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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypertension is a risk factor for the development of
atherosclerosis
and its complications, which are among the major causes of morbidity and mortality. Although recent clinical trials indicate that antihypertensive treatment reduces morbidity and mortality associated with stroke,
congestive heart failure
, and renal insufficiency, questions remain as to whether such treatment also prevents coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality. The observed reduction in CHD mortality from pooled clinical trial data was 10-14% and was much less than the expected 20-25% reduction for a 5-6 mm Hg reduction in diastolic pressure. One explanation may be that subtle adverse metabolic effects of treatment may have blunted the beneficial effects. Isradipine, a dihydropyridine calcium antagonist, is a potent antihypertensive drug with antiatherogenic properties in animal models. Therefore, we hypothesized that isradipine may be appropriate for testing the efficacy of antihypertensive treatment in retarding the progression of
atherosclerosis
in humans. The Multicenter Isradipine/Diuretic
Atherosclerosis
Study (MIDAS) is a clinical trial designed to compare the efficacy of isradipine (2.5 or 5 mg b.i.d.) with hydrochlorothiazide (12.5 or 25 mg b.i.d.) in retarding the progression of early carotid
atherosclerosis
as monitored by high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography.
...
PMID:The Multicenter Isradipine/Diuretic Atherosclerosis Study: a study of the antiatherogenic properties of isradipine in hypertensive patients. MIDAS Research Group. 172 Apr 79
In the present study: (a) physiopathology, (b) clinics, and (c) therapy of cardiothyreosis are discussed. (a) The hyperkinetic syndrome, the earliest clinical sign in thyrotoxicosis (vasodilatation, increase in inotropism, automatism, etc.), is mediated by a two-fold increase in the number of beta-receptors, and supported by an adequate synthesis of ATP and creatinphosphate (CP) in the young and, to a lesser extent, in the elderly. Genetical heart reserves are mobilized, thus significantly increasing the number and the size of mitochondria and also the enzymatic equipment (such as: the alpha-glycerophosphate-dehydrogenase, malic, pentosic cycles, etc.), a.s.o. Due to an excessive adrenergic action (glycogenolysis, an excessive oxygen consumption, up to necrosis, the ATP and CP syntheses dramatically drop; the phosphorus/oxygen ratio decreases to 2 (normal = 4). In this condition, the high functional cardiovascular performances are also impaired (the submaximal effort capacity is attained at a smaller and smaller oxygen consumption; Propranolol 2 mg i.v. decreased the cardiac output by above 30% (vs 10%--normal); electrocardiogram presents aspects of "coronary disease", tachycardia, etc.). An ultrastructural damage occurs: from "mitochondrial disease", partial lysis of myofibrils, to myofibrosis (revealed postmortem), in spite of a reduced degree of coronary
atherosclerosis
. Ultrastructural and biochemical experimental data support this point of view. (b) The incidence, precocity and severity of the thyrotoxic heart increase with age and the existence of a previous cardiovascular pathology. Cardiothyreosis is not present under 27 years; in 4,353 patients its incidence is of 25% (arrhythmia--21%, heart failure--12%, coronary insufficiency--1-3%). Of a major interest are tachyarrhythmias which may lead to a high mortality by hypodiastolic
congestive heart failure
, heart failure with secondary hyperaldosteronism, thromboembolic episodes and ventricular fibrillation. Thyrotoxicosis favours the disease of papillary muscles--mitral prolapse and insufficiency, reversible especially in children. (c) The treatment of thyrotoxic heart is an etiologic one (medical, surgical, radioactive--the last two being preferable after the adequate medical therapy). In particular, cardiothyreosis requires a reinforced irradiation (10,000 rads instead of 7,000 rads) in smaller 131I doses. The protection against the increased nocivity of catechols in thyrotoxicosis is very important (which explains the high mortality in the thyrotoxic "storm") and requires propranolol; doses above 2 mg/kilo body/day are recommended. In the elderly, the sensitivity to propranolol decreases: verapamil i.v. is more efficient in paroxysmal tachyarrhythmias (flutter, atrial fibrillation) and in those occurring intra-operatively during halothane narcosis. The anticoagulant therapy is administered in tachyarrhythmias with high ventricular rate, especially in the elderly, to avoid the embolic risk, higher in defibrillation condition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cardiothyreosis. 182 Oct 70
Left ventricular hypertrophy is the most important cardiovascular consequence of chronic systemic hypertension. While ventricular hypertrophy is an adaptive response to increased work load that preserves cardiac output, it nonetheless has adverse consequences. These include gradual systolic and diastolic dysfunction leading to
congestive heart failure
, an increased incidence of ventricular arrhythmias, accelerated
atherosclerosis
of the coronary arteries, and alterations (anatomic and physiologic) in the coronary microvasculature. Additionally, the presence of hypertension and hypertrophy increases the likelihood of poor outcome when ischemic heart disease occurs. Chronic systemic hypertension is prevalent among African Americans, who are therefore at risk for the development of left ventricular hypertrophy and the increase in mortality that accompanies the hypertrophic response.
