Clinical and Experimental Hypertension

Title Publication Date Language Citations
The Sodium-Potassium Pump in Volume Expanded Hypertension1978/01/01English56
Captopril and Hypertension Development in the SHR1980/01/01English54
Brain Stem Mechanisms in the Control of Arterial Pressure1981/01/01English52
Effects of Prazosin and Phentolamine on Cardiac Presynaptic α-Adrenoceptors in the Cat, Dog and Rat1978/01/01English48
Familial Aggregation of Cation Transport Abnormalities and Essential Hypertension1981/01/01English45
Stress Response Characteristics of Adolescents with High Genetic Risk for Essential Hypertension a five year Follow-UP1981/01/01English44
Comparison of the Alpha and Beta Blocking Drug, Labetalol, and Methyl Dopa in the Treatment of Moderate and Severe Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension1980/01/01English43
Abnormal Membrane Characteristics of Erythrocytes in Rat Models and Men with Predisposition to Stroke1980/01/01English41
Effects of Captopril in Animal Models of Hypertension1980/01/01English41
Plasma Volume, Blood Volume and Transcapillary Escape Rate (TER) of Albumin in Young Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats (SHR) as Compared with Normotensive Controls (NCR)1978/01/01English38
Differential Development of Salt-Induced and Renal Hypertension in Dahl Hypertension-Sensitive Rats After Neonatal Sympathectomy1979/01/01English35
Comparison of the Effects of ‘Glucocorticoid’ And ‘Mineralocortocoid’ Infusions on Blood Pressure in Sheep1979/01/01English35
Na Countertransport and Cotransport in Human Red Cells: Function, Dysfunction, and Genes in Essential Hypertension1981/01/01English34
Centrally-Generated Commands and Cardiovascular Control in Man1981/01/01English32
Effect of Polyunsaturate-Rich Vegetable Oils on Blood Pressure in Essential Hypertension1981/01/01English31
Pathogenic and Therapeutic Significance of Cardiovascular Pressor Reactivity as Related to Plasma Catecholamines in Borderline and Established Essential Hypertension1980/01/01English28
Differential Development of Renal, Doca-salt, and Spontaneous Hypertension in the Rat After Neonatal Sympathectomy1978/01/01English28
Plasma Catecholamines and Cardiac, Renal and Peripheral Vascular Adrenoceptor-Mediated Responses in Different Age Groups of Normal and Hypertensive Subjects1980/01/01English26
Intracellular Na+as a Genetic Marker of Essential Hypertension1981/01/01English26
The Relationship Between Increased Myogenic Tone and Hyporesponsiveness in Vascular Smooth Muscle of Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats1980/01/01English26
Importance of new Catecholamine Pathways in Control of Blood Pressure1981/01/01English26
ECG Alterations with Progressive Left Ventricular Hypertrophy in Spontaneous Hypertension1978/01/01English25
Interruption of the Maintenance Phase Of Established Hypertension by Ablation of the Anteroventral Third Ventricle (AV3V) in Rats1978/01/01English25
Correlation Between Decreased Heart Rate and Central Inhibition of Sympathetic Discharge After Prazosin Administration in the Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat1981/01/01English24
Single-Dose Captopril Administration in DOCA/Salt Rats: Reduction of Hypotensive Effect by Indomethacin1980/01/01English24
Prazosin and Phentolamine: Comparative Cardiovascular and Autonomic Profiles1978/01/01English23
Variation of Plasma and Kidney Renin Activities Among Substrains of Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats1980/01/01English22
Evidence that the Increased Calcium Sensitivity of Resistance Vessels in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats is an Intrinsic Defect of Their Vascular Smooth Muscle1981/01/01English22
Evidences Supporting an Increased Sympathetic Tone and Reactivity in a Subgroup of Patients with Essential Hypertension1980/01/01English20
Differentiation of Drugs Acting Centrally Upon the Cardiovascular System by Means of Sympathetic and Vagal Responses1978/01/01English19