Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lower extremity peripheral arterial disease (PAD) most frequently presents with pain during ambulation, which is known as "intermittent claudication". Some relief of symptoms is possible with exercise, pharmacotherapy, and cessation of smoking. The risk of limb-loss is overshadowed by the risk of mortality from coexistent coronary artery and cerebrovascular atherosclerosis. Primary therapy should be directed at treating the generalised atherosclerotic process, managing lipids, blood sugar, and blood pressure. By contrast, the risk of limb-loss becomes substantial when there is pain at rest, ischaemic ulceration, or gangrene. Interventions such as balloon angioplasty, stenting, and surgical revascularisation should be considered in these patients with so-called "critical limb ischaemia". The choice of the intervention is dependent on the anatomy of the stenotic or occlusive lesion; percutaneous interventions are appropriate when the lesion is focal and short but longer lesions must be treated with surgical revascularisation to achieve acceptable long-term outcome.
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PMID:Peripheral arterial disease. 1193 17

The aim of this study is to compare the results of one stage surgical treatment of combined multifocal aortoiliac (AIOD) and coronary (CA) atherosclerosis (ATS) with two staged surgical approach and isolated aortoiliac reconstructions and to determine adequate surgical strategy for this combination of ATS. The study includes 104 patients (pts) with different localization of multifocal ATS (predominately AIOD and CA) divided in three groups according to the type of operative procedure: Group A--64 with AIOD operated only for this pathology (aortobifemoral bypass grafting-Ao2F) since CA didn't necessitate operative treatment. Group B--30 pts. with combined multifocal AIOD and coronary atherosclerosis were operated in one stage (coronary artery bypass grafting-CABG and Ao2F). Group C--10 pts. with combined multifocal AIOD and coronary atherosclerosis were operated in two stages (CABG first and 4-12 months later Ao2F). Postoperative clinical improvement was obtained in 90% of the pts in all three groups which proved effectiveness both of Ao2F and CABG performed in one or two stages or isolated. There was not significant difference in vascular complications and mortality in pts. of the three groups. Our experience and clinical data in this study dictated that one stage combined operative treatment of AIOD and coronary atherosclerosis is recommendable only in cases of: 1. Critical limb ischemia (III-IV st. of Fontaine) when vascular reconstruction is indicated to avoid development of limb gangrene at the time of cardiopulmonary bypass. 2. In cases when ejection fraction (EF) is < 30% and introduction of Intraaortic-balloon pump is indicated, simultaneous performance of CABG and Ao2F is presenting best conditions this procedure. In the absence of this specific indications two staged surgical approach seems more favorable--CABG first and Ao2F some months later.
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PMID:[Strategy of the surgical approach to combined coronary and peripheral atherosclerosis]. 1169 35

Diabetes mellitus has reached epidemic proportions worldwide as we enter the new millennium. The World Health Organization (WHO) has commented there is 'an apparent epidemic of diabetes which is strongly related to lifestyle and economic change'. Over the next decade the projected number will exceed 200 million, possibly reaching 250 million persons. Most will have type 2 diabetes and all are at risk of the development of complications. Better education, improved nutrition, more exercise, early diagnosis and prompt treatment are imperative. Diabetes is a serious disease, subject to the development of many complications affecting large vessels (heart, cerebral and peripheral), small vessels (kidney and retina), nerves and other organs. In type 2 diabetes these complications may precede diagnosis of the disease by many years. The process continues inexorably, with premature mortality and morbidity mainly from the development of vascular disease. Data from the WHO confirm the principal role of non-communicable disease on mortality in developed countries, while mortality in developing countries is rising rapidly, now often exceeding communicable disease. The non-communicable diseases are divided into cancer and degenerative diseases. In the developed world, degenerative diseases are grouped to include ischaemic heart disease, stroke, renal failure, hypertension and other macro- and microvascular diseases. The major complications of diabetes encountered most frequently and with the greatest impact are: 1. Neuropathy, both peripheral and autonomic, with principal manifestations in the lower limbs 2. Microvascular disease, mainly affecting the retina and kidney, resulting in blindness and renal failure 3. Macrovascular disease, presenting with atherosclerosis in the coronary arteries causing ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease causing stroke and peripheral vascular disease contributing to diabetic gangrene.
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PMID:The economic burden of insulin resistance. 1196 27

