Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of the present study was to assess the genetic risk for atherothrombotic cerebral infarction (ACI) in men and women separately as well as in individuals with or without conventional risk factors for
atherosclerosis
and thereby to contribute to the personalized prevention of ACI. The study population comprised 2705 unrelated Japanese individuals (1244 men, 1461 women), including 636 subjects (372 men, 264 women) with ACI. Subjects with ACI and controls either had or did not have conventional risk factors for
atherosclerosis
, including hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and diabetes mellitus. The genotypes for 202 polymorphisms of 152 candidate genes were determined by a method that combines polymerase chain reaction and sequence-specific oligonucleotide probes with suspension array technology. Multivariable logistic regression analysis and a stepwise forward selection procedure revealed that 11 different polymorphisms were significantly (P < 0.005) associated with ACI in women or men or in individuals with or without hyper-tension, hypercholesterolemia, or diabetes mellitus: the 584C-->T polymorphism of LIPG, 5665G-->T of EDN1, and G-->A of CCL11 in women; 677C-->T of
MTHFR
, 1323C-->T of ITGB2, 3932T-->C of APOE, and -231A-->G of EDNRA in men; -572 G -->C of IL6 in hypertensive individuals; -403G-->A of CCL5 and G-->A of COMT in individuals with hypercholesterolemia; and 3932T--> C of APOE and A-->G of TNFSF4 in diabetic individuals. Polymorphisms associated with ACI may thus differ between women and men as well as among individuals with different risk factors. Stratification of subjects on the basis of sex or conventional risk factors for
atherosclerosis
may therefore be important in order to achieve the personalized prevention of ACI with the use of genetic information.
...
PMID:Genetic risk for atherothrombotic cerebral infarction in individuals stratified by sex or conventional risk factors for atherosclerosis. 1701 17
A prospective molecular epidemiology study was implemented in a cohort of 98 subjects suffering from severe atherosclerotic lesions requiring removal of an abdominal aorta fragment. We previously published the results relative to detection, in the aorta medium layer, of bulky DNA adducts and fluorescent polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-related DNA adducts, oxidative DNA damage, and mitochondrial DNA 4977 common deletion, as well as GSTM1 and GSTT1 gene polymorphisms. We report herein new data, relative to oxidative stress biomarkers, including oxidative DNA damage in both inner and medium aorta layers, malondialdehyde in the medium layer, homocysteine and reduced glutathione in plasma, and those relative to additional gene polymorphisms, including NAT1, NAT2, OGG1,
MTHFR
, Leiden factor V, and prothrombin. The results of biochemical and molecular analyses were related to survival of the patients, whose average age was 70 at the start of the follow up. During the following 14 years, 71.4% of them died. The results obtained provide evidence for the crucial impact of oxidative stress and certain gene polymorphisms on clinical and biochemical patterns as well as on survival of patients. Survival was significantly affected not only by traditional risk factors for
atherosclerosis
but also by molecular end-points and adverse gene polymorphisms, and by their combinations.
...
PMID:Survival of atherosclerotic patients as related to oxidative stress and gene polymorphisms. 1738 90
Nineteen patients (age 60 +/- 14) with amaurosis fugax associated with heritable thrombophilia-hypofibrinolysis without ipsilateral atherosclerotic carotid plaque or other causes of amaurosis fugax were studied. Our hypothesis was that case-specific thromboprophylaxis would prevent subsequent amaurosis fugax episodes. Prospective treatment data were available for 13 cases. Thrombophilic disorders included high Factors VIII and XI, G20210A prothrombin heterozygosity, low proteins C and S,
MTHFR
mutations, and the PL A1/A2 mutation. Hypofibrinolytic disorders included plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 4G4G, and high lipoprotein (a). Treatments included Coumadin; Lovenox, folic acid-vitamin B6-vitamin B12, discontinuation of estrogens-selective estrogen receptor modulators, Glucophage, and aspirin, as appropriate. Usually within 1 month on therapy, patients became asymptomatic and have remained asymptomatic for > or = 1 year on therapy, without adverse treatment side effects. When amaurosis fugax occurs without carotid artery
atherosclerosis
or other known causes, thrombophilia or hypofibrinolysis, or both are nearly universal, safely treatable, reversible pathoetiologies.
