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

During a 5-year period, 212 patients (170 men and 42 women, median age 65 and 64 years, respectively) were diagnosed as having internal carotid artery occlusion. Mean follow-up was 24.9 months. Five-year cumulative survival and stroke-free rates by life-table analysis were 62% and 75%, respectively. Deaths were due to stroke in 7 of 40 patients (17%) and were of cardiac origin in 22 of 40 patients (55%). The strokes were ipsilateral in 20 of 31 patients (65%). No statistically significant difference between the sexes could be demonstrated for either death or stroke, nor was age correlated with stroke during follow-up. Diabetes and hypertension increased the risk of stroke, whereas gender and aspirin consumption had no discernible effect. Endarterectomy of the opposite carotid artery did not significantly affect the natural history but did reduce the stroke rate in the territory of the operated artery. Presenting symptoms were useful for estimating prognosis. Twenty-two of 111 patients referred for stroke (20%) suffered a further stroke and 21 of 111 patients (19%) died (three were stroke-related), whereas of those patients referred for transient ischemic attack (TIA), only 2 of 42 patients (5%) suffered a stroke and none died. TIAs occurred in 23 patients (11%) during follow-up, and these were premonitory for stroke in three cases (13%). The limited value of TIA in predicting stroke and the high mortality rate unrelated to stroke in this group are important considerations when therapy is considered for these patients.
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PMID:Carotid artery occlusion: natural history. 377 31

Age-specific risk of recurrent stroke for various risk factors, calculated independently, was estimated using the first year of data from the Lehigh Valley Stroke Register. The register is based on a population of more than one-half million. Among the risk factors examined, the highest overall risk of recurrent stroke, 41.4, occurred with a history of at least one transient ischemic attack (TIA). After myocardial infarction (MI), the relative risk of a recurrent stroke was 8.0, while with all other heart diseases combined it was 8.4. With diabetes, the relative risk of a recurrent stroke was 5.6; with hypertension, it was 4.5. The relative risk increased with age after TIA and MI, but not for other heart disease, diabetes, and hypertension, except in the 85+-year-old age group.
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PMID:Stroke in the Lehigh Valley: risk factors for recurrent stroke. 382 48

Possible effects of chronically elevated serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels on measurements of cerebral blood flow were investigated by between-group comparisons of individuals, with and without hyperlipidemia, among 56 neurologically normal elderly volunteers and among 102 age-matched patients with symptoms of transient ischemic attacks (TIAs). Results demonstrated significantly higher levels of serum cholesterol and triglyceride among the TIA patients compared with randomly selected age-matched normal controls of similar educational and environmental backgrounds. Cerebral blood flow levels were reduced among groups of TIA patients with elevated levels of either cholesterol or triglycerides compared with the TIA patients with normal lipid levels. Similar trends were seen among normal volunteers, but these did not reach levels of statistical significance because of the limited numbers available. Analysis of frequency distributions for risk factors other than hyperlipidemia indicated that hypertension, atherosclerotic heart disease, diabetes mellitus, and cigarette smoking were also more prevalent among TIA patients than among age-matched normal controls.
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PMID:Hyperlipidemia is a risk factor for decreased cerebral perfusion and stroke. 382 97

