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)

A 48 year old male patient presented with xanthomatosis, hyperbeta lipoproteinemia and hyper-IgA globulinemia; these two serum components occurred as a "complex." The patient has subsequently been studied for 22 years (1952 to 1974). His serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels have been consistently and excessively high despite efforts to regulate them by means of diet or diet and drugs. Serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) concentration ranged from 1,400 to 3,400 mg/dl compared with a normal value of 156 plus or minus 92 mg/dl. The metabolism of lipoproteins, judged by vitamin A turnover studies was slow. Peripheral atherosclerosis became evident 15 years after beginning the study whereas cinecoronary arteriography concurrently demonstrated only minimum changes. Xanthomas exhibited marked regression only during the last 6 years, after 16 years of diet and the addition of clofibrate for 7 years. Beta lipoprotein and IgA globulin determined by immunofluorescent and immunoelectrophoretic technics were demonstrated in the atherosclerotic material obtained from the patient's arterial wall. They were also found in the plasma cells of the bone marrow. The IgA globulin-beta lipoprotein complex in the serum was broken with difficulty. The patient's isolated IgA globulin, free of lipoprotein, formed a firm complex when mixed with beta lipoprotein prepared from normal human serum. Initially, IgA globulin studies showed presence of both kappa and lambda light chains in normal proportion. But after 18 years, the IgA globulin has become monoclonal, type lambda. The plasma cells of the bone marrow have become progressively more atypical and immature. No clinical indications of multiple myeloma have been found. It is concluded that association of lipoproteins with IgA globulin in the serum of this patient with hyperlipidemia, hyper-IgA globulinemia did not prevent the development of atherosclerotic lesions and the deposition of lipids and lipoproteins in the plaques. It is possible that the lipoprotein-immunoglobulin association may have retarded the process, since it became manifest only after many years of known hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Autoimmune hyperlipidemia in a patient. Atherosclerotic course and chaning immunoglobulin pattern during 21 years of study. 16 71

The mean length of the LCA found by pathological (or angiographic) methods is fairly constant. This exclusively anatomical study shows no significant relationship between the length of the LCA and stenotic atherosclerosis in the LCA or the heart weight or a dominant left circumflex coronary artery or a complete His left bundle-branch block.
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PMID:The length of the left main coronary artery: pathological features. 92 May 79

This is a case report of a 63-year-old man with myotonic dystrophy in whom an ECG showed atrial flutter, complete A-V block, idioventricular rhythm with image of left bundle branch block and giant, wide and negative "T-U" waves. The microscopic study of the conduction system showed slight fibrosis of the SAN, fatty infiltration and cellular atrophy of the AVN and bundle of HIS, as wells ad basophilic degeneration of a cell at the begining of the left branch and diffuse sclerosis of the left subendocardial ramifications. Advanced coronary atherosclerosis was also found. Since only two complete pathologic descriptions of the heart in myotonic dystrophy have been reported, no definitive specificity could be atributed to this findings. It is suggested that in the present case both coronary atherosclerosis and an intrinsic myocellular dystrophy could have contributed to the final lesions of the conducting system.
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PMID:[Steinert's disease with cardiac arrhythmia. Morphological findings in the heart conduction system]. 113 61

A 29-year-old man with congenital protein C deficiency and acute myocardial infarction is reported. Four hours after the onset of chest pain, he was treated intravenously with tissue-type plasminogen activator. Subsequent coronary angiography revealed only slight stenosis of the left anterior descending coronary artery without any atherosclerosis. The propositus, his brother, and his mother, showed low levels of both protein C activity and antigen, while plasma thrombomodulin levels were normal. His grandfather had died from acute myocardial infarction at 38 years of age. We investigated several other risk factors for arterial thrombosis, including factor VII, fibrinogen, heparin cofactor II, lipoprotein (a), and anticardiolipin antibodies. No other haemostatic abnormalities apart from factor VII hyperactivity were detected in this family. To study the effects of protein C and factor VII on procoagulant activity, prothrombin time was measured after the addition of activated protein C and factor VII to protein C-deficient plasma. The prothrombin time ratio decreased along with an increase in the factor VII level. It also decreased with a decrease in the activated protein C level. These findings indicated that the procoagulant activity of factor VII was enhanced by low protein C levels, suggesting that concomitant factor VII hyperactivity may cause acute myocardial infarction in patients with protein C deficiency.
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PMID:Congenital protein C deficiency and myocardial infarction:concomitant factor VII hyperactivity may play a role in the onset of arterial thrombosis. 144 May 17

The oxidative modification of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is suggested to play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. The present study examined the role of the formation of LDL-copper (Cu) complex in the peroxidation of LDL. The amount of copper bound to LDL increased during incubation performed with increasing concentrations of CuSO4. More than 80% of the copper bound to the LDL particle was observed in the protein phase of LDL, suggesting that most of the copper ions formed complexes with the ligand-binding sites of apoprotein. The addition of histidine (1 mM), known to form a high affinity complex with copper, and EDTA (1 mM), a metal chelator, during the incubation of LDL with CuSO4 prevented the formation of both thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) and LDL-Cu complexes. EDTA inhibited the copper-catalyzed ascorbate oxidation whereas histidine had no effect, suggesting that the copper within the complex with histidine is available to catalyze the reaction, in contrast to EDTA. These observations indicate that the preventive effect of histidine on the copper-catalyzed peroxidation of LDL is not simply mediated by chelating free copper ions in aqueous phase. Evidence that copper bound to LDL particle still has a redox potential was provided by the observed increase in TBARS content during incubation of LDL-Cu complexes in the absence of free copper ions. The addition of either histidine or EDTA to LDL-Cu complexes inhibited the formation of TBARS by removing copper ions from the LDL forming the corresponding complexes. However, there still remained small amounts of copper in the LDL particles following the treatment of LDL-Cu complexes with histidine or EDTA. The copper ions remaining in the LDL particle lacked the ability to catalyze LDL peroxidation, suggesting that there may be two types of copper binding sites in LDL: tight-binding sites, from which the copper ions are not removed by chelation, and weak-binding sites, from which copper ions are easily removed by chelators. The formation of TBARS in the LDL preparation during incubation with CuSO4 was comparable to the incubation with FeSO4. In contrast, the formation of TBARS in the LDL-lipid micelles by CuSO4 was nearly eliminated even in the presence of ascorbate to promote metal-catalyzed lipid peroxidation, although a marked increase in TBARS content was observed in the LDL-lipid micelles with FeSO4, and with FeCl3 in the presence of ascorbate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of lipoprotein-copper complex in copper catalyzed-peroxidation of low-density lipoprotein. 153 73

