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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. 46 cases of Prinzmetal's angina have been studied: there were 36 males and 10 females, with an average age of 54.6 years. 19 patients (group A) were treated medically, and 12 of these were followed up for more than 6 months (average follow-up period 45.1 months). 27 patients (group B) underwent a coronary by-pass procedure: 22 of these were followed up for more than 6 months after surgery (average postoperative follow-up period 21.6 months). 2. One patient from group A and two patients from group B died, one of them from postoperative renal failure. None of the three deaths could be attributed directly to the coronary artery disease. 2 patients from group A and 5 patients from group B had a
myocardial infarction
without fatal outcome. 5 of the 12 patients in group A and 16 of the 22 patients in group B were asymptomatic after more than 6 months of follow-up. 3. The treatment policy should take account: - of the prognosis of Prinzmetal's angina, which is on the whole better than that of an unstable angina pectoris of the common type; - of an assessment of the risks in each individual case; these are increased when there is a combination of risk factors for
atherosclerosis
, and/or severe arrhythmia with syncope, and/or persistant electrical changes in the territory of the anterior descending artery, and/or coronary artery lesions involving two or three major vessels. 4. Surgery is used if there is a failure of treatment with beta-blockers, which are used under cover of a pacemaker when there is a paroxysmal block. If medical treatment is successful, surgery is indicated in high-risk cases.
...
PMID:[Discussion on therapeutic attitude in Prinzmetal's angina. Apropos of 6 cases]. 81 80
Report of an exceptional case of massive anterior-wall
myocardial infarction
ending in death in a man aged 42, with no previous coronary history nor risk factors of
atherosclerosis
. Autopsy has demonstrated a thrombus obliterating the coronary artery ostium, penetrating into the first centimetre of the common trunk, while the coronary network was otherwise normal. The nature of this thrombus remains unexplained and did not seem to be of embolic origin.
...
PMID:[Massive myocardial infarct with healthy coronary arteries caused by ostial thrombosis]. 81 12
Oral intake of calciferol (vitamin D) was higher in patients with
myocardial infarction
than in controls. Having established an assay for 25-hydroxycalciferol (25-OH-D), the principal circulating form of the vitamin, we measured this compound in control subjects and patients with
myocardial infarction
. In controls, 25-OH-D varied with the season: levels were high in summer and low in winter. Furthermore, levels were low in control subjects above 60 years of age. In patients with
myocardial infarction
, normal and low values for 25-OH-D were found. It is concluded that in this region patients with
myocardial infarction
do not consume greater amounts of vitamin D.
Atherosclerosis
1977 Jan
PMID:Serum 25-hydroxycalciferol in myocardial infarction. 83 48
A population of 239 women suffering from chronic coronary disease was divided into two groups according to whether or not they had sustained a
myocardial infarction
. For the 226 post-menopausal women, the type of menopause (natural or artificial) and their age at its onset were determined, together with the age of onset of the infarction or angina, and possible correlations with other risk factors in
atherosclerosis
. Whilst the average age at the time of artificial menopause was markedly less than that of natural menopause, the age of onset of coronary complications was comparable regardless of the type of menopause, this applying to both groups. Contrary to a classically accepted opinion, early menopause would not appear to favourise the premature development of atherosclerotic coronary problems, and, in addition, would not appear to affect other coronary "risk factors".
...
PMID:[Coronary insufficiency in the female: possible effect of menopause]. 85 Jun 24
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
Lipid and carbohydrate metabolism abnormalities are reviewed with particular emphasis on the role of insulin and interrelationships between carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. The pathogenesis of
atherosclerosis
is discussed in terms of the association of abnormal circulating insulin levels. Some of the conditions associated with abnormal insulin levels and
atherosclerosis
are diabetes mellitis, hypertriglyceridemia, obesity, uremia, and oral contraceptive use. There is evidence that a proportion of subjects who have
atherosclerosis
or at risk have elevated circulating insulin levels. There is also increasing evidence that the arterial wall is an insulin-sensitive tissue. More women with
myocardial infarction
take oral contraceptives than controls do. Those who take the pill have 9 times the risk of others to develop cerebral ischemia or thrombosis. Many oral contraceptives cause abnormalities in glucose tolerance associated with elevated plasma insulin levels, and a degree of insulin resistance is induced. A number of the metabolic consequences of the pill may be caused by the elevated insulin levels.
