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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The prevailing belief that
transient ischemic attack
is a risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality is based primarily on comparisons of survival of patients after transient ischemic attacks to that of an age-, race-, and sex-adjusted general population. Concomitant conditions that carry a high risk of premature mortality or morbidity, such as ischemic heart disease, hypertension, and
diabetes
, are very prevalent among patients with transient ischemic attacks. Hence, the poor prognosis of such patients may be attributable to these factors rather than their
transient ischemic attack
per se, which may only serve to bring patients into the medical system. We compared the survival of 336 patients after
transient ischemic attack
to that of a control group with a similar risk factor profile consisting of 6,710 patients evaluated for cardiac catheterization. Survival estimates, both unadjusted and adjusted for risk factors, did not differ between the two groups. Three-year survival estimates, after adjustment to the mean value of covariates, were 94% for the patients with transient ischemic attacks and 91% for the controls. These results suggest that the
transient ischemic attack
may not be an independent risk factor for mortality, although it may identify patients already at increased risk from coexisting conditions.
...
PMID:Reevaluation of transient ischemic attacks as a risk factor for early mortality. 202 85
Systolic or diastolic hypertension, cigarette smoking,
diabetes mellitus
, left ventricular hypertrophy, age, prior stroke,
transient cerebral ischemic attack
, extracranial arterial disease, and coronary heart disease are risk factors for the most common type of geriatric stroke, atherothrombotic brain infarction (ABI). Also, by contributing to hypertension and
diabetes mellitus
, obesity predisposes to ABI. The relationship of abnormal serum lipids and of physical inactivity to ABI is unclear. Antihypertensive treatment decreases the incidence of fatal and nonfatal stroke in patients with systolic and diastolic hypertension. Cessation of smoking also decreases risk.
...
PMID:Risk factors for geriatric stroke: identification and follow-up. 220 86
Irradiation has been shown experimentally to cause accelerated development of atherosclerosis in exposed large arteries. However, occurrence of such an entity in carotid arteries of patients after treatment for head and neck carcinoma is unknown. Therefore, we reviewed 179 patient charts who had undergone head and neck operations with or without irradiation between 1979-1987. Of these 179 patients, 107 (59.8%) were dead at time of follow-up. Cause of death was unknown in 42 (40%) patients; in the remainder included: respiratory arrest--33; carcinoma-related--18; cardiac--6;pneumonia--7; and trauma--1. Average interval from treatment to death was 23.5 months. Of the 72 patients known to be alive, follow-up was obtained in 52 patients. Their average age was 64.9 years. Risk factors for atherosclerosis included: male gender--43; smoking--50; hypertension--9;
diabetes
--4; coronary artery disease--12; and peripheral vascular disease--4. Seventy-five per cent of these patients received postoperative irradiation. Average follow-up was 64.5 months. Duplex scans were performed on 34 patients. Three patients had common or internal carotid stenoses greater than 75 per cent. All of these patients had received irradiation and none of them were symptomatic. Seven patients had carotid stenoses between 50 to 75 per cent; five of these had received irradiation. Of these five patients, one had a stroke 60 months postoperatively, and one had a
TIA
36 months postoperatively. The remaining 58 patients (of which 48 had irradiation) had carotid stenoses less than 50 per cent and none were symptomatic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Carotid artery disease in patients with head and neck carcinoma. 226 6
We tested the hypothesis that hypertension is more common and cardiac embolism less common in patients with lacunar infarction than in patients with other types of cerebral infarction. We studied risk factor profiles in a series of 102 consecutive patients with a lacunar infarct and 202 consecutive patients with a carotid artery-distribution infarct involving the cortex registered in the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project, a community-based study of first-ever stroke. The two groups did not differ in the prevalence of prestroke hypertension (defined in a number of ways) or in the prevalence of markers of sustained hypertension. The presence of atrial fibrillation and a history of myocardial infarction, particularly during the 6 weeks before the stroke, were significantly more common in the group with carotid-distribution infarcts involving the cortex. There was no significant difference in the prevalence of other accepted risk factors for ischemic stroke, including previous
transient ischemic attack
, cervical bruit,
diabetes mellitus
, peripheral vascular disease, or cigarette smoking. Our results suggest that hypertension is no more important in the development of lacunar infarction than it is in the development of other types of ischemic stroke that are presumed to be due to atherosclerotic thromboembolism in a major cerebral artery. Our data support the autopsy evidence that cardioembolic occlusion is an unusual cause of lacunar infarction.
...
