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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Coronary arteriographic findings, plasma lipid and lipoprotein levels, and cigarette smoking history are reported for the first 101 male post
myocardial infarction
survivors who have been entered into the POSCH clinical trial. Estimates of the extent of stenosis in the major coronary arteries were made using 4 models ranging from a simple determination of the number of the 3 major vessels having significant (i.e. 50% or greater stenosis) disease to more complex methods of determining overall extent of disease in 14 major segments of the coronary arteries. Age was shown to be an important factor in the extent of vessel disease. When controlling for age, plasma cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol levels were shown to be related to the extent of disease, especially in Type II hyperlipoproteinemia subjects. Multiple linear regression analysis demonstrated that age and LDL-cholesterol had positive associations and HDL-cholesterol had an inverse association with the coronary artery disease indices. In this comparatively "healthy" subgroup of the overall population of first MI survivors the major CHD risk factors are limited to plasma lipids and cigarette smoking. This preliminary report of 10% of the recruitment objective of the project supports the currently held views of the lipid--
atherosclerosis
hypothesis regarding the effects of age-total plasma cholesterol, LDL--cholesterol, and HDL--cholesterol on the extent of coronary atherosclerotic plaques, as determined by coronary arteriography.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Feb
PMID:Plasma lipoproteins and coronary arteriography in subjects in the program on the surgical control of the hyperlipidemias. Preliminary report. 22 1
High density lipoprotein (HDL) and low density lipoprotein (LdL) cholesterol levels were measured in fasting blood samples from 950 healthy subjects and 188 aged patients by a new simple method. The HDL-cholesterol levels and HDL/LDL-cholesterol ratios are significantly higher in females than in males. In the healthy subjects, there are slight decreases in the levels of HDL-cholesterol and HDL/LDL-cholesterol ratio with aging in both sexes. The patients with
myocardial infarction
had significantly lower HDL-cholesterol levels and HDL/LDL-cholesterol ratios as compared to those of the group without infarction. On the contrary, no differences in total lipoprotein cholesterol levels were observed in the patients with cerebral infarction. The results, obtained in respect of electrocardiographic findings after the isoproterenol stress test, suggest that the HDL-cholesterol levels and HDL/LDL-cholesterol ratios may be related not only to the established
myocardial infarction
, but also to the presence of coronary
atherosclerosis
and stenosis.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Mar
PMID:High and low density lipoprotein cholesterol in myocardial and cerebral infarction. 22 92
Lecithin : cholesterol acyl transfer (LCAT) and relative fatty acid composition of serum lecithin and cholesterol esters were studied in 20 young male survivors of
myocardial infarction
(MI). Comparisons were made with controls matched for serum cholesterol. There was no difference in LCAT rate between MI patients and controls. The relative content of arachidonic acid in cholesterol esters was higher in MI patients. The fatty acid composition of lecithin and cholesterol esters suggests an equal transfer of linoleic and oleic acids from lecithin to cholesterol. Furthermore negative correlations were found between LCAT and linoleic acid content of lecithin (r = --0.43, P less than 0.01) and cholesterol esters (r = --0.45, P less than 0.01). This inverse relationship does not seem to be linked to substrate specificity, but rather to be mediated by influences in common on serum lipid content and turnover.