Atherosclerosis
1977 May
PMID:The relationship of abnormal circulating insulin levels to atherosclerosis. 85 12
Plasma renin activity (PRA) stimulated by upright posture was measured, in 300 men aged 45-64 years, by a radio-immunoassay of angiotensin I. The subjucts examined were divided into six groups, comparable in mean age, each containing 50 subjects: group 1, normotensives without manifest
atherosclerosis
; group 2, normotensives with angina pectoris definite; group 3, normotensives with a history of a transmural
myocardial infarction
; groups 4 to 6, patients with benign essential hypertension, without manifest
atherosclerosis
in group 4, with angina pectoris in group 5 and with a history of
myocardial infarction
in group 6. Significant differences in mean PRA were found between corresponding groups of hypertensives and normotensives, the values in hypertensives being lower. The precentage of low renin values was higher in hypertensives with ischaemic heart disease than in other groups. An analysis of 3-year cardiovascular mortality revealed no significant difference in mortality due to ischaemic heart disease between high-renin and low renin sub-groups.
Atherosclerosis
1977 May
PMID:Plasma renin activity in men with relation to the presence of ischaemic heart disease. 85 14
A normal coronary arteriogram after transmural
myocardial infarction
is a well-recognised phenomenon, but the pathophysiology remains unclear in most cases. A possible aetiological role of oral contraceptives is suggested by the occurrence of unequivocal
myocardial infarction
with normal or near normal coronary arteries in 4 young women who had been taking oral contraceptives. While the cause-effect relation of coronary thrombosis and
myocardial infarction
remains controversial in patients with coronary
atherosclerosis
, a primary occlusion of macroscopically normal coronary arteries by cellular elements of blood appears possible in these cases. The action of contraceptives, the, would be analogous to their thrombogenic effect in peripheral veins and cerebral arteries. Absence of atherosclerotic lesions in these patients favours spontaneous thrombolysis and restoration of normal vessel patency in many of these cases. Myocardial blood flow in the region of the damaged left ventricular wall remains low in spite of normal coronary arteries. Reduced perfusion in infarcted areas is assumed to be the consequence of structural and functional alterations at precapillary and capillary level rather than an effect of obstructive coronary disease.
...
PMID:Transmural myocardial infarction in young women taking oral contraceptives. Evidence of reduced regional coronary flow in spite of normal coronary arteries. 86 Oct 90
Plasma renin activity (PRA) stimulated by upright posture was measured in 300 men aged 45-64 years using a radioimmunoassay of angiotensin-I. The examined subjects were normotensive or patients with benign essential hypertension and were divided into 6 groups according to the absence of manifest
atherosclerosis
, the presence of definite angina pectoris or a history of
myocardial infarction
. Each group contained 50 unselected subjects, with a comparable mean age. Significant differences in mean PRA were found between corresponding groups of hypertensives and normotensives, the values in hypertensives being lower. The percentage of low renin values was higher in hypertensives with ischaemic heart disease than in other groups. It is suggested that this finding might be explained by functional disturbances in the kidneys in hypertensives with ischaemic heart disease.
...
PMID:Plasma renin activity in patients with ischaemic heart disease. 87 44
The "sudden death" of a 23-year-old Ashkenazy Jew, suffering from "familial dysautonomia" was probably caused by an arrhythmia accompanying a
myocardial infarction
. Such a report is unique. Diffuse coronary
atherosclerosis
and direct myocardial "catecholamine cardiomyopathy" seem responsible for the myocardial damage. However, diversion of the endocardial blood flow toward dpicardium and a "coronary steal" phenomenon, both the result of a sudden catecholamine discharge, could aggravate the ischemic injury.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction association with the Riley-Day syndrome. 91 Jun 83
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