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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Atherosclerosis represents a systemic disease that affects all major vascular territories. Despite advances in medical therapies to prevent atherosclerosis and better manage patients with established peripheral arterial disease (PAD), the incidence of PAD continues to increase, and associated morbidity remains high, especially as the population ages. Over the past decade, percutaneous revascularization therapies for the treatment of patients with PAD have tremendously evolved, and a great number of patients can be offered treatment options that are less invasive than traditional surgical ones. Here we are presenting the case of a 67-year-old diabetic woman with multiple cardiovascular risk factors and oligosymptomatic atherosclerotic involvement in several important territories (severe internal carotid stenosis, severe proximal left subclavian artery stenosis, critical serial stenosis in the mid-segment of the left anterior descending artery). Bilateral staged carotid artery plus left subclavian artery stenting was performed with very good results. Regarding the existence of asymptomatic one vessel coronary artery disease (CAD) with a negative exercise test our attitude was to maximize anti-ischemic medical therapy. In conclusion, the presence of multivascular atherosclerotic disease in a diabetic patient with coexisting risk factors is not surprising and it only reinforces the well known fact that we have to search for the involvement of other territories in an oligosymptomatic patient.
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PMID:Asymptomatic polyvascular atherosclerotic disease requires a complex management strategy--case report and review of the literature. 2011 68

Preeclampsia, eclampsia and HELLP syndrome are severe complications of pregnancy associated with a high morbidity and mortality for both mother and foetus. The issue of prognosis with regards to risk of relapse is therefore of upmost importance for both the patients and doctors managing their subsequent pregnancies. The overall risk of relapse is estimated to be less than 10%. The risk is especially increased in case of early onset, before the 28(th) week of amenorrhea. In such patients, an underlying renal disease, essential hypertension or secondary hypertension might be identified. A renal consultation must ensure the complete resolution of the hypertension and proteinuria, otherwise investigations need to be carried out looking for an underlying renal or vascular disease affecting the renal parenchyma or outflow. Screening for a hereditary thrombophilia is performed in the immediate post-partum period following and early onset PE, especially if associated with an IUGR, fetal death, or in an early and severe relapse. A renal biopsy is only rarely considered: it is either performed within the first post-partum days whenever a systemic disease flare-up is suspected (i.e. SLE), or late if the proteinuria failed to settle beyond 6 months post-part. Severe PE is a marker of a vascular disease of short duration, but must be considered a risk factor for later atherosclerosis with cardiovascular complications, justifying long term cardiovascular, renal and metabolic follow-up.
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PMID:[Late prognosis after preeclampsia]. 2048 49

Atherosclerosis is a progressive systemic disease of the large arteries characterized by the formation of plaques in the vessel wall. Despite our knowledge of its pathogenesis, many vulnerable plaques still remain undiagnosed while in their asymptomatic phase and manifest for the first time with dramatic clinical events, such as stroke or myocardial infarction. In recent years, it is becoming clearer that sudden clinical events do not necessarily correlate with the degree of luminal obstruction caused by lesions, but rather with plaque composition. In particular, the degree of plaque inflammation is important in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and is considered a good marker of high-risk/vulnerable plaques. The presence of inflammatory infiltrate and plaque neovascularization are both histological hallmarks of atherosclerotic plaque inflammation. Therefore, plaque angiogenesis represents an attractive target to try and identify asymptomatic high-risk lesions. Dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a technique that has been used extensively in the past to study the vascularity of tumors and its changes following therapeutic intervention. Recently, delayed and dynamic contrast enhanced (CE) MRI have been proposed as non-invasive tools to study the extent of plaque neovascularization in animals and patients with atherosclerosis. In this review, we will provide a brief introduction on DCE-MRI acquisition and analysis techniques. We will follow this with a description of contrast enhanced MR methods for the detection and quantification of neovasculature in atherosclerosis, with an emphasis on DCE-MRI. Finally, we will examine the current limitations and challenges faced by DCE-MRI and briefly discuss its future applications in the context of atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of atherosclerotic plaque angiogenesis. 2052 59

