Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (angina)
21,142 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Blood flow disturbances in the gastrointestinal tract can lead to serious illness. They can be acute or chronic, their cause may be arterial or venous occlusion or hypotonia. Lesions of the gastrointestinal tract caused by ischemia depend on localisation, acuteness and degree of the blood flow disturbance. They may reach from focal and segmental ischemic lesions to extensive necroses of the entire intestinal tubes. The most serious ischemic disease is the embolic and thrombotic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior due to previous arterosclerotic damage. Infarction of a large part of the intestines and peritonitis can be the consequence. These patients' only chance of survival is early diagnosis--as a rule exclusively via angiography--and immediate surgery. Chronic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior leads to angina abdominalis which mainly occurs after food intake and can last for hours. The reason may also be a general arteriosclerosis. Men are affected more frequently and at a younger age than women. As a consequence of lowered intestinal blood flow these patients suffer from malabsorption and heavy weight loss. Conservative therapy is not effective. These patients, too, will have to be treated surgically after previous angiography. Vascular disease with decreased blood flow as its consequence can be found in a number of inflammatory diseases, in malign hypertensian, in collagen disease and in other more rare diseases as pseudoxanthoma elasticum or Ehlers-Danlos-syndrome. In the case of ischemic colitis arterial and more rarely venous occlusions cause decreased blood flow in the big bowel. A frequent consequence is colitis in the left colon which is characterized by acuteness, pain in the left side of the abdomen and by heavy rectal bleeding. Diagnosis is established by means of endoscopy, barium enema and angiography. Primarily therapy of ischemic colitis is of the conservative type. In severe cases with gangrene and peritonitis the colon has to be resected.
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PMID:[Disorders of the blood circulation in the gastrointestinal tract]. 32 26

A follow-up study of 1,402 patients with a positive maximal treadmill stress test was made to evaluate the significance of angina during the test. Life tables were constructed and evaluated for significance of age, sex and work load at onset of angina. Coronary events (myocardial infarction, progression of angina and coronary death) were twice as frequent in subjects with angina and S-T segment depression as in those without angina. The increased incidence in 4 years held for all coronary events and was still doubled at 7 years for progression of angina and coronary death. The incidence of coronary events was more than twice as great when the angina was induced by a light work load (4 metabolic equivalents = METS) as when it was induced by a heavy work load (8 to 9 METS). Men aged 41 to 50 years having angina during exercise testing had a 3-fold greater incidence of coronary events and a 4-fold greater incidence of myocardial infarction compared with their counterparts who had S-T segment depression alone. In this study, angina during exercise testing identified 85% of true positive tests for coronary artery disease, whereas S-T depression alone identified only 64% of such tests. Thus, angina during exercise testing increases the sensitivity of the test and identifies cohorts of subjects at high risk for subsequent coronary events.
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PMID:Significance of chest pain during treadmill exercise: correlation with coronary events. 62 16

Prior to undergoing diagnostic coronary angiography, 94 men responded to tests for the coronary-prone behavior pattern, anxiety, depression, and neuroticism. Independently, cardiologists rated cineangiograms by the percent of atheromatous luminal obstruction in four major coronary arteries. The patients with greater atheromatous obstruction scored significantly higher than those with lesser disease on all four scales of the test for the type A coronary-prone behavior pattern. Those with more seriously diseased vessels also scored significantly higher on anxiety and depression scales but significantly lower on a denial scale. Men rated as having more frequent and intense angina pain scored significantly higher on hypochondriasis, depression, and admission of symptoms than men less subject to ischemic pain. Multivariate statistical analyses revealed that the findings regarding extent of atherosclerosis are independent of anginal pain or congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Psychological correlates of coronary angiographic findings. 98 97

In order to establish the anatomic criteria, the functional results, and the safety of complete myocardial revascularization for severe coronary artery disease, 100 consecutive patients who received four or five saphenous-vein grafts were analyzed. Ages ranged from 37 to 75 years (mean, 56 years). Men predominated by a ratio of 12:1. As an indication of the severity of multiple-vessel disease, 28 percent were in functional class 4, and left ventricular function was classified as good in 47 percent, as fair in 44 percent, and as poor in 8 percent. Coronary arterial scores ranged from 9 to 15 (average, 12.2). Fourteen patients had significant left main coronary arterial obstruction. All 100 patients had grafts to the left anterior descending coronary artery; 96 to the right coronary artery; 94 to the obtuse marginal branch of the circumflex; 78 to a diagonal branch of the left anterior descending; and 27 to the distal circumflex. Operative mortality was 5 percent. Nonfatal perioperative myocardial infarction occurred in 10 percent, and only one of these had low cardiac output. Follow-up from 5 to 23 months showed 95 percent of the patients to be improved, with 70 percent free of angina. Two late deaths occurred, for an overall mortality of 7 percent.
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PMID:Treatment of severe coronary artery disease with quadruple and quintuple saphenous vein grafts. Review of 100 consecutive patients. 108 46

