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)

The effect of low-density lipoprotein, serotonin and low-density lipoprotein plus serotonin on platelet aggregation (measured ex vivo in plasma) was studied in 28 normotensive subjects (15 non-smokers, 13 smokers) and 15 previously untreated non-smoking patients with essential hypertension. Low-density lipoprotein alone had no platelet-activating effect. Serotonin-induced platelet aggregation was enhanced by low-density lipoprotein in both the normotensive and the hypertensive subjects. The platelet response to low-density lipoprotein plus serotonin was higher in the smokers than in the non-smokers; it was also higher in the hypertensive patients than in the normotensive controls. We conclude that low-density lipoprotein activates platelets in plasma via an interaction with a serotonergic mechanism. Low-density lipoprotein amplifies the serotonin-induced platelet aggregation (normally reversible), making it irreversible. A higher platelet response to low-density lipoprotein plus serotonin in patients with essential hypertension may be of pathophysiological relevance in respect to the thrombovascular lesions accompanying hypertension and/or atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Low-density lipoprotein amplifies the platelet response to serotonin in human plasma. 263 5

The family at risk has at least one member who has (1) hyperlipidemia; (2) low HDL2-cholesterol; (3) essential hypertension; (4) a family history of premature CHD; or (5) actively smokes. The predictive value of CHD risk factors in adults is well documented and quantified. Familial aggregation, genetic studies, and tracking of blood pressure provide evidence that children born to families with a high prevalence of hypertension or who as adolescents track in the upper part of the blood pressure distribution are themselves at risk for hypertension. Similarly, familial aggregation, tracking, and autopsy studies provide evidence for the relationship of serum lipids to the subsequent development of coronary atherosclerosis. Smoking by parents adversely affects the hearts and lungs of children. In addition, the child with a parent who smokes is more likely to become an active smoker. Preventive strategies are now available to the pediatrician to reduce the risk of premature CHD.
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PMID:The management of the family at high risk for coronary heart disease. 265 86

Drug treatment of hypertension reduces morbidity and mortality most effectively in moderate to severe cases. However, most patients have only mild hypertension, for which traditional drug treatment is not consistently successful. Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors provide superior control of mild hypertension. They have a haemodynamically favourable mechanism of action, are well tolerated and can produce a predictable response within a narrow and convenient dose range. Further, ACE inhibitors are lipidneutral, and they positively affect some of the mechanisms conducive to the development of atherosclerosis. Further research in this area is warranted. The ACE inhibitors may also help prevent end-organ damage in hypertensive patients who also have diabetes, kidney disease, left ventricular hypertrophy or a combination of these disorders. The case for renoprotection in diabetic hypertensives is strong enough to recommend preferential use of ACE inhibitors for these patients. The positive effects shown in left ventricular hypertrophy may also be produced by other modern antihypertensive agents, while the advantages of ACE inhibitors in essential hypertension with renal damage remain largely conjectural. There have been encouraging clinical results, but ongoing larger trials may provide a more definitive answer.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and the progress of antihypertensive therapy. 268 2

Diabetes may be associated with systolic hypertension secondary to atherosclerosis, renal hypertension secondary to diabetic nephropathy, and essential hypertension. The latter is by far the most prevalent, and a wealth of epidemiologic data suggests that such an association is independent of age and obesity. Considerable evidence indicates that the link between diabetes and essential hypertension is hyperinsulinemia. Thus, when hypertensive subjects, whether obese or of normal body weight, are compared to age- and weight-matched normotensive controls, a heightened plasma insulin response to a glucose challenge is found consistently. A state of cellular resistance to insulin action subtends the observed hyperinsulinism. With the use of the glucose clamp technique coupled with tracer glucose infusion and indirect calorimetry, it can be shown that the insulin resistance of essential hypertension is located in peripheral tissues (muscle), is limited to nonoxidative pathways of glucose disposal, and is directly correlated with the severity of hypertension. The reasons for the association of insulin resistance and essential hypertension can be sought in at least four general types of mechanisms--sodium retention, sympathetic nervous system overactivity, disturbed membrane ion transport, and altered muscle fiber composition. Physiologic maneuvers such as caloric restriction in the overweight individual and regular physical exercise can improve tissue sensitivity to insulin; good preliminary evidence shows that these measures can also lower blood pressure in both normotensive and hypertensive individuals. A strong case can therefore be made for the use of physiologic intervention in the treatment of essential hypertension.
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PMID:The association of essential hypertension and diabetes. 268 84

