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

The prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) and peripheral artery disease (PAD) was studied in 280 (203 males, 77 females) patients with different types of primary hyperlipoproteinemia. In primary hyperbetalipoproteinemia the prevalence of CAD (45% for Type IIa and 47% for Type IIb) is significatly higher than that in the other types of hyperlipoproteinemia (38% for Type IV and 17% for Type V). On the other hand, PAD prevalence is much higher in hypertriglyceridemia (21% in Type IIb and 20% in Type V) than in hypercholesterolemia alone (9% in Type IIa). These results suggest ths atherosclerotic complications are concerned. Moreover, the high frequency of PAD found in hypertriglyceridemia can be related to the high occurrence of diabetes in these patients. The effects of other major risk factors of atherosclerosis (smoking and hypertension) were also evaluated. Our results indicate that the association of hypercholestolemia and hypertension is more dangerous than the co-occurence of hypercholesterolemia and smoking.
Atherosclerosis 1977 Apr
PMID:Prevalence of coronary artery disease and peripheral artery disease in patients with different types of primary hyperlipidemia. 85 27

A group of 78 patients with severe hypercholesterolemia (-X = 464 mg/dl) and symptoms of vascular disease of the heart, the extremities, or the brain, started a beta-pyridylcarbinol treatment with an average daily dosage of 1.2 g in 1964. In 1976 we could re-examine 12 patients, still on the same therapy. No myocardial infarction has occurred in this group since 1973, only 2 patients have had more attacks of angina pectoris that 1964. In contrast patients discontinuing therapy or replacing beta-pyridylcarbinol by other hypolipidemic drugs had a higher mortality.
Atherosclerosis 1977 Apr
PMID:The treatment of hypercholesterolemia with beta-pyridylcarbinol. Part 5. Report on 16 cases with severe hypercholesterolemia treated for 12 years. 85 28

A spontaneously hypercholesterolemic male rat, found in the Sprague-Dawley strain, was mated with normocholesterolemic females of the same strain: the male offspring were hypercholesterolemic. By selecting rats according to their plasma cholesterol levels and repeated brother-sister mating, progeny became progressively more hypercholesterolemic--especially the males--when fed a basal low-cholesterol diet. These rats were tentatively given the short name of SHC and have at present been bred to the F14 generation. Hypercholesterolemia in male SHC rats proceeded in two stages: plasma cholesterol rose only slightly during the first stage up to the age of about 10 weeks and then increased progressively in the subsequent stage. Female SHC rats developed a high degree of hypercholesterolemia from the age of 10 months. SHC rats maintained on the basal diet were not obese, but their kidneys and livers enlarged. Histological examination showed that glomerulonephritis developed in the kidney of male SHC rats by the age of 9 months. The liver of these rats was not fatty and contained rather less lipid than usually found in the normal Sprague-Dawley rat. Male and female SHC rats were subjected to gonadectomy at the age of 4 weeks, and were then maintained on the basal diet for 18 weeks. Blood cholesterol was higher throughout the experiment in ovariectomized female SHC rats than in controls, and the renal lesion was correspondingly worse. However, gonadectomy in male SHC rats had no effect on the disease.
Atherosclerosis 1977 Jun
PMID:Serum and tissue lipids and glomerulonephritis in the spontaneously hypercholesterolemic (SHC) rat, with a note on the effects of gonadectomy. 90 16

Chromium is an essential trace element in mammals since dietary chromium deficiency results in glucose intolerance due to decreased sensitivity to insulin. In humans, both adults and children with glucose intolerance have been improved by treatment with chromium. Furthermore, chromium deficiency has been implicated as a causative factor in hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis. However, little is known of the metabolism of chromium in humans, primarily because of analytical difficulties. The biologically active form of chromium is the "glucose tolerance factor" (GTF) which is a co-ordination complex of trivalent chromium with nicotinic acid and certain amino acids. At physiological pH, ionic chromium as a simple inorganic salt is insoluble in water, but trivalent chromium forms stable complexes with ascorbic acid, amino acids and other substances present in blood and tissue. Chromium is present in serum, bound to protein and also as dialysable or ultrafiltrable chromium (free chromium). The free chromium includes G.T.F. and other coordination complexes and represents the metabolically active form of the element; the ratio free/protein bound chromium in serum varies within the individual according to the diet and the metabolic state.
...
PMID:The measurement of volatile chromium in biological materials. 91 55

