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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adults with hypopituitarism die prematurely, and the excess mortality is from vascular disease. On echocardiography we have demonstrated abnormalities of myocardial diastolic function in hypopituitary adults, indicating possible early ischaemic change.
Peripheral arterial disease
is evident on ultrasonography. Vascular risk factors have also been examined. Impaired glucose tolerance and unrecognized
diabetes
are common in hypopituitary adults. Total cholesterol levels are elevated, particularly in hypopituitary women. The role of growth hormone (GH) deficiency in the vascular disease and in the vascular-risk-factor abnormalities is unknown at present. Prolonged GH therapy causes a decrease in the levels of fasting total cholesterol, without any adverse effects on glucose homeostasis. GH therapy trials in adults will clarify the role of GH in the excess vascular risk of hypopituitarism. Prolonged GH therapy will be necessary for the vascular effects to be defined.
...
PMID:Metabolic changes and vascular risk factors in hypopituitarism. 129 16
The aim was to determine if certain risk factors in the general population are more strongly related to peripheral arterial disease than to ischemic heart disease. Arterial disease in the lower limbs was measured by means of the World Health Organization questionnaire on intermittent claudication, the ankle brachial pressure index, and a reactive hyperemia test in 1,592 men and women aged 55-74 years selected randomly in 1988 from the age-sex registers of 10 general practices in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Peripheral arterial disease
was strongly related to lifetime cigarette smoking, with additional risks