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

Mild to extensive calcification of the intrarenal branches of the renal arteries seen in 13 patients over a period of 12 months is described. This type of renal vascular calcification appeared to be associated with generalised atherosclerosis in patients of advancing age. The association of diabetes mellitus and intrarenal arterial calcification could not be supported by the cases presented here.
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PMID:Calcification of the intrarenal branches of the renal arteries. 85 21

The major reason for treating hypertension is to avoid complications of the disease as it affects "target organs." Treatment of the blood pressure is not the only way to avoid these complications, but it is part of the total practice of preventive medicine. Hypertension lasts for several decades in most patients, and there is time to destroy the patient through target organ effects or to save the patient through treatment. Diabetes, atherosclerosis, and other illnesses and operations pose special hazards to the patient with hypertension. Patients take many other drugs as well, and some of them react adversely with antihypertension medicines. Complications from blood pressure drugs involve nearly every organ system, more than most physicians can remember. These may be dose-related and can often be avoided by using smaller doses of more than one drug. Certain problems occur so frequently that they should be learned well. The physician should bear in mind that whatever develops may be due to the antihypertensive therapy. On the whole, however, medications for treatment of hypertension are remarkably safe and free from side effects.
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PMID:Prevention of some complications of essential hypertension. 86 7

In view of the reported excess prevalence of atherosclerosis and cholelithiasis in diabetes, we investigated several aspects of cholesterol metabolism under metabolic ward conditions in six Pima Indians with maturity-onset diabetes mellitus. Cholesterol balance (13.5 versus 11.0 mg per kilogram per day, P less than 0.05), fecal bile acid excretion (415 versus 261 mg per day, P less than 0.05), bile acid pool size (3150 versus 1950 mg, P less than 0.05), fasting plasma cholesterol (193 versus 160 mg per deciliter, P less than 0.05) and plasma triglycerides (251 versus 150 mg per deciliter, P less than 0.05) were higher during uncontrolled hyperglycemia than during relative euglycemia on insulin. The increased plasma lipid levels and total cholesterol synthesis during hyperglycemia may contribute to the acceleration of atherosclerosis in diabetes mellitus. Gallbladder bile was significantly more saturated with cholesterol (181 per cent versus 114 per cent, P less than 0.05) during insulin treatment than during uncontrolled hyperglycemia. Bile lipid composition was thus more favorable to cholesterol precipitation and gallstone formation during insulin treatment than in the untreated diabetic state.
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PMID:Effects of diabetes mellitus on cholesterol metabolism in man. 87 Aug 27

The authors analysed clinically 108 patients (61 males and 47 females), aged below 50 years treated at the department of neurology, because of acute cerebral ischaemia. Attention is called to risk factors such as arterial hypertension, heart disease, atherosclerosis, obesity and diabetes which may be the cause of earlier development of ischaemic changes in the central nervous system. In the analysed group in 18 cases cerebral thrombosis, in 23 cases embolism, in 31 cerebral circulatory failure were diagnosed. In 36 cases the cause could not have been established.
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PMID:[Acute cerebral ischemic disease in patients under the age of 50]. 88 1

Measurements of aortic length and circumference in 336 post-mortem specimens confirm earlier, neglected observations on the progressive increase in aortic size which occurs with advancing years. The increase is not related to atherosclerosis , or to hypertension and seems to be part of a true ageing process. The value of measurement of aortic size in body age determination merits exploration by forensic pathologists. Aortic calcification is found in raised and complicated atherosclerotic plaques and its prevalence and severity closely follows the accepted pattern of plaque severity, occurring earlier and more severely in men, in the abdominal aorta and in patients with overt vascular disease in other territories such as patients with cardiac infarcts. No association was found between the amount of calcification and the presence of hypertension, diabetes or neoplasia.
Atherosclerosis 1977 Aug
PMID:Aortic size and aortic calcification. A necropsy Study. 88

