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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The luminal surface of fatty lesions of atherosclerosis was viewed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Endothelial cells were outlined by staining intercellular junctions with silver and the aortas were fixed in situ at physiological pressure. When aortas were dehydrated by passage through organic solvents followed by critical point drying from liquid CO2, there was considerable disruption of the luminal surface and it was not possible to correctly interpret the morphological integrity of the endothelium. In contrast, simple air-drying of aortas, without solvent dehydration after fixation, allowed the integrity of the cell layer overlying the lesion to be evaluated. The success of this technique was attributed to the retention of arterial lipids during dehydration of the tissue.
Atherosclerosis 1976 Oct
PMID:Scanning electron microscopy in the evaluation of endothelial integrity of the fatty lesion in atherosclerosis. 79 Dec 98

An operative case of 12-year-old boy with a saccular aneurysm at the anterior communicating artery was reported. He had episodes of occasional headache during one year before admission. He was attacked by a severe headache associated with nausea and vomiting, and was admitted to Ooita Pref. Hospital under the diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage four days later. On admission physical examinations revealed almost normal findings except for moderate dehydration and a blood pressure of 130/70 mmHg. Routine examinations (blood, serum including total cholesterol, urine, ECG and plain chest X-film) were normal. Neurologically there were lethalgic state, moderate nuchal rigidity and bilateral abducens paresis. Slightly hemorrhagic and xanthochromic CSF was demonstrated by a spinal puncture. An aneurysm was found at the anterior communicating artery on the right carotid arteriogram. The left carotid and the left vertebral arteriograms showed no pathologic findings. Operation via right fronto-temporal approach disclosed a berry aneurysm about 4 mm in diameter arising from the bifurcation of the right anterior cerebral and the anterior communicating artery. There was a plaque presumably an atherosclerotic change at the neck of the aneurysm. Clipping of the aneurysmal neck was done. The aneurysm was not visualized on the postoperative arteriogram, and the patient was discharged in good condition two weeks after the operation. It is true that this patient had a lesion which seemed to be an atherosclerotic plaque at the neck of the aneurysm macroscopically, but he did not have any evidence of generalized atherosclerosis or other metabolic disturbance. This plaque may be of special significance in etiological respect. In general, however, degenerative lesions like atherosclerosis occur predominantly in larger arteries than smaller arteries of the brain. Also the location of this aneurysm was at the anterior communicating artery which is reported to be implicated in anomalous vascularity on occasion. From these facts the authors considered combined congenital and acquired factors in the development of this aneurysm.
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PMID:[Intracranial aneurysm in a child--a case report and some considerations on etiology (author's transl)]. 94 72

In a prospective study of postoperative complications, strokes occurred in 6 out of 2463 patients (0.2%) who underwent non-cardiac, non-carotid artery surgery. The patients who experienced cerebrovascular accidents, including three cases of transient ischemic attack, were significantly older than the rest of the group (mean age 79 years versus 65 years) and had manifestations of atherosclerosis in at least one organ preoperatively. Significant predictors of risk for postoperative cerebrovascular accidents were previous cerebrovascular disease, heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, and hypertension. Cerebrovascular accidents occurred late in the postoperative period, 5-26 days after surgery, and were not directly related to surgery and anesthesia. They were more frequent after acute than after elective operations. Precipitating factors for some of the stroke incidents were rapid atrial fibrillation and postoperative dehydration.
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PMID:Postoperative cerebrovascular accidents in general surgery. 321 96

Alterations of the function of two essential organs during ageing is studied: the heart and the kidney. Anatomical and hemodynamic alterations secondary to cardiac ageing are considered along with the essential role of coronary atherosclerosis. Clinical consequences because of the decreased performance of the left ventricle ensue, especially a diminution of the adaptability during stress. As far as ageing of the kidney is concerned, physiological consequences are studied, especially the renal clearance which conditions the therapeutic and/or toxic effect of medications. The difficulties of a reliable reflection of the condition of the kidneys by blood creatinin measurements, are demonstrated, because of the diminution of the lean mass and dehydration in elderly patients. Because of the difficulties in collecting 24 hours urine, methods of measurement of the creatinin clearance by estimation from blood creatinin levels are proposed.
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PMID:[The major physiologic stages of advancing age]. 356 47

Numerous studies have utilized histologic sections of coronary arteries as the standard for testing the validity of the angiographic determination of coronary artery dimensions. However, little attention has been given to artifactual dimensional changes that occur during fixation and histologic processing of tissues (dehydration, clearing, embedding, sectioning and staining). Using planimetric techniques, the dimensional changes that occurred with fixation and processing were quantitated in 61 coronary artery segments with minimal or moderate to severe atherosclerosis obtained from 12 patients studied at autopsy. In vessels with minimal atherosclerotic narrowing, fixation and processing resulted in a decrease in total vessel cross-sectional area and luminal cross-sectional area (p less than or equal to 0.05), whereas absolute wall area (total vessel cross-sectional area minus luminal cross-sectional area) did not change (p = NS). These disproportionate changes resulted in an alteration in the relation between lumen and wall areas so that luminal cross-sectional area decreased from 47.6 +/- 8.5% of the total vessel cross-sectional area observed before fixation to 36.2 +/- 7% after processing (p less than or equal to 0.05). In vessels with moderate to severe atherosclerosis, both the total cross-sectional area and wall area decreased after fixation and processing (p less than or equal to 0.05), but luminal area did not change (p = NS). As a result, the percent luminal cross-sectional area in these vessels increased from 21.1 +/- 10.1% before fixation to 28.7 +/- 9.7% after processing (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Limitations of postmortem assessment of human coronary artery size and luminal narrowing: differential effects of tissue fixation and processing on vessels with different degrees of atherosclerosis. 388 98