Male adult New Zealand rabbits were fed a 2% cholesterol diet for 30 of 60 days in order to determine the effect of hypercholesterolemia on aortic collagen synthesis. Collagen synthetic activity was estimated by measuring tissue prolyl hydroxylase activity and the amount of tissue collagen was estimated by measuring tissue hydroxyproline levels. Following 30 or 60 days of feeding there was a significant increase in both tissue and serum cholesterol indicating the onset of hypercholesterolemia. Measurement of collagen synthetic activity and tissue collagen levels demonstrated no increase over control tissues. These data therefore indicate that hypercholesterolemia is not a direct stimulus of tissue collagen synthetic activity.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Hypercholesterolemia and aortic collagen synthesis in rabbit aortas. 94 16

Strong clinical and experimental evidence suggests that chronic latent vitamin C deficiency leads to hypercholesterolaemia and the accumulation of cholesterol in certain tissues. Ascorbic acid supplementation of the diet of hypercholesterolaemic humans and animals generally results in a significant reduction in plasma cholesterol concentration. While most studies relating ascorbic acid to atherosclerosis have used the rabbit as a model, those concerned with elucidating the role of ascorbic acid in the regulation of cholesterol metabolism have generally used the guinea pig. Comparatively little use has been made of the non-human primates. A significant advance in recent years has been the development of a model of chronic latent scurvy in the guinea pig. Chronic dietary inadequacy of vitamin C may influence the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis as it affects not only plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations but also the integrity of the vascular wall. Ascorbic acid is involved in the regulation of cholesterol metabolism in several ways. Dietary inadequacy of vitamin C is associated indirectly with a lowering of cholesterol absorption, this effect resulting from a reduction in the availability of bile acids, monoglycerides and fatty acids. The excretion of cholesterol as neutral steroids, however, appears not to be affected by ascorbic acid. Although much of the evidence for the involvement of ascorbic acid in cholesterol synthesis is equivocal, it seems likely that cholesterol synthesis is decreased in vitamin C deficiency. A series of studies using guinea pigs with chronic latent vitamin C deficiency has provided clear evidence that bile acid synthesis is reduced in this condition. Indirect evidence strongly suggests that this results from a decrease in the activity of the microsomal enzyme cholesterol 7 alpha-hydroxylase. However, some evidence suggests that the mitochondrial reactions of bile acid synthesis require ascorbic acid. The role of ascorbic acid in the regulation of steroidogenesis appears to involve selective inhibitory and stimulatory effects on the desmolase, hydroxylase and dehydrogenase reactions which lead to the formation of pregnenolone and its subsequent conversion to steroid hormones.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:The role of ascorbic acid in the regulation of cholesterol metabolism and in the pathogenesis of artherosclerosis. 94 15

Hypercholesterolemia was induced in rats by feeding them a high cholesterol olive oil diet. The livers were homogenized in modified Krebs-Ringer medium and centrifuged at 35,000 x g. The supernatants from livers of both hypercholesterolemic and normal rats were found to stimulate collagen synthesis in freshly isolated embryonic chick-tendon fibroblasts. However, this was significantly greater in the supernatants from fatty livers. The stimulating principle proceed to be dialyzable, non-lipid and heat-stable. There were at least two factors involved, the more effective of which was trypsin-sensitive, with a molecular weight below 2,000. The results suggest that a mediator is formed in the livers of hypercholesterolemic rats which might be responsible for the enhanced collagen synthesis of fibrotic processes vivo, e.g., in atherosclerosis and liver cirrhosis.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Factors stimulating collagen synthesis from the livers of hypercholesterolemic rats. 94 25

