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

Arteriosclerosis is caused by many factors. These pathogenic factors especially over-nutrition, nicotinabusus, deficiency of muscular exercise, muscular overstrain, emotional stress and concomitant basic diseases, especially arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus and dyslipidemia are the most important points for preventive and therapeutical action. When possible the risk factors has to be eliminated, arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus and dyslipidemia have to be treated orderly. In the pathogenesis of arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis are known disturbances of the lipid metabolism, the blood coagulation and the metabolism of the arterial wall cells most important. Application of anticoagulants and lipid lowering medicaments did not come up to our expectations. Experiences with animal models and a double blind study (secondary prevention of myocardial infarction) have given good reason for recommending antirheumatic or as we like to say, mesenchyme suppressive drugs.
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PMID:[Prevention and therapy of arteriosclerosis (author's transl)]. 3 60

The body cholesterol pool increases with decreasing plasma-high-density-lipoprotein (H.D.L.) but is unrelated to the plasma concentrations of total cholesterol and other lipoproteins. This finding supports existing evidence that H.D.L. facilitates the uptake of cholesterol from peripheral tissues and its transport to the liver for catabolism and excretion. Plasma-H.D.L., is reduced in several conditions associated with an increased risk of future ischaemic heart-disease (I.H.D.), namely hypercholesterolaemia, hypertriglyceridaimia, male sex, obesity, and diabetes mellitus, while subjects with existing clinical I.H.D. have lower levels of H.D.L. than healthy subjects within the same community. It is proposed that a reduction of plasma-H.D.L. concentration may accelerate the development of atherosclerosis, and hence I.H.D., by impairing the clearance of cholesterol from the arterial wall.
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PMID:Plasma-high-density-lipoprotein concentration and development of ischaemic heart-disease. 4 38

The following clinical groups of volunteers were studied: patients long after recovery from myocardial infarction (MI), others after recovery from deep vein thrombosis (DVT), patients with intermittent claudication, with diabetes, and male and female controls who were well matched. All were subjected to many platelet and clotting tests together with clinical, biochemical and haematological measurements in an attempt to find long term abnormalities in these various diseases. The male MIs differed very significantly from the controls in having much more heparin neutralizing activity (P less than 0.001)and less anti-thrombin (P less than 0.01). Less significantly, some bleeding time tests indicated less bleeding and the patients' platelets were larger. The females with MI had in general the same abnormalities but to a lesser degree. The patients with intermittent claudication, none of whom had a history of MI, had almost the same abnormalities and to the same degree. In deep vein thrombosis the heparin neutralizing activity was also clearly increased; the other tests were generally in the same direction but many were not significant. The diabetics had shorter bleeding times but little else abnormal relative to the controls, suggesting a different pathological process. When all male patients and controls were "scored" according to the degree of atherosclerosis there was a close overall correlation between the degree of atherosclerosis and the increase in the HNA level (r = --0.50, n = 66, P less than 0.001) and the decreased anti-thrombin (r = 0.25, n = 66, P less than 0.05).
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PMID:Blood changes in atherosclerosis and long after myocardial infarction and venous thrombosis. 5 92

53 patients coming to amputation of one or more toes for the late results of degenerative vascular disease were studied prospectively. By a median time of thirteen months, 26 of the 53 had undergone a major amputation of the affected side. Diabetes was associated with the same prognosis as atherosclerosis obliterans uncomplicated by diabetes. A palpable pedal pulse or a functioning arterial reconstruction carried a virtual guarantee of success for the toe amputation. The presence of a popliteal pulse, however, was not associated with any better prognosis than the presence of a femoral pulse alone. Smoking seemed to exert little influence. With the passage of time, the major-amputation rate rose steadily, and by 3 1/2 years almost three-quarters of the patients had come to major amputation.
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PMID:Amputation of the toes for vascular disease: fate of the affected leg. 6

We have demonstrated that in rhesus monkeys, 18 months of diabetes alters the end-diastolic pressure, end-diastolic volume relations without hypertrophy. Accumulation of collagen in the myocardial interstitium was the apparent basis for abnormal left ventricular performance. Neither collagen concentration nor left ventricular performance were signigicantly affected by dietary lipid composition. These myocardial abnormalities occurred at a stage when coronary atherosclerosis was limited. However, the relative influence of coronary atherosclerosis and myocardial alterations during more prolonged lipid feeding remains to be determined.
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PMID:Altered myocardial function and collagen in diabetic rhesus monkeys on atherogenic diet. 11 54

Aortic atherosclerosis is minimal in normal Macaca nigra; development of atherosclerosis correlates with increasing severity of diabetes mellitus. The extent of aortic involvement (plaque plus sudanophilia) was quantified and compared with metabolic and clinical parameters. Increasing atherosclerosis correlated with decreasing ability to clear glucose in a tolerance test (P less than 0.01), decreasing insulin (P = 0.02), and increasing glucose (P less than 0.01) and triglycerides (P less than 0.01). A diabetic index, established as a summation of several metabolic measurements, correlated with atherosclerosis at P less than 0.001. On the average, involvement of the thoracic aorta was about 3-fold greater than in the abdominal portion; involvement reached over 40% in severely diabetic monkeys. Atherosclerosis development is unique in these monkeys since they consume a natural ration low in fat and cholesterol. Serum cholesterol did not correlate with diabetes or artherosclerosis. Increasing age alone was associated with slight sudanophila, some intima-media thickening, and occasional small lesions. However, only with increasing severity of diabetes was there significant atherosclerosis.
Atherosclerosis 1979 Aug
PMID:Aortic atherosclerosis in normal and spontaneously diabetic Macaca nigra. 11 65