PMID:Are hypertension or cardiac embolism likely causes of lacunar infarction? 230 60
In order to determine the safety and long-term salutary effects of carotid endarterectomy in the asymptomatic patient, we retrospectively reviewed all asymptomatic patients who underwent carotid endarterectomy from 1980 through 1986. There were 60 carotid endarterectomies performed in 54 patients, 53 men and one woman. The mean age was 64 years. Arteriography revealed a high grade stenosis of 70% or greater in 46 carotid arteries (77%), ulceration in five (8%), and both in nine (15%). Risk factors included coronary artery disease in 60% of patients, smoking in 87%, hypertension in 67%, and
diabetes
in 22%. Perioperative morbidity included three cranial nerve injuries, one myocardial infarction and one contralateral stroke. There were no deaths. Mean follow-up was 47 months with only two patients being lost to follow-up. During follow-up three patients suffered ipsilateral transient ischemic attacks without recurrent carotid stenosis and one patient had a
transient ischemic attack
secondary to contralateral carotid occlusion. There was one ipsilateral stroke occurring two years after operation secondary to restenosis that required reoperation and four late contralateral strokes. Ten patients died in the follow-up period. Causes of death were stroke (1), cardiac (4), malignancy (2), pulmonary (2), and unknown (1). All surviving patients were evaluated by duplex scan at a mean interval following surgery of 47 months. Restenosis of endarterectomized arteries was seen at the following rates: less than 50% in 41 (87%); 50-75% in four (8.5%); 80% in one (2%); and 90% in one (2%). Life table analysis revealed a 98% ipsilateral stroke-free rate at five and eight years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Safety and long-term benefit of carotid endarterectomy in the asymptomatic patient. 234 Feb 42
One hundred patients with ischaemic cerebro vascular disease (
TIA
/RIND--67% and completed stroke--33%) were evaluated for various clinical and biochemical risk factors. Evidence of extra-cranial carotid vascular disease (ECCVD) was looked for by using Doppler scan and carotid angiography. Of the 28 patients with abnormal Dop scan, 27 were confirmed to have ECCVD by angiography. Though the history of hypertension was elicited in 40%, only 28% had BP of 160/95 mm Hg or more during hospital stay. Hypertension was twice more common in ECCVD group compared to the group with normal carotid vessels. Obesity was seen in 15%,
diabetes mellitus
in 10% and 1% had hyperuricaemia. Total cholesterol was elevated in 29% and HDL cholesterol fraction was decreased (less than 35 mg%) in 43%. The reduction of HDL cholesterol was more frequent in ECCVD group (63%) and in hypertensive (73%) patients. Lipoproteins, triglycerides, free fatty acids and phospholipids were not significantly affected.
...
PMID:Risk factors in extracranial carotid disease. 261 17
High-grade (80% to 99% diameter reduction) asymptomatic internal carotid artery stenoses are associated with an increased neurologic event rate (
transient ischemic attack
, stroke, asymptomatic internal carotid artery occlusion) compared to less severe asymptomatic lesions. However, many do remain free of associated events. To determine which are most dangerous, we compared risk factors and duplex scan results in two groups with asymptomatic high-grade internal carotid artery stenoses. Group A included 31 patients with 33 unoperated high-grade lesions that remained asymptomatic for at least 12 months (mean 30 months). Group B included 25 patients with 26 initially asymptomatic lesions that subsequently were associated with a neurologic event (mean time to event 7.4 months). The groups did not differ significantly in average age, sex, aspirin use, smoking, or prevalence of hypertension,
diabetes
, or cardiac disease. With respect to the index high-grade lesion, there was no difference in the frequency of a greater than 50% contralateral internal carotid artery stenosis or greater than 50% ipsilateral external carotid stenosis. However, on duplex scanning, high-grade stenoses with greater than 6.5 kHz end-diastolic frequencies were more frequently associated with an event than high-grade lesions with lower end-diastolic frequency (p = 0.0004). Similarly, seven of 23 lesions (30%) with end-diastolic frequency greater than 6.0 kHz were associated with subsequent internal carotid artery occlusion compared to only one of 29 (3.5%) with end-diastolic frequency less than or equal to 6.0 kHz (p = 0.025). Analysis of internal carotid artery end-diastolic frequency may help select a subgroup of patients with asymptomatic high-grade lesions who are at greatest risk for subsequent neurologic symptoms or ICA occlusion or both.
...
PMID:Asymptomatic high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis: is stratification according to risk factors or duplex spectral analysis possible? 237 48
Cranial computed tomography of 284 patients with transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) and without previous stroke was evaluated. The sample population included patients with carotid and/or vertebrobasilar TIAs. Computed tomography revealed cerebral infarction in 34 patients, including 5 with multiple infarctions. The lesion location was consistent with
TIA
symptoms in 16 patients. In another 16 patients, however, the lesion location did not correspond to the
TIA
symptoms; these lesions were attributed to previous silent infarctions. Two patients with multiple infarctions had both symptomatic and asymptomatic lesions. Age and carotid stenosis were each significantly related to an increased chance of detecting cerebral infarction (either symptomatic or asymptomatic). No significant relationship between race, gender, hypertension,
diabetes
, cardiac disease, or smoking and the incidence of infarction was found by either univariate or multivariate analyses.
...
PMID:Cerebral infarction in patients with transient ischemic attacks. 270 69
We used the Lehigh Valley Stroke Register and a logistic regression model for the odds ratio to study the relative contribution of several factors, considered jointly, to the risk of recurrent ischemic stroke. The factors were hypertension (HT),
transient ischemic attack
(
TIA
), myocardial infarction (MI), other heart diseases (OHD),
diabetes mellitus
(DM), age, and sex. Among these factors MI, OHD, and
TIA
constituted significantly greater risk than HTN, DM, age, or sex for ischemic stroke recurrence.
...
PMID:Stroke in the Lehigh Valley: combined risk factors for recurrent ischemic stroke. 271 Mar 58
We investigated black/white differences in stroke rate (standardized morbidity), severity, and subtype, and the relative frequencies of 5 primary risk factors (hypertension,
diabetes
, myocardial infarction, other heart diseases, and
transient ischemic attack
[
TIA
]) using the Lehigh Valley Stroke Register. Blacks had a statistically significant higher, age-adjusted rate of stroke than whites. We found no differences in stroke severity using our measures but blacks had a statistically higher proportion of lacunar stroke, while whites had a higher proportion of embolic stroke. There were no differences in proportions of thrombotic stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage. The relative frequencies of hypertension, myocardial infarction, other heart diseases, and
diabetes
were higher for blacks, while the relative frequency of
TIA
was higher for whites. These observations are consistent with other reports that blacks have a higher frequency of stroke and tend to have more small-vessel cerebrovascular pathology than whites.
...
PMID:Stroke in the Lehigh Valley: racial/ethnic differences. 277 Oct 65
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