Deaths from ischemic heart disease(IHD) occurring during a period of one year in Helsinki in persons aged 65 years or younger have been investigated by the Ischaemic Heart Disease Register. Altogether 526 fatalities were registered. Autopsy data were collected in 432 cases, the autopsy rate being 82 percent. The results are presented separately for persons autopsied in the pathologic departments, representing mostly delayed deaths in hospitals, and for medico-legally autopsied persons representing sudden deaths outside hospitals. The diagnosis of IHD death was either based on the positive patho-anatomic or clinical evidence of an acute heart attack or supported by a history of clinical IHD in 92 percent of all registered fatal cases. In the remaining fatalities the possibility of other causes of death had been more or less definitely excluced. All persons with an acute attack of IHD and all autopsied cases showed a division into four socio-economic groups very similar to that of the population of Helsinki. Men belonging to the lowest social group were over-represented among medico-legally autopsied cases. A history of a previous heart disease, visits to a doctor and the use of digitalis were less common in persons autopsied medico-legally than in those autopsied in the pathologic departments. In the former an acute infarction was most often located in the posterior wall and in the latter in the anterior wall of the left ventricle. The prevalence of an occlusion was highest in the right coronary artery in the former and in the left anterior descending coronary artery in the latter; In medico-legally autopsied cases in which a recent myocardial infarction was observed the interventricular septum was involved in 81 percent, but in cases with an old infarction the septum was involved in only 52 percent. No difference in the size of the hearts, the frequency of an old infarction or the prevalence of coronary occlusions was found between persons autopsied in the pathologic and forensic departments. Although a previous angina was about equally common in both sexes, old infarctions were more common in men. The increase in heart weight had occurred proportionally to the same extent in both sexes.
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PMID:Deaths from ischemic heart disease in persons aged 65 or younger in Helsinki in 1970 with special reference to patho-anatomic findings in hearts.?211. 112 61

The relationship of a reported parental history of coronary heart disease (CHD) to the incidence of CHD was determined in this prospective study of CHD in an intake population of 39-59-year old men. Reported parental history of CHD was found to be associated with level of schooling, the type A behavior pattern, serum cholesterol and beta/alpha lipoprotein ratio. Men with reported parental history had an increased incidence of angina pectoris in both age defined by symptomatic myocardial infarction and sudden coronary death. Adjustment then was made simultaneously for the confounding effects of the risk factors found to be associated with the prevalence of parental history of CHD. After such adjustment a reported parental history of CHD was still found to have a significant association (p = 0.01) with the combined incidence of symptomatic myocardial infarction and angina pectoris in subjects under 50 years of age.
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PMID:The relationship of reported parental history to the incidence of coronary heart disease in the Western Collaborative Group Study. 118 Feb 56

OBJECTIVE--To investigate the relationship between asymptomatic hyperglycemia (IGT or newly diagnosed NIDDM) and atherosclerotic vascular disease. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--A representative cross-sectional population sample of 1431 subjects (511 men, 920 women; 65-74 yr old). Altogether, 312 men and 515 women had NGT, 84 men and 158 women had IGT, 33 men and 59 women had newly diagnosed NIDDM, and 82 men and 188 women had previously diagnosed NIDDM. Participation rate was 71%. Main outcome measures were prevalence rates of CHD, stroke, and intermittent claudication. RESULTS--There was no difference in the prevalence of definite or possible MI verified at hospital between subjects with asymptomatic hyperglycemia and NGT (15.5 vs. 13.3% in men, 6.3 vs. 5.3% in women). Men with asymptomatic hyperglycemia had 1.5 x higher prevalence of angina pectoris (29.4 vs. 19.3%, P less than 0.05), major Q-QS changes (21.1 vs. 12.0%, P less than 0.05), ischemic ECG changes (59 vs. 45%, P less than 0.05), and silent MI on ECG (14.8 vs. 7.9%, P less than 0.05) compared to men with NGT. Women with asymptomatic hyperglycemia had more often ischemic ECG changes compared to women with NGT (48.3 vs. 39.7%, P less than 0.05). There was no difference (NS) in the prevalence of verified stroke (3.5 vs. 4.6% in men, 2.7 vs. 2.5% in women) or claudication (7.0 vs. 7.7% in men, 4.6 vs. 4.3% in women) between subjects with asymptomatic hyperglycemia and NGT. In multiple logistic regression analyses, the association between risk factors and MI or ischemic ECG changes in subjects with asymptomatic hyperglycemia was not consistent. CONCLUSION--Elderly subjects with asymptomatic hyperglycemia (particularly men) tended to have an increased prevalence of CHD. Thus, asymptomatic hyperglycemia in the elderly is not a benign phenomenon but is associated with cardiovascular morbidity.
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PMID:Asymptomatic hyperglycemia and atherosclerotic vascular disease in the elderly. 150 3

