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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phthalazinol (EG 626), a thromboxane A2 antagonist and cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor, has been shown to prevent the
atherosclerosis
induced in cholesterol fed rabbits. In an attempt to clarify the antiatherosclerotic mechanism, the effects of this compound on the lipolytic enzyme activities (cholesterol esterase and lipoprotein lipase) of rat aorta were examined in vivo. Administration of EG 626 (100-200 mg/kg, per os, daily, 1-2 weeks) affected neither the aortic lysosomal cholesterol esterase nor the
acid phosphatase
activity, whereas the lipoprotein lipase activity was signficantly decreased by the treatment. These results suggest that with an elevation in HDL-cholesterol, a decrease in lipoprotein lipase activity after ingestion of EG 626 might contribute, at least to some extent, to the prevention of arterial lipid accumulation.
...
PMID:Effects of phthalazinol (EG 626) on arterial lipolytic enzyme activities in the rat. 23 31
Metabolic intermediate levels, glycolytic and Krebs cycle enzyme activities and lysosomal acid hydrolase activities were measured in aortas of spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) versus normotensive (WKY) rats. In the hypertensive aortas the level of lactate, the ratio of lactate to glucose and of lactate to malate was higher in the SHR than WKY aortas. In the hypertensive aortas the obvious shift of metabolism toward higher rate of glycolysis was associated with decreased activity of malate dehydrogenase and espically of lipoamide dehydrogenase. The latter is an essential compoenent of the alpha-ketoglutarate and pyruvate dehydrogenase enzyme complexes and it appears that these complexes are among the sites of arterialmetavolism which are primarily altered by the elevated blood pressure, resulting in increased production of lactate. The activity of the marker lysosomal enzyme N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase was unequivocally elevated in the hypertensive aortas. The activity of beta-glucuronidase exhibited incogruous differences between the SHR and WKY aortas and the activity of aortic
acid phosphatase
did not differ in the two rat strains. The results are discussed in relation to arterial injury, permeability, and atherogenesis.
Atherosclerosis
1977 Nov
PMID:Metabolic intermediates, enzymes and lysosomal activity in aortas of spontaneously hypertensive rats. 59 42
The presentation deals with the enzymatic spectrum of the blood serum (aminotransferase-glutamino-pyruvic and glutamino-oxaloacetic acid, sera cholinesterase, histidase, acid alkaline phosphatase) in 100 patients with transient disorders of cerebral circulation in the form of ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes. These disorders of circulation appeared on the background [corrected] of
atherosclerosis
and hypertensive disease or in other combination along with vasculitis of a different etiology. The most significant were changes of histidase and
acid phosphatase
activity and an inhibition of cholinesterase activity in ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes with expressed focal disorders of cerebral circulation. In an improvement of the clinical state following medicative therapy there was a normalization of these indices. The only exclusion was histidase the content of which in some cases remained cunhanged.
...
PMID:[Blood serum enzymatic spectrum in vascular diseases of the brain]. 62 45
Hypertension is an important risk factor for
atherosclerosis
and often occurs in association with diabetes mellitus. Specific activities of hydrolases in homogenates of aortas from rats with renal-clip hypertension, normotension following a period of hypertension, and hypertension combined with streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus were measured. Enzymes included: neutral alpha-glucosidase, and lysosomal N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, beta-galactosidase, cathepsin C, acid alpha-glucosidase, and acid cholesteryl esterase. After 6 or 12 weeks of hypertension, specific activities of all enzymes measured were significantly increased, levels ranging from 24% above normal for cathepsin C to 351% above normal for N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase. Six weeks of normotension following 6 weeks of hypertension resulted in restoration to normal of four of the six enzyme activities; the remaining two enzymes were significantly below normal levels. Combined hypertension and diabetes mellitus showed smooth muscle cell levels of four of the five hydrolases measured to be significantly lower than those present with hypertension alone. In every instance, histochemical studies of aortas showed
acid phosphatase
and N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase activities which corresponded to the biochemical findings. These findings indicate profound and discrete effects of two clinical risk factors on vascular smooth muscle cell lysosomes.
...