Experimental and clinical evidence points to the existence of a cardiomyopathy associated with diabetes mellitus that is not due to coronary atherosclerosis. The condition is characterized by distinct clinical presentations and physiologic and biochemical abnormalities. Potential mechanisms for the development of diabetic cardiomyopathy are complex but are probably associated, in part, with hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia. Primary hypertension is also associated with the development of myocardial abnormalities. Many of these changes are similar to those seen in diabetic cardiomyopathy. It is now clear that the co-existence of hypertension and diabetes mellitus produces a more severe cardiomyopathy than that produced by hypertension or diabetes alone. Potential mechanisms for interaction are numerous. Treatment of hypertension in diabetic patients must be targeted to more specific needs. Antihypertensive drugs should not worsen cardiac risk factors or glucose control and should have favorable effects on left ventricular function. The calcium antagonists and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors have pharmacologic profiles that make them attractive as monotherapy for diabetic patients.
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PMID:Myocardial disease in hypertensive-diabetic patients. 268 10

A total of 100 patients, aged 16-25 years, suffering from metabolic-alimentary obesity were investigated under clinical conditions. An analysis was made of deviations from the normal parameters of arterial pressure, blood serum lipids, and other risk factors of the development of atherosclerosis, coronary heart disease, essential hypertension and other metabolic diseases. The shifts detected could be directly dependent of the disorders in nutrition. Alimentary correction of the disorders noted, reduction of body mass resulted in the improvement of the subjective conditions of patients, and in normalization of the above parameters. However, in some patients significant improvement in the metabolic status of the patients (lipid, in particular) was not achieved. The necessity of dispensary follow-up of young patients with obesity has been considered.
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PMID:[Excess body weight at a young age as a risk factor for developing metabolic diseases]. 271 10

Twenty-five patients with stable arterial hypertension associated with the painful syndrome in the heart region were examined. In addition to the general clinical examination, all the patients were subjected to echocardiography, bicycle ergometry, and coronaroangiography. According to the character of alterations in the coronary arteries the patients were distributed into 3 groups. The first group comprised the patients with angiographically intact coronary arteries, the second the patients with initial atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries. The third group included the patients with disseminated atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries. In accordance with the bicycle ergometry data, the coronary insufficiency associated with essential hypertension was primarily related to the disseminated atherosclerosis of the coronary arteries. However, in cases of marked hypertrophy of the left ventricle the patients could develop relative coronary insufficiency. The pump and total contractile function of the myocardium remained satisfactory in all the examinees. In the third group patients, however, there were alterations in the local contractility as shown by the ventriculography findings. The diastolic function of the myocardium of the left ventricle was disordered in all the patients examined, while alterations in that function correlated with an increase in the mass of the left ventricle myocardium whatever the degree of changes in the coronary vessels.
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PMID:[Functional state of the heart in patients with hypertension and varying degrees of atherosclerosis of the coronary vessels]. 294 Jul 16

The blood pressure response to surgery or percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) was determined an average of 3 years after treatment. In atherosclerotic disease, 85% of patients benefited. Furthermore, the extremely low overall cure rate of 6% (4/67) suggests that renal artery stenosis due to atherosclerosis is rarely a sole cause of hypertension, but more likely is an atherosclerotic complication of essential hypertension that develops in patients who are cigarette smokers. In fibrodysplastic disease both treatments were likely to improve the blood pressure. However, surgery resulted in a 41% rate of loss of the operated kidney. The response to PTA or surgery is strongly influenced by the etiology of the lesion being treated.
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PMID:Renal vascular hypertension. Surgery vs. dilation. 294 21

Arterial hypertension is considered a major risk factor in atherosclerosis in the pathogenesis of which platelet activity plays a fundamental role. However the data in the literature on platelet function in arterial hypertension do not always agree. The present study was conducted on whole blood, using the impedance metering technique to assess platelet aggregation induced by ADP (10 pg) and collagen (2 mg/ml) in 15 patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension and 25 healthy controls. Analysis of the data shows a statistically significant difference between the aggregation curves of the hypertensive and the healthy subjects with excessive platelet aggregation in those suffering from uncomplicated arterial hypertension.
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PMID:[Platelet aggregation in whole blood with the impedance method in subjects with non-complicated essential arterial hypertension]. 296 26

Sets of conventional macroscopic and up-to-date histochemical techniques were employed to study hearts from 267 patients who had died of essential hypertension, atherosclerosis or secondary renal hypertension. Excessive cardiac mass was found disease-specific and related to the time since hypertension onset. Cardiac hypertrophy was augmenting with growing deficiency of coronary blood supply and showed specific correlation between cardiomyocyte nucleus and cytoplasm within each nosological unit mentioned. This may serve evidence for the absence of a common morphofunctional underground for this process. Essential hypertension is characterized by stepwise nuclear changes in cardiomyocytes relevant to advancing hypertrophy.
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PMID:[Characteristics of myocardial hypertrophy in arterial hypertension of various origins and in atherosclerosis]. 297 82


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