Actinomycosis is a rare, chronic disease caused by a group of anaerobic Gram-positive bacteria that normally colonize the mouth, colon, and urogenital tract. Infection involving the cervicofacial area is the most common clinical presentation, followed by pelvic region and thoracic involvement. Due to its propensity to mimic many other diseases and its wide variety of symptoms, clinicians should be aware of its multiple presentations and its ability to be a 'great pretender'. We describe herein three cases of unusual presentation: an inferior caval vein syndrome, an acute cholecystitis, and an acute cardiac tamponade. We review the literature on its epidemiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis.
High sodium diet was associated with increased urinary cortisol and its metabolites. Also, HS diet was associated with HT, insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia and hypoadiponectinaemia, even when adjusting by confounding variables. Further, we observed that high salt intake, IR and higher cortisol metabolites, alone or combined in a clinical simple model, accurately predicted MetS status, suggesting an additive mechanism in obesity-related metabolic disorders.
Primary aldosteronism is characterized by aldosterone secretion that is independent of renin and angiotensin II and sodium status. The deleterious effects of primary aldosteronism are mediated by excessive activation of the mineralocorticoid receptor that results in the well-known consequences of volume expansion, hypertension, hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis, but it also increases the risk for cardiovascular and kidney disease, as well as death. For decades, the approaches to defining, diagnosing, and treating primary aldosteronism have been relatively constant and generally focused on detecting and treating the more severe presentations of the disease. However, emerging evidence suggests that the prevalence of primary aldosteronism is much greater than previously recognized, and that milder and nonclassical forms of renin-independent aldosterone secretion that impart heightened cardiovascular risk may be common. Public health efforts to prevent aldosterone-mediated end-organ disease will require improved capabilities to diagnose all forms of primary aldosteronism while optimizing the treatment approaches such that the excess risk for cardiovascular and kidney disease is adequately mitigated. In this review, we present a physiologic approach to considering the diagnosis, pathogenesis, and treatment of primary aldosteronism. We review evidence suggesting that primary aldosteronism manifests across a wide spectrum of severity, ranging from mild to overt, that correlates with cardiovascular risk. Furthermore, we review emerging evidence from genetic studies that begin to provide a theoretical explanation for the pathogenesis of primary aldosteronism and a link to its phenotypic severity spectrum and prevalence. Finally, we review human studies that provide insights into the optimal approach toward the treatment of primary aldosteronism.
Background Primary aldosteronism is recognized as a severe form of “renin-independent aldosteronism” that results in excessive mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) activation. Objective To investigate whether there is a spectrum of subclinical renin-independent aldosteronism among normotensives that increases risk for hypertension. Design Cohort study. Setting National community-based study. Participants 850 untreated normotensive participants in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis with measurements of serum aldosterone, plasma renin activity (PRA). Measurements Longitudinal analyses investigated whether aldosterone concentrations, in the context of physiologic PRA phenotypes (suppressed: ≤0.50; indeterminate: 0.51–0.99; unsuppressed: ≥1.0 μg/L/h), associated with incident hypertension, defined as SBP≥140, DBP≥90 mmHg, or initiation of anti-hypertensive medications. Cross-sectional analyses investigated associations of aldosterone with MR activity, assessed via serum potassium and urinary fractional excretion of potassium. Results A suppressed renin phenotype was associated with a higher rate of incident hypertension when compared to other PRA phenotypes (85.4 [73.4, 99.3] vs. 53.3 [42.8, 66.4] vs. 54.5 [41.8, 71.0] cases per 1000 person-years of follow-up). With renin suppression, higher aldosterone concentrations were independently associated with an increased risk for incident hypertension; whereas no association between aldosterone and hypertension was observed when renin was not suppressed. Higher aldosterone concentrations were associated with lower serum potassium and higher urinary excretion of potassium, but only when renin was suppressed. Limitations Measurements of sodium and potassium occurred several years before renin and aldosterone. Conclusions Suppression of renin, and higher aldosterone concentrations in the context of this renin suppression, associated with an increased risk for developing hypertension and possibly also with increased MR activity. These findings suggest a clinically-relevant spectrum of subclinical primary aldosteronism (renin-independent aldosteronism) in normotension. Funding National Institutes of Health
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