PMID:Hydrolase activities in the rat aorta. II. Effects of hypertension alone and in combination with diabetes mellitus. 65 43
The cellular events that occur in the vessel wall consequent to changes in endothelial permeability result in the progression of vascular disease, particularly
atherosclerosis
. Female rhesus monkeys were fed an atherogenic diet or were made hypertensive for 6-8 months; and their vessels were then compared with vessels from control monkeys. Length-defined segments of coronary vessels, the thoracic aorta, and the abdominal aorta showed significant increases in total connective tissue in the atherosclerotic and hypertensive groups; pulmonary vessels did not. The diseased aortic segments had increased levels of two lysosomal enzymes,
acid phosphatase
and beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase; pulmonary vessels were not diseased and did not show these changes. Coronary vessels from the atherosclerotic and hypertensive groups did not show an increase in enzyme levels on biochemical measurements, but focal accumulations of lysosomes were identified by cytochemical techniques. In atherosclerotic lesions, a doubling of cholesterol and more than a tenfold increase in cholesterol ester were found. These connective tissue and lysosomal changes are early features of primate vascular disease and may result from the accumulation of excessive substrate (cholesterol ester) in the lysosomes of vascular smooth muscle cells.
...
PMID:Arterial lysosomes and connective tissue in primate atherosclerosis and hypertension. 111 47
The main objective of the study was to investigate the effect of the calcium antagonists Verapamil (2 mg.kg-1.day) and Nifedipine (1 mg.kg-1.day-1) on cholesterol (1%) induced
atherosclerosis
in rabbits. The drugs were administered s.c. twice daily over a period of 8 weeks. Blood lipid levels were determined three times during the experiment. After the experimental period the animals were killed and macroscopic changes on the aorta were recorded. For histochemical investigation samples were taken from the arch of the aorta and coronary artery. In cryostat sections lipids were determined by Sudan black B and Fett rot 7 B and the following enzymes were assayed:
acid phosphatase
, non-specific and acid esterase, acid beta-galactosidase, dipeptidyl peptidase I and II, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Following treatment with the calcium antagonists the levels of triacylglycerols and of total cholesterol were significantly increased in comparison with the control and diet groups. The ratio of HDL cholesterol to total cholesterol decreased in the treated animals. In lipoid plaques the activity of enzymes was enhanced in all experimental animals. There were however no qualitative differences in the composition of plaques between individual groups, which exhibited only quantitative differences. The number of migrating macrophages was increased only in the nifedipine treated animals. The extent of plaques was significantly decreased after nifedipine treatment, whereas verapamil failed to exert antiatherogenic effect. (Tab. 2, Fig. 4, Ref. 22.).
...
PMID:[The effect of verapamil and nifedipine on the development of experimental atherosclerosis in rabbits]. 152 79
We have used the cynomolgus macaque as a model for the study of the effects of endogenous and exogenous sex steroid hormones on
atherosclerosis
and osteoporosis. As in human beings, premenopausal female cynomolgus macaques develop much less extensive coronary artery
atherosclerosis
than their male counterparts. Furthermore, surgical menopause results in a more atherogenic plasma lipoprotein pattern and an approximate doubling of
atherosclerosis
extent. Frequent pregnancy, a hyperoestrogenic state, results in an approximate 50% reduction in
atherosclerosis
extent. Physiological replacement with 17 beta-oestradiol alone or in combination with progesterone prevents the increase in coronary artery
atherosclerosis
extent associated with ovariectomy. This effect is independent of plasma lipoprotein concentrations and appears to be accounted for, at least in part, by an inhibitory effect of oestrogen replacement therapy on the uptake and degradation of LDL by the artery wall. Also, as in human beings, treatment with certain types of combination oral contraceptives results in marked decreases in plasma HDL-C concentration. Nonetheless, coronary artery
atherosclerosis
extent is reduced in monkeys by oral contraceptive treatment, and this effect is most pronounced among animals at highest risk due to theoretically adverse plasma lipoprotein profiles. It appears that, as with oestrogen replacement therapy, this effect can be accounted for, at least in part, by an inhibition of the uptake and degradation of low density lipoprotein by the artery wall. The monkey also appears to be a good model for studies of postmenopausal bone loss. As in women, surgical menopause results in significant diminution of bone mineral density and bone mineral content. Also, serum biomarkers of bone turnover (total alkaline phosphatase,
acid phosphatase
, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and osteocalcin) are increased in surgically postmenopausal monkeys, indicating increased bone turnover resulting from the surgical menopause. These increases in bone loss and indices of bone turnover were prevented by physiological oestrogen replacement therapy. Cynomolgus monkeys seem to be exceptionally useful models for studies of the effects of sex steroid hormones on
atherosclerosis
and osteoporosis, two major public health problems in postmenopausal women.
