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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Certain clinical and cardiac necropsy findings are described in 152 patients aged 16 to 78 years (mean 45) with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy: 109 (72%) were men and 43 (28%) were women. Compared with the women, the men had a significantly (p less than 0.05) shorter mean duration of chronic congestive heart failure (CHF) (43 vs 69 months), a higher percentage of habitual alcoholism (40 vs 24%) and a higher mean heart weight (632 vs 551 g). The male to female ratio among the 58 known alcoholics was 7.3:1 and among the 70 known nonalcoholics, 1.5:1 (p less than 0.05). The mean duration of clinical evidence of CHF was similar among the known alcoholics and the known non-alcoholics (each 50 months). Of the 152 patients, 148 (97%) had clinical evidence of chronic CHF; in 114 patients it was the initial manifestation of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy, and in most it became intractable and caused death. The interval from onset of chronic CHF to death (known in 120 patients) ranged from 1 to 264 months (mean 54). Comparison of the 27 patients surviving greater than 72 months after onset of chronic CHF to the 64 patients surviving less than or equal to 36 months disclosed a significantly higher frequency in the longer survival group of older patients, of women, of habitual alcoholics, of patients with chest pain syndromes,
diabetes mellitus
, pulmonary emboli, of patients treated with warfarin and of patients with larger hearts at necropsy. Each of the 4 patients without chronic CHF died suddenly and sudden death was the initial manifestation of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy in them. An additional 33 patients also died suddenly, but each of them previously had had chronic CHF. Of the 79 patients (of the 131 for whom information was available) with either pulmonary or systemic emboli or both, 67 (85%) had either right- or left-sided thrombi or mural endocardial plaques or both, whereas of the 52 patients without emboli, 36 (69%) had intracardiac thrombi or plaques (p less than (0.05). Electrocardiograms in the last 6 months of life in 101 patients disclosed atrial fibrillation in 25; complete left (41 patients) or right (6 patients) bundle branch block or indeterminate intraventricular conduction delay (4 patients) in 51 patients; QRS voltage indicative of
ventricular hypertrophy
in 44 patients (left ventricular in 39 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy: analysis of 152 necropsy patients. 368 84
Progression of coronary artery stenosis was measured using a quantitative, computer-assisted cinevideodensitometric method in 144 arterial segments in 44 subjects undergoing coronary arteriography on two separate occasions at least 6 months apart. Projected coronary arteriograms were digitized into 512 X 512 pixel mode and percent stenosis was calculated by comparing background-corrected videodensitometric values over stenotic and normal segments. Subjects underwent repeat coronary arteriography because of worsening symptoms of angina or heart failure; subjects with renal failure, coronary artery bypass grafts or cardiac transplant were excluded. Clinical variables determined at the time of the first arteriogram included age, sex, serum cholesterol, systolic blood pressure and presence or absence of cigarette smoking,
diabetes mellitus
and left
ventricular hypertrophy
. The mean interval between arteriograms was 29.3 months. Overall progression of coronary stenosis was observed in 40 of the 44 subjects; the mean progression at 24 months was 39% (90% confidence interval, 33 to 45%) and at 36 months was 48% (40 to 56%). The degree of overall progression was related to the length of time between arteriograms (F = 5.81, p less than 0.05) and to serum cholesterol level (F = 4.37, p less than 0.05). These data indicate that using an accurate, quantitative method, it is possible to measure progression of coronary artery atherosclerosis within 2 to 3 years of the initial arteriogram. Serum cholesterol appears to be an important determinant of disease progression.
...