...
PMID:Amaurosis fugax caused by heritable thrombophilia-hypofibrinolysis in cases without carotid atherosclerosis: thromboprophylaxis prevents subsequent transient monocular partial blindness. 1745 20
Essential hypertension (EH) is a multifactorial disorder determined by the interaction of environmental and genetic factors. EH patients' responses to these factors may vary, depending on differences in their genes that determine the physiological systems that mediate the response. The purpose of this investigation was to clarify the contributions of genetic background and lifestyle to EH through an association study using some common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that should have functional effects on EH phenotypes. We studied the associations between common SNPs of some causal genes related to EH and lifestyle in a Japanese population. The variants of the causal genes were selected based on their functions, including: obesity (adrenergic, beta-3-, receptor: ADRB3), alcohol consumption (aldehyde dehydrogenase 2: ALDH2), water-electrolyte metabolism (guanine nucleotide binding protein [G protein], beta polypeptide 3: GNB3), glycometabolism (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma: PPARG), lipometabolism (cholesteryl ester transfer protein, plasma: CETP),
atherosclerosis
(5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase [NADPH]:
MTHFR
), and cellular behavior (gap junction protein, alpha 4, 37 kD: GJA4). Case-control association analysis showed a significant association between EH and both the ALDH2 (Lys487Glu) and GNB3 (C825T) variants. Logistic regression analysis indicated that body mass index (BMI) is an important risk factor for EH, and that the GG (Glu/Glu) genotype of ALDH2 was an independent risk factor for EH overall and especially for EH in males. There was no interaction between the ALDH2 genotype and alcohol consumption overall or in male subjects. Our results suggest that the ALDH2 genotype is associated with EH independently of alcohol consumption.
...
PMID:Common single nucleotide polymorphisms in Japanese patients with essential hypertension: aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 gene as a risk factor independent of alcohol consumption. 1778 25
Vascular diseases are commonly associated with traditional risk factors, but in the last decade scientific evidence has suggested that elevated plasma levels of homocysteine are associated with an increased risk of
atherosclerosis
and cardiovascular ischaemic events. Cardio- and cerebrovascular diseases are multifactorial, as their aetiopathogenesis is determined by genetic and environmental factors and by gene-gene and gene-environment interactions. Experimental studies have shown that many possible mechanisms are implicated in the pro-atherogenic effect of homocysteine. Hyperhomocysteinaemia may confer a mild risk alone, but it increases the risk of disease in association with other factors promoting vascular lesions. Variants in genes encoding enzymes involved in homocysteine metabolism, or depletion of important cofactors or substrates for those enzymes, including folate, vitamin B12 and vitamin B6, may result in elevated plasma homocysteine levels. Several studies have been performed to elucidate the genetic determinant of hyperhomocysteinaemia in patients with vascular disease, and the
MTHFR
677C>T polymorphism is the one most extensively investigated. However, the lack of homogeneity in the data and the high number of factors influencing plasma homocysteine concentrations remain conflicting. Moreover, studies on the evaluation of therapeutic interventions in improving the atherogenic profile, lowering plasma homocysteine levels, and preventing vascular events, have shown inconsistent results, which are reviewed in this paper. More prospective, double-blind, randomized studies, including folate and vitamin B interventions, and genotyping for polymorphisms in genes involved in homocysteine metabolism, might better define the relationship between mild hyperhomocysteinaemia and vascular damage.
...