Considerable evidence points to a metabolic cause for the long-term complications of diabetes--neuropathy, retinopathy, nephropathy and atherosclerosis. Recent studies suggest potential benefits from controlling hyperglycemia as well as possible. However, the individual physician must analyze the evidence for himself and then decide on which principles to base the treatment of his patients.
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PMID:Diabetic control and the late complications of diabetes. 88 56

A noninvasive technique for studying blood flow dynamics in human skin capillaries is described. A light microscope combined with a closed-circuit TV system was used to monitor and record capillary blood flow velocity on video tape. Arterial pulsations were recorded plethysmographically and converted into video signals by modulating the position of a square, white area in the televised scene. Twelve healthy subjects were studied. The mean (+/- SD) resting capillary blood flow velocity was 0.65 +/- 0.3 mm/s at an average skin temperature of 30.4 +/- 2.3 degrees C. Spontaneous fluctuations at a frequency of 6-10 cycles/min were observed in most subjects. A well-pronounced flow pulsatile component could be demonstrated in all capillaries studied. The technique can be used in clinical practice for studying the physiology and pathophysiology of cutaneous microcirculation in man. It can be expected that the method may become an important diagnostic tool in diseases that involve disturbances of the microcirculation, such as diabetes, hypertension, and atherosclerosis.
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PMID:A microscope-television system for studying flow velocity in human skin capillaries. 88 75

Plasma linoleic acid levels were found to be low in the atherosclerosis patients investigated. In contrast, platelet arachidonic acid levels were decreased only when atherosclerosis was combined with diabetes or mixed hyperlipidemia. In acute vascular thrombosis, a marked decrease in platelet arachidonic levels occurrrd, irrespective of whether the patient had atherosclerosis or not.
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PMID:[Platelets fatty acid variation in patients with atherosclerosis (author's transl)]. 89 Sep 91

The smooth muscle cell plays an important role in the process of atherogenesis, proliferating in the arterial intima and becoming filled with lipid during the course of the disease. In these experiments the effect of insulin and glucose on sterol synthesis in cultured rat arterial smooth muscle cells was studied. Arterial smooth muscle cells were cultured from pieces of intima and inner media of young rat aortas. The cells were grown in Petri dishes in culture medium with foetal calf serum and when confluent were exposed to insulin or glucose for 24 hours. Insulin in concentrations of 10 micromicron-100 millimicron per ml stimulated the incorporation of sodium [2-(14)C]acetate into non-saponifiable lipids and digitonin precipitable sterols. However, insulin had no effect on the incorporation of labelled mevalonate into cell sterols. Increasing concentrations of glucose in the medium up to 140 mM had had no effect on the incorporation of isotope into sterols, but higher concentrations of glucose caused cell damage and sterol synthesis was markedly depressed. These results may have relevance to the development of atherosclerosis in diabetes and obesity.
Atherosclerosis 1977 Jul
PMID:The effect of insulin and glucose on sterol synthesis in cultured rat arterial smooth muscle cells. 90 24

This article presents a theory concerning the pathogenetic background for three diseases of civilization: essential hypertension, stable diabetes and atherosclerosis. Man and many other animals have mobilizing mechanisms for preparation for physical activity, expressed inter alia by an increase in blood pressure, hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia. During physical activity, blood pressure falls almost to the resting level and hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia are reduced parallel with the metabolism of glucose and fats in working muscles. In wealthy countries, this preparation for physical activity, which is dominated by the sympathetic-adrenergic system, comes into action just as frequently as in less wealthy countries -- or possibly even more frequently -- but this is rarely followed by muscular activity. How long is this sympathetic dominance maintained? How high are the blood pressure, hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia? How slowly do these return to normal levels? It appears probable that this may be of fundamental pathogenetic significance in the three abovementioned diseases, the causes of which we have difficulty in finding or agreeing upon. Various prophylactic possibilities are mentioned briefly.
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PMID:[An hypothesis concerning the pathogenetic background of 3 diseases of civilization]. 90 6


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