Rheumatoid arthritis is a systemic disease characterized by a reduced life expectancy mainly due to cardiovascular disease. In long-standing disease, it has been widely demonstrated that both traditional cardiovascular risk factors than chronic inflammation and immune-mediated mechanisms play a relevant role in atherosclerosis. Recently, it has been shown that the increased cardiovascular risk appears to precede rheumatoid arthritis onset and that particular immune and inflammatory factors, predating disease presentation, in association with a well-defined genetic background, may be associated with increased risk of accelerated atherosclerosis in patients with early disease. However, the effect of early immunosuppressive treatment on cardiovascular disease outcome remains uncertain. A multidisciplinary cardiovascular risk management is required to provide the better care of patients with RA at disease onset.
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PMID:How early is the atherosclerotic risk in rheumatoid arthritis? 2054 46

Clinical observations and a few research reports seem to suggest that intraoral infection as well as periodontal teeth could potentially lead to systemic infections including atherosclerosis. The aim of our investigations was to determine whether periodontal disease might aggravate atherosclerosis and whether interferon-gamma (IFNG), widely recognized as a potent multifunctional cytokine, might serve as a marker of the process. This is the first research based on tissue material such as atheromata and periodontal pocket granulation tissue. The study population consisted of 15 patients with periodontitis and atherosclerosis. Control group comprised 15 non-atherosclerotic patients with periodontitis. IFNG, IFNGR1 and IFNGR2 expression was analysed using qRT-PCR profiling in the inflammatory granulation tissue and atheroma. Granulation tissue samples obtained from non-atherosclerotic group showed a significant increase in IFNG and a decrease of IFNGR1, IFNGR2 expression whereas granulation tissue and atheromata of patients with systemic disease demonstrated lower IFNG and higher IFNGR1 and IFNGR2 expression.
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PMID:Interferon gamma in the etiology of atherosclerosis and periodontitis. 2065 98

Atherosclerosis is a systemic disease that affects most vascular beds. The gold standard of atherosclerosis imaging has been invasive intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). Newer noninvasive imaging modalities like B-mode ultrasound, cardiac computed tomography (CT), positron emission tomography (PET), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have been used to assess these vascular territories with high accuracy and reproducibility. These imaging modalities have lately been used for the assessment of the atherosclerotic plaque and the response of its volume to several medical therapies used in the treatment of patients with cardiovascular disease. To study the impact of these medications on atheroma volume progression or regression, imaging modalities have been used on a serial basis providing a unique opportunity to monitor the effect these antiatherosclerotic strategies exert on plaque burden. As a result, studies incorporating serial IVUS imaging, quantitative coronary angiography (QCA), B-mode ultrasound, electron beam computed tomography (EBCT), and dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging have all been used to evaluate the impact of therapeutic strategies that modify cholesterol and blood pressure on the progression/regression of atherosclerotic plaque. In this review, we intend to summarize the impact of different therapies aimed at halting the progression or even result in regression of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease evaluated by different imaging modalities.
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PMID:Impact of medical therapy on atheroma volume measured by different cardiovascular imaging modalities. 2067 24

Periodontal disease, as a polymicrobial disease, is globally endemic as well as being a global epidemic. It is the leading cause for tooth loss in the adult population and has been positively related to life-threatening systemic diseases such as atherosclerosis and diabetes. As a result, it is clear that more sophisticated therapeutic modalities need to be developed, which may include vaccines. Up to now, however, no periodontal vaccine trial has been successful in satisfying all the requirements; to prevent the colonization of a multiple pathogenic biofilm in the subgingival area, to elicit a high level of effector molecules such as immunoglobulin sufficient to opsonize and phagocytose the invading organisms, to suppress the induced alveolar bone loss, or to stimulate helper T-cell polarization that exerts cytokine functions optimal for protection against bacteria and tissue destruction. This article reviews all the vaccine trials so as to construct a more sophisticated strategy which may be relevant in the future. As an innovative strategy to circumvent these barriers, vaccine trials to stimulate antigen-specific T-cells polarized toward helper T-cells with a regulatory phenotype (Tregs, CD4+, CD25+, FoxP3+) have also been introduced. Targeting not only a single pathogen, but polymicrobial organisms, and targeting not only periodontal disease, but also periodontal disease-triggered systemic disease could be a feasible goal.
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PMID:Vaccines against periodontitis: a forward-looking review. 2082 24

Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease causing great morbidity and mortality in the Western world. To increase the anti-inflammatory action and decrease adverse effects of glucocorticoids (PLP), a nanomedicinal liposomal formulation of this drug (L-PLP) was developed and intravenously applied at a dose of 15 mg/kg PLP to a rabbit model of atherosclerosis. Since atherosclerosis is a systemic disease, emerging imaging modalities for assessing atherosclerotic plaque are being developed. (18)F-Fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography and dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, methods commonly used in oncology, were applied to longitudinally assess therapeutic efficacy. Significant anti-inflammatory effects were observed as early as 2 days that lasted up to at least 7 days after administration of a single dose of L-PLP. No significant changes were found for the free PLP treated animals. These findings were corroborated by immunohistochemical analysis of macrophage density in the vessel wall. In conclusion, this study evaluates a powerful two-pronged strategy for efficient treatment of atherosclerosis that includes nanomedical therapy of atherosclerotic plaques and the application of noninvasive and clinically approved imaging techniques to monitor delivery and therapeutic responses. Importantly, we demonstrate unprecedented rapid anti-inflammatory effects in atherosclerotic lesions after the nanomedical therapy.
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PMID:Multimodal clinical imaging to longitudinally assess a nanomedical anti-inflammatory treatment in experimental atherosclerosis. 2102 95

Erection is a vascular phenomenon under a psychologic control in a hormonal environment. Erectile dysfunction is defined as the inability to obtain and to maintain sufficient erection for satisfactory intercourse. Organic erectile dysfunction results mainly from vascular problems due to atherosclerosis, a process that begins during childhood, and becomes clinically evident from middle age. Endothelial dysfunction is the first step of atherosclerosis. As the endothelial cells recover the sinusoid spaces in the cavernous tissue and because common risk factors for atherosclerosis have been frequently found in patients with erectile dysfunction, it is logical that vascular impotence presents the same pathophysiology of the other vascular diseases. They share a similar pathogenic involvement of nitric oxide pathway leading to impairment of endothelium dependent vasodilatation and structural vascular abnormalities. Circulating markers of endothelial cell damage have been reported in patients with erectile dysfunction while they have not yet presented any other vascular pathology. Endothelial progenitor cells of bone marrow origin that play a role in promoting endothelial repair are also reduced in vascular abnormalities.As penile arteries have the smallest diameter in the vascular network and because atherosclerosis is a systemic disease, erectile dysfunction could be a sentinel symptom of a more generalized vascular pathology. Modifications of reversible causes or risk factors at the base of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis remain the first approach toward improving endothelial function and associated with chronic exposure to PDE5-I, they could improve or even cure ED and could avoid fatal cardiovascular attacks in the future.
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PMID:Erectile dysfunction and cardiovascular diseases. 2104 47

Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) are found in up to 8% of men aged >65 years, yet usually remain asymptomatic until they rupture. Rupture of an AAA and its associated catastrophic physiological insult carries overall mortality in excess of 80%, and 2% of all deaths are AAA-related. Pathologically, AAAs are associated with inflammation, smooth muscle cell apoptosis, and matrix degradation. Once thought to be a consequence of advanced atherosclerosis, accruing evidence indicates that AAAs are a focal representation of a systemic disease of the vasculature. Risk factors for AAAs include increasing age, male sex, smoking, and low HDL-cholesterol levels. Familial associations exist and although susceptibility genes have been described on the basis of candidate-gene studies, robust genetic studies have failed to discover causative gene mutations. The surgical management of AAAs has been revolutionized by minimally invasive endovascular repair. Ongoing randomized trials will establish whether endovascular repair confers a survival advantage over open surgery for patients with a ruptured AAA. In many countries, centralization of vascular surgical services has largely been driven by the improved outcomes of elective aneurysm surgery in specialized centers, the widespread adoption of endovascular techniques, and the introduction of screening programs.
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PMID:Pathophysiology and epidemiology of abdominal aortic aneurysms. 2107 38


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