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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
The smooth muscle cell plays an important role in the process of atherogenesis, proliferating in the arterial intima and becoming filled with lipid during the course of the disease. In these experiments the effect of insulin and
glucose
on sterol synthesis in cultured rat arterial smooth muscle cells was studied. Arterial smooth muscle cells were cultured from pieces of intima and inner media of young rat aortas. The cells were grown in Petri dishes in culture medium with foetal calf serum and when confluent were exposed to insulin or
glucose
for 24 hours. Insulin in concentrations of 10 micromicron-100 millimicron per ml stimulated the incorporation of sodium [2-(14)C]acetate into non-saponifiable lipids and digitonin precipitable sterols. However, insulin had no effect on the incorporation of labelled mevalonate into cell sterols. Increasing concentrations of
glucose
in the medium up to 140 mM had had no effect on the incorporation of isotope into sterols, but higher concentrations of
glucose
caused cell damage and sterol synthesis was markedly depressed. These results may have relevance to the development of
atherosclerosis
in diabetes and obesity.
Atherosclerosis
1977 Jul
PMID:The effect of insulin and glucose on sterol synthesis in cultured rat arterial smooth muscle cells. 90 24
In order to determine whether the adrenal glands play a primary or secondary role in the pathogenesis of the spontaneous arteriosclerosis which occurs in repeatedly bred rats, sexually mature female, Sprague-Dawley rats were adrenalectomized and maintained during four successive pregnancies. Some of the breeders were treated with deoxycorticosterone (DOCA) and 0.5% saline. The adrenalectomized breeders did not develop arteriosclerosis, beta cell degranulations, or those which has accesory or regenerated adrenal glandular tissue. Surprisingly, intact DOCA-treated breeders also showed inhibition of arterial disease but they did have fatty livers and beta cell degranulation. Body and organ weights, serum enzymes, lipids,
glucose
, BUN, and corticosterone were elevated in breeder rats but not to such high levels as is usual in repeatedly bred rats. These findings demonstrate that the presence of the adrenal glands is essential for the pathogenesis of the spontaneous arteriosclerosis, fatty liver, and beta cell degranulation which occurs in repeatedly bred, female rats.
Atherosclerosis
1977 Jul
PMID:Inhibition of spontaneously developing arteriosclerosis in female breeder rats by adrenalectomy. 90 28
This article presents a theory concerning the pathogenetic background for three diseases of civilization: essential hypertension, stable diabetes and
atherosclerosis
. Man and many other animals have mobilizing mechanisms for preparation for physical activity, expressed inter alia by an increase in blood pressure, hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia. During physical activity, blood pressure falls almost to the resting level and hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia are reduced parallel with the metabolism of
glucose
and fats in working muscles. In wealthy countries, this preparation for physical activity, which is dominated by the sympathetic-adrenergic system, comes into action just as frequently as in less wealthy countries -- or possibly even more frequently -- but this is rarely followed by muscular activity. How long is this sympathetic dominance maintained? How high are the blood pressure, hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia? How slowly do these return to normal levels? It appears probable that this may be of fundamental pathogenetic significance in the three abovementioned diseases, the causes of which we have difficulty in finding or agreeing upon. Various prophylactic possibilities are mentioned briefly.
...
PMID:[An hypothesis concerning the pathogenetic background of 3 diseases of civilization]. 90 6
Treatment of rats with 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (SDMH) with the doze of 21 mg/kg per body weight once a week during four weeks caused the decrease of biogenic amine level, particularly, of dopamine in the hypothalamus, the decrease of
glucose
tolerance, the increase of the blood level of insulin and triglycerides. According to the previously achieved data SDMH causes the elevation of the hypothalamic threshold of sensitivity to the inhibitory action of estrogens. At the same time SDMH provides considerable suppression of lymphocyte blastogenic response to phytohemagglutinin and lipopolisaccharide, the decrease of the level of antibody produced against sheep erythrocytes, and the decrease of phagocytic activity of macrophages. Thus SDMH provides the syndrome of intensified aging. Recently our laboratory achieved the data, that antidiabetic drug-phenformin-improves cell-mediated immunity indices and the activity of phagocytosis in middle-aged subjects, as well as in patients with
atherosclerosis
and cancer (Vopr. Oncol., 1976, N 2, p. 13). On the basis of these findings phenformin (2 mg/day per os) was administered in rats in combination with SDMH. This resulted in restoration of all the abovementioned immunologic indices. It may be suggested that SDMH causes metabolic immunodepression, similar to the immunodepression, inherent to normal aging, pregnancy, stress and specific age-associated pathology--diseases of compensation (Vopr. Oncol., 1976, N 8, p. 3). If immunodepression is one of the components of cancerogenesis, then the elimination of metabolic immunodepression, which arises in course of normal aging or under the influence of cehmical cancerogens, can provide an anticancerogenic prophylactic effect.
...