...
PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy resulting from systemic hypertension: adaptive advantage and adverse consequences. 183 25
The endothelium is increasingly recognized as a modulator of vascular tone, and evidence also is accumulating for an important role of the endothelium in humans in vivo. Endothelial release of prostacylin appears to regulate hyperemic blood flow after ischemia and muscle exercise, and the potent vasodilating properties of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) are well established. Tonic release of EDRF plays an important role in the regulation of vascular tone in normal subjects, and a reduction of EDRF release in response to muscarinergic stimulation has been described in subjects with uncomplicated hypertension and also in hyperlipidemic patients. These observations point toward an early disturbance of endothelial function in disorders known as risk factors for the development of
atherosclerosis
. Furthermore, altered EDRF release and responsiveness to stimuli may be involved in the disturbed regulation of peripheral vascular tone in
congestive heart failure
. The physiological role of the vasoconstricting peptide endothelin-1 is not yet defined, but the study of the vascular actions of the peptide in humans has shown a vasodilating effect (for low dosages or when the vasconstricting effects are blocked), as well as a marked and long-lasting vasoconstricting effect. Although the mechanisms leading to vasodilation are not clear in humans, endothelin-1-induced vasoconstriction appears to be completely dependent on the activity of voltage-operated calcium channels and can be blocked by organic calcium antagonists but not by nitrovasodilators or EDRF. Further clarification of the role of the endothelium will provide a better understanding of circulatory physiology and pathophysiology and eventually may lead to the development of new therapeutic modalities.
...
PMID:Endothelial function in humans. Studies of forearm resistance vessels. 191 1
The use of antihypertensive drug treatment has altered the natural history of hypertension. Whereas
congestive heart failure
, cerebral hemorrhage, and renal failure were the major complications of untreated severe hypertension, myocardial infarction and thrombotic stroke have emerged as the major problems in treated hypertensives. None of the major therapeutic trials in hypertension have provided evidence that reducing blood pressure reduces the risk of atherosclerotic complications of hypertension. Hypertension certainly aggravates the severity of atheromatous lesions in experimental animals and, thus, may do so in humans. However,
atherosclerosis
is more closely related to disturbances in lipoprotein metabolism than to other factors. The common finding that serum cholesterol is raised in hypertensive patients may be due to
atherosclerosis
being the primary lesion, with the hypertension as a secondary complication rather than the primary lesion.
...
PMID:Hypertension and vascular disease. 202 54
Kawasaki disease is an acute vasculitis characterized by mucosal inflammation, rash, cervical adenopathy, indurative edema of the hands and feet, and late membranous desquamation of the fingertips. Early cardiac effects include myocarditis (occasionally with
congestive heart failure
), pericardial inflammation, and, rarely, valve involvement. Coronary artery aneurysms are a long-term concern because coronary thrombosis with myocardial infarction can be a late manifestation. The origin of Kawasaki disease is unknown, but an infectious agent is most likely. Management consists of aspirin for control of fever and inflammatory manifestations and intravenous gamma globulin for the prevention of coronary aneurysm formation. Careful late follow-up is required, especially for patients with persistent coronary abnormalities. Giant aneurysms (greater than 8 mm) are more likely to progress to coronary obstructive disease, and coronary bypass grafts have been required for some patients. Late coronary artery manifestations in patients with mild early coronary dilatation have not been described. However, since long-term epidemiologic studies have not yet been performed, it is prudent to consider childhood Kawasaki disease to be a potential risk factor for coronary disease, especially in
atherosclerosis
-prone Western societies.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of Kawasaki disease. 202 52
Nowadays orthotopic heart transplantation is world wide accepted as a therapeutic concept in endstage
congestive heart failure
. Concerning infants, there are still major objections against this kind of therapy and especially in our country exists only very limited experience. Since march 1988 we have performed an orthotopic heart transplantation in 10 pediatric patients: 5 infants (2-16 years of age) with congestive cardiomyopathy, 1 newborn with endocardial fibroelastosis, 3 newborns with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, and finally 1 infant at the age of 2 years with AV-canal and hypoplastic left ventricle. Until now 6 infants survived and are all at home and in good clinical condition. There have been no signs for chronic rejection or graft
atherosclerosis
up till now. As demonstrated in the example of the newborn, in whom we performed the first successfully orthotopic heart transplantation in Germany, the clinical course and quality of life are superior to those after other palliative procedures in complex cardiac malformations.
...
