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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-eight patients with subendocardial infarction (Group A) were compared with 28 patients with unstable angina (Group B) and 28 with stable angina (Group C) matched for age and sex. The three groups did not differ in prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, old infarction or duration of disease. There were no significant differences in number of diseased vessels, coronary score, abnormal left ventricular wall motion or left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. Angiograms performed 2 weeks postoperatively revealed closure of 3 of 31 grafts (16 patients) in Group A, closure of 3 of 34 grafts (17 patients) in Group B and closure of 6 of 50 grafts (22 patients) in Group C (differences not significant). Postoperative angiograms showed improved wall motion in 37 percent of Group A, 53 percent of Group B and 36 percent of Group C (differences not significant). Postoperative new Q waves appeared in one hospital in Group A and in two patients in Groups B and C. There were no hospital or late deaths. In a mean follow-up period of 29 months, 68 percent of patients in Group A, 61 percent in Group B and 54 percent in Group C were asymptomatic. Thus, bypass grafting was performed with similarly low mortality and morbidity in patients with subendocardial infarction and in those with angina; more than one third of postoperative angiograms in the three groups showed improved wall motion; and late follow-up studies demonstrated functional improvement in the majority of patients in all three groups.
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PMID:Results of aortocoronary bypass grafting in patients with subendocardial infarction: late follow-up. 30 5

Fifty patients who suffered from an acute myocardial infarction at age 40 or below and underwent coronary arteriography, were studied from 8 to 184 months after the infarction (mean follow-up 56 months). Hyperlipidaemia (60%) and cigarette-smoking (82%) were the most common risk factors, while hypertension and diabetes mellitus were found in 10% of all patients. Thirty-seven patients had two or more risk factors. Preinfarction angina was present in 7 subjects. Death rate was 14% within five years and was related to the severity of symptoms. Out of the patients with normal coronary arteriogram (6 patients) or with a single vessel disease 21 were free of angina and 30 did not suffer a reinfarction. Out of 17 patients with two or more coronary vessel disease, angina was present in 14 and reinfarction was seen in 5.
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PMID:[Myocardial infarction in the young: evolution and clinico-coronarographic correlation (author's transl)]. 87 96

ONe hundred twelve patients undergoing aortocoronary bypass--35 with diabetes of adult onset and 77 without diabetes--were studied to determine whether diabetic patients have additional operative risks and greater operative mortality and whether their coronary disease differs from that of nondiabetic patients. Among the diabetic patients there was a greater prevalence of preoperative unstable angina, prior myocardial infarction and class IV functional disability (New York Heart Association criteria). The major coronary arteries angiographically and at operation appeared similar in both groups. The blood flow rates measured in aortocoronary bypass vein grafts were similar in both groups, raising doubt about the presence of microvascular disease in the myocardium of the diabetic patient. Preliminary follow-up results demonstrated relief of anginal symptoms in 76 percent of diabetic and 78 percent of nondiabetic patients. The operative mortality rate of 9 percent in diabetic and 4 percent in nondiabetic patients occurred among the first 40 patients in the series; no patient in either group has died in the immediate postoperative period during the last 18 months of the study. Aortocoronary bypass should be recommended to diabetic patients with symptomatic coronary arteriosclerosis using the same criteria for operability applied to the nondiabetic population.
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PMID:Aortocoronary bypass in the diabetic patient. 107 97

The clinical and pathological data from 46 patients who died during or shortly after coronary bypass surgery and one patient who died shortly after angiography were studied. Each patient was placed into one of three clinical categories of angina pectoris. Twelve were classified as having unstable angina pectoris, 20 as stable severe angina, and 15 as stable moderate angina. No significant difference was found between the three catagories whem age, sex, presence of hypertension, lipid abnormalities, diabetes, smoking, family history of myocardial infarction, or history of previous mycardial infarction were examined. Most patients in all classes of angina had extensive atherosclerotic coronary disease: 12 patients had triple vessel plus left main disease; 25, triple vessel disease; nine double vessel disease; and only one, single vessel disease. There was no difference in severity or distribution of coronary disease when the three catagories of angina were compared. Thirty-six of the 47 patients had evidence of scarring of one or more aspects of the left ventricular wall. There was likewise no significant difference between extent and distribution of myocardial scarring between the three clinical categories. Four of the 12 patients with unstable angina pectoris had pathologic evidence of preoperative myocardial infarction, whereas this was not found in any of the 35 patients with stable angina.
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PMID:Pathology of stable and unstable angina pectoris. 113 96

