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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present work has attempted an analysis of the role hypercorticism as a risk factor in arterial hypertension and
atherosclerosis
. Our series consisted of 149 male and female patients of various ages. The incidence of cardiovascular disorders in relation to age and the glucidic lipidic metabolic disorders were also investigated. The results showed that hypercorticism may trigger in very young patients as well arterial hypertension (AH) and glucidic-lipid metabolic disorders both incriminated as risk factors in including
atherosclerosis
.
Hypercorticism
was proved to be an aggravating factor of pre-existing cardiopathy. Efficient management of adrenocortical hormones excess brings complete resolution of arterial hypertension and glucidic lipid metabolic disorders in young patients and most adult patients who had no cardiovascular complaints prior to the endocrine syndrome.
...
PMID:Hypercorticism--a risk factor in arterial hypertension and atherosclerosis. 725 66
The authors have explored the suitability of the Mongolian gerbil as a model in aging research and reviewed data on major factors in gerbil morbidity and mortality. The gerbil is a semi-desert rodent, introduced relatively recently into biomedical research. It is moderately prolific, has a maximum survival of about 208 weeks and is easily maintained. Maternal neglect, fighting and epidemic diseases (Tyzzer's disease, salmonellosis, pneumonia) are potential causes of mortality in gerbil colonies. Obese or breeding gerbils may exhibit
hyperadrenocorticism
, diabetes, non-lipoid arteriosclerosis and secondary lesions in several organs. There is a high prevalence of spontaneous neoplasms in aged gerbils, especially tumors of the adrenal cortex, ovary and skin. The gerbil is a useful model of experimentally-induced stroke, but has proven unsuitable for studies of cholesterol-induced
atherosclerosis
. The normal and pathological anatomy of periodontal disease in the gerbil is similar in many respects to that of man.
...
PMID:The Mongolian gerbil in aging research. 739 11
Glucocorticoids mainly act through binding to cytosolic receptors that translocate to the nucleus after ligand binding, and dimerize to affect gene transcription in multiple fashions. The liganded receptors may interact with DNA at specific glucocorticoid responsive-elements, may physically hinder the ability of other transcription-regulating proteins to interact with their own DNA response-elements, and may form intranuclear complexes with the transcription factor c-jun, thus changing the number of c-jun/c-fos heterodimers that bind at AP-1 sites. By these, and perhaps other, mechanisms, physiologic concentrations of glucocorticoids regulate normal tissue metabolism, and supraphysiologic concentrations cause Cushing's syndrome. Cushing's syndrome leaves virtually no body tissue untouched. Left untreated, it results in progressive adiposity, myopathy, dermopathy (atrophy, stria, purpura, and hirsutism), psychopathy, glucose intolerance, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension,
atherosclerosis
, immunosuppression, and, ultimately, death. The physiology underlying each of these effects of
hypercortisolism
has been reviewed. The differences in the presentation of Cushing's syndrome in children and adults have also been discussed. The goal of the clinician must be to identify individuals with Cushing's syndrome as early in the course of the disease as possible so as to avoid the devastating complications that result from prolonged
hypercortisolism
. In patients for whom screening tests are equivocal, or only intermittently elevated, it may be necessary to re-evaluate the patient over time to establish that the patient has
hypercortisolism
. Some clinical guidelines for which patients to screen for
hypercortisolism
have been presented. Once
hypercortisolism
is established, patients with mild
hypercortisolism
(urine free cortisol less than four-fold above the upper limit of normal) should undergo tests to differentiate true Cushing's syndrome from a pseudo-Cushing state.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoid action and the clinical features of Cushing's syndrome. 780 50
The patient was a 26-year-old man with Cushing's disease who underwent transsphenoidal microscopic surgery for a pituitary microadenoma. His postoperative course was uneventful, but he died suddenly five years after the operation. At autopsy, a ruptured dissecting aneurysm with marked
atherosclerosis
was observed in the aorta. In the pituitary, a small focus of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) producing adenoma, possibly residual adenoma, was detected and Crooke's degeneration was observed in the non-tumorous pituitary gland. But immunohistochemical patterns of pituitary hormones in the non-tumorous pituitary gland were normal and the adrenal cortex was unremarkable. In the hypothalamus, corticotropin-releasing hormone immunoreactivity was not detected and arginine vasopressin was sporadically positive. Considering these findings, this patient may have developed subclinical
hypercortisolism
due to the residual adenoma at the time of autopsy, despite clinical remission. Cushing's syndrome is considered to be a risk factor dissecting aneurysm, and in this case the metabolic changes in Cushing's disease may have influenced the development of the dissecting aneurysm. Periodic cardiovascular re-evaluations should therefore be performed when there is clinical remission of Cushing's syndrome.
...