In a prospective study of 7725 middle-aged British men, 357 of whom died in an average follow-up period of four years, self-assessment of health status was strongly associated with mortality. Men who reported poor health had an eight-fold increase in total mortality compared with those reporting excellent health. Those perceiving fair or poor health were older, more likely to be manual workers and cigarette smokers, more likely to be thin and to be heavy drinkers or to have given up drinking in the past five years. They were also more likely to recall multiple diagnoses and to be on regular medication. Half of those with poor perceived health had chest pain on exertion (angina), one-third had experienced severe chest pain (possible myocardial infarction) half were breathless on exertion and 80% had been off work for more than a month in recent years. At all age levels between 45 and 64 years, and in both manual and non-manual workers, mortality was twice as high in men reporting fair or poor health than in men reporting excellent or good health. In both men with and without recall of at least one major diagnosis, fair or poor perceived health was associated with a two fold increase in age-adjusted mortality rate. In both groups this increased mortality was to a large extent accounted for by the increase in the prevalence of adverse characteristics such as regular medication, chest pain, breathlessness and current smoking. Self-assessment of health status appears to be a good measure of current physical health and risk of death. It could be useful in both clinical and epidemiological situations.
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PMID:Self-assessment of health status and mortality in middle-aged British men. 206 28

The incidence of first coronary heart disease (CHD) events was evaluated prospectively in relation to the baseline measurements of systolic and diastolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol, smoking status and education in a cohort of 4576 Quebec men aged 35 to 64 and free from CHD at entry in 1974. From 1974 to 1986, 603 first CHD events were documented. The most frequent first manifestation was angina (6.7/1000 person-years) followed by nonfatal myocardial infarction (4.7/1000) and CHD death 2.2/1000). There was a positive relationship between the first CHD event and systolic (Z = 4.67) and diastolic (Z = 6.50) blood pressure. This relation was observed for angina, nonfatal myocardial infarction and CHD death. Serum cholesterol was also related to all events (Z = 4.99) but more specifically to angina and nonfatal myocardial infarction. Cigarette smoking was significantly related to first CHD manifestations. This relationship for specific CHD events was observed in men who smoked more than 20 cigarettes per day. Men who discontinued smoking one year before the study had a risk not different from those who never smoked. No relationship was observed between years of schooling and CHD events. Blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking constituted nearly two-thirds of the attributable risk of first CHD events.
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PMID:First coronary heart disease event rates in relation to major risk factors: Quebec cardiovascular study. 222 16

Cardiac extraction, oxidation and release of plasma free fatty acids (FFA) was measured by coronary sinus catheterization, utilizing infusions of 3H palmitate and 14C oleate, in patients with ischaemic heart disease (IHD) at rest and during pacing induced angina pectoris and, for comparison, in healthy men of similar and younger age and men with hypertriglyceridaemia (HTG). At rest IHD patients differed from healthy men only by greater cardiac fatty acid release, which correlated with a significant glycerol release. In IHD patients, unlike in healthy men, myocardial extraction of both palmitate and oleate decreased while fractional oxidation of oleate increased during pacing. Fatty acid release was unaltered. Men with HTG had at rest higher myocardial FFA extraction than IHD patients, which did not decrease during pacing, but like in the patients oleate fractional oxidation increased on pacing. It is concluded that, in the moderately ischaemic human heart, the restricted blood flow may contribute to limit the fatty acid flux into the myocardium. The augmented cardiac fatty acid release in IHD patients is not related to ischaemia per se but may derive from an increased amount of cardiac interstitial fat.
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PMID:Fatty acid turnover in the ischaemic compared to the non-ischaemic human heart. 277 38


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