PMID:Homocysteine, MTHFR gene polymorphisms, and cardio-cerebrovascular risk. 1867 64
Aim of the study was to investigate association of gene candidate polymorphisms encoding elements of the renin-angiotensin system and participating in regulation of vascular tone with development of microalbuminuria in patients with hypertensive disease. We examined 93 patients (52 women, 41 men, mean age 58.3+/-1.12 years, mean duration of hypertension 15.6+/-1.16 years) with hypertensive disease. Two patients had arterial hypertension (AG) with I, 22 with II, 63 with III degree of blood pressure (BP) elevation. Thirty four patients smoked, 2 had stroke in anamnesis, 33 had ischemic heart disease, in 58 heredity burdened with cardiovascular diseases was noted. In 38 patients hypertrophy of left ventricular myocardium was revealed. As gene-candidates we considered AGT, ACE, AT2R1, CYP11B2,
MTHFR
, PPARA, PPARG2, NOS3. Patients with microalbuminuria had significantly higher systolic and diastolic BP levels. Groups did not differ significantly according sex, age, disease duration, glucose level. There were no significant differences in involvement of other target organs - hypertrophy of left ventricular myocardium and
atherosclerosis
of carotid arteries. Patients with microalbuminuria had significantly higher level of blood cholesterol. Patients with and without microalbuminuria differed only in frequencies of genotypes of polymorphic marker A(-153)G of AT2R1 gene. Genotype AA predisposed to development of nephropathy--odds ratio (OR) 4.71 (95CI 1.78-12.97), while genotype AG was protective (OR 0.20 95%CI 0.07 to 0.56, p=0.031). According to results of multifactorial analysis independent factors affecting increase of risk of development of nephropathy in the studied group were level of systolic BP and carriage of genotype AA of polymorphic marker A(-153)G of AT2R1 gene.
...
PMID:[Genetic aspects of development of microalbuminuria in patients with hypertensive disease]. 1907 77
The development of the
atherosclerosis
is based on multifactorial causes. In addition to the traditional risk factors, gene polymorphisms can play a role in the disease. Therefore in this study we investigated whether the eNOS and
MTHFR
gene polymorphisms is associated with myocardial infarction and stroke in patients with or without diabetes. We have identified polymorphisms in the NOS 3 gene and one of these polymorphisms, Glu(298-->)Asp, was found to be a major risk factor for carotid artery disease and myocardial infarction. Our results indicate that the
MTHFR
G677T allele is significantly associated with MI.
MTHFR
677 G/T genotyping may be of clinical importance as a prognostic and therapeutic marker, although further studies are needed to substantiate this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Methylentetrahydrofolate reductase and nitric oxide synthase polymorphism in patients with atherosclerosis and diabetes. 1933 Apr 66
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a late-onset progressive neurodegenerative disorder which results in the irreversible loss of cortical neurons, particularly in the associative neocortex and hippocampus. AD is the most common form of dementia in the elderly. Apart from the neuronal loss, the pathological hallmarks are extracellular senile plaques, containing the peptide beta-amyloid (Abeta), and neurofibrillary tangles. The Abeta cascade hypothesis remains the main pathogenetic model, as suggested by familiar AD, mainly associated to mutation in amyloid precursor protein and presenilin genes. The remaining 95% of AD patients are mostly sporadic late-onset cases, with a complex aetiology due to interactions between environmental conditions and genetic features of the individual. A relationship between genetic and acquired vascular factors and AD has been hypothesized. Many vascular risk factors for AD, such as
atherosclerosis
, stroke and cardiac disease in the aging individual, could result in cerebrovascular dysfunction and trigger AD pathology. A major vascular susceptibility factor gene is the apolipoprotein E gene, found to be associated with sporadic late-onset AD cases. Another interesting vascular susceptibility gene is angiotensin converting enzyme. Other possible genes include VLDL-R, LRP, NOS3, CST3, OLR1,
MTHFR
, PON1 and VEGF, but many of the related studies have shown conflicting results. In this paper, we review the role of molecular vascular abnormalities and of the "vascular risk" genes supposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of AD, in an attempt to provide a comprehensive picture of what is known about the mechanisms underlying the role of vascular factors in late-onset sporadic AD.