PMID:A case of ruptured dissecting aneurysm 5 years after pituitary microsurgical treatment of Cushing's disease: autopsy findings in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. 795 28
The paper summarizes the studies documenting the outlasting of increased cardiovascular mortality in patients with Cushing's syndrome even after the
hypercortisolism
resolution. Despite the
hypercortisolism
resolution the mortality during the subsequent period of life is up to four-fold higher than in the comparable population as a whole. The pathogenesis of this cardiovascular risk is based on arterial hypertension, steroid cardiomyopathy and hyperlipidaemia with subsequent
atherosclerosis
. The post mortem material bears a parallel of the extent of atheromatous changes and duration of hypercorticolism. The prevention has to its disposition two mutually complementing means. The first is represented by clinical screening of hypercorticolism which enables an early recognition and therapy of the Cushing's syndrome. The successive measure resides in increased attention to the cardiovascular system even after hypercorticolism resolution. (Tab. 1, Fig. 1, Ref. 25.).
...
PMID:[Cushing's syndrome is still a potentially fatal disease]. 862 39
Cortisol is the most important hormone secreted in response to acute and chronic stress. Thromboxane A2 (TxA2) is a potent eicosanoid with vasoconstricting and proaggregatory actions. Our earlier finding of a close correlation between plasma levels of TxB2, the stable metabolite of TxA2, and cortisol in subjects with major depression but without frank
hypercortisolism
prompted us to investigate a possible association between TxA2 and cortisol production in nondepressed subjects. The 24-hour urinary excretion values of 2,3-dinor-TxB2 (the urinary catabolite of TxA2) and cortisol were measured by radioimmunoassay in 50 subjects divided into three groups matched for age, sex distribution, and body mass index. Group 1 consisted of 19 healthy subjects; group 2 consisted of 15 patients with type IIa hypercholesterolemia, a condition associated with a high atherothrombotic risk, but without history of
atherosclerosis
or evidence of this disorder documented clinically or in noninvasive diagnostic tests; and group 3 consisted of 16 patients with regional
atherosclerosis
(8 with cerebrovascular disease, 6 with coronary artery disease, and 2 with peripheral vascular disease). Although the three groups had similar cortisol and 2,3-dinor-TxB2 urinary values, a significant direct correlation emerged between the two catabolites in the whole study sample (r = 0.63; p < 0.0001) and the three groups (r1 = 0.62, p < 0.01; r2 = 0.78, p < 0.0001; r3 = 0.63, p < 0.01). The close association between cortisol and thromboxane A2 biosynthesis thus appears to be a general phenomenon. These findings may be important in interpreting the well-described causative link between stress and atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Associated daily biosynthesis of cortisol and thromboxane A2: a preliminary report. 875 43
Most patients with hypertension in the United States have essential (primary) hypertension (95%), the cause of which is unknown. The remaining 5% of adults with hypertension have the secondary form of hypertension, the cause and pathophysiologic process of which are known. Internists and other primary care physicians refer to this as treatable or curable hypertension, because the hypertension can be managed or even controlled with medications. Similarly, the condition is called surgical hypertension by surgeons in the belief that once the cause is determined and identified, surgical intervention will result in cure of hypertension. Secondary causes of hypertension include renal parenchymal disease, renovascular diseases, coarctation of the aorta, Cushing's syndrome, primary hyperaldosteronism, pheochromocytoma, hyperthyroidism, and hyperparathyroidism. Occasionally included in this category are alcohol- and oral contraceptive-induced hypertension and hypothyroidism, but these conditions are not discussed herein. The evaluation of secondary hypertension is of interest and can bring together different facets of anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, and radiology in the medical and surgical treatment of these disorders. Despite enthusiasm that can be generated in the evaluation of these conditions, evaluation can be expensive and should not be conducted for all patients with hypertension. Features that aid in the diagnosis of secondary hypertension include the following: 1. Onset of hypertension before the age of 20 or after the age of 50 years. The presence of hypertension at a young age may suggest coarctation of the aorta, fibromuscular dysplasia, or an endocrine disorder. Hypertension found for the first time after the age of 50 years may suggest the presence of renovascular hypertension caused by
atherosclerosis
. 2. Markedly elevated blood pressure or hypertension with severe end-organ damage, as in grade III or IV retinopathy. These findings suggest the presence of renovascular hypertension or pheochromocytoma. 3. Specific body habitus and ancillary physical findings. For example, truncal obesity and purple striae occur with
hypercortisolism
, and exophthalmos is associated with hyperthyroidism. 4. Resistant or refractory hypertension (poor response to medical therapy usually necessitating use of more than three antihypertensive medications from three different classes). 5. Specific biochemical test that suggest the existence of certain disorders, such as hypercalcemia in hyperparathyroidism, hyperglycemia in Cushing's syndrome and pheochromocytoma, and unprovoked hypokalemia with renin-producing tumors, primary hyperaldosteronism, or renin-mediated renovascular hypertension. 6. Other characteristics that may suggest secondary hypertension such as abdominal diastolic bruits (renovascular hypertension), decreased femoral pulses (coarctation of the aorta), or bitemporal hemianopias (Cushing's disease). A combination of a good history and physical examination, astute observation, and accurate interpretation of available data usually are helpful in the diagnosis of a specific causation.
