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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To determine the influence of
diabetes mellitus
on the results of coronary artery bypass surgery, a review of 163 diabetic patients operated on during 8 years, of whom 146 were receiving no drugs or receiving oral hypoglycemic agents, and 17 were receiving insulin. They were compared with 337 nondiabetic patients operated on over the same period. Higher incidences of hypertension and cerebrovascular disease for the diabetic group were found. The extent of
coronary artery disease
as judged angiographically was significantly greater in the diabetic group than in the nondiabetic group. Perioperative mortality was similar in the two groups. The incidence of perioperative myocardial infarction, sternotomy complication, neurological complication, and renal insufficiency was equal in the two groups. Early graft patency was comparable in the two groups. Overall 8-year actuarial angina free ratios were 88.5% for the diabetic group, 93.2% for the nondiabetic group. Overall 8-year survival rates were 95.6% for the diabetic group, 98.6% for the nondiabetic group. Results indicate that diabetic patients have quantitatively more
coronary artery disease
than the non-diabetic patients but have no higher perioperative morbidity and mortality than nondiabetic patients. Long-term results revealed a lower angina free rate in diabetic patients than in nondiabetic patients.
...
PMID:[Diabetes mellitus and coronary artery bypass surgery]. 147 Jan 66
Risk factor analysis in
coronary artery disease
was conducted in 303 patients who underwent coronary arteriography to identify associations between personal characteristics and the prevalence of coronary heart disease. Age, sex, obesity, smoking, alcohol intake, hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, serum uric acid, total cholesterol, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglyceride, and atherogenic indices were statistically analyzed. All 13 variables were first compared between patients with positive and negative ergonovine tests. Only total cholesterol was significantly different, while significant differences in age, sex, history of
diabetes
, total cholesterol, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglyceride and atherosclerotic indices were observed between patients with and without organic coronary artery stenosis. A multivariate analysis was performed, and the resulting equation was tested using the remaining patients. Logistic analysis of all 13 variables identified 5 (age, sex,
diabetes mellitus
, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol) which accounted for the differences between patients with and without significant
coronary artery disease
and that were validated in the test group. The sensitivity for prediction of
coronary artery disease
was 75.8%, specificity 68.5%, and predictive accuracy 71.5% in the test group. Thus, risk factor analysis appears to be very valuable in screening subjects with high-risk organic coronary stenosis and in optimizing the preventive and therapeutic modalities, but not in predicting vasospastic subjects.
...
PMID:Coronary risk factors used to predict coronary artery disease by logistic regression analysis. 147 44
The prevalence of silent myocardial ischemia was retrospectively assessed in a group of 100 consecutive patients with angiographically proved
coronary artery disease
, and diagnostic ECG, by symptom-limited exercise thallium-201 scintigraphy. Twenty-four patients had no evidence of ischemia despite adequate exercise level. So among 76 patients with exercise induced ischemia, only 33 patients (43%) stopped exercise due to anginal pain (symptomatic ischemia: Group 3). And 43 patients with asymptomatic ischemia composed of 23 patients (30%) with ECG change (Group 2B) and 20 patients (26%) without ECG change (Group 2A). Patients background including the history of old myocardial infarction and
diabetes mellitus
, were similar among Group 2A, 2B, and Group 3. And our major observation was that the extent and severity of quantified SPECT perfusion defects was nearly identical between 3 groups Thus in this study group, there was a rather high prevalence rate of silent ischemia (57%) by exercise thallium-201 criteria. Patients with silent ischemia, associated with positive and negative exercise ECG findings, and those with exercise angina had similar background and comparable amount of jeopardized myocardium.
...
PMID:[The prevalence and the clinical characteristics of silent myocardial ischemia detected by stress thallium scintigraphy]. 148 17
Heart disease is a significant problem in women. Age, smoking, and hyperlipidemia are potent risk factors, as is the presence of
diabetes
. Hypertension is less of a risk factor in women than men. Diagnosis of
coronary artery disease
is most difficult in women, especially using non-invasive techniques, because of a lower prevalence of disease. Thrombolytic therapy may be associated with more bleeding in older, smaller women. Angioplasty and surgical bypass may be more difficult because of smaller coronary artery size in women. Exercise, aspirin, and estrogens appear to decrease the incidence and mortality of heart disease in women, but concern has been raised that the use of resources for the study, prevention and treatment of heart disease has a gender bias, with men receiving more than their fair share.
...
PMID:Heart disease in women. 149 6
Hypertension, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and hyperinsulinemia--acknowledged risk factors for
coronary artery disease
--are all more common in persons with non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
than in nondiabetic persons. The interrelationships of these risk factors are becoming increasingly recognized. This article discusses the dyslipidemias commonly seen in type II
diabetes
and describes their relationship to glucose metabolism.
...
PMID:Lipid metabolism in type II diabetes. 149 73
Hyperlipidemia is a well-recognized complication of renal transplantation. In long-term survivors of renal transplantation, cardiovascular disease accounts for the majority of patient deaths. In the cyclosporine era, cardiovascular disease has surpassed infection as the number one cause of death. Risk factors in the transplant population for hyperlipidemia include age, male sex,
diabetes
, prednisone dose, graft impairment, obesity, and antihypertensive therapy. Recently, cyclosporine has been implicated as an aggravating factor in the development of hyperlipidemia after transplantation, although its role has been controversial. Because renal transplant recipients have other significant risk factors for the development of
coronary artery disease
, the amelioration of hyperlipidemia may improve long-term patient survival. Because most late deaths occur in patients with a functioning graft, long-term graft survival could also be improved. The role of corticosteroids in the development of hyperlipidemia is well established. Recent studies employing corticosteroid withdrawal after transplantation have shown a marked reduction in cholesterol despite the use of cyclosporine. Data on corticosteroid withdrawal in living related transplants at our center show a significant reduction in total cholesterol after steroid withdrawal. Data from heart transplant recipients under corticosteroid-free protocols show a similar reduction in total cholesterol. Other treatments for hyperlipidemia include diet and cholesterol-lowering agents, such as Mevacor (lovastatin; Merck Sharp & Dohme, West Point, PA). The efficacy of lowering cholesterol in this high-risk population is unknown.