Atherosclerosis
1979 May
PMID:Lecithin : cholesterol acyl transfer (LACT) and fatty acid composition of lecithin and cholesterol esters in young male myocardial infarction survivors. 22 97
The proliferation of aortic smooth muscle cells (ASMC) of Wistar rats, impaired by risk factors such as arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, atherogenic diet and staphylolysin injections and of normal Wistar rats treated with antirheumatic drugs such as prednisolone and acetylsalicylic acid was investigated. The cells of these animals were cultivated, subcultivated, and in the 2nd subcultures the cell numbers/5 ml medium were counted by means of Coulter Counter, and the cells were incubated with [3H]thymidine and the percentage of labelling in 100 or 1000 counted cells was stated. The effect of risk factors such as LDL and staphylolysin and of antirheumatic drugs such as prednisolone, acetylsalicylic acid, D-penicillamine and chloroquine added to the 2nd subcultures of cultivated ASMC of normal minipigs was investigated by the same method. The proliferation of cultivated ASMC of rats impaired by risk factors was accelerated. The proliferation of cultivated ASMC of rats treated with antirheumatic drugs was inhibited. The proliferation of ASMC of minipigs in the 2nd subcultures was activated by addition of risk factors and inhibited by addition of antirheumatic drugs. Antirheumatic drugs given to the rats and added to the medium of the 2nd subcultures of ASMC of normal minipigs inhibit the acceleration of ASMC proliferation induced by simultaneously given risk factors. The proposal to augment up our arsenal of the hitherto existing preventive and therapeutical measures by the application of antirheumatic drugs based on the experimental models referred to is supported by the result of a limited prospective double-blind-study of a sample of 133 male patients after
myocardial infarction
. The most remarkable result that the acceleration of the ASMC proliferation, the real pathologic process of arteriosclerosis, is inhibited by the application of antirheumatic drugs, at exactly the same time as the acceleration of the fibroblast proliferation, the real pathologic process in rheumatic diseases--ASMC and fibroblast, both being mesenchymal cells--recommends the use of these drugs in the prevention and therapy of human arteriosclerosis. The surprising result of our in-vivo experiments, that the acceleration of the growth of the ASMC induced by risk factors and the inhibition of the growth induced by antirheumatic drugs persist in the subcultures, is explained by the "selection theory" that there are dissimilar kinds of ASMC in normal arteries and that they react differently.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Oct
PMID:Effect of risk factors and antirheumatic drugs on the proliferation of aortic wall cells. 22 70
Six highly trained marathon runners developed
myocardial infarction
. One of the two cases of clinically diagnosed
myocardial infarction
was fatal, and there were four cases of angiographically-proven infarction. Two athletes had significant arterial disease of two major coronary arteries, a third had stenosis of the anterior descending and the fourth of the right coronary artery. All these athletes had warning symptoms. Three of them completed marathon races despite symptoms, one athlete running more than 20 miles after the onset of exertional discomfort to complete the 56 mile Comrades Marathon. In spite of developing chest pain, another athlete who died had continued training for three weeks, including a 40 mile run. Two other athletes also continued to train with chest pain. We conclude that the marathon runners studied were not immune to coronary heart disease, nor to coronary
atherosclerosis
and that high levels of physical fitness did not guarantee the absence of significant cardiovascular disease. In addition, the relationship of exercise and
myocardial infarction
was complex because two athletes developed
myocardial infarction
during marathon running in the absence of complete coronary artery occlusion. We stress that marathon runners, like other sportsmen, should be warned of the serious significance of the development of exertional symptoms. Our conclusions do not reflect on the possible value of exercise in the prevention of coronary heart disease. Rather we refute exaggerated claims that marathon running provides complete immunity from coronary heart disease.
...
PMID:Coronary heart disease in marathon runners. 27 Sep 40
Factors underlying spontaneous cardiac rupture were studied in a consecutive series of 30 hearts with ruptured infarcts removed at medicolegal autopsy. Normal and diseased heart muscle and narrowed coronary arteries were examined microscopically. The average age of the 15 women at death was 80 years, and of the 15 men, 73 years. All of the ruptures occurred through a recent transmural left ventricular
myocardial infarction
which was associated with coronary arteries severely narrowed by
atherosclerosis
. Nine (33 percent) of the cases showed an occlusive coronary thrombosis. Many of the subjects had no symptoms of recent myocardial ischaemia.
...