PMID:[Heart transplantation in infants--a new option]. 203 8
This is a clinical report of a rare case of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with dilated cardiomyopathy. A seventy-seven-year-old Japanese male first visited our outpatient clinic with a ten-year history of muscular weakness in his bilateral lower extremities and gait disturbance characterized by classical features of peroneal muscular atrophy and inverted champagne bottle legs. Biopsy findings of the m. quadriceps femoris and the n. gastrocnemius revealed clustered atrophy of myofibrils and segmental demyelinization mingled with remyelinization. Because of his other problem of dilated cardiomyopathy, he had been treated with salt restriction, digitalis, diuretics and vasodilators, until his third hospitalization, when he developed terminal stage of severe
congestive heart failure
. Despite our intensive cardiac care, the patient died because of profound pump failure. Autopsy findings disclosed a remarkably dilated left ventricular chamber and an increased total heart weight of 600 grams. Grossly, the cross sectional view of the left ventricle revealed diffuse, but not homogenous fibrosis that was most prominent in the posterior wall. On light microscopic examination, the left ventricular myocardium revealed diffusely scattered muscular degeneration interlaced with fibrosis. Although large epicardial coronary arteries revealed only mild intimal atheromatous thickening, most of the small intramuscular coronary arteries were free from
atherosclerosis
. Neither diabetic nor amyloid lesions could be detected. It has been well known that cardiomyopathy is often associated with various forms of muscular dystrophy and Friedreich's ataxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with dilated cardiomyopathy: an autopsy case report]. 204 12
Cardiovascular disease, the major cause of death in the elderly, is mostly ascribable to complications of coronary
atherosclerosis
: angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, and sudden death. However, other degenerative diseases involving several cardiac structures exist, and should be distinguished from age-related cardiac changes. Extensive dystrophic calcification determines aortic stenosis, and may affect either a normally tricuspid or a congenitally bicuspid valve. Surgical valve replacement is now a low risk option, even in elderly persons, whereas the efficacy of balloon valvuloplasty is questionable. Aortic incompetence in adults and aged persons is mostly the consequence of aortic tunica media atrophy with anular ectasia, in the setting of nearly normal aortic leaflets. Mitral valve prolapse is the main cause of mitral incompetence; spontaneous cordal rupture is a late complication in the natural history of this disease, thus warranting prompt surgical valve repair or replacement. The entire spectrum of cardiomyopathies is observed in the elderly: dilated, hypertrophic, restrictive, arrhythmogenic. Cardiac amyloidosis is by far the most frequent secondary form and leads to
congestive heart failure
by impairing ventricular compliance. Idiopathic fibrosis of the specialized AV junction or dystrophic calcification of central fibrous body are the usual substrates of AV block, which requires pace-maker implantation. Nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation, due to fibro-fatty degeneration of the atrial musculature or dilated left atrium, carries a high risk of thromboembolic complications and cerebral accidents; oral anticoagulants have proven to be effective in preventing stroke. Aortic dissecting aneurysm is a spontaneous laceration, and usually a complication of longstanding systemic hypertension; exceptionally, spontaneous dissection may primarily occur in the coronary arteries. In conclusion, longevity at present is mostly threatened by cardiovascular disease, among which the role of degenerative, non-atherosclerotic disorders may be greater than thought.
...
PMID:Degenerative, non-atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in the elderly: a clinico-pathological survey. 209 63
The daily variation in blood pressure (circadian blood pressure rhythm) is characterized by a nocturnal fall and a diurnal rise. The circadian blood pressure rhythm seems to be mediated mainly by the circadian rhythm of sympathetic tone, linked to changes in physical and mental activities, e.g. the waking-sleeping cycle. Statistically significant circadian blood pressure rhythms have been confirmed in approximately 80% of mild to moderate essential hypertensive patients as well as in normal subjects. However, the normal pattern of circadian blood pressure rhythm is reversed in elderly people and in those with Cushing's syndrome, those undergoing glucocorticoid treatment, and those with hyperthyroidism, central and/or peripheral autonomic dysfunction (Shy-Drager syndrome, tetraplegia, diabetic or uremic neuropathy, etc), chronic renal failure, renal or cardiac transplantation,
congestive heart failure
, eclampsia, sleep apnea syndrome, malignant hypertension, systemic
atherosclerosis
and accelerated hypertensive organ damage. However, in those with primary aldosteronism, renovascular hypertension, pheochromocytoma without paroxysmal hypertension, or those with cardiac pacing, a nocturnal blood pressure fall is ordinarily observed. It may be that a fall in cardiac output rather than in peripheral resistance may be mainly responsible for the nocturnal fall in blood pressure. It also seems that a nocturnal heart rate fall is not responsible for it, since the nocturnal blood pressure fall remained unchanged in patients undergoing cardiac pacing and was disturbed in patients with Cushing's syndrome or hyperthyroidism in whom the circadian heart rate rhythm remained unchanged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Circadian blood pressure variations under different pathophysiological conditions. 209 80
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