...
PMID:Hyperlipidemia and transplantation: etiologic factors and therapy. 149 81
The Functional Independence Measure (FIM), a single-score instrument used to measure independent functioning in six areas of basic self-care skills, was used to evaluate 68 patients following lower-limb amputation. Patients in a rehabilitation hospital were assessed with the FIM upon admission and discharge. Admission scores averaged 52.7, ranging from 25.2 to 70.0. Patients scoring in the lowest and highest quartiles were compared: no remarkable gender, ethnic, or age differences were evident. Persons with the lowest scores (ie, lowest functioning) had a higher prevalence of hypertension,
coronary artery disease
, and noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. The success of rehabilitation in patients in the lower two quartiles upon admission was variable and not predicted well by the FIM. In contrast, predictability of rehabilitation success was high in patients functioning higher at admission, the majority achieving near-perfect scores by discharge. Length of hospitalization appeared to be largely unrelated to the net difference in FIM scores over the course of hospitalization.
...
PMID:Functional screening of lower-limb amputees: a role in predicting rehabilitation outcome? 151 95
Over the past decade we have seen a shift in the strategy for the treatment of hypertension, from stepped therapy--involving a highly structured, unvarying series of steps--to recommendations for more individualized treatment. How shall we accomplish that goal? Severe hypertension provides a clear indication to bypass earlier recommendations. Demographic data such as age, gender, and race, often cited, have proved less helpful. Concomitant medical problems, which are found in greater than 50% of hypertensive patients, are most often the crucial determinants in the selection of antihypertensive therapy. Concurrent
coronary artery disease
,
diabetes mellitus
, heart failure, azotemia, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, borderline cognitive dysfunction, anxiety, and depression are all common. Each has implications for antihypertensive therapy. Moreover, blood pressure reduction is a surrogate for our real goal, which is reduction of cardiovascular risk. Thus, consideration of concomitant medical problems has extended to left ventricular hypertrophy, obesity, hyperlipidemia, and insulin resistance as additional risk factors in hypertension. Consideration of all of these factors makes it possible to individualize antihypertensive therapy in most patients.
...
PMID:Evolution of the treatment of hypertension: what really matters in the 1990s? 151 35
In people with
diabetes
, the concentration of an individual lipoprotein or apolipoprotein can be highly variable and is totally different in the two major forms of the disease. Alterations in the concentrations of major lipids and lipoproteins are well characterized in both IDDM and NIDDM. In general, the lipoprotein pattern is antiatherogenic in individuals with IDDM who are treated and have optimal glycemic control. In contrast, NIDDM is associated with atherogenic changes of serum lipids and lipoproteins regardless of the mode of treatment. In people with both types of
diabetes
, the distribution of apoE phenotype seems to be similar to that in nondiabetic populations. IDDM patients with microalbuminuria show atherogenic changes of lipoproteins and have elevated levels of Lp(a), which is a risk factor of
coronary artery disease
. Whether glycemic control influences the concentration of Lp(a) is still an open question. An important issue is that the concentration of a lipoprotein can be normal without excluding compositional abnormalities that are potentially atherogenic. Such alterations are present in people with both IDDM and NIDDM. Consequently, it has been questioned whether the target values to start treatment should be lower in diabetic than in nondiabetic populations.
Diabetes
1992 Oct
PMID:Quantitative and qualitative lipoprotein abnormalities in diabetes mellitus. 152 30
To determine the predictive value of adenosine thallium-201 myocardial imaging for perioperative cardiac events, 60 consecutive patients referred for preoperative cardiac evaluation were studied before vascular (n = 25), orthopedic (n = 14), or general (n = 21) surgery. Tomographic (n = 52) and planar (n = 8) thallium-201 imaging was performed after adenosine infusion at a rate of 140 micrograms/kg/min for 6 minutes. Two blinded expert observers graded results of adenosine thallium-201 studies as normal (33%), fixed defect only (2%), reversible defect only (48%), and combined (fixed and reversible) defects (17%). After 6 +/- 3 months of follow-up, 81% proceeded to surgery and 43% underwent preoperative coronary angiography. Clinical variables that correlated with perioperative cardiac events were a history of
diabetes mellitus
(p = 0.05), left bundle branch block (p = 0.02), and left ventricular hypertrophy (p = 0.06) on the resting ECG. This clinically "high-risk" group had an event rate of 22% as compared with no cardiac events in patients in the "low-risk" group without these clinical characteristics (p = 0.005). Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed that the presence of a combined (fixed and reversible) adenosine thallium-201 defect (p = 0.0007), three-vessel
coronary artery disease
(p = 0.001), and left bundle branch block (p = 0.02) was predictive of subsequent cardiac events with relative risk ratios of 4.9, 2.9, and 2.2, respectively. Therefore the presence of an adenosine thallium-201 perfusion defect is correlated with and predictive of an increased risk of perioperative cardiac events in patients referred for preoperative risk evaluation.
...
PMID:Determination of perioperative cardiac risk by adenosine thallium-201 myocardial imaging. 152 2
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