Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0002962 (
angina
)
21,142
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Iron deficiency, the most common cause of anemia, is prevalent in 10 percent to 30 percent of the world's population. Inadequate intake of iron may be an important causative factor, particularly when the body requires more iron than usual (e.g., during infancy, early childhood, adolescence, pregnancy and periods of blood loss). The popular increase of fiber in diets may increase the incidence of iron-deficiency anemia because too much fiber in the diet renders available iron unabsorbable. Symptoms in children include skin or conjunctival pallor, excessive
sleepiness
, learning disabilities, diminished attention span, tiredness, irritability or inappropriate behavior, and pica. Adults may have shortness of breath, decrease in exercise tolerance, palpitations, tachycardia,
angina
, congestive heart failure, orthopnea and edema. Iron deficiency occurs in sequential states and is measured by many laboratory tests. The levels of hemoglobin and hematocrit are both decreased, while the red blood cell count may be normal initially, but will decrease as the iron-deficiency state continues. The steps of treatment include correction of the underlying disorder, administration of the amount of iron needed and observation of the response to treatment.
...
PMID:A guide to primary care of iron-deficiency anemia. 143 77
A 56-year-old male was admitted because of respiration arrest during sleep, and precordial crushing sensation which repeatedly occurred early in the morning. He had been hypertensive and aware of daytime
sleepiness
for ten years. After admission, all night polysomnography was recorded a total of four times. Apnea index was 37.5 times/hour, and central type apnea was predominant. The diagnosis of sleep apnea syndrome was made. In the early morning of the fourteenth day after admission, the patient developed anterior chest pain associated with ST elevation in leads II, III, and aVF of the electrocardiogram. Thus, the case was thought to be complicated by variant
angina
. There were no anginal attacks during the all night polysomnography recordings. However, a causal relationship between the sleep apnea and variant anginal attacks was suspected. Since both the sleep apnea and the variant anginal attacks tended to occur during the stages of REM sleep, and they are both related to changes in activity of the autonomic nervous system. It was considered that hypoxemia following sleep apnea and/or the hyperventilation after the apneic episodes might be the cause of the variant anginal attacks.
...
PMID:[A case of sleep apnea syndrome with variant angina]. 180 88
A double-blind crossover comparison is reported of the effects of alprazolam and placebo on anxiety and
angina
in 27 ambulatory outpatients with
angina pectoris
stabilized on propranolol. Alprazolam was shown to be a safe treatment when combined with propranolol in these patients. Patients receiving alprazolam with propranolol reported more improvement on their targeted symptoms than did patients receiving placebo with propranolol. The side effect most often reported was moderate
drowsiness
or sedation; no unusual side effects emerged. There was no evidence that alprazolam compromised the patients' response to propranolol.
...
PMID:Alprazolam as an adjunct to propranolol in anxious outpatients with stable angina pectoris. 351 Jan 96
Complaints about sleep are extremely common in the elderly, leading to an impression that aging-related sleep problems are virtually normal and benign. However, studies have shown that such complaints as habitual snoring, frequent awakening, nocturnal sweating, and awakening with anxiety, may be signs of genuine sleep disorders. The most prevalent and most serious aging-related sleep disorder is sleep apnea. There is recent evidence of an association between sleep apnea and circulatory disorders, including hypertension, stroke, and
angina pectoris
, and with reduced life expectancy. The older sleep apnea victim may not complain of daytime
sleepiness
, the usual symptom in younger patients. Sleep apnea, and several other sleep disorders of the elderly are treatable, once an accurate diagnosis is made. Physicians are urged to make questions about sleep as routine as the taking of blood pressure.
...