To elucidate the clinical characteristics of pulmonary edema in unstable angina, 120 patients with unstable angina who admitted to the hospital within 6 hours after the onset of chest pain were studied. The criteria for the diagnosis of pulmonary edema included interstitial pulmonary edema and diffuse alveolar edema. Pulmonary edema was present in 24 patients. In these patients, the duration of chest pain was relatively longer, and the incidences of diabetes mellitus, emergency coronary revascularization and multiple-vessel coronary artery disease were higher than in those without pulmonary edema. In addition, in-hospital mortality rate in patients with pulmonary edema was higher than in those without it (21 vs 1%, p < 0.001), which is probably due to a large area of myocardial ischemia. For these patients, therefore, early diagnosis and appropriate therapy to save viable segments of the myocardium are mandatory.
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PMID:[Clinical characteristics of pulmonary edema in patients with unstable angina]. 134 24

Between 1980 and 1990, 1,664 coronary angioplasty procedures were performed in 1,307 patients (86.6% male) with multivessel disease. The average age was 57 +/- 3 years (range 29 to 83 years). There was a previous history of infarction in 40.1% of patients and 22.4% of the procedures were performed for unstable angina. Catheter and 58.2%, 1,220 double vessel and 444 triple vessel diseases. A total of 2,509 lesions were dilated (1.5 stenoses/patient). The primary success rate was 81.9% with 3.2% of infarcts and 3.5% emergency bypass procedures and a global mortality of 2%. The factors responsible for death in the acute and hospital phases were unstable angina, age > 70 years, and ejection fraction < 35%. Complete revascularisation was achieved in 14.3% of cases: the only predictive factor for complete revascularisation on multivariate analysis was double vessel disease. A 6 months clinical and angiographic control was obtained for 83.8% of controllable procedures (965 dilatations). The restenosis rate was 47.9%. Univariate analysis of the factors of restenosis identified clinical parameters (age > 58 years, triple vessel disease, diabetes and unstable angina), parameters related to the lesion (length of stenosis > 1 cm, percentage stenosis > 80%) and to the procedure (residual stenosis > 20%): 68.4% of patients with restenosis underwent repeat angioplasty with a significantly superior primary success rate 88.7% vs 81.9% of global successes (p < 0.001). With a 82% primary success rate with few major complications, coronary angioplasty is a safe and effective therapeutic alternative. The extent of the lesions and the presence of chronic occlusion are the main limitating factors of revascularisation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Coronary angioplasty of multivessel coronary diseases. Apropos of 1664 procedures. Immediate results and results following 6 months]. 141 99

A consecutive series of 30 patients 75 years of age and older who underwent isolated coronary artery bypass graftings during a 6 year period (from 1985 to 1990) was analyzed. This group was compared with a consecutive series of 512 patients under the age of 75 who underwent the same procedure during the same period. The elderly patients had a higher incidence of unstable angina pectoris, left main or triple vessel disease and depression of ejection fraction. There were no deaths in the hospital or within 30 days of operation (0%), but postoperative complication occurred in 26 cases (86.7%) in the elderly patients. Mean postoperative hospital stay was longer in the elderly patients than the younger ones (21.7 +/- 8.7 days, 18.9 +/- 5.9 days, respectively). The factors frequently noted in the elderly cases with major complications were emergency or urgent operation, history of congestive heart failure and diabetes. The factors associated with prolonged postoperative hospital stay in elderly cases were octogenarians, intraoperative blood transfusion, wound complications, perioperative myocardial infarction, pulmonary failure and low cardiac output state. It is concluded that CABG can be performed safely even in elderly patients by the proper postoperative management, in spite of having increased postoperative complications and resulting in a prolonged postoperative hospital stay.
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PMID:[Morbidity and mortality of coronary artery bypass surgery in patients 75 years of age or older]. 148 30