...
PMID:Effects of oestrogens and progestogens on coronary atherosclerosis and osteoporosis of monkeys. 182 26
Lysosomes have long been implicated as a factor contributing to the progression and complication of
atherosclerosis
. The authors' laboratory previously has shown that lysosomal ultrastructure in arterial macrophage foam cells is altered as primary lysosomes give rise to large pleiomorphic organelles on lipid accumulation during lesion progression. To further explore the subcellular alterations in lysosomes and associated organelles during foam cell formation, three-dimensional (3D) intermediate voltage electron microscopy was used to examine monocyte-derived macrophages (monocyte/macrophages) during early in vitro uptake of beta migrating very-low-density lipoproteins (beta VLDL). Lysosomes were identified using
acid phosphatase
cytochemistry, and in control cells these organelles constituted 3.5% of the total cytoplasmic volume. Both primary and secondary lysosomes were observed. Upon beta VLDL uptake, the total volume of acid-phosphatase-positive organelles increased threefold over 30 minutes, and the reaction product was found in three additional morphologically distinct structures: tubular lysosomes, membrane stacks, and endoplasmic reticulum with widened cisternae. The proportion of the cell occupied by each of the five acid-phosphatase-positive organelles was quantitated at 10 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, and 4 hours of beta VLDL incubation, and their relative abundance was compared with controls that were processed either with no lipoprotein challenge or albumin incubation for 1 hour. Secondary lysosomes compartment volume peaked at 30 minutes; over the ensuing 3.5 hours, however, the reaction progressively shifted to three new membrane-limited locations. Our observations document the complex 3D organization and spacial relationships among the acid-phosphatase-positive structures induced by lipoprotein uptake. The 3D organization patterns for acid-phosphatase-positive lysosomes in lipoprotein-stimulated pigeon monocyte/macrophages were similar in several aspects to the complex lysosomes previously observed in the macrophages of pigeon arterial lesions.
...
PMID:Pigeon monocyte/macrophage lysosomes during beta VLDL uptake. Induction of acid phosphatase activity. A model for complex arterial lysosomes. 186 24
Pharmacologic doses of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), a steroid hormone produced naturally by the adrenal cortex, may lower plasma lipoprotein levels in humans and reduce the severity of experimental
atherosclerosis
in rabbits. Effects of DHEA on cells of the vascular wall, particularly endothelial cells (EC), which are in direct contact with the plasma, have not been documented. The authors have found that micromolar doses of DHEA induce a consistent and reversible morphologic change in cultured EC derived from the human umbilical vein. During 24 hours of exposure to DHEA, cultured EC became loaded with phase-dense, perinuclear cytoplasmic granules, which persisted while DHEA remained in the culture medium. Certain steroids related to DHEA, particularly 17-ketosteroids, also induced perinuclear cytoplasmic granules. The granules lost their phase-density after fixed monolayers were extracted using ethanol or methanol. The granules did not form in media made with lipoprotein-deficient serum, suggesting that serum lipoproteins were involved in formation of the granules. Ultrastructurally, the granules were identical to multilamellar lipid structures, a type of pleomorphic lipid-containing lysosome found in foam cells. The granules were identified as lysosomes by positive reaction for
acid phosphatase
. The mechanism by which DHEA induces formation of lysosomal lipid structures remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Dehydroepiandrosterone and related steroids induce multilamellar lipid structures in cultured human endothelial cells. 214 Sep 27
Coronary arteries of 93 clinically healthy Finnish children of both sexes were collected from successive, medicolegal autopsies of victims of violent death. In the histological and histochemical study, local, cushion-type thickenings of the coronary walls were demonstrable in 47, i.e. 50 per cent, of the children, the occurrence increasing with age. The most prominent change was the splitting of the internal elastic membrane and the accumulation of smooth muscle cells, forming a new, musculo-elastic layer. Glycosaminoglycans appeared in the luminal parts of the thickenings. There was an average decrease in the succinate dehydrogenase reaction in the cushion area, implying a degenerative process. The increase in the reaction of "injury markers",
acid phosphatase
and esterase based on the increase of cells rich in these enzymes, indicated pathologic process. It was concluded that change of this kind, demonstrable early in childhood, may dispose coronary arteries to
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Histological and histochemical studies on local coronary wall thickenings (cushions) in Finnish children who died violently. Cardiovascular risk in young Finns? 230 49
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