol ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. HÆMODYNAMIC SETTING OF ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION AS A GUIDE TO MANAGEMENT
- Author
-
M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, A. Wester, Kho Tl, W.H. Birkenhäger, G. A. Zaal, and G. Kolsters
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Diazoxide ,Sodium ,Hemodynamics ,Myocardial Infarction ,Blood Pressure ,Arteries ,General Medicine ,Essential hypertension ,medicine.disease ,Propranolol ,Clonidine ,Hypertension ,medicine ,Humans ,Infusions, Parenteral ,Vascular Resistance ,Cardiac Output ,Diuretics ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Antihypertensive Agents - Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. INTERRELATIONS BETWEEN ARTERIAL PRESSURE, FLUID-VOLUMES, AND PLASMA-RENIN CONCENTRATION IN THE COURSE OF ACUTE GLOMERULONEPHRITIS
- Author
-
G. Kolsters, W.H. Birkenhäger, M. A. D. H. Schalekamp, X. H. Krauss, and M. P. A. Schalekamp-Kuyken
- Subjects
Male ,Cardiac output ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Renin secretion ,Peripheral resistance ,Blood Pressure ,Plasma renin activity ,Glomerulonephritis ,Internal medicine ,Renin ,medicine ,Humans ,Cardiac Output ,Plasma Volume ,business.industry ,Normal level ,Arteries ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Body Fluids ,Blood pressure ,Endocrinology ,Acute Disease ,Hypertension ,Acute glomerulonephritis ,Female ,Vascular Resistance ,business - Abstract
Two patients with acute glomerulonephritis and hypertension exhibited a normal cardiac output despite excessive fluid retention and hypervolaemia. Plasma-renin concentration at first was subnormal in one patient and normal in the other. In both, plasma-renin rose steeply to abnormal levels after the onset of unloading. One patient was given an artificial load afterwards; plasma-renin then fell to a much lower level than was found in the first stage. It is suggested that an inappropriate renin secretion both increased peripheral resistance and inhibited prompt reversion of blood-pressure towards a normal level.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. CONGENITAL DOPAMINE BETA-HYDROXYLASE DEFICIENCY
- Author
-
F. Boomsma, Andrea Superti-Furga, PeterM. Royce, Beat Steinmann, A. J. Man In 'T Veld, and M. A. D. H. Schalekamp
- Subjects
Denervation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Baroreflex ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,chemistry ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Dopamine beta hydroxylase deficiency ,Catecholamine ,Cholinergic ,business ,Neurotransmitter ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A woman was referred with severe orthostatic hypotension at the age of 21. Ptosis, skeletal muscle hypotonia, and recurrent hypoglycaemia had been noticed in early childhood. There was noradrenergic denervation and adrenomedullary failure but baroreflex afferents, cholinergic innervation, and adrenocortical function were intact. Noradrenaline and adrenaline were undetectable in plasma, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), but dopamine was 7-fold to 12-fold normal in plasma, 4-fold normal in urine, and 20-fold normal in CSF. Measurements of catecholamine metabolites showed further evidence for impairment of noradrenaline and adrenaline biosynthesis due to deficient dopamine-beta-hydroxylation. Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase was undetectable in plasma and CSF. Physiological and pharmacological stimuli of sympathetic neurotransmitter release caused increases in plasma dopamine rather than plasma noradrenaline.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.