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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Asymptomatic hyperuricemia should be treated only if the plasma uric acid levels are around 10 mg/100 ml or more on several determinations. In addition, patients on a purine-free diet who excrete more than 600 mg uric acid per 24 h should be treated. In both cases, treatment is intended to be prophylactic against gouty nephropathy. At present there is no evidence that primary hyperuricemia alone is a risk factor for early
atherosclerosis
and especially
coronary artery disease
. However, more attention should be paid to the accompanying risk factors such as obesity, hyperlipoproteinemia, diabetes mellitus and hypertension.
...
PMID:[Which uric acid value is in need of treatment?]. 126 67
Endothelial cells synthesize and metabolize vasoactive substances which are involved in the regulation of vascular tone. Among these factors, the endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) appears to be of major importance. Many studies observed an impairment of the generation, release, or the diffusion of endothelial NO across the vascular intima in laboratory animals with various experimental diseases such as hypercholesterolemia,
atherosclerosis
and hypertension. In human coronary arteries obtained from explanted hearts impaired endothelium-dependent relaxations were measured in atherosclerotic segments. The hypothesis of a decreased NO mediated vasodilation in patients with
coronary artery disease
was further underscored by in vivo studies in man using intracoronary infusions of the endothelium-dependent vasodilator acetylcholine and quantitative coronary angiographic measurements of the diameter changes. From these observations it was assumed that endothelial dysfunction, in particular a profound inability of the coronary endothelium to relax via NO dependent mechanisms may play an important role in the pathogenesis of abnormal coronary vasomotion. However, further investigations in man reveal that the ability of the coronary endothelium of patients with
coronary artery disease
or vasospastic angina to produce endothelial NO is less affected as judged from the effects of acetylcholine. In recent investigations a largely preserved endothelial function could be measured in these patients when the endothelium-dependent vasodilator substance P was used as a tool for the measurement of NO dependent relaxation. Thus, endothelial dysfunction does not appear to serve as a major cause of abnormal vasoconstriction in
coronary artery disease
or vasospastic angina in man.
...
PMID:In vivo measurement of endothelium-dependent vasodilation with substance P in man. 128 20
Hyperhomocysteinemia is a risk factor for
atherosclerosis
, and is found in the heterozygous form in approximately one-third of all individuals with
coronary artery disease
. The sulfhydryl group of homocysteine has been viewed as contributing to the atherogenic effects of this low-molecular-weight thiol, largely as a consequence of facilitating the generation of hydrogen peroxide from oxygen. Hydrogen peroxide, in turn, is presumed to induce dysfunction and damage to the endothelial cell, leading to attenuation of its antithrombotic and vasodilatory properties. As we have shown that endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) and other oxides of nitrogen can form adducts with thiols, we hypothesized that EDRF released from normal endothelium S-nitrosates homocysteine, rendering it nontoxic to the endothelium. We show that EDRF released from endothelial cells in the presence of homocysteine can lead to the formation of S-nitrosohomocysteine; that, like other S-nitrosothiols, S-nitrosohomocysteine induces vasorelaxation and platelet inhibition; and that, in contrast to homocysteine, S-nitrosohomocysteine does not support hydrogen peroxide generation and does not lead to endothelial dysfunction. These data suggest that normal endothelial cells modulate the adverse effects of homocysteine by facilitating the formation of the EDRF adduct, S-nitrosohomocysteine. The toxic effects of homocysteine may, then, result from an inability of the endothelium to sustain adequate production of EDRF in the face of elevated homocysteine concentration.
...