PMID:Progression of coronary atherosclerotic disease assessed by cinevideodensitometry: relation to clinical risk factors. 378 37
To better define the etiologic importance of hypertension for spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage, hospital records were studied for all patients sustaining intracerebral hemorrhage during 1982 in the Cincinnati metropolitan area. Hypertension pre-dating the hemorrhage was present in 45% (69 of 154), as determined by history. A more inclusive definition of hypertension, combining those with a positive history with those found to have left
ventricular hypertrophy
by electrocardiogram or cardiomegaly by chest radiography, applied in 56% (87 of 154). The cases were compared to controls with and without hypertension derived from the NHANES II study of blood pressure (n = 16,204) to determine relative risk. For the presence of hypertension by history, the relative risk of intracerebral hemorrhage was 3.9 (95% confidence interval, 2.7 to 5.7). For the inclusive definition of hypertension, the relative risk was 5.4 (3.7 to 7.9). Relative risk was also determined for hypertension in blacks (= 4.4), age greater than 70 (= 7), prior cerebral infarction (= 22), and
diabetes
(= 3). We conclude that the term "hypertensive hemorrhage" should be used very selectively, particularly in whites, and propose that hypertension be viewed as one of several important risk factors for spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Hypertension as a risk factor for spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage. 381 Jul 4
This study compares two groups of patients: Group I with 44 patients who suffered recent acute myocardial infarction and Group II: 40 control subjects. In both groups, 2D Doppler echocardiography was performed to detect carotid atheroma, to determine the respective roles of vascular risk factors for two sites of atherosclerosis. Carotid atheroma affected 73 p. 100 of subjects in Group I and 22.5 p. 100 in Group II. Carotid stenosis of more than 40 p. 100 was found mainly in hypertensive patients who presented with acute myocardial infarction, and in patients with left
ventricular hypertrophy
. Smoking was more frequent in Group I than in Group II (p less than 0.001) irrespective of the frequency of carotid atheroma (p less than 0.05). Hypercholesterolaemia only favoured carotid atherosclerosis after acute myocardial infarction (p = 0.01). We did not find any difference in the incidence of
diabetes mellitus
in the two groups of patients. Age analysis indicated that carotid atheroma occurred earlier in Group I than in Group II. An association between a dominant risk factor for coronary disease (smoking or hypercholesterolemia) was found in 9 patients, all of whom had severe bipolar atherosclerosis with multivessel coronary lesions and carotid stenosis.
...
PMID:[Risk factors in the combination of myocardial infarction and carotid atheroma]. 381 69
A total of 17,130 children of both sexes born in 1964 and living in Hungary, USSR, GDR and Cuba were examined in 1977. The children were grouped in upper (U) and lower (L) blood pressure groups and 3,640 children were re-examined in 1978-1981. The parents' age, smoking habits, marital status, the children's order of birth, number of siblings, and proportion of twins did not differ between U and L. The prevalence of hypertension and
diabetes
in the medical history of the children, and the prevalence of hypertension and stroke and
diabetes
in the medical history of the parents were significantly higher in U than in L. Signs of left
ventricular hypertrophy
and systolic murmurs, the magnitude of R and S waves in the ECG, and mean values of cardiothoracic and heart volume indices were higher in U than in L. Children in U were sexually more developed, taller, more obese (greater Quetelet's index and skinfold thickness) and less active physically. Average values of blood sugar and serum uric acid were also higher in U than in L. No difference was found between the two groups in the proportion of smokers and in mean cholesterol values. These differences between U and L were strengthened in comparison of children who showed repeatedly low (below the 30th percentile) or high (at or above the 70th, 90th and 95th percentile) readings in the SBP and DBP distribution curves. Since we did not find important differences when we related various factors to blood pressure taken on one or two separate occasions we emphasize the importance of casual blood pressure measurement in childhood.
...
PMID:Blood pressure in childhood and adolescence. Results from an international collaborative study on juvenile hypertension. 387 90
A study was made of the incidence of cerebrovascular disease, the chronological trends, and the relationship between the disease types and risk factors in 16,491 citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The subjects underwent medical examination at least once between 1958-74, and were free of cerebrovascular disease at the initial examination. During the 16-year period, 1.162 cases of cerebrovascular disease developed in the study population, with diagnosis definite in 621. By type, there were 108 cases of cerebral hemorrhage, 469 cases of cerebral infarction, 33 cases of subarachnoid hemorrhage, and 11 cases of other unclassifiable types. As a risk factor of cerebral hemorrhage, elevation of systolic and diastolic blood pressure was the most closely related to onset, and left
ventricular hypertrophy
on electrocardiogram (ECG), and proteinuria were also related. However, a tendency was seen for the risk to be higher when the levels of serum cholesterol were lower. In cerebral infarction, aging like systolic blood pressure, was a most important risk factor. Left
ventricular hypertrophy
on ECG, proteinuria, and
diabetes
could also be risk factors. However, the relation to blood pressure, especially diastolic blood pressure, was not so great as in the case of cerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Cerebrovascular diseases in a fixed population of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, with special reference to relationship between type and risk factors. 623 35
We present 38 acromegalyc patients who were studied by non invasive methods to assess the frequency of cardiovascular complications. Seventy one percent of the cases presented some type of cardiovascular alteration. In 68% we observed left
ventricular hypertrophy
by echocardiography which was the most sensitive method to detect it. In 71% we obtained abnormal electrocardiograms, mainly because of conduction disturbances, being right bundle branch block the most frequent. Half of the cases had pulmonary fibrosis and chronic bronchitis. Arterial hypertension was present in 32%.