We studied a 39-year-old man who had palmar xanthomas complicated with marked hyperlipidemia. His serum cholesterol and triglyceride were 2000 and 6300 mg/dl, respectively. Serum apolipoprotein E (apo E) was undetectable in the patient by the methods of single radial immunodiffusion, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and radioimmunoassay. Serum apo E concentrations of his father and sister were low. This evidence is consistent with a diagnosis of familial apo E deficiency. We studied the synthesis of apo E in cultures of peripheral blood monocyte macrophages (M-M cultures) obtained from the patient, and detected no secretion of apo E in the culture medium and no newly synthesized apo E in the cell lysate. There were only trace amounts of apo E mRNA of the M-M cultures and the size of the mRNA appeared the same as normal apo E mRNA, indicating a different mutation of the gene from that of the case reported by Zannis et al. (J. Biol. Chem., 260 (1985) 12891).
Atherosclerosis 1991 May
PMID:Apolipoprotein E deficiency with a depressed mRNA of normal size. 187 6

Cultured fibroblasts from patients with familial hyperapobetalipoproteinemia (hyperapoB) were used to determine if a defect in lipid metabolism was present. Three basic proteins (BP I, BP II, and BP III) were isolated from normal human serum by preparative isoelectric focusing, preparative SDS/PAGE, and reversed-phase HPLC. The Mr and pI values of these proteins were 14,000 and 9.10 for BP I, 27,500 and 8.48 for BP II, and 55,000 and 8.73 for BP III. These proteins differed significantly in their content of arginine, cysteine, proline, histidine, serine, and methionine. BP I appears to be the same protein as acylation-stimulating protein, but BP II and BP III appeared different from acylation-stimulating protein and other lipid carrier proteins. BP I, BP II, and BP III stimulated the incorporation of [14C]oleate into lipid esters in normal fibroblasts, an effect that was time and concentration dependent. In hyperapoB cells, BP II markedly increased (up to 9-fold) the incorporation of [14C]oleate into cholesteryl ester compared with that in normal cells; in addition, there was a 50% decrease in the stimulation of triglyceride acylation and cholesterol esterification with BP I. No difference between normal and hyperapoB cells was observed with BP III. In summary, the identification of another serum basic protein, BP II, led to the elucidation of another cellular defect in hyperapoB fibroblasts, enhanced cholesterol esterification, which may be related to the precocious atherosclerosis and abnormal lipoprotein metabolism seen in hyperapoB.
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PMID:Acylation-stimulatory activity in hyperapobetalipoproteinemic fibroblasts: enhanced cholesterol esterification with another serum basic protein, BP II. 224 73

The propositus was a 43-year-old Japanese male with a plasma total cholesterol (chol) level of 252 mg/dl and a high density lipoprotein (HDL)-chol of 169 mg/dl. His brother also had a markedly higher HDL-chol level of 149 mg/dl. In addition, his mother, sister and all 3 children had higher HDL-chol levels of 75-91 mg/dl. These data suggest that the propositus and his brother were homozygous for familial hyperalphalipoproteinemia (FHALP), whereas his mother, sister and 3 children were heterozygous for FHALP. None had any clinical signs of atherosclerosis. The propositus and his brother (homozygous FHALP) also showed markedly higher levels of apo AI (greater than or equal to 190 mg/dl) and E (greater than 16 mg/dl). Ultracentrifugal analysis disclosed an increase of HDL2-chol in the propositus. Cholesteryl ester transfer activity (CETA) was completely absent in the propositus (0.0% transfer/5 microliters/18 hr) and his brother (0.3% transfer/5 microliters/18 hr). It is concluded that this case is a family of homozygous FHALP probably caused by complete deficiency of CETA.
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PMID:A family of homozygous familial hyperalphalipoproteinemia with complete deficiency of cholesteryl ester transfer activity. 236 Aug 80

A case is reported in which simultaneous surgical correction of coronary atherosclerosis and cholelithiasis was performed. A 71-year-old man was admitted with severe stable angina and right hypochondrial dull pain. Coronary angiograms disclosed severe triple vessel disease, and abdominal echography demonstrated gallstone. He underwent bypass of left anterior descending, diagonal, obtuse marginal, and right coronary arteries with autogenous saphenous vein on cardiopulmonary bypass. The procedure was followed immediately by cholecystectomy. His postoperative course was uneventful.
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PMID:[Concomitant coronary artery bypass and cholecystectomy: a case report]. 259 5

A 10-year-old boy died of a myocardial infarction; he had homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia. Unrecognized tendon xanthomas previously had been removed. His parents and siblings were found to have elevated cholesterol levels. The screening of at-risk children allows the early recognition of hypercholesterolaemia and intervention in the development of atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Death of a child as a result of familial hypercholesterolaemia. 274 25


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