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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Data obtained from two multipurpose surveys of hospitalized patients were examined to determine the risk of nonfatal
acute myocardial infarction
in post-menopausal women 40 to 75 years of age in relation to use of estrogen-containing drugs. Eight (2.4 per cent) of 336 myocardial infarction patients and 330 (4.9 per cent) of 6730 reference patients were regular estrogen users (crude rate ratio, 0.47) at the time of hospitalization. After control for confounding variables -- among them, age, past history of myocardial in farction, angina,
diabetes
, and hypertension (alone or in combination) and cigarette smoking -- the summary point estimate of rate ratio was 0.97 with 95 per cent confidence limits of 0.48 and 1.95. Thus, there was no evidence of a statistically significant association between current regular use of estrogens and nonfatal
acute myocardial infarction
.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction and estrogen therapy in post-menopausal women. 17 69
A 64-year-old woman with
diabetes mellitus
as well as hypertensive retinopathy developed an
acute myocardial infarction
and hypertensive crisis following the injection of 5 ml. of 10 per cent sodium fluorescein for fundus angiography. This is the first time this complication has been documented. Possible mechanisms for such an occurrence are discussed. Recommendations for recognizing and dealing with patients at high risk for cardiovascular complications of fluorescein angiography are emphasized.
...
PMID:Acute myocardial infarction following fluorescein angiography. 58 85
Twenty four cases with myocardial rupture among 259 patients with autopsy after death due to myocardial infarction, were compared with patients with
acute myocardial infarction
and death secondary to other causes. Myocardial rupture occured during the first 72 hours in 58% of the patients and all cases within the first five days. Two thirds of the patients were males and 46% were 70 years of age. There were 24 myocardial ruptures (9.5%). Previous history of arterial hypertension and un-remittent anginal pain were predisposing factors for rupture (p=0.05). Other previously reported bad prognostic factors such as persistent hipertension after acute infarction, severe exercise before infarction and history of
Diabetes Mellitus
were not statistically significant in this study. Ruptured myocardium was not influenced by a previous history of myocardial infarction, hospitalization delay in the C.C.U., administration of anticoagulants, digitalis or pressor amines. There was no significant difference among the groups compared in enzyme curves or magnitude of leucocytosis. Electromechanic dissociation, sinus bradycardia, nodal rhythm followed by idioventricular rhythm and asystole, were observed following myocardial rupture.
...
PMID:[Rupture of the free wall of the heart as cause of death in acute myocardial infarct]. 66 44
In a retrospective survey of 1,118 admissions for acute ischemic heart disease (AIHD) at St. Luke's Hospital in Malta in 1963-72, there were 945 (84.5%) cases of
acute myocardial infarction
(
AMI
) and 173 (15.5%) cases of acute coronary insufficiency (ACI). The proportion of patients with
diabetes
was 30.2% (30.7% in
AMI
, and 27.7% in ACI; age-corrected rates at greater than or equal to 40 years). This was significantly higher (P less than 0.01) than the corresponding rate of
diabetes
(20.2%) in the general population of Malta. There was a significantly greater prevalence of
diabetes
among women than among men with AIHD: the proportion with
diabetes
was 50.0% among women with
AMI
and 41.3 among women with ACI. The
diabetes
was mostly of the maturity-onset type. The high frequency of AIHD among diabetics seemed to be chiefly attributable to the effects of the diabetic state, either directly or indirectly through its association with other risk factors: obesity, physical inactivity, excessive eating and high plasma cholesterol levels. Diastolic hypertension and chronic bronchitis and emphysema associated withe heavy smoking were no more common in diabetics than in nondiabetics with
AMI
.
...