PMID:[Phenformin elimination of the immunodepression caused by 1,2-dimethylhydrazine in rats]. 90 6
To identify metabolic and other concomitants of a single important type of atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease, 75 patients with angiographically and surgically proven internal carotid stenosis were compared with age and sex matched control subjects with respect to plasma cholesterol, triglycerides and
glucose
. They were also compared for blood pressure, cigarette smoking, evidence of ischemic heart disease, peripheral vascular disease and for a family history of these diseases. Patients with carotid stenosis had higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures and higher plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations than the control groups. They had, as well, a far greater likelihood of being cigarette smokers and a greater likelihood of having diabetes mellitus and previous evidence of coronary and peripheral vascular disease. Patients with carotid stenosis were far more likely to have 2 or more of these common concomitants of
atherosclerosis
than were the control subjects. The data suggest that the precursors of carotid stenosis are similar to those of coronary
atherosclerosis
and raise the hope that modification of these factors may decrease the incidence of this highly prevalent form of cerebrovascular disease.
...
PMID:Concomitants of atherosclerotic carotid artery stenosis. 92 53
Non-arteriosclerotic, virgin and arteriosclerotic breeder rats were subjected to chronic treatment with prolactin or prolactin-releasing drugs such as perphenazine and reserpine for 12 weeks. Males and females responded to the prolactin as evidenced by increased milk secretion, adrenal hyperplasia and thymus gland involution. Although the prolactin- and reserpine-treated animals gained weight and manifested pituitary gland basophilia, the perphenazine-treated animals showed considerable loss of body weight as well as involution of the pituitary gland, ovaries and testes, suggesting a condition of induced hypopituitarism. Chronic treatment with prolactin, both directly and indirectly, caused uniform increases in serum enzymes, e.g., CPK, SGOT, SGPT and LDH, lipids, e.g., triglycerides, free fatty acids and cholesterol,
glucose
and BUN. Corticosterone production was enhanced by prolactin, reduced by perphenazine and unaffected by reserpine. Prolactin did not induce any arterial disease in the arteriosclerosis-resistant, virgin rats but it did cause eracerbation of the usual severity of arteriosclerosis in the hilar renal arteries of the arteries sclerosis-prone, breeder rats as well as an increased incidence of "old" and "new" foci of myocardial necrosis, characteristically found in breeder rats. It is suggested that hypothalamic control of prolactin as well as ACTH release may play a role in the spontaneous arteriosclerosis which develops in repeatedly-bred, male and female rats.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Comparative effects of prolactin, perphenazine and reserpine on non-arteriosclerotic (virgin) vs arteriosclerotic (breeder) rats. 94 17
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity was measured in adipose tissue, heart and diaphragm in Sprague--Dawley rats after estrogen therapy or orchiectomy. Enzyme activity was measured by incubation of tissue fragments with a triolein emulsion in the presence of serum and heparin. In confirmation of other work, depression of adipose tissue LPL followed estradiol treatment in pharmacologic or near-physiologic doses. Cardiac and diaphragmatic muscle LPL were increased. Estrogen-treated male animals showed growth retardation. However, they gained weight steadily and did not show significant differences in serum insulin,
glucose
of D-beta-hydroxybutyrate. The effects of estradiol in male animals were reversed by sequential fasting and re-feeding. At times during growth and aging in normal female rats, adipose tissue activity was decreased while cardiac and skeletal muscle activities were increased relative to males of the same age or body weight. Castration of male rats failed to reproduce the effect of estrogens on tissue lipoprotein lipase. These in vitro data suggest that exogenous estrogens may shift the flux of triglyceride fatty acids from storage in the adipose organ toward incorporation by muscle. These, and other data, raise the possibility that physiological estrogen secretion exerts a tonic influence over the synthesis and ultimate destination of triglyceride fatty acids.
Atherosclerosis
1976 Sep
PMID:Estrogen treatment and gonadal function in the regulation of lipoprotein lipase. 97 48
Arginine-induced insulin secretion was evaluated in 13 patients with endogenous hypertriglyceridemia (Fredrickson's Type IV) before and after a two-month period of Clofibrate therapy. Clofibrate reduced triglyceride, cholesterol and FFA levels by 68, 28 and 15% respectively and provoked a significant reduction in arginine-induced insulin secretion without modifying
glucose
response. Arginine-induced insulin secretion was also studied in 11 normal subjects during saline and intralipid infusions.
Glucose
and insulin basal values, and
glucose
and insulin response to arginine infusion were not influenced by Intralipid infusion in these controls. These results confirm that clofibrate reduces insulin secretion thereby contributing to decreased serum triglyceride levels.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Effects of clofibrate treatment on arginine-induced insulin secretion in endogenous hypertriglyceridemia. 100 8
The influence of variations of oxygen tension on the metabolism of bovine mesenteric arteries was studied in vitro.
Glucose
uptake, lactate production, glycogen content, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), creatine phosphate (CrP) and incorporation of [14C]leucine into protein were determined. The mesenteric arteries were suspended in Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer which was aerated with a gas mixture containing 5% CO2,O-95% O2 and N2 to 100%. Reduction of the O2 concentration of the gas phase from 95-20% resulted in little metabolic change. A further reduction from 20-0% O2 increased the lactate production 4-fold, indicating a marked Pasteur effect. At 0% O2 the
glucose
uptake was moderately increased and the glycogen content was decreased. The tissue level of CrP was reduced at a low oxygen tension and at 0% O2 the ATP content was also lowered. The incorporation of leucine into proteins was reduced at 0% O2.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Influence of oxygen tension of the metabolism of vascular smooth muscle: demonstration of a Pasteur effect. 100 12
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