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  1. Home
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Browsing by Author "Baudrand Biggs Rene Felipe"

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    Actualización en el manejo clínico de la hipertensión hiporreninémica
    (2019) Macchiavello Theoduloz, Stefano Pietro Gian; Fardella Bello, Carlos Enrique; Baudrand Biggs Rene Felipe
    The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system modulates volume, sodium and potassium homeostasis. In the setting of a high sodium diet, up to 30% of patients with hypertension have a low or suppressed renin and increased volume. This phenotype of low renin hypertension (LRH) is multifactorial and includes infrequent inherited genetic syndromes, milder phenotypes of classic diseases and environmental exposures. All these conditions have in common a higher cardiovascular risk mediated by the over activation of the mineralo corticoid receptor (MR), present not only in the kidney, but also in vasculature, myocardium and adipocytes. Consequently, the aim of LRH treatment goes beyond the control of blood pressure and requires antagonizing MR with specific pharmacologic agents, pursuing normalization of renin as a clinical objective. Due to the unusual evaluation of renin status by non-endocrinologists and lack of disease awareness, only a minority of hypertensive patients receive this pathophysiologically-driven treatment that should reduce cardiovascular outcomes.
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    Overexpression of hepatic 5 alpha-reductase and 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 in visceral adipose tissue is associated with hyperinsulinemia in morbidly obese patients
    (W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC, 2011) Baudrand Biggs Rene Felipe; Domínguez Ruiz-tagle, José Miguel; Carvajal, Cristian A.; Riquelme, Arnoldo; Campino, Carmen; Macchiavello, Stefano; Bozinovic, Milan; Morales, Mauricio; Pizarro, Margarita; Solis, Nancy; Escalona, Alex; Boza, Camilo; Arrese, Marco; Fardella, Carlos E.
    11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11 beta-HSD1) converts cortisone to cortisol, mainly in the liver and visceral adipose tissue (VAT), and has been implicated in several metabolic disorders. The absence of systemic hypercortisolism in central obesity could be due to increased inactivation of cortisol to its tetrahydrometabolites by the hepatic enzymes 5 alpha-and 5 beta-reductases. Our aim was to assess the expression of the reductases in the liver and of 11 beta-HSD1 in the liver and VAT in morbidly obese patients and to analyze their association with clinical, anthropometric, and biochemical parameters. Hepatic and VAT samples were obtained during bariatric surgery. 5 alpha- and 5 beta-reductases, 11 beta-HSD1, and 18S expression was measured using real-time polymerase chain reaction. Anthropometric and biochemical variables were analyzed. Forty-one patients were recruited (age, 41.8 +/- 10.6 years; body mass index, 42.1 +/- 6.6 kg/m(2); 71% women). The expression of hepatic 5 alpha- and 5 beta-reductases was positively correlated (r = +0.53, P = .004), and their expression levels were correlated with hepatic 11 beta-HSD1 expression (r = +0.61, P < .001 for 5 alpha-reductase and r = +0.50, P < .001 for 5 beta-reductase). Hepatic 5 alpha-reductase was associated with insulin (r = +0.34, P = .015). Visceral adipose tissue 11 beta-HSD1 expression was associated with glucose (r = +0.37, P = .025) and insulin (r = +0.54, P = .002). Our results showed that 5 alpha-reductase and VAT 11 beta-HSD1 expressions were associated with insulinemia. These findings suggest that overexpression of 5 alpha-reductase, through a higher inactivation of cortisol in the liver, could have a protective role in preserving hepatic sensitivity to insulin. The overexpression of liver reductases in obesity could be an adaptive response to an increase in cortisol production by the liver and visceral 11 beta-HSD1 to avoid systemic hypercortisolism. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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