PMID:Diabetes as a coronary risk factor in Malta. 66 17
Vasodilators acutely reduce afterload and improve hemodynamics in congestive heart failure. Intravenous nitroprusside reduces left ventricular filling pressure and increases cardiac output while modestly reducing blood pressure and not changing heart rate in patients with heart failure in whom this response is characteristic. Comparably reduced blood pressure during nitroprusside infusion in normal subjects or hypertensive patients without failure results in a decrease in cardiac output and tachycardia. Long-acting vasodilators are also effective in patients with congestive heart failure. Nitrates, predominant venodilators, decrease left ventricular filling pressure as much as nitroprusside does, but increase cardiac output less. Hydralazine, an arterial dilator, increases cardiac output similarly to nitroprusside but decreases filling pressure less. Combining hydralazine with nitrates results in hemodynamic effects almost identical to those of nitroprusside. The quinazoline derivatives, trimazosin and prazosin, are also effective vasodilators, which act on both arteries and veins in patients with congestive heart failure. The hemodynamic response to vasodilators is influenced by the underlying hemodynamic status, as the change in cardiac output is directly related to base line ventricular filling pressure as well as systemic vascular resistance, and inversely related to the base line cardiac output. Response to vasodilators does not appear to be altered by age,
diabetes
,
acute myocardial infarction
or the cause of congestive myocardiopathy.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic responsiveness to short- and long-acting vasodilators in left ventricular failure. 68 86
We studied 83 women younger than 46 years with
acute myocardial infarction
(MI) and 154 controls. There was a strong positive association between MI and the following: (1) age, (2) both oral contraceptive and noncontraceptive estrogen use, (3) cigarette smoking, and (4) the presence of predisposing medical conditions, eg, past MI, hypertension, and
diabetes
. ABO blood type and family history of arterial disease were also positively associated with MI. Whereas the risks for idiopathic stroke and venous thromboembolism have also been shown to be increased among oral contraceptive users, there is comparatively little correlation between these two illnesses and age or smoking in young women. The present study, taken together with previously published work, provides reasonable estimates of the vascular risks associated with oral contraceptive use.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction and other vascular diseases in young women. Role of estrogens and other factors. 71 57
Survival of 312 patients with
acute myocardial infarction
was studied from data collected during the first 48 h in the coronary care unit. Only patients with recent onset of symptoms (48 h), with a 48-h survival, and with evidence of myocardial infarction, were selected. Mortality rate at 1 mth was 15.3% and 24.6% at 6. The following factors were significant for poor survival: increasing age, female sex,
diabetes
, previous angina, low blood pressure on admission and at the 48th h low average value and the lowest observed value of blood pressure, clinical and radiological left ventricular failure, high level of LDH, increased urea and leukocytosis. Among ECG data, the presence of signs related to extent of infarction, anterior as compared to inferior location, antero-lateral as compared to anterior, QRS frontal axis deviation, absence of sinus rhythm, sinus tachycardia, tachyarrhythmias with wide QRS complex, right bundle branch block, 3rd-degree AV block with wide QRS complex, was associated with significantly worse survival than the absence of these signs. A multivariate analysis of the 42 most significant data, assuming linear regression, was used to establish a discriminant prognostic index. Using this index, survival was predicted correctly in 90.2% of patients at 1 mth and 85.7% at 6 mth. Thus prognosis can be established in nonclear-cut groups of patients with myocardial infarction (severe and benign forms being excluded by criteria) from simple clinical data.
...
PMID:Quantitative assessment of myocardial infarction prognosis to 1 and 6 mth--from clinical data. 72
Serial study of 72-lead precordial ST-maps, SGOT, and SLDH was done in 30 cases of
acute myocardial infarction
. Infarct size was estimated by sum of ST elevation in all leads (sigma ST), number of sites showing ST elevation (NST), peak SGOT, and peak SLDH levels, and correlated with each other and with clinical features and hospital course. sigma ST correlated well with NST (r=0.92), but the correlations of sigma ST with SGOT (r=0.99) and SLDH (r=3.84) were better than those of NST with SGOT (r=0.22) and SLDH (r=0.53). There were close agreements between sigma ST and peak SGOT and peak SLDH except in the cases of non-transmural infarction, in whom smaller sigma ST suggesting small infract occurred with higher enzyme peaks indicating moderate or large infarct. Longer duration of chest pain, larger number of associated conditions (e.g. angina, hypertension,
diabetes
), complications (e.g. congestive heart failure, shock, arrhythmias) and mortality were associated with larger infarcts.
...
PMID:Precordial ST-segment changes and serum enzyme levels in acute myocardial infarction. 73 32
During a six year period twelve patients with insulin dependent diabetes and end-stage renal failure received cadaveric kidney grafts. Eleven of the patients have previous to this been hemodialysed, one patient was transplanted before hemodialysis was necessary. The cumulative two year survival was thirty-seven per cent for the patients, and twenty-nine per cent for the kidney grafts. The average time of observation was eleven months, the motality was fifty per cent. The causes of death were
acute myocardial infarction
in two cases, sepsis in two cases, severe hypoglycemia in one case and unexpected sudden death in one case. The most prominent problems in the treatment of the diabetic patients after the renal transplantation were difficulties in the regulation of the
diabetes
, rejections, infections, cardiac failure and aggravation in pre-existing hypertension.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in patients with insulin requiring diabetes and renal failure. 78 7
The hospital mortality of
acute myocardial infarction
amongst 285 known diabetics treated in the last decade was 39.7 per cent at one month and had increased to 51 per cent at 12 months. Treatment in a coronary care unit during the acute stage had little effect on the mortality amongst patients on insulin, but was beneficial for patients whose
diabetes
had been controlled by oral hypoglycaemic drugs. Female patients on oral hypoglycaemic drugs had the highest mortality. When considering age, duration of
diabetes
and presence of retinopathy,
acute myocardial infarction
in diabetics controlled on oral therapy appeared to have a worse outcome than in patients on insulin. Independently of whether patients were on insulin or on oral hypoglycaemic drugs 12 months after the acute episode, only about half of them were still alive.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction in diabetics. 80 45
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