Diabetes mellitus
in 21%. Only 2 cases had coronary heart disease. In 37% of the patients who underwent hypophisectomy we observed regression up to 90% of the cardiac complications except for left
ventricular hypertrophy
and pulmonary fibrosis. None of the patients has died.
...
PMID:[Cardiovascular changes in acromegaly. Prospective study]. 623 87
Clinical examinations including echocardiography were performed for 14 acromegalic patients (five men and nine women, whose mean age was 48.6 years). Three of these had hypertension (HT) above 160/95 mmHg, three had
diabetes mellitus
(DM). Their cardiac sizes and functions were correlated with the durations of disease and plasma growth hormone (GH) levels. The incidences of HT and DM were also evaluated. Three of 14 patients (22%) had increased cardiothoracic ratios (greater than 55%). Electrocardiographic abnormalities were noted in three patients including two with left
ventricular hypertrophy
(LVH) and one with interventricular conduction defects with abnormal Q waves. By echocardiography (Table 2), nine patients (64%) were judged to be normal. The remaining five patients (36%) had abnormal echocardiograms. These included LVH (sums of the interventricular and posterior wall thicknesses greater than or equal to 25 mm) in two (25 mm in Case 10, 30 mm in Case 11), increased left ventricular end-diastolic dimension (EDD greater than or equal to 55 mm) in one (72 mm in Case 14) and both abnormalities in two patients (Cases 12 and 13). Two patients (Case 13 and 14), whose %FS were 17% and 22%, respectively, had definite evidence of congestive heart failure. Two patients (Case 11 and 13) met the diagnostic criteria for asymmetric septal hypertrophy. One patient with echocardiographic LVH and another who had increased EDD with LVH had histories of HT (Case 11 and 12). Plasma GH levels in patients with LVH were greater than 100 ng/ml (Cases 10 and 11). The left
ventricular hypertrophy
and/or increased EDD observed in these patients seemed related to the duration of acromegaly but not to the presence of DM. Myocardial biopsy of the right ventricle in two patients with congestive heart failure disclosed myocardial hypertrophy, myocardial fiber disarray, interstitial fibrosis and large nuclei.
...
PMID:[The heart in acromegaly: an echocardiographic study]. 624 54
Echocardiography was performed in 14 patients with acromegaly in order to characterize cardiac involvement in this disease. The left ventricle was enlarged or hypertrophic in 10 patients (71%): the fraction of myocardial shortening, an index of left ventricular contractility, was normal in all but one; and 10 patients had a reduced mitral EF slope, suggesting that their left ventricular compliance was reduced. Cardiac disease was not suspected clinically as most patients had normal clinical, ECG and X-ray examinations of the heart. Left
ventricular hypertrophy
occurred in the absence of hypertension,
diabetes
or evidence of coronary artery disease. There was a positive correlation between left ventricular wall thickness and duration of acromegaly but not between the former and growth hormone levels after fasting, suggesting that ther must be prolonged hypersecretion of growth hormone, and not simply high levels, before cardiac hypertrophy develops.
...
PMID:The heart in acromegaly: correlation of echocardiographic and clinical findings. 644 20
Out of 512 recipients of kidney allotransplants 36 patients exhibiting cardiovascular complications (coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular accident, aneurysm of aorta, peripheral arterial occlusions) were compared with an age and sex matched group of recipients without cardiovascular problems. The following significant differences were observed in the study group versus the controls: high systolic and diastolic blood pressure, longer duration of hypertension before renal allografting, higher serum concentrations of cholesterol, triglycerides and uric acid, and an increased incidence of left
ventricular hypertrophy
and preexisting cardiovascular disease. No differences were found between the two groups as regards smoking habits, overweight, hyperparathyroidism, duration of hemodialysis treatment and type of kidney disease.
Diabetes mellitus
, family history of cardiovascular complications and hypertonic alterations of the eye fundus were more frequent, but not to a statistically significant extent, in the study group as compared to control patients. These findings show the need for regulation of blood pressure, hyperlipemia and hyperuricemia to ensure successful longterm rehabilitation after kidney allografting.
...
PMID:[Cardiovascular diseases after kidney transplantation: an analysis of predisposing factors]. 645 62
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