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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebral arteries from 65 human subjects were examined by immunofluorescence, using antisera against human fibrinogen and low density lipoprotein (LDL). Deposition of fibrinogen and LDL was most frequent at the bifurcation of the middle cerebral arteries and least in the basilar arteries in all age groups. In general, deposition of LDL was associated with deposition of fibrinogen, and lone deposition of LDL in the absence of fibrinogen was only rarely seen.
Fibrinogen
was scattered in the intercellular spaces, and located in the inner layer or edges of the thickened intima of the bifurcation with increasing plaque formation.
Fibrinogen
was observed even in the subendothelial region of the uninvolved intima at the bifurcations. LDL was present in the cytoplasm of the endothelial cells in the earliest stage, and it increased in the extracellular stroma with increase in intimal thickening, corresponding closely to the distribution of perifibous oil-red-O-stained lipids. No LDL was detected in the uninvolved intima. The observations suggest that deposition of fibrinogen in the intima might precede LDL deposition and possibly play a more important role than LDL in the development of atherosclerotic lesions in the cerebral arteries, especially in their early stage. Severe
atherosclerosis
at the bifurcations may be in part due to increased permeation of these plasma proteins, possibly as a result of hemodynamic stress.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Oct
PMID:Fibrinogen and low density lipoprotein in the development of cerebral atherosclerosis. 22 73
The concentration of plasma fibrinogen increases with age and is particularly elevated in subjects with vascular changes due to
atherosclerosis
.
Fibrinogen
, which is the meeting point of the "cascade" of the coagulation factors and an important regulating factor of plasma viscosity, occupies a key position in atherosclerotic vascular pathology. This indicates the necessity to keep its value within normal limits, to avoid the clinical development of the disease or improve its evolution. Thus, frequent checks of the fibrinogenemia are necessary at various ages even if this means a big organizational burden. However, this checking can be facilitated by using automatic techniques, such as the immunonephelometric method, with which it is possible to carry out a large number of determinations in a short time.
Atherosclerosis
1978 Feb
PMID:Fibrinogenemia, determined immunonephelometrically, as a possible parameter in the evaluation of peripheral arteriosclerotic arteriopathy. 64 50
Mounting data support a causal connection between high-normal fibrinogen levels and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. There is clearly a thrombogenic component to
atherosclerosis
and the onset of clinical manifestations. This offers the possibility to better identify high-risk candidates and also to protect them by reducing blood fibrinogen concentration or blocking its action. The relationship of antecedent fibrinogen to the subsequent development of cardiovascular disease is examined, based on 18 years of surveillance of a cohort of 1274 men and women aged 47 to 79 years who participated in the Framingham Study. The association with the development of peripheral arterial disease and cardiac failure is now examined in addition to previously studied relationships to coronary heart disease and stroke. In men and women, there is a significant age-adjusted relationship of fibrinogen level to coronary heart disease and to cardiovascular disease in general. In women, a significant relationship to cardiac failure and peripheral arterial disease, but not to stroke, was also found. These data on women are unique as they are not available elsewhere. Age-adjusted cardiovascular, all-cause, and coronary heart disease mortality were all related to fibrinogen in both sexes. In men, fibrinogen impact was the greatest for stroke and the least for peripheral arterial disease. For women, the impact on coronary heart disease was greatest. The absolute risk for an elevated fibrinogen level was greatest for coronary heart disease in both sexes. Average fibrinogen values are higher in women and in persons with other risk factors, including hypertension, cigarette smoking, diabetes, obesity, and elevated hematocrit. However, there is an independent contribution of fibrinogen to cardiovascular disease in general and coronary disease in particular, on adjustment for coexistent risk factors.
Fibrinogen
enhances the risk of cardiovascular disease in hypertensives, diabetics, and cigarette smokers. About half the cardiovascular risk of cigarette smoking appears due to the higher fibrinogen values. Now, five prospective studies document the excess incidence of cardiovascular events in persons with elevated fibrinogen levels within the "normal range." Each standard deviation increase in fibrinogen is associated with a 30% increment of coronary heart disease in men and a 40% increase in women.
