View clinical trials related to Hyperaldosteronism.
Filter by:The study investigators are interested in learning more about how drugs, that are given to children by their health care provider, act in the bodies of children and young adults in hopes to find the most safe and effective dose for children. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the PK of understudied drugs currently being administered to children per SOC as prescribed by their treating provider.
Primary aldosteronism (PA) is the main cause of secondary hypertension, affecting 5-15% of the general hypertensive population. Early diagnosis and treatment are of crucial importance as patients with PA are more susceptible to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality than blood-pressure-matched hypertensive patients. Current guidelines indicate that mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonists and laparoscopic adrenalectomy are the principal treatments for PA.Laparoscopic adrenalectomy is recommended for patients with aldosteronoma or unilateral adrenal hyperplasia. During the past two decades, catheter-based arterial embolization or computed tomography (CT)-guided radiofrequency thermogenesis have been used for aldosteronomas treatment. Although these procedures are claimed to be effective for treatment of aldosteronomas, the evidence comes mostly from case reports or small series. In addition, some PA patients refuse surgery and are intolerant of the adverse effects of MR antagonists; others have persistence of PA after adrenelectomy, but respond poorly to MR antagonists. An alternative therapy is needed in such cases. In recent years, adrenal artery ablation has also been used to treat primary aldosteronism, which can reduce the level of aldosterone and blood pressure, but its efficacy and safety are not clear. To confirm the effect of adrenal artery ablation on blood pressure, RAAS system and blood potassium, the researchers conducted a parallel control clinical study of patients with primary aldosteronism (Aldosteronoma).
Recent human studies found tissue sodium storage in patients with hyperaldosteronism that could be detected non-invasively by 23Na-MRI. Tissue sodium accumulation could be mobilized upon treatment of hyperaldosteronism. Besides, former animal studies applying chemical electrolyte analysis indicate that this aldosterone induced sodium storage might be accompanied by intracellular potassium loss. Wether such an intracellular tissue Potassium loss occurs in vivo in patients with hyperaldosteronism and if this deficiency can be corrected by treatment is unclear. The investigators will employ 39K-MR Imaging at 7Tesla to further assess this hypothesis.
Prevalence of primary aldosteronism (PA) in resistant hypertension is not clear. In addition, emerging evidence supports the role of elevated serum aldosterone in promoting cardiovascular disease, independently from high blood pressure (BP) levels, but current data on this issue are heterogeneous.
The guideline requires clinical works to screen for primary aldosteronism(PA) in young adults with family history of stroke at early onset. But the prevalence of PA in young adults with stroke onset before 45 years old had never been investigated. The study aimed to discover the prevalence as well as the clinical characteristics between patients with PA and those without PA during stroke attack. In order to fulfill this objective, investigators intended to conduct a cross-sectional study by taking screening and confirmatory tests among young adults who once admitted due to early onset of acute stroke.
To compare the diagnostic value of three confirmatory tests for primary aldosteronism.
Current guidelines recommend withdrawal of treatments that affect the aldosterone/renin ratio (ARR) when screening for primary aldosteronism (PA). However, abandonment of mineralocorti-coid-receptor antagonist (MRA) and/or blockers of the renin-angiotensin system can deteriorate control of blood pressure (BP) and hypokalemia. Thus, in consecutive patients with an unambiguous diagnosis of PA in wash-out from confounding treatments and subtyped by AVS, the investigators have compared within-patient the plasma aldosterone and active renin concentration, and the ARR values, measured at baseline, and after a one-month treatment with MRA alone and combined with an AT-1 receptor blocker (ARB). Patients on a regular salt intake have been treated with canrenone (50-100 mg orally) for 1 month, after which olmesartan (10 or 20 mg orally) has been added for another month with up-titration of both treatments over the first 2 weeks to control BP and hypokalemia, however maintaining background therapy. The biochemical variables and the ARR have been assessed in an identical manner at baseline values and after each month of treatment. The investigators calculated that with a sample size of 40 patients the study will have a 95% power to show a clinically significant 20% change in the ARR at an 5% alfa-value using a two-sided paired t-test. Hence, this study will allow to determine if an MRA alone, or added to an ARB at doses that control BP and hypokalemia, affect or not the ARR, thus allow to establish if these agents can be administered or must be forbidden during the screening of PA.
Primary aldosteronism is a common cause of hypertension. Recent evidence suggests that many patients with bilateral idiopathic hyperaldosteronism harbor gain-of-function somatic mutations in zona glomerulosa calcium channels that results in aldosterone production. This finding raises the possibility that calcium channel antagonists may be a targeted therapy to reduce aldosterone production in patients who harbor these mutations.
To investigate whether increasing water intake has renal protective effect on PA patients after surgical treatment.
Atrial arrhythmia is the most frequent cardiac arrhythmia. It is a source of significant morbidity. Hypertension is a major risk factor for atrial arrhythmias. Primary hyperaldosteronism (PA) is a common cause of secondary hypertension, associated with a high prevalence of arrhythmias with a specific, sometimes curative, treatment. The purpose of the study is to show that the prevalence of PA among hypertensive patients under 65 years old with atrial arrhythmia is high, justifying systematic screening.