...
PMID:Secondary hypertension: evaluation and treatment. 894 19
HIV infection has reached endemic proportions in many African countries. In addition, HIV infection is a significant cause of renal dysfunction in the United States. HIV patients are at higher risk of developing hypertension at a younger age than the general population. Predisposing factors for developing hypertension include vasculitis in small, medium, and large vessels in the form of leukocytoclastic vasculitis, and aneurysms of the large vessels such as the carotid, femoral, and abdominal aorta with impairment of flow to the renal arteries. A syndrome of acquired glucocorticoid resistance has been described in patients with HIV with
hypercortisolism
and a lower affinity of the glucocorticoid receptors. The syndrome is characterized clinically by weakness, hypertension or hypotension, and skin pigmentation changes. Acute and chronic renal failure is often associated with HIV infection. The associated dysfunction in water and salt handling often induces hypertension. Finally,
atherosclerosis
has been described in young adults with HIV infection secondary to receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy.
...
PMID:Hypertension in the HIV-infected patient. 1099 24
Cardiovascular accidents represent the most important cause of death in patients with Cushing's syndrome. This prospective study aims at evaluating carotid arteries by echo-Doppler ultrasonography and clinical and metabolic markers of
atherosclerosis
in 25 patients with Cushing's disease (CD) before and after 1 yr of remission. Thirty-two sex- and age-matched subjects (control-1) and 32 body mass index-matched subjects (control-2) served as controls. At diagnosis, CD patients had higher body mass index, waist to hip ratio (WHR), total, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol and total/high-density lipoprotein (HDL) ratio, glucose and insulin, as well as lower HDL-cholesterol than control-1; they had higher WHR and total/HDL ratio and lower HDL-cholesterol than control-2. They also had higher intima-media thickness (IMT), and lower systolic lumen diameter and distensibility coefficient (DC) than either control group. Atherosclerotic plaques were detected in 31.2% of patients, 0 control-1, and 6.2% of control-2 subjects. One year after remission, WHR, LDL-cholesterol, and IMT significantly decreased, whereas systolic lumen diameter and DC significantly increased. However, all of the above parameters were still abnormal compared with control-1, but not control-2. A significant correlation was found between WHR, glucose and insulin levels, and right and left carotid IMT. WHR was the best predictor of left IMT and left DC in active, but not in cured, patients. The duration of
hypercortisolism
was the best predictor of right DC in active but not in cured patients. In conclusion, patients with CD have severe atherosclerotic damage. The persistence of a metabolic syndrome, vascular damage, and atherosclerotic plaques after cortisol level normalization makes these subjects still at high cardiovascular risk despite disease remission.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors and common carotid artery caliber and stiffness in patients with Cushing's disease during active disease and 1 year after disease remission. 1278 49
The objective of this study was to determine whether dogs with
atherosclerosis
are more likely to have concurrent diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, or
hyperadrenocorticism
than dogs that do not have
atherosclerosis
. A retrospective mortality prevalence case-control study was performed. The study group included 30 dogs with histopathological evidence of
atherosclerosis
. The control group included 142 dogs with results of a complete postmortem examination, a final postmortem examination diagnosis of neoplasia, and no histopathological evidence of
atherosclerosis
. Control dogs were frequency matched for age and year in which the postmortem examination was performed. Proportionate changes in the prevalence of diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, and
hyperadrenocorticism
were calculated by exact prevalence odds ratios (POR), 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), and P values. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to examine the combined effects of prevalence determinants while controlling for age and year of postmortem examination. Dogs with
atherosclerosis
were over 53 times more likely to have concurrent diabetes mellitus than dogs without
atherosclerosis
(POR = 53.6; 95% CI, 4.6-627.5; P = .002) and over 51 times more likely to have concurrent hypothyroidism than dogs without
atherosclerosis
(POR = 51.1; 95% CI, 14.5-180.1; P < .001). Dogs with
atherosclerosis
were not found to be more likely to have concurrent
hyperadrenocorticism
than dogs that did not have
atherosclerosis
(POR = 1.8; 95% CI, 0.2-17.6; P = .59). Diabetes mellitus and hypothyroidism, but not
hyperadrenocorticism
, are more prevalent in dogs with
atherosclerosis
compared to dogs without
atherosclerosis
on postmortem examination.
...
PMID:Association between diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism or hyperadrenocorticism, and atherosclerosis in dogs. 1289 99
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