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)

Among 13010 adults who underwent coronary arteriography, 80 (0.61%) patients had a total of 83 anomalous coronary arteries. Thirty-three (41%) of the patients were of Hispanic origin, while out of the entire population studied 30% were Hispanic. The right coronary artery was the most common anomalous vessel. It was identified in 50 (62%) patients, arising in 35 from the left aortic sinus, in 14 from the posterior sinus, and in 1 from the left coronary artery. An anomalous circumflex artery was recognized in 22 (27%) patients. Nine (11%) patients presented an anomalous left anterior descending artery, 1 patient an anomalous left main coronary artery, and another an anomalous septal perforator artery. Twenty-three (29%) patients had concomitant congenital heart abnormalities, most commonly. bicuspid aortic valve and mitral valve prolapse. In each of 5 patients with complex congenital heart disease the course of the anomalous vessel could have interfered with a surgical procedure. In 4 cases anomalous coronary arteries were associated with either anomalous systemic venous circulation or anomalous cardiac veins. In 5 (6%) patients only, the anomalous coronary artery was solely responsible for a clinical event. Coronary atherosclerosis of the anomalous arteries was found in 28% of the patients, while the overall incidence of the disease in this series was 65%. Thus, anomalous coronary arteries are associated with a high incidence of congenital heart diseases, but do not appear to be associated with an increased risk for development of coronary atherosclerosis. The angiographic recognition of these vessels is important in patients who undergo coronary angioplasty or cardiac surgery. Variations in the frequency of congenital coronary anomalies as reported herein may be attributed to a genetic background.
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PMID:Anomalous coronary arteries: angiographic findings in 80 patients. 834 83

The potential thrombotic risk of mitral valve prolapse may, in certain circumstances, require preventive treatment. This study was aimed at determining whether the presence of angina in patients with mitral valve prolapse and healthy coronary vessels was accompanied by a high-risk thrombogenic profile. Forty two patients (19 women and 23 men) with anginal chest pain and angiographically normal coronary vessels were divided into two populations according to the presence (18 patients) or absence (24 patients) of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) shown by angiography. Before angiography, all patients underwent laboratory studies to detect any possible abnormality of plasma coagulation and of prothrombotic physiological fibrinolysis. Study of subgroups, according to sex and/or the presence of MVP, revealed no significant difference in the profile of laboratory parameters. Thus the presence of angiographic MVP in symptomatic patients free of atherosclerosis is not associated with the existence of any particular thrombotic profile and, theoretically, does not require preventive anti-thrombotic treatment.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse and angina with normal coronary arteries: research of a thrombogenic factor]. 195 72

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.
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PMID:Degenerative, non-atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in the elderly: a clinico-pathological survey. 209 63

The importance of a prothrombotic state as a cause of ischemic stroke in young adults is ill defined. We examined 46 unselected patients under age 50 years with cerebral ischemia for anticardiolipin antibody (aCL) and lupus anticoagulants (LA), over a 3-year-period. Age- and sex-matched patients with other neurologic diseases served as a noncerebral ischemia comparison group to test whether (1) stroke/transient ischemic attacks (TIA) in young people is associated with aCL and/or LA, and (2) their presence is specific to cerebral ischemia. In the stroke/TIA group, 21 patients had aCL or LA and 25 had neither, whereas in the control group, 2 patients had aCL and 24 had neither. Equal numbers of stroke/TIA patients with and without antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) had other stroke risk factors. Patients with aPL and cerebral ischemia, however, had a more frequent history of multiple events than those without them. These antibodies occur with undue frequency in young patients with stroke/TIA and are not associated with a concurrent diagnosis of systemic lupus in most cases. A coexistent aPL-associated prothrombotic state may be a key determinant of whether patients with atherosclerosis, mitral valve prolapse, or other structural lesions experience recurrent ischemia.
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PMID:Antiphospholipid antibodies and cerebral ischemia in young people. 211 4

Strokes in young adults are uncommon and often a diagnostic challenge. A retrospective study of strokes due to intracerebral hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, or cerebral infarction was undertaken. We reviewed the medical records of 113 young patients aged 15-45 years who were admitted to the Medical Center Hospital of Vermont with a diagnosis of stroke between 1982 and 1987. This group comprised 8.5% of patients of all ages admitted for stroke, 2.3 times the proportion observed in the National Survey of Stroke. Nontraumatic intracerebral hemorrhage was diagnosed in 46 young patients (41%); the main causes included aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations, hypertension, and tumors. Subarachnoid hemorrhage was found in 19 young patients (17%); the majority were due to aneurysms. The remaining 48 young patients (42%) had cerebral infarction, the majority due to cardiogenic emboli and premature atherosclerosis. Mitral valve prolapse, the use of oral contraceptives, alcohol drinking, and migraine were infrequent sole causes of cerebral infarction in the absence of other risk factors. The case-fatality rate for this group of young patients with stroke was 20.4% compared with 23.9% for the National Survey of Stroke. Young adults with stroke deserve an extensive but tailored evaluation, which should include angiography and echocardiography.
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PMID:Stroke in young adults. 230 61