The aging kidney suffers reduction both in mass and in glomerular filtration rate. These changes may be totally or partially due to atherosclerosis and hypertension, which reduce renal blood flow. Superimposed on these processes, and perhaps responsible for primary loss of renal mass irrespective of renal vascular disease, is glomerular damage and involution that is a consequence of adaptive increases in glomerular perfusion pressure that occurs as the number of nephrons decline with age. The data available at this time do not allow us to distinguish between these two potential mechanisms of renal senescence. The decline in GFR is in turn responsible for reduced renal acidification and the reduced renal clearance of drugs that are normally removed by the kidney. Certain renal functions, however, are depressed to a greater extent than is GFR. Both the ability to maximally dilute the urine and to maximally concentrate it are controlled by serum ADH concentrations and by the action of that hormone on the collecting duct. Aged rats do not maximally secrete ADH under conditions of dehydration and the effect of ADH on the kidney is also attenuated. Elderly humans also cannot maximally suppress ADH secretion when serum osmolality is reduced. Likewise, the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis is poorly responsive to volume depletion in aging subjects. As a result, elderly individuals cannot maximally retain sodium under conditions of plasma volume contraction out of proportion to reduction in GFR. The kidney is the site of vitamin D1 hydroxylation. Hydroxylation of vitamin D is reduced out of proportion to any reduction in GFR in the rat. There are no data as yet available on the effect of aging and the production of erythropoietin, a principal regulator of red blood cell mass. Neither are there data available on changes that might occur with advancing age in the ability of the aging kidney to metabolize various hormones, such as parathyroid hormone, glucagon, and insulin. The mechanisms and the full biochemical and physiologic consequences of renal senescence remain to be fully elucidated.
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PMID:The aging kidney. 391

Diarrhea is a common problem among the elderly that can have catastrophic results. Atherosclerosis predisposes older adults to morbid sequelae from dehydration resulting from diarrhea. Deaths related to diarrheal illnesses are recognized among older adults living in the community as well as among those confined to nursing homes. Outbreaks have most often been associated with excess deaths from diarrhea among nursing-home patients. Although most cases of dehydration from diarrhea result from gastrointestinal infections, noninfectious causes of diarrhea related to prescription of laxatives, side effects of medications, and use of enteral feedings are common. Clostridium difficile infection is particularly common among older adults in hospitals and nursing homes, and relapsing disease in these groups may be more frequent than among younger adults. The approach to an elderly patient with diarrhea is to ensure proper hydration using available oral rehydration solutions, proceed with diagnostic tests likely to yield a positive result, avoid the use of harmful antiperistaltic drugs, and provide adequate follow-up of the nutritional state.
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PMID:Approach to acute diarrhea in the elderly. 840 28

This review summarizes progress in glycosylation research of relevance to atherosclerosis. Glucose reacts in vivo with cellular proteins nonenzymatically and forms Amadori products. The Amadori products proceed very slowly to undergo a number of further dehydration and rearrangement to form advanced glycosylation end products (AGE). The AGE moiety are characterized by being brown, fluorescent chromophores that can cross-rink proteins. In contrast Amadori products, AGE are irreversible and accumulate on long-lived proteins (eg, collagen, enzyme, lens crystallins) for many years. AGE proteins can modify lipoproteins fibrinogen, collagen and DNA. AGE protein receptor is identified on macrophages. AGE may accelerate development of atherosclerosis by various manner.
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PMID:[Carbohydrate metabolism]. 841 57

The incidence of certain ageing sequelae such as lung and cardiovascular disease and cataract are higher in smokers than in non-smokers. We recently proposed that certain components of mainstream cigarette smoke can react with plasma and extracellular matrix proteins to form covalent adducts with many of the properties of advanced glycation endproducts (AGE). AGEs have been implicated previously in the pathogenesis of the end-organ complications of diabetes and ageing, including cataract, atherosclerosis and renal insufficiency. In these circumstances, AGEs arise in vivo from the non-enzymatic reaction of reducing sugars with amino groups. Over time the initial Schiff base and Amadori products that form gradually undergo dehydration and rearrangement to produce reactive, carbonyl containing compounds with characteristic fluorescence and covalent crosslinking properties. Recent studies indicate that in smokers, tobacco-derived AGEs accumulate on plasma low density lipoprotein (LDL), structural proteins present within the vascular wall, and the lens proteins of the eye. These data point to a new and significant source of Maillard products in the human environment, significantly broaden the role of Maillard chemistry in pathological processes, and provide new insight into the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and other diseases associated with tobacco usage.
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PMID:Advanced glycation endproducts and cigarette smoking. 984 84

This hypothesis is that some crewmen on prolonged space flights may develop permanent myocardial injury despite the absence of coronary atherosclerosis and even without the hazards of radiation beyond orbit. This may resuIt from atrophy of skeletal muscle and bone resulting in magnesium ion deficiency predisposing to a vicious cycle with catecholamine elevations, with the latter aggravated by stress, dehydration-provoked angiotensin elevations, unremitting endurance exercise, and in turn a second vicious cycle with severe ischemia. Toxic free radicals can develop complicating ischemia and potential high radiation, with magnesium ion deficiency and high vascular catecholamines playing contributing roles. These free radicals may lead to inactivation of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) causing coronary endothelial injury by a third vicious cycle, increased peripheral resistance and coronary vasospasm intensifying ischemia. Local and systemic thrombogenesis could contribute ultimately to focal fibrosis of the myocardium, if the ischemia is not recognized. Sufficient magnesium and time for repair are vital.
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PMID:Interplanetary travel and permanent injury to normal heart. 1154


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