Fibrinogen
should be added to the list of major cardiovascular risk factors. Trials of intervention to lower fibrinogen in high-risk coronary candidates are needed.
...
PMID:Update on fibrinogen as a cardiovascular risk factor. 134 96
The recent status of the extent and severity of
atherosclerosis
in Japanese children and young adults and its causative factor are presented. The material and data are collected from 2,856 autopsies, with the age range of 1 month to 39 years.
Fibrinogen
-fibrin metabolism in the arterial wall has a definite role in atherogenesis. The incidence of myocardial infarction in 539 consecutive autopsy cases over 40 years old at Kyushu University is 12.7%.
...
PMID:Lessons in prevention of ischemic heart disease learned from pathological studies of coronary atherosclerosis. 149 69
In this paper are reported the basal results of a multidisciplinary, multicenter study designed to explore in a population with ischemic disease the relation between hemostatic variables, conventional risk factors and atherothrombotic sequelae. 953 patients less than or equal to 69 yrs with documented coronary, cerebral or peripheral atherosclerotic disease were studied and followed-up for 24 months. Examinations included hemostatic and lipid laboratory assays, arterial Doppler examination, cerebral computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance, exercise electrocardiogram and coronary angiography.
Fibrinogen
(301.4 +/- 71.52 mg/dl) correlated positively with antithrombin III (r = 0.27) and leukocytes (r = 0.25), negatively with HDL-cholesterol (r = 0.18) and tended to increase with smoking. Heavy smokers had higher leukocyte counts than non-smokers (8.0 +/- 2.0 vs. 7.2 +/- 2.1 x 10(3)/microliters), higher triglycerides (1.87 +/- 1.12 vs. 1.53 +/- 1.35 mmol/l) and lower HDL-cholesterol (0.93 +/- 0.27 vs. 1.00 +/- 0.25 mmol/l). FVII correlated positively with triglycerides (r = 0.16) and protein C (r = 0.45). vWF:Ag (145.4 +/- 70.58%) ad FVII:C (139.7 +/- 59.10%) were positively correlated (r = 0.44). FVIII:C correlated positively with fibrinogen (r = 0.21). Myocardial infarction survivors with associated cerebral and peripheral vascular lesions had higher FVIII:C, FVII, fibronogen and vWF:Ag. These findings suggest that hemostatic factors may enhance and/or mediate the effects of conventional risk factors in atherothrombotic ischemic events.
Atherosclerosis
1991 Oct
PMID:The PLAT Study: a multidisciplinary study of hemostatic function and conventional risk factors in vascular disease patients. 159 Aug 30
Recent prospective investigations have reported that higher plasma fibrinogen concentrations and higher factor VII coagulant activity are associated with greater risk of cardiovascular disease. To discover what characteristics may influence fibrinogen and factor VII, we analyzed data from the
Atherosclerosis
Risk in Communities Study obtained from over 12,000 men and women, aged 45-64 years, from four communities in December 1986 to June 1989.
Fibrinogen
was higher in blacks than whites and in women than men; in general, it increased with age, smoking, body size, diabetes, fasting serum insulin, LDL cholesterol, lipoprotein(a), leukocyte count, and menopause, and it decreased with ethanol intake, physical activity, HDL cholesterol, and female hormone use. Factor VII was higher in women than men and, in women, increased with age; in both sexes, it increased with body size, triglycerides, LDL cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol, and it decreased with ethanol intake. These findings indicate that elevations in fibrinogen and factor VII may be modifiable through appropriate lifestyle changes.
Atherosclerosis
1991 Dec
PMID:Population correlates of plasma fibrinogen and factor VII, putative cardiovascular risk factors. 178 4
W examined the short-term effects of a high-complex carbohydrate, low fat diet on the plasmin-dependent fibrinolytic pathway. A population of 27 adult American Caucasians exposed to the diet for 3 weeks showed highly significant reductions in the levels of plasminogen (P = 0.0001), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) (P = 0.0001) and plasminogen activator inhibitor (tPAI) (P = 0.0017).