Human mortality demonstrates a maximum incidence in the early morning, with a reduction in the late afternoon. In order to determine whether sudden cardiac death presents a circadian rhythm similar to that of overall human mortality, the time of the day has been analyzed in 269 cases of sudden cardiac death. The definitive criteria of sudden cardiac death were: death within 1 hour of the onset of symptoms and pathoanatomical findings. The cases of sudden cardiac death consisted of 161 males and 108 females, with ages ranging from 23 to 86 years, subdivided into 139 cases of acute myocardial infarction, 101 cases of coronary atherosclerosis, 12 cases of primary myocardiopathies, 4 cases of mitral valve prolapse and 13 cases with structurally healthy heart. All the deaths occurred outside the hospital, or immediately after resuscitation efforts had begun. The data were analyzed by means of chronograms, and with the "single cosinor" method, both for the total cases of sudden cardiac death, and for subdivisions into sex, pathoanatomical picture, and for age groups (less than 40, between 41 and 60, and more than 61 years). The results demonstrate a statistically significant (p less than 0.05) circadian rhythm of sudden cardiac death, with a peak from midnight to 8:00 am, and a minimum in the afternoon. Significant differences do not exist (p greater than 0.05) within the acrophases of sudden cardiac death between the 2 sexes, among the different age groups, or the pathoanatomical pictures of myocardial infarction and coronary atherosclerosis. No rhythm was detected regarding the sudden deaths by primary myocardiopathy, mitral valve prolapse, and "normal" heart.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Circadian rhythm in the incidence of sudden cardiac death]. 274 62

We report 133 cases of strokes in patients aged 9-45 (male: 68, female: 65), mean age: 33.5 years. There were 112 arterial infarcts (84%), 9 venous infarcts (7%), 12 hemorrhages (9%). Among the arterial infarcts, 23 (20.5%) were due to a dissecting aneurysm, 17 (15%) to atherosclerosis, 13 (12%) to cardiac embolism. Echocardiography with contrast was performed in 69 patients showing a patent foramen ovale in 15. Mitral valve prolapse was present in 8, among which 5 had in addition a patent foramen ovale. Among 16 migrainous patients there were 7 dissecting aneurysms and 3 patent foramen ovale. Twenty two of 65 women were taking oral contraceptives at the time of the stroke. Strokes in patients taking oral contraceptives or during the puerperium accounted for 43% of the strokes in women. Ten cases (9%) have had no explanation. Venous infarctions were mainly due to puerperium and oral contraceptives. Hemorrhages were mainly due to arterial hypertension. No cause was found in 4/12 cases. The most useful investigations were angiography and echocardiography with contrast. This study confirms that extensive and early investigations are necessary in strokes in the young and particularly in women taking oral contraceptives, migraine patients and patients with mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:[Cerebral vascular accidents in young subjects. A study of 133 patients 9 to 45 years of age]. 279 9

Cardiovascular abnormalities are infrequently documented in osteogenesis imperfecta, one of a group of hereditary, generalized connective tissue disorders. A patient with osteogenesis imperfecta is described with mitral valve prolapse, significant coronary artery disease and a coronary artery aneurysm. The latter two cardiac defects are apparently rare in this disease. The option of surgery was carefully considered with regard to technical feasibility and potential deterioration of the graft anastomoses. Although successful aortocoronary bypass surgery had not been previously reported in osteogenesis imperfecta, this patient received such surgery with therapeutic benefit. Therefore, coronary artery vascularization should be considered as a safe and effective treatment modality for patients with osteogenesis imperfecta and coexisting coronary atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Successful aortocoronary bypass in osteogenesis imperfecta. 349 48

Cardiovascular diseases responsible for sudden unexpected death in highly conditioned athletes are largely related to the age of the patient. In most young competitive athletes (less than 35 years of age) sudden death is due to congenital cardiovascular disease. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy appears to be the most common cause of such deaths, accounting for about half of the sudden deaths in young athletes. Other cardiovascular abnormalities that appear to be less frequent but important causes of sudden death in young athletes include congenital coronary artery anomalies, ruptured aorta (due to cystic medial necrosis), idiopathic left ventricular hypertrophy and coronary artery atherosclerosis. Diseases that appear to be very uncommon causes of sudden death include myocarditis, mitral valve prolapse, aortic valve stenosis and sarcoidosis. Cardiovascular disease in young athletes is usually unsuspected during life, and most athletes who die suddenly have experienced no cardiac symptoms. In only about 25% of those competitive athletes who die suddenly is underlying cardiovascular disease detected or suspected before participation and rarely is the correct clinical diagnosis made. In contrast, in older athletes (greater than or equal to 35 years of age) sudden death is usually due to coronary artery disease, and rarely results from congenital heart disease.
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PMID:Causes of sudden death in competitive athletes. 351 Feb 33

Because the cause and prognosis of ischemic stroke in adults younger than 30 years of age are not known, we observed 41 such patients (26 females and 15 males) using a standard protocol of investigations, including cerebral angiography and echocardiography. Mitral valve prolapse and arterial dissection accounted for 51% of infarcts, migrainous infarction was the likely cause in 15% of infarcts, and uncommon causes accounted for 34% of infarcts. Atherosclerosis played a role in only two patients. Two thirds of the women were taking oral contraceptives, which may have been the primary cause of stroke in one woman who had recurrent venous thromboses followed by thrombosis of the aortic arch. Three patients (7.3%) died of acute causes. During follow-up (mean, 46 months), the annual incidence of death (0.7%) and recurrent stroke (0.7%) was low. Eighty-one percent of the survivors could return to work. We conclude that cerebral angiography and echocardiography are indicated in all adults younger than 30 years of age. After the acute phase of stroke, prognosis is reasonable.
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PMID:Ischemic stroke in adults younger than 30 years of age. Cause and prognosis. 357 57


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