PMID:Sleep disorders in the elderly: rationale for clinical awareness. 367 42
TNF-alpha (so-called cachectin), IL-1 and 6 are important regulating agents in the homeostasis of energy in the organism, as among others they control processes of apoptosis and thus also the volume of adipose and muscular tissues. They are produced not only in immunocompetent cells but also in adipocytes and muscle cells. The cytokine system is then activated not only in tumours and infections but elevated values were found also in obesity, NIDDM, in myocardial infarction and in advanced decompensated cardiac patients. By acting on phosphorylation of IRS-1 and PI-3 kinase TNF-alpha promotes significantly insulin resistance, causes deterioration of diabetes, as well as elevated body temperature,
sleepiness
and anorexia. In a group of 65 patients, mostly with android obesity, in hyperleptinaemic and insulin resistant probands with coronarographically confirmed microvascular
angina pectoris
(n = 22) or IHD, mostly after a myocardial infarction (n = 43) with one or more significant stenoses on the epicardial coronary arteries in half the patients positive or elevated TNF-alpha was found and in 28% also IL-6. This increase did not correlate however with BMI, the percentage of body fat, IRI and C peptide levels nor with cortisol and leptin levels. Insulin resistant subjects had more frequently elevated homocysteine and Lp(a) values which are further two independent risk factors of atherothrombogenesis. Hyperhomocysteinaemia can be favourably influenced by vitamin fortification of the diet or by administration of folate and pyridoxine (1 tablet per day) involving negligible financial costs.
...
PMID:[Relation between cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-1 and 6) and homocysteine in android obesity and the phenomenon of insulin resistance syndromes]. 1042 20
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been strongly associated with several cardiovascular disorders during the past decade, and studies suggested that there might be a causal relationship. Recent studies have described several pathophysiologic mechanisms that are active in OSA and may participate in the development of cardiovascular disorders. Primarily, the repetitive respiratory events that occur in OSA cause hypoxia, hypercapnea, arousals, or disrupted sleep singly or in combination. These abnormal physiologic events result in increased sympathetic outflow, alterations in blood pressure control mechanisms, dysfunctional ventilatory regulation, and vascular alterations. As a consequence of the relative impact and the genetic predisposition, these pathophysiologic alterations may lead to or complicate a wide variety of cardiovascular disorders. Frequently, patients who have OSA present with complaints of excessive daytime
sleepiness
, chronic fatigue, snoring, morning headache, and nocturnal arousals. Difficult-to-control hypertension, recurrent exacerbations of congestive heart failure, and nocturnal
angina
are common cardiovascular manifestations of undiagnosed OSA. This article reviews the major cardiovascular disorders associated with OSA and the pathophysiologic mechanisms associated with their development.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease and obstructive sleep apnea: implications for physicians. 1090 7
The uses, pharmacology, clinical efficacy, dosage and administration, adverse effects, and drug interactions of hawthorn are discussed. Hawthorn (Crataegus oxyacantha) is a fruit-bearing shrub with a long history as a medicinal substance. Uses have included the treatment of digestive ailments, dyspnea, kidney stones, and cardiovascular disorders. Today, hawthorn is used primarily for various cardiovascular conditions. The cardiovascular effects are believed to be the result of positive inotropic activity, ability to increase the integrity of the blood vessel wall and improve coronary blood flow, and positive effects on oxygen utilization. Flavonoids are postulated to account for these effects. Hawthorn has shown promise in the treatment of New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class II congestive heart failure (CHF) in both uncontrolled and controlled clinical trials. There are also suggestions of a beneficial effect on blood lipids. Trials to establish an antiarrhythmic effect in humans have not been conducted. The recommended daily dose of hawthorn is 160-900 mg of a native water-ethanol extract of the leaves or flowers (equivalent to 30-169 mg of epicatechin or 3.5-19.8 mg of flavonoids) administered in two or three doses. At therapeutic dosages, hawthorn may cause a mild rash, headache, sweating, dizziness, palpitations,
sleepiness
, agitation, and gastrointestinal symptoms. Hawthorn may interact with vasodilating medications and may potentiate or inhibit the actions of drugs used for heart failure, hypertension,
angina
, and arrhythmias. The limited data about hawthorn suggest that it may be useful in the treatment of NYHA functional class II CHF.
...