Two patients with protein C deficiency who presented with peripheral arterial insufficiency were successfully managed. One patient was managed with bypass surgery for focal gangrene followed by full anticoagulation whilst the other patient was managed with full anticoagulation. Both patients showed characteristic arteriographic findings. Patients who present with peripheral arterial insufficiency demonstrating thrombotic occlusion of main peripheral artery without atherosclerosis and other risk factors should be evaluated for hypercoagulable states.
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PMID:Peripheral arterial insufficiency associated with protein C deficiency. 1238 94

Acute leukemias with thrombocytosis have been recently linked with structural abnormalities of the short arm of chromosome 3. A 46-year-old man with a 2-month history of recurrent transient ischemic attacks and abdominal pain developed an ischemic left foot and a gangrenous toe as his initial symptoms. Platelet count was 3.5 x 10(6)/microL, and despite plateletpheresis, the patient required left-leg amputation. Pathologic examination was remarkable for arterial thrombosis in the absence of atherosclerotic lesions. A diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia with a novel translocation between chromosomes 3q21, 16, and 7 was made. Induction therapy was unsuccessful, and the patient died of overwhelming sepsis within 5 weeks of diagnosis. The striking features of this case were extreme symptomatic thrombocytosis, peripheral gangrene without atherosclerosis, and a novel three-way chromosomal translocation involving chromosome 3q21.
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PMID:Acute myelogenous leukemia associated with extreme symptomatic thrombocytosis and chromosome 3q translocation: case report and review of literature. 1250 63

Atherosclerosis is the principal contributor to the pathogenesis of myocardial and cerebral infarction, gangrene and loss of function in the extremities. It results from an excessive inflammatory-fibroproliferative response to various forms of insult to the endothelium and smooth muscle of the artery wall. Atherosclerotic lesions develop fundamentally in three stages: dysfunction of the vascular endothelium, fatty streak formation and fibrous cap formation. Each stage is regulated by the action of vasoactive molecules, growth factors and cytokines. This multifactorial etiology can be modulated through the diet. The degree of unsaturation of dietary fatty acids affects lipoprotein composition as well as the expression of adhesion molecules and other pro-inflammatory factors, and the thrombogenicity associated with atherosclerosis development. Thus, the preventive effects of a monounsaturated-fatty acid-rich diet on atherosclerosis may be explained by the enhancement of high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels and the impairment of low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels, the low-density lipoprotein susceptibility to oxidation, cellular oxidative stress, thrombogenicity and atheroma plaque formation. On the other hand, the increase of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and the reduction of thrombogenicity, atheroma plaque formation and vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation may account for the beneficial effects of polyunsaturated fatty acid on the prevention of atherosclerosis. Thus, the advantages of the Mediterranean diet rich in olive oil and fish on atherosclerosis may be due to the modulation of the cellular oxidative stress/antioxidant status, the modification of lipoproteins and the down-regulation of inflammatory mediators.
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PMID:The degree of unsaturation of dietary fatty acids and the development of atherosclerosis (review). 1277 Jun 42

A 19-year-old female college student had numbness and the sensation of coldness of her left toes. She had a 3-year smoking history. Gangrene of the left foot developed rapidly. Angiography revealed peripheral arterial occlusion of both legs and arms. Detailed laboratory examination excluded collagen disease, a hypercoagulable state, and juvenile atherosclerosis. Below-knee amputation of the left leg was performed. Typical histologic findings of Buerger's disease were observed in the crural arteries and saphenous veins. The clinical course was uneventful after the patient stopped smoking. This is the second case report of Buerger's disease in a woman in the second decade of life. It is important that a correct diagnosis of Buerger's disease be established, because the disease process is benign, compared with collagen disease, if the patient stops smoking.
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PMID:Buerger's disease in a 19-year-old woman. 1284 8

Patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) may develop premature atherosclerosis, notably peripheral vascular disease (PVD) presenting with intermittent claudication or gangrene. Therefore, it is important to investigate if high prevalence of poor muscle perfusion of lower extremities in SLE patients with abnormal myocardial perfusion is related to more cardiovascular risk factors. We used a well-established and noninvasive radionuclide method (xenon 133 muscle washout) to evaluate objectively the anterior tibial muscle perfusion of 34 SLE female patients without symptoms/signs of PVD in the lower extremities. The patients were separated into two groups according to myocardial perfusion imaging results. Meanwhile, 30 normal female controls with matched age distribution were also included for comparison. The muscle perfusion differed significantly ( P <0.05) between patients (1.90+/-0.41 ml/100 g per min) and controls (2.91+/-0.50 ml/100 g per min), as well as between 18 SLE patients with abnormal myocardial perfusion (1.33+/-0.43 ml/100 g per min) and 16 with normal myocardial perfusion (2.26+/-0.45 ml/100 g per min). Based on the xenon 133 muscle washout method, we conclude that muscle perfusion in the lower extremities of SLE patients without symptoms/signs of PVD is significantly decreased and related to abnormal myocardial perfusion.
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PMID:High prevalence of asymptomatically poor muscle perfusion of lower extremities measured in systemic lupus erythematosus patients with abnormal myocardial perfusion. 1287 74

Patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) may develop premature atherosclerosis, notably peripheral vascular disease presenting with intermittent claudication or gangrene. This study evaluates the usefulness of thallium-201 muscle perfusion scan (Tl-201 muscle scan) for investigating perfusion reserve in the lower limbs of 25 asymptomatic, female SLE patients without peripheral ischemia findings. The patients showed no evidence of peripheral arterial disease in history, physical examination, or Doppler ultrasonography. A control group consisted of 24 healthy, age-matched women. Each subject flexed her right foot maximally both dorsally and plantarly 60 times. In the middle of this exercise, 2 mCi of Tl-201 was injected intravenously. Three minutes after the injection, a posterior image of both calves was obtained using a gamma camera. Rectangular regions of interest were symmetrically drawn over both calves. The total count in the resting calf was subtracted from the total count in the exercising calf, and the percentage of increase, termed the perfusion reserve, was determined. A significant difference was found between the perfusion reserves of the SLE patients and control groups (75.3+/-8.9% and 99.6+/-9.0%, respectively, P <0.05). In conclusion, perfusion reserve in the lower limb muscles of SLE patients may be measured by Tl-201 muscle perfusion scan.
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PMID:Usefulness of thallium-201 muscle scan to investigate perfusion reserve in the lower limbs of patients with systemic lupus erythematusus. 1292 May 68

Ischemic injury to the gastrointestinal tract can threaten bowel viability with potential catastrophic consequences, including intestinal necrosis and gangrene. The presenting symptoms and signs are relatively nonspecific and diagnosis requires a high index of clinical suspicion. AMI often results from an embolus or thrombus within the SMA, although a low-flow state through an area of profound atherosclerosis may also induce severe ischemia. Because most laboratory and radiologic studies are nonspecific in early ischemia an aggressive approach to diagnosis with imaging of the splanchnic vasculature by mesenteric angiography is advocated. Various therapeutic approaches, including the infusion of vasodilators and thrombolytics, may then be used. Proper diagnosis and management of patients with AMI requires vigilance and a readiness to pursue an aggressive course of action.
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PMID:Intestinal ischemia. 1469


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