Fibrinogen
levels also decreased, but the changes did not reach statistical significance (P = 0.07). In contrast, the levels of the Lpa(a) lipoprotein, a potential inhibitor of fibrinolysis, remained remarkably constant despite a marked decrease in the levels of apolipoprotein B, a major constituent of Lp(a). Correlations between the levels of tPA, tPAI and plasma triglyceride were observed among the individuals both before and after the dietary challenge. Although the mechanisms responsible for the effects are unknown, the dramatic responsiveness of the thrombolytic pathway to dietary challenge is likely to be of importance in understanding the etiology of coronary artery disease and other vascular disorders.
Atherosclerosis
1990 Sep
PMID:Dietary regulation of fibrinolytic factors. 214 72
The effects of smoking and plasma risk factors on the patency of prosthetic femoro-popliteal bypass grafts were investigated in 93 patients entered into a multicentre trial of prosthetic graft materials (70 patients had patent grafts and 23 patients had occluded grafts 2 years after surgery). The smoking markers thiocyanate and fibrinogen were significantly higher in patients with occluded grafts, whereas LDL-cholesterol was significantly higher in patients with patent grafts 2 years after bypass. Based on smoking markers, graft patency in smokers was 57% at 2 years by life table, compared to 78% in non-smokers. P less than 0.05.
Fibrinogen
was an important variable, predicting graft occlusion with graft patency in patients with below median fibrinogen levels, being 84% at 2 years by life table compared to 51% in those with above median fibrinogen levels, P less than 0.025. Although increased levels of LDL-cholesterol have been associated with accelerated
atherosclerosis
, patients with above median levels of LDL-cholesterol had improved graft patency (83%) at 2 years compared to patency in patients with below median LDL-cholesterol (60%), P less than 0.05. The plasma risk factors associated with the failure of prosthetic grafts are similar to those associated with the failure of saphenous vein grafts, indicating that higher fibrinogen levels and smoking may contribute to an hypercoagulable state. Greater efforts are needed to stop patients smoking after vascular reconstruction.
...
PMID:The influence of smoking and plasma factors on prosthetic graft patency. 218 44
Apolipoprotein B (apo B), fibrinogen/fibrin, blood platelets, factor VIII-related antigen of the blood coagulation system, and smooth muscle cells (SMC) were identified in the intima of normal and atherosclerotic human aorta and large arteries by the indirect immunofluorescence technique.
Fibrinogen
/fibrin was revealed by a monoclonal antibody (monAb) against the C-terminal region of human fibrinogen A alpha-chain. Fibronectin was visualized by monAb to the cellular form and against an epitope shared by different fibronectin subunit variants. In normal intima, fatty streaks, small amounts of fibrinogen/fibrin together with large amounts of apo B were observed. Fibronectin detected by two types of monAb was not found in extracellular matrix (ECM), whereas cellular fibronectin encircled SMC. According to the data obtained, fibrinogen/fibrin accumulates in plaques as a result of intramural thrombus incorporation, blood insudation, intramural haemorrhage, and in or around cells, apparently macrophages.
Atherosclerosis
1990 Jun
PMID:Visualization of apo B, fibrinogen/fibrin, and fibronectin in the intima of normal human aorta and large arteries and during atherosclerosis. 219 29
We studied the effect of fibrinogen on the migration of bovine aortic smooth muscle cells in culture, using a Neuro Probe 48-well micro chemotaxis chamber.
Fibrinogen
stimulated the migration of the cells dose-dependently at concentrations from 30 to 1000 micrograms/ml. A modified checkerboard analysis of the response demonstrated that the effect was largely chemotactic in nature. The present results suggest that fibrinogen may play an important role in the pathogenesis of arterial intimal thickening and
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Fibrinogen is chemotactic for vascular smooth muscle cells. 252 19
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