Rabbits become hypercholesterolemic when transferred from commercial feed to a low fat, cholesterol-free semisynthetic diet. The role of different dietary components in mediating this effect was investigated by varying the composition of the semisynthetic diet and of the commerical feed. Addition of alfalfa to the semisynthetic diet prevented the normal hypercholesterolemic response, but other plant products, including several with high fibre content, were ineffective. Increasing the content of powdered cellulose appeared to enhance the response. A commercially formulated diet in which the alfalfa and soybean meal components were replaced by ground corn and oats did not produce a significant elevation of plasma cholesterol. Substitution of different sugars or starches for the dextrose in the semisynthetic diet gave variable results, but of those tested, only potato starch prevented the hypercholesterolemia. The type of protein used in the semisynthetic diet had a marked influence on the level of plasma cholesterol. Semisynthetic diets containing proteins from animal sources gave higher plasma cholesterol levels than those containing proteins from plant sources. Very low levels were obtained with a low choline semisynthetic diet containing soy protein isolate, and supplementation with choline and methionine only raised the level to that normally obtained with commercial feed. Replacement of the salt mixture in the semisynthetic diet by one specially recommended for rabbits made no significant difference to the hypercholesterolemic response. Prevention of coprophagy did not significantly affect plasma cholesterol levels in rabbits on either commerical or semisynthetic diets. Growth performance was generally better on commercial feed than on semisynthetic diets but there was no direct correlation between weight gain and level of plasma cholesterol in rabbits on the different semisynthetic diets.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Plasma cholesterol levels in rabbits fed low fat, low cholesterol diets: effects of dietary proteins, carbohydrates and fibre from different sources. 94 88

To define the etiologic factors of Japanese cerebrovascular diseases, a pathological research was conducted on autopsy cases of stroke in Akita Prefecture. In most cases of cerebral hemorrhages, especially in the middle age group (30-59 of age), arteriosclerotic deviations in basal berebral arteries of the circle of Willis and intracerebral small arteries are not found. The authors conclude that cerebral hemorrhage may occur without relationship to disturbances of lipid metabolism, biochemically, and to atherosclerosis, pathologically. Concerning cerebral infarction, especially in the old generation (over 60 years of age), severe arteriosclerotic deviations were recognized both in basal cerebral and intracerebral arteries. These changes were highly influenced by the grade and duration of hypertension, and rarely influenced by hypercholesterolemia. According to the above-mentioned facts, the results obtained from out epidemiological survey were confirmed by the pathological studies.
...
PMID:Epidemiological studies of cerebro-and cardiovascular diseases in the northeast of Japan Part I. Pathological approach to the study in Akita Prefecture. 96 61

The examination was conducted in 142 patients with coronary atherosclerosis, aged 33 to 74 years, and in 40 normal persons, aged 25 to 48 years. The pain form of the disease was observed in 96 patients, the arrhythmic one--in 38, the painless one--in 8 patients. The arterial pressure was within the normal limits in the examined patients. In 67.6% of the patients hypercholesterolemia was diagnosed, in 47.3%--hypertriglyceridemia. Type II hyperlipoproteinemia was found in 67.6% of the cases, types III and IV--in 5.3 and 9.1%, respectively, type V--in 0.5% of the patients; the type of hyperlipoproteinemia could not be identified in 10.6%, and in 6.9% of the cases the blood level of lipoproteins did not differ from the normal. The plasma renin activity examined by the radioimmunoassay in normals comprised 1.26 +/- 0.21 ng/ml/hour; in patients with the pain form of coronary atherosclerosis--6.67 +/- 0.72 ng/ml/hour; in those with arrhythmias--6.89 +/- 1.20 ng/ml/hour; in those with the painless form--2.39 +/- 1.02 ng/ml/hour. The highest renin activity was revealed in types IIa, IIb and III hyperlipoproteinemia, as well as in paroxysmal arrhythmia and cardiac fibrillation.
...
PMID:[Plasma renin activity in patients with coronary arteriosclerosis with different types of hyperlipoproteinemia]. 96 46


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>