During the past decade, it has become clear that the vascular endothelium critically influences vascular permeability, controls vessel growth, modulates hemostasis, and regulates vasomotion. This latter role of the endothelium is mediated by the liberation of a number of potent vasoactive compounds, including endothelium-derived relaxing factors, one of which is either nitric oxide or a compound that releases nitric oxide, vasoactive prostaglandins, hyperpolarizing factors, and a number of constricting factors. This role of the endothelium is dramatically altered by several diseases, including atherosclerosis, hypertension, and diabetes. Abnormalities of endothelial regulation of vascular tone may contribute to a number of clinical syndromes, including variant angina, unstable angina, syndrome X, and perhaps many others. In this review, several aspects of the endothelium-derived relaxing factor will be considered, including recent concepts regarding its synthesis, its chemical identity, and alterations in atherosclerosis. Finally, its action in the coronary microcirculation as contrasted to that of nitroglycerin will be considered.
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PMID:Normal and pathophysiologic considerations of endothelial regulation of vascular tone and their relevance to nitrate therapy. 152 21

It is generally recognized that formation of a platelet-fibrin-rich thrombus in an atherosclerotic coronary artery is the basis of unstable angina and acute myocardial infarction. Platelet hyperactivity has been identified in coronary risk factors such as hyperlipidemia and diabetes mellitus. Persistent activation of these cells results in release of growth factors that may contribute to the progression of atherosclerosis. Several recent studies show that endothelium, by generating or metabolizing a host of vasoactive substances, plays a critical role in the modulation of vascular tone. Important among these substances are prostacyclin (PGI2) and endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF). The endothelium-dependent modulation of coronary artery tone correlates with the severity of atherosclerosis and the number of coronary risk factors. Procedures such as angioplasty and coronary bypass surgery injure the endothelium. The loss of endothelial smooth muscle relaxant function may contribute to the vasoconstriction and thrombosis often observed soon after these procedures. Thrombolysis (and subsequent reperfusion of the coronary artery) is also associated with severe endothelial dysfunction, with a resulting vasoconstrictor influence on the coronary vascular bed. Activation of leukocytes and their presence in the reperfused myocardium contribute to progression of myocardial injury by release of oxygen free radicals and proteolytic enzymes. Thus, it seems that a perturbation in this delicate equilibrium in cellular interactions relates to genesis and progression of myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Platelet-leukocyte-endothelial interactions in coronary artery disease. 154 43

The prevalence and prognostic significance of silent myocardial ischemia were prospectively assessed in 217 patients (mean age 57 +/- 9 years, 83% male) recovering from a first uncomplicated acute myocardial infarction and undergoing a dipyridamole echocardiography test before hospital discharge. Clinical, angiographic, exercise electrocardiographic (ECG) and dipyridamole echocardiographic variables were also examined. Of the 217 patients, 89 had no echocardiographically proved dyssynergy after dipyridamole, whereas 128 had dipyridamole-induced wall motion abnormalities that were silent in 94 (Group I) and symptomatic in 34 (Group II). There was no intergroup difference with respect to dipyridamole time (i.e., the time from onset of the test to frank dyssynergy: 7 +/- 3 vs. 8 +/- 3 min; p = NS); prevalence of inferior myocardial infarction (69% vs. 71%; p = NS); ischemic ECG changes during the test (83% vs. 71%; p = NS); diabetes (8.5% vs. 6%; p = NS); ongoing medical therapy; multivessel disease (57% vs. 56%; p = NS); and baseline left ventricular ejection fraction (57 +/- 13% vs. 57 +/- 10%; p = NS). There was also no significant difference between Group I and Group II with respect to wall motion score index at peak dipyridamole effect (1.77 +/- 0.39 vs. 1.78 +/- 0.36; p = NS). Patients were followed up for 24 +/- 4 and 25 +/- 5 months, respectively (p = NS). Life table analysis revealed no difference in unstable angina, reinfarction and death between the two groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Silent versus symptomatic dipyridamole-induced ischemia after myocardial infarction: clinical and prognostic significance. 155 19


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