PMID:Endothelium-derived relaxing factor modulates the atherothrombogenic effects of homocysteine. 128 70
Calcium-antagonist drugs are therapeutic agents of first choice in patients with
coronary artery disease
. We have reviewed a number of clinical trials in which the safety and efficacy of calcium blockers have been tested and discuss the established clinical effects of these compounds, which range from relief of angina and improved quality of life (both in patients with ischemia due to reduction in coronary flow and in patients with ischemia due to increased O2 demand) to a favorable effect on the course of coronary
atherosclerosis
and, finally, (at least for some of these agents) to an improvement in prognosis.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of calcium-antagonist drugs. 128 60
The reduction in cardiovascular mortality and morbidity observed over the last decade may be considered to be largely the result of the prevention of lipid disorders. The beneficial effects of diet and increased consumption of unsaturated fatty acids on ischaemic heart disease is a generally accepted concept. The low death rate from
coronary artery disease
amongst Greenland eskimos who eat a lot of fish has been confirmed by epidemiological studies of other large fish eating populations like the Japanese. The results reported by Bang and Dyerberg have been confirmed by the Zutphen study undertaken by Kromhout in the Netherlands. Fish oil act by the intermediary of the omega-3 fatty acids. Fish oil is rich in high unsaturated omega-3 fatty acids, the most important one being eicosapentaenoic (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acids (DHA). On the basis of epidemiological studies and clinical and experimental observations, it would appear that the consumption of marine polyunsaturated fatty acids has at least a preventive effect on phenomena of
atherosclerosis
and thrombosis. Their efficacy on the regression or stabilisation of the atheromatous plaque has not been demonstrated. The sites of action are multiple: decreased platelet aggregation; inhibition of thromboxane A2 production; reduction of triglyceride and VLDL concentration; improved blood rheology; action on the endothelium and proliferation of the intimal cells, vascular tone and vasomotricity. The importance of cardiovascular mortality and the hopes raised by clinical and epidemiological trials justify the pursuit of complementary studies on the efficacy and modes of action of marine polyunsaturated omega-3 fatty acids.
...
PMID:[Atheroma and fish oils]. 128
Accelerated
atherosclerosis
of cardiac grafts is one of the factors limiting long-term survival after cardiac transplantation. The authors report the case of a patient who had a cardiac arrest associated with severe
atherosclerosis
18 months after transplantation. The severity of the coronary lesions was underestimated by coronary angiography. An ergometrine test induced coronary spasm, a phenomenon which has only rarely been observed in transplanted hearts. The patient died one month later despite calcium inhibitor therapy. Autopsy revealed very severe triple vessel disease. This case illustrates the possible rapid evolution of
coronary artery disease
in cardiac transplant recipients, the difficulty in evaluating the severity of the lesions by coronary angiography and the additional possibility of observing coronary spasm in these cases.
...
PMID:[Coronary accelerated arteriosclerosis and vasospasm in the transplanted heart]. 129 Apr 1
Randomized controlled trials along with 'within group' studies of patients with symptomatic
coronary artery disease
suggest that dietary and other lifestyle changes can halt progression of coronary
atherosclerosis
, induce regression of pre-existing severe lesions, and reduce the severity or frequency of angina. Varying combinations have been tested, including restriction of dietary total, saturated and polyunsaturated fat using lean meat or vegetarian diets, fish oil supplements, smoking cessation, stress management, and exercise training. The relative importance of each of these remains unclear. In patients with recent myocardial infarction high fish diets appeared effective in reducing both ischaemic heart deaths and total death rates over two years, whereas modest changes in dietary saturated fats or fibre had no influence on outcome. These results suggest that a far more active dietary approach is needed for patients with symptomatic coronary disease. Further research is required into the possible complementary role of dietary measures and drug treatment for reversing the disease process and improving outcome, using new techniques for achieving behavioural change.
...
PMID:Strategies and difficulties in dietary intervention in myocardial infarction patients. 131 46
Recent clinical studies have shown that calcium channel blockers can retard and possibly reduce the angiographic progression of
coronary artery disease
. Calcium channel blockers also inhibit dietary-induced
atherosclerosis
in animal models of this disease. In this study, we delineate potential cellular and molecular mechanisms by which nicardipine, a dihydropyridine calcium antagonist, may alter lipoprotein and cholesterol trafficking, affect the regulatory signal transduction pathways involved in accelerating cholesteryl ester (CE) catabolism in vascular smooth muscle cells, and modulate cell-cell interactions of vascular and inflammatory cells. We demonstrate in arterial smooth muscle cells that nicardipine increases 1) LDL binding, uptake, and degradation, 2) RNA transcript levels for the LDL receptor, 3) CE catabolic activity, 4) PGI2 release, and 5) RNA transcript levels for cyclooxygenase. Furthermore, nicardipine blocked cytokine-induced monocyte adhesion to endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. Taken together, these findings support the hypothesis that nicardipine may function as an anti-atherosclerotic agent by promoting CE catabolism and cholesterol clearance and by reducing monocyte adhesion to the activated endothelium.
