In a patient with Bartter's syndrome (increased plasma renin, juxtaglomerular-cell hyperplasia, hyperaldosteronism and hypokalemia, but no hypertension), aldosterone excretion and secretion were ...
Since the description in 1962 of a syndrome of "hyperplasia of the juxtaglomerular complex with hyperaldosteronism and hypokalemic alkalosis" 1 a number of reports of the same and of similar ...
This “mirror effect” explains the pseudo-Bartter syndrome present in neonates born to mothers with eating disorders, which might put them at risk of precocious inadvertent death. Conclusion ...