...
PMID:The role of vascular factors in late-onset sporadic Alzheimer's disease. Genetic and molecular aspects. 1951 4
Hyperhomocysteinemia is a well-defined risk factor for endothelial dysfunction and
atherosclerosis
. A point mutation (677 C-T) of
MTHFR
gene results in a significant increase at plasma homocysteine levels. In this study we aimed to evaluate the effects of
MTHFR
gene mutation and consequent hyperhomocysteinemia on the development of diabetic microvascular complications in comparison with the other defined risk factors. Diabetic patients without a history of macrovascular complication or overt nephropathy enrolled into the study. The presence of
MTHFR
677 C-T point mutation was evaluated by Real-Time PCR technique by using a LightCycler.
MTHFR
heterozygous mutation was present in 24 patients over 52. Patients with diabetes were divided into two groups according to the presence of
MTHFR
gene mutation. Both groups were well matched regarding age and diabetes duration. Metabolic parameters, plasma homocysteine, microalbuminuria, folic acid, and vitamin B12 levels were also studied. Presence of neuropathy and retinopathy were evaluated by specific tests. Duration of diabetes, BMI, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, plasma CRP, HbA1c, and lipid levels were not different between the two groups. Plasma homocysteine (12.89 +/- 1.74 and 8.98 +/- 1.91 micromol/l; P < 0.0001) and microalbuminuria levels (73.40 +/- 98.15 and 29.53 +/- 5.08 mg/day; P = 0.021) were significantly higher in the group with
MTHFR
gene mutation while creatinine clearance levels (101.1 +/- 42.6 and 136.21 +/- 51.50 ml/min; P = 0.008) were significantly lower. Sixteen over 22 (73%) of the patients with diabetic nephropathy had
MTHFR
gene mutation, while this was only 27% (8 over 30) in normoalbuminuric patients (P = 0.017). There was a significant correlation of plasma homocysteine level with microalbuminuria (r = 0.54; P = 0.031) in the patients with diabetic nephropathy who had C677T polymorphism. We did not find any specific association of
MTHFR
gene mutation and hyperhomocysteinemia with retinopathy or neuropathy.
...
PMID:Methyltetrahydrofolate reductase C677T gene mutation and hyperhomocysteinemia as a novel risk factor for diabetic nephropathy. 1959 5
Plasma homocysteine (Hcy) level is associated with cardiovascular disease and may play an etiologic role in vascular damage, a precursor for
atherosclerosis
. We performed a genome-wide association study for Hcy in 1786 unrelated Filipino women from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey (CLHNS). The most strongly associated single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) (rs7422339, P = 4.7 x 10(-13)) encodes Thr1405Asn in the gene CPS1 and explained 3.0% of variation in the Hcy level. The widely studied
MTHFR
C677T SNP (rs1801133) was also highly significant (P = 8.7 x 10(-10)) and explained 1.6% of the trait variation. We also genotyped these two SNPs in 1679 CLHNS young adult offspring. The
MTHFR
C677T SNP was strongly associated with Hcy (P = 1.9 x 10(-26)) and explained approximately 5.1% of the variation in the offspring. In contrast, the CPS1 variant was significant only in females (P = 0.11 in all; P = 0.0087 in females). Combined analysis of all samples confirmed that the
MTHFR
variant was more strongly associated with Hcy in the offspring (interaction P = 1.2 x 10(-5)). Furthermore, although there was evidence for a positive synergistic effect between the CPS1 and
MTHFR
SNPs in the offspring (interaction P = 0.0046), there was no significant evidence for an interaction in the mothers (P = 0.55). These data confirm a recent finding that CPS1 is a locus influencing Hcy levels in women and suggest that genetic effects on Hcy may differ across developmental stages.
...
PMID:Genome-wide association study of homocysteine levels in Filipinos provides evidence for CPS1 in women and a stronger MTHFR effect in young adults. 2015 41
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>