PMID:Cardiac rupture: 30 consecutive cases from a series of medicolegal autopsies. 28 37
From 1967 through 1973, 80 consecutive patients underwent simultaneous aortic valve replacement (AVR) and coronary bypass grafting. Fourteen (18%) experienced no angina pectoris and had no history or electrocardiographic evidence of coronary
atherosclerosis
. Seven of these 14 had severe multiple vessel disease. All operations were performed under normothermic conditions without coronary perfusion. Seven patients (9%) died during operation. Intra-operative
myocardial infarction
was documented in eight (10%). After a mean follow-up of 35 months, overall mortality was highest in aortic regurgitation patients [seven of 13 (54%)] compared to aortic stenosis [17 of 54 (31%)] (P less than 0.07), and mixed pathology [1 of 13 (8%)]. Thirty-one of 34 (91%) grafts in 25 patients were patent an average of 12 months postoperatively. After 42 months a 65% actuarial survival was found in the combined AVR and graft(s) series versus a 76% survival in 300 AVR patients proven by angiography not to have severe coronary
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Aortic valve replacement combined with myocardial revascularization. Late clinical results and survival of surgically-treated aortic valve patients with and without coronary artery disease. 29 24
Coronary artery aneurysms were found in 16 men between 37 and 62 years of age, mean 51 years. Aneurysms were of two types: saccular and fusiform. They involved the right coronary artery in 13 (87 per cent), the circumflex artery in eight (50 per cent) and the left anterior descending artery in five (31 per cent). In some patients, more than one vessel was involved. Twelve patients presented with angina pectoris, three with congestive heart failure and one with both. Five were in functional class II, eight were in class III and three were in class IV at the beginning of the study. The electrocardiogram showed evidence of previous
myocardial infarction
in four patients; four patients had left ventricular hypertrophy, one had left axis deviation, one had left bundle branch block, one had right bundle branch block, two had first degree atrioventricular block and seven had abnormalities in the S-T segment and T wave. Obstructive coronary disease was present in all; the obstruction score was from 1 to 4 in three patients, from 5 to 9 in four patients and from 10 to 14 in the remaining nine. Similar aneurysms were found in the pulmonary artery of one patient and in the abdominal aorta of three patients; in seven of 14 patients with adequate venous angiograms, varicosities of the coronary venous tree were observed. Left ventricular dysfunction and angina pectoris were noted in patients with significant obstructive coronary disease (greater than 70 per cent) and also in patients without obstruction but with coronary aneurysms. Ten patients were treated surgically; nine underwent aortocoronary bypass and one mitral valve replacement. Criteria for bypass was the presence of obstructive disease and medically unresponsive angina pectoris. All but one surgically treated patient showed improvement. The functional class in medically treated patients was unchanged. Fourteen patients were still alive at the completion of the study. The findings of this study suggest that angina pectoris and left ventricular dysfunction can occur with coronary artery aneurysm without coronary artery obstructions. Coronary aneurysms may be a subset of
atherosclerosis
, and this process may involve other vascular territories. The prognosis in those patients appears to be no worse than in patients with obstructive coronary disease and no aneurysms.
...
PMID:Coronary artery aneurysms: study of the etiology, clinical course and effect on left ventricular function and prognosis. 30 May 67
Of the 13,049 patients who underwent coronary artery bypass surgery, 168 underwent a second or third operation because of the failure of the first. The early mortality was eight of 168. Good to excellent results were obtained in 141 patients. The cumulative survival rate was 82% at six years. Graft failure and the progression of
atherosclerosis
to a critical lesion were the most common reasons for reoperation, and perioperative
myocardial infarction
and incomplete initial operation were the least common. Long-term follow-up showed a peak of graft failure and progression of disease in nongrafted arteries at three years and decreased thereafter. Progression of distal disease in grafted arteries was not temporally related and was uncommon. Thrombosis of the vein graft could be related most frequently to the distal circulation rather than the vein graft itself.
...
PMID:Reoperation for recurrent coronary artery disease: causes, indications, and results in 168 patients. 31 21
The von Willebrand factor is a high molecular weight protein which is synthesized by endothelial cells and appears in plasma and platelets. The main function of the factor is in mediating the adherence of platelets to the deendothelialized vessel wall. Animals with congenital deficiency of the factor do not develop the atherosclerotic lesions found in their normal counterparts. Elevated levels of the von Willebrand factor are observed in patients with atherosclerotic peripheral vascular disease,
myocardial infarction
, and diabetics with proliferative retinopathy. These increases in the factor may be due to the increased turnover rates of platelets and endothelial cells commonly seen in these disorders. Whether elevated levels of the von Willebrand protein constitute a unique risk factor for the development of
atherosclerosis
and vascular occlusive disease should be determined by studies currently in progress.
...
PMID:Role of the von Willebrand factor in atherogenesis. 31 93
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