This report describes the experimental design, methods, and baseline characteristics of patients enrolled in a Veterans Administration Cooperative Study on the effect of aspirin (325 mg t.i.d.) and dipyridamole (75 mg t.i.d.) (110 patients), or placebo (121 patients) on major vascular outcome variables in noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients with either a recent amputation for gangrene (n = 207) or active gangrene (n = 24). It also describes the baseline characteristics of the patients. A total of 231 patients of 563 screened (41%) were enrolled at 11 participating V.A. Medical Centers during a 39 month period. The median age at entry was 60 years, the median duration of diabetes was 10 years, and weight was 110% of desirable. All patients were men. Sixty-eight percent were treated with insulin and 32% with diet alone. Only 42% were smokers at entry, 40% had retinopathy, 61% sensory neuropathy, 42% hypertension, and 29% had a history of myocardial infarction, angina, and/or congestive heart failure. Thirteen percent had a history of cerebrovascular disease. Despite randomization, the treatment group had an increased frequency of a history of cerebrovascular disease (p = 0.01), diagnosed as stroke (p = 0.03), a finding suggesting that the treatment group was at a slightly increased risk for vascular disease upon enrollment in the study. Other baseline variables did not differ significantly between the two groups. This study should provide definitive data on the efficacy of these doses of antiplatelet agents in preventing further vascular disease in diabetic men with gangrene or recent amputation for gangrene, using death due to vascular disease and subsequent amputation of the opposite extremity for gangrene as major outcome variables. It should also give useful information on the effect of antiplatelet therapy on vascular outcome variables such as same side amputations, myocardial infarction, stroke, transient ischemic attack, retinopathy, and renal failure. Finally, the study should provide useful data on the natural history and significance of risk factors in this patient population.
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PMID:V.A. Cooperative Study on antiplatelet agents in diabetic patients after amputation for gangrene: I. Design, methods, and baseline characteristics. 637 22

A prospective study was initiated in January 1980 to follow with Duplex scanning a consecutive series of 167 asymptomatic patients with cervical bruits. Patients were seen at six month intervals for the first year and yearly thereafter. Based on previously validated criteria, disease at the carotid bifurcation was classified into 6 categories: Normal, 1-15% diameter reduction, 16-49%, 50-79%, 80-99%, and occlusion. Patients were evaluated to assess: the occurrence of new neurological symptoms, the stability of the lesions at the carotid bifurcation, and the possible role of risk indicators on disease changes. During follow-up, ten patients became symptomatic (6 with TIA's and 4 with stroke). The development of symptoms was accompanied by disease progression in 8 patients. By life table analysis, the annual rate occurrence of symptoms was 4%. The mean annual rate of disease progression to a greater than 50% stenosis was 8%. When progression in all categories was considered, 60% of the sides showed some disease aggravation. The presence of or progression to a greater than 80% stenosis was highly correlated (p = 0.00001) with either the development of a total occlusion of the internal carotid artery or new symptoms. The major risk factors associated with disease progression were cigarette smoking, diabetes mellitus, and age. Those patients under 65 years of age were most likely to show progression. Despite high rates of disease progression, this study further supports the contention that it is prudent to follow a conservative course in the management of asymptomatic patients presenting with a cervical bruit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The natural history of carotid arterial disease in asymptomatic patients with cervical bruits. 646 52

30 patients aged between 45 and 78 years and who had suffered from transient global amnesia (TGA), were seen at the Department of Neurology, Pordenone Public Hospital, in the period 1978 to 1982. 25 patients had one or more risk factors for cerebrovascular disease, such as hypertension, cardiac abnormalities, diabetes and hyperlipidemia. EEG examination revealed abnormal activity only in 7 patients. Brain Computed Tomography showed cerebral atrophy in 10 and hypodense lesions in 3 patients. 16 patients had been followed up for a mean interval of 20 months. During the follow-up period, 4 patients had recurrent TGA and one had a transient ischemic attack in the vertebrobasilar arterial system. In the follow-up group, 15 patients showed permanent memory impairment. The high incidence of risk factors for cerebrovascular disease seems to confirm that TGA is probably due to transient cerebral ischemia. The high rate of permanent memory impairment, almost always connected with the coexistence of cerebrovascular risk factors, is not in agreement with the postulated good prognosis of TGA.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia. 651 86

A prospective study was made of the morbidity and mortality from ischemic heart disease in 390 patients with focal TIA caused by atherosclerotic vascular disease. The 5-year cumulative rate of myocardial infarction or sudden death in these patients was 21.0%, a rate only slightly less than that of fatal or nonfatal cerebral infarction (22.7%). Risk factors including diabetes, angina, and ECG abnormalities were associated with an increase in morbidity and mortality from ischemic heart disease. A major factor associated with these cardiac events was the presence of atherosclerotic obstructive or ulcerative lesions in the carotid arteries. These observations indicate that focal TIA caused by carotid atherosclerosis is a predictor not only of cerebral infarction, but also of serious cardiac disease and death.
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PMID:Risk of ischemic heart disease in patients with TIA. 653 54