Factors which are known to be associated with cerebral atherosclerosis were evaluated in Nigerian Africans. Of 465 autopsied adult Nigerians, 62 (13%) had cerebral atherosclerosis. The frequency and severity of atherosclerosis among Nigerians with hypertension, particularly male subjects, were higher than in normotensives. Although there was a similar frequency of hypertension among autopsied Nigerian and Minnesota Caucasian populations, the severity and extent of atherosclerosis were greater in the Minnesota Caucasian populations, the severity and extent of atherosclerosis were greater in the Minnesota population. The relatively short duration of hypertension in the Nigerian before death might be an important factor which did not permit progressive development of cerebral atherosclerosis. Other factors which predisposed the Nigerian to increased frequency and severity of atherosclerosis included increased heart weight and diabetes mellitus. The relatively low frequency of cerebrovascular disease in the Nigerian may be explained on the basis of a low degree of cerebral atherosclerosis and relatively short duration of hypertension.
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PMID:Cerebral atherosclerosis and its relationship to selected diseases in Nigerians: a pathological study. 12 75

In 80 industrial workers producing herbicides (2,4,5-trichlorphenoxyaceticacidsodium and sodiumpentachlorphenolate) in Czechoslovakia the following signs of intoxication caused by 2,3,6,7-tetrachlordibenzodioxin were found: Dermatological: Chloracne and Porphyria cutanea tarda. Internal: Disorders of the metabolism of porphyrins, fats, carbohydrates, plasmaproteins. Neurological: Mainly lesions of the peripheral neurone. Psychiatric: Neurasthenic syndrome and organic lesions. Differences from the usual course of chloracne were observed. Porphyria cutanea tarda acquisita was most obvious, one patient suffered and died from severe atherosclerosis, hypertension and diabetes. Many patients developed polyneuropathy, as verified both by EMG and autopsy. Two patients died from bronchogenic carcinoma.
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PMID:[Chloracne, porphyria cutanea tarda, and other poisonings due to the herbicides]. 13 6

We have postulated that the accelerated snythesis of cholesteryl ester in atherosclerotic microsomes may result in part from decreased acyl-CoA hydrolase activity in arterial tissue, because acyl-CoA is a common substrate for both reactions. We have now investigated the influence of nutritional status, type of diet, and diabetes on the acyl-CoA hydrolase activity of otherwise normal aortic microsomes. Fasting rabbits for 16 hr diminished the acyl-CoA hydrolase activity approximately 30%. The activity of this aortic microsomal enzyme in rats maintained on a high-carbohydrate diet for 5 weeks was comparable to the activity observed on a high fat (olive oil) diet. The type of fat in the diet influences the acyl-CoA hydrolase activity: oils containing 77% oleic acid (high-oleic safflower oil) and containing 70% linoleic acid (conventional safflower oil) lowered the aortic microsomal acyl-CoA hydrolase activity in comparison to a more saturated fat (cocoa butter). Aortic preparations of rats made diabetic by streptozotocin exhibited higher acyl-CoA hydrolase activity than the normal. The results show that conditions associated with human atherogenesis (diabetes and saturated fat diet) increase rather than suppress the activity of this arterial enzyme in normal arterial tissues of the rat.
Atherosclerosis 1977 Mar
PMID:Influence of dietary status and diabetes on aortic acyl-CoA hydrolase activity. 13 97

Between January, 1965, and December, 1975, 204 patients (138 men and 66 women) underwent aortoiliac reconstruction for atherosclerotic occlusive disease. Eighteen patients (9%) had a hypoplastic aortoiliac segment and an analysis of these 18 patients constitutes the basis of this report. There were 17 women and one man, and their ages ranged from 28 to 60 years, with an average of 43 years. Hyperlipidema was present in nine of 13 patients tested. All patients were heavy cigarrete smokers and had lower extremity claudication with weak or absent pulses. Carotid or subclavian artery disease was found in 50%. Angiography demonstrated hypoplasia of the aorta distal to the renal arteries with either occlusion, diffuse narrowing, or, most often, an "hourglass" stenosis. The iliac and femoral arteries also were narrowed. Reconstruction was achieved primarily by aortobilateral-iliac or femoral bypass. There were no operative deaths and all patients were improved initially. It appears that normally occurring atherosclerosis in this portion of the aorta, along with congenital narrowing, accounts for symptoms at an early age. The predominence in women is a puzzle. The prognosis does not appear to be too grim. This may be due to absence of diabetes mellitus and the infrequency of coronary artery disease. All patients are still alive; there has been one major amputation following graft infection 1 1/2 years after operation. When progression of atherosclerosis occurs, it seems to involve the superficial femoral, carotid, and subclavian arteries.
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PMID:Atherosclerosis and the hypoplastic aortoiliac system. 14 60


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