...
PMID:Dihydropyridine calcium antagonist modulates cholesterol metabolism and eicosanoid biosynthesis in vascular cells. 131 89
We examined 164 endomyocardial biopsy specimens from 29 patients who received an orthotopic heart transplant since 1984. Rejection was graded according to the Hannover classification. Non-isotopic in situ DNA hybridization was conducted on cryostat sections with biotinylated probes for herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus, and cytomegalovirus. Serial sections of 126 biopsies were investigated immunohistochemically for the presence of activated T lymphocytes and proliferating cells, with monoclonal antibodies against interleukin 2 receptors (CD 25) and Ki-67 antigen. Relations between rejection grades, presence of proliferating cells, and presence of herpesvirus DNA were determined for the total number of biopsies. For some patients correlation of these parameters was studied over time. Herpesviral nucleic acids were detected in 25% of all biopsies: 37% of biopsies with relevant rejection (grades A 2 or A 3; 39% of all biopsies) compared to 18% of biopsies graded A 0, A 1, or A 5 (61% of all samples) (P less than 0.01). 56% of the biopsies with infection showed relevant rejection as compared with only 33% of the uninfected. Ki-67 expression was found in 41% of all biopsies, mainly in infiltrating cells: 69% of biopsies with relevant rejection compared with 23% of cases of minor/no rejection (P much less than 0.001). Ki-67 expression was also associated with herpesvirus infection: 66% of infected biopsies contained Ki-67 positive cells compared with 33% of uninfected biopsies (P less than 0.001). Herpesvirus infection was usually observed within the interstitial cell population, which, in many cases, displayed a considerable Ki-67 expression, too. In few cases only, hybridization was unequivocally found in vascular wall cells or myocytes. Viral myocarditis does not only mimic graft rejection morphologically, but it may also affect the course of rejection, via induction of antigenic changes or direct injury of cardiac tissues. Virus infections may also elicit or aggravate obliterative
coronary artery disease
, and thus contribute to accelerated graft
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Rejection, herpesvirus infection, and Ki-67 expression in endomyocardial biopsy specimens from heart transplant recipients. 131 59
In this article we have focused on the evolving pattern of nutritional management of the person with diabetes. Before the advent of insulin in 1922, it was sufficient to identify a meal plan that would keep people alive until they could be rescued from mortality due to diabetic ketoacidosis (the major killer of the era) by pharmacologic means. Now, the life expectancy of people with diabetes is close to that of the general population and focus has turned to combating the new threats of macrovascular disease and kidney failure. Over recent years the susceptibility of NIDDM patients to macrovascular events has been established and the twofold increase in risk of a heart attack in diabetic men is outshadowed by the four- to fivefold risk in diabetic women and the 13- to 17-fold greater risk in diabetics under the age of 30 years compared with their nondiabetic counterparts. The mechanism behind the susceptibility to macrovascular disease has generated a veritable plethora of investigations focusing on the atherogenic profile of diabetic dyslipidemia. Hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, and overtreatment of the diabetic with insulin have been claimed as contributors to the development of premature
atherosclerosis
. The hallmark of the diabetic dyslipidemia is the tendency to elevated VLDL triglyceride levels and the closely linked reduction in HDL cholesterol. Although there is some controversy on the relationship between triglyceride levels and the incidence of
CAD
, there is no doubt that HDL is an independent risk factor. It can now be safely said that elevated triglycerides are a risk factor in women and that in men elevated triglycerides constitute a risk factor if accompanied by a reduced HDL level. For these reasons, any approach to nutritional management of the diabetic must attempt not only to normalize glycemia but to make every effort to reduce the atherogenic profile. In the accompanying algorithm (Fig. 4), we consider the risk factors conducive to a reduction in life expectancy and offer a meal plan that is appropriate for the individual with diabetes. For the 80% of NIDDM patients who are obese, a diet with a reduction of 500 to 1000 kcal is in order and this may be achieved by a periodic VLCD. We examined carefully the controversy related to yo-yo dieting and support the notion that its effects in humans are not all that harmful. Ingestion of simple sugars in the high carbohydrate diet has negative effects both on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The good, the bad, and the ugly in diabetic diets. 131 32
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