This paper is the second devoted to the controlled trial "A.I.C.L.A." comparing aspirin, aspirin + dipyridamole and placebo in the secondary prevention of athero-thrombotic cerebral ischaemic events. It presents the description and distribution of baseline characteristics at entry. Six hundred and four patients (men: 70 p. 100, mean age : 63) were entered. Risk factors were distributed as follows: arterial hypertension: 63 p. 100, Diabetes: 24 p. 100, High blood lipids: 26 p. 100, high uric acid: 20 p. 100, hematocrit greater than 46 p. 100: 34 p. 100, cigarette smoking: 64 p. 100, angina pectoris and myocardial infarction: 15 p. 100, peripheral vascular disease: 7 p. 100, 37 p. 100 of patients had a stroke prior to entry. The ischemic event at entry occurred not more than one year prior to randomization and less than 3 months in 77 p. 100. It was much more often a completed stroke (84 p. 100) than a transient ischaemic attack (16 p. 100) and was referrable either to the carotid (46 p. 100) or the vertebrobasilar circulation (50 p. 100). On the whole patients are older and strokes more severe than in other similar studies. Randomization produced remarkably comparable treatment groups since almost no significant difference was observed between the 3 groups.
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PMID:[Controlled cooperative trial. Secondary prevention of atherosclerosis-related cerebral ischemic accidents by aspirin dipyridamole. 2: Description of subjects at the beginning of the trial]. 704 82

Between 1967 and 1976, 314 patients with transient ischemic attack (TIA) were evaluated and treated. Follow-up has been from 2.8 to 13.2 years (mean 7.8). As of 1979, 55 of the patients had succumbed to cardiovascular disease (28), cerebrovascular disease (9), malignancy (10), and other causes (8). During the follow-up period, 15 patients suffered brain infarction (4.8% under the risk) while 40 had myocardial infarction (12.7%) under the risk). Brain infarction occurred as often in patients with carotid TIA as in those with vertebral-basilar TIA, and was more common in patients under anticoagulation therapy than in those without it (p less than 0.05). Arterial hypertension, heart disease, peripheral arterial disease and diabetes did not increase the risk of brain infarction, but all (except diabetes) increased the risk of myocardial infarction. Combination of TIA with arterial hypertension, heat disease, or peripheral arterial disease increased the mortality (p less than 0.001). A life table analysis of surviving 1, 5, and 10 years gave probabilities of 99 and 100%, 89 and 91%, and 60 and 75% for males and females respectively. In the case of normotensive and hypertensive patients, a life table analysis of chances of surviving 1, 5, and 10 years gave probabilities of 100 and 95%. 94 and 80%, and 76 and 49% in both groups respectively. The result clearly emphasize treating of arterial hypertension, and demonstrate that TIA is not only a warning sign of impending stroke but also that of myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Outcome of 314 patients with transient ischemic attacks. 706 75

From 1978 to 1980, thirty-one patients aged forty years or less, had cerebral ischemic events as TIA, RIND or complete stroke. These patients have been studied, both clinically and with laboratory tests to assess the most common causes of their disorder. It was found that hypertension, excess smoking, diabetes and disorders of the lipid metabolism are the most common causes of the atherosclerosis, which plays a role in enhancing ischemic cerebro-vascular accidents during youth. The detection as well as the localization of the site of the ischemic lesions was difficult; only in six out of the seventeen patients examined it was possible to show angiographically a stenosis of one cerebral vessel. Comparison between the 31 patients and 31 subjects of the same age without clinical symptoms or neurological signs, showed a significant incidence of causes of atherosclerosis in the control subjects. In view of the limited number of controls it was not possible to predict a clearcut prognosis.
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PMID:[Risk of cerebral infarct in young adults (author's transl)]. 711 91


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