PMID:Hawthorn: pharmacology and therapeutic uses. 1188 7
Four basic control mechanisms of breathing (brainstem respiratory centre, peripheral and central chemoreceptors, intero- and exteroceptive reflexes and suprapontine influences), as well as their sleep-related disorders are analysed. A decrease in central chemoreceptor sensitivity to CO2 and an increase in upper airway resistance during sleep result in hypoventilation and mild hypoxaemia already in physiological conditions. Compensatory increase in ventilatory effort with synchronous inhibition of pharyngeal dilators during sleep reduces the upper airway lumen manifesting with snoring, upper airway resistance syndrome, and OSA. The resulting hypoxaemia may cause marked cardiovascular, neuro-psychic, endocrine-metabolic and behavioural disorders. The augmented ventilatory effort and hypoxaemia evoke reflex dilation of airways and arousal from sleep, stimulating the sympatho-adrenal system, which provokes autoresuscitation by gasping preventing fatal asphyxia. Failure of this autoresuscitation mechanism seems to cause SIDS. Elimination of voluntary breathing by sleep either in Ondine's curse induced by lesions of respiratory centre, or in congenital central hypoventilation syndrome caused by insufficient central chemoreceptors result in respiratory failure and death. Nocturnal attacks of bronchial and cardiac asthma, lung oedema and other consequences of pulmonary congestion are also discussed. The pathomechanism of extreme daytime
sleepiness
, chronic fatigue, and disorders of memory, cognitive and other brain functions, are also analysed. Severe cardiovascular consequences of SAS may manifest acutely as
angina pectoris
, myocardial infarction. dysrhythmias, transient ischaemic attacks and even stroke or sudden cardiac death. OSAS may result also in development of hypertension, central obesity, diabetes mellitus, erectile dysfunction, depression, and various behavioural disorders.
...
PMID:[Regulation of respiration and its sleep-related disorders]. 1244 39
One of the most common yet unidentified conditions in heart disease is sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). Although it is most prevalent in patients with heart failure, it has been epidemiologically and pathophysiologically linked to ischemic heart disease, hypertension, sudden cardiac death, atrial fibrillation, and stroke. There are two primary SDB syndromes: obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and central sleep apnea (CSA; also known as Cheyne-Stokes respiration). The pathophysiologic mechanisms that underlie these disorders appear to be distinct but both involve recurrent cycles of excessive sympathetic activation, hypoxemias and hypercapnias, and increases in ventricular wall stress. Signs and symptoms may include daytime
somnolence
, snoring, difficult-to-control hypertension, and refractory arrhythmias or
angina
. In heart failure, half of patients will have SDB and most patients will exhibit evidence of both OSA and CSA, although one or the other may predominate. The current standard diagnostic method is overnight laboratory polysomnography. Primary therapies for OSA include lifestyle changes, various facial and oral appliances, head and neck surgery, and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). CPAP is the most effective form of therapy for OSA, with few side effects, but is limited by compliance because of comfort-related issues. In patients with cardiovascular disease who predominantly suffer from OSA, treatment recommendations should be based on current guidelines for OSA. For patients with heart failure with predominant CSA, the current cornerstone of therapy is the optimization of medical therapy and resynchronization therapy when indicated. When SDB persists despite optimal medical management, referral to a sleep medicine consultant should be considered.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of sleep apnea in heart disease. 1822 2
A 73-year-old man with underlying chronic renal failure,
angina pectoris
, chronic heart failure, and respiratory failure reporting three-day appetite loss, fever, and
drowsiness
was admitted for lower right lung pneumonia. Despite antibiotic administration, infiltration progressed to the entire right lung and upper left lung after 12 hours, and he developed acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and multiple organ failure. Respirator ventilation and continuous hemodiafiltration (CHDF) failed to halt this progression and he died on hospital day 3. Acinetobacter baumannii was cultured from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and the postmortem lung specimen, indicating that his severe community-acquired pneumonia was due to A. baumannii. Microscopically, the lung specimen showed prominent cellular alveolar exudate and partial hyaline membrane with suppurative pneumonia. Although A. baumannii is considered the causative agent in nosocomical pneumonia, community-acquired pneumonia due to A. baumannii is very rare. This is, to our knowledge, the first report in Japan. In the subtropical zone, A. baumannii is recognized as an important cause of severe community-acquired pneumonia. Given the apparent progress of global warming, physicians in Japan would do well to familiarize themselves with subtropical disease causes such A. baumannii when managing severe community-acquired pneumonia.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of fulminant community-acquired pneumonia due to Acinetobacter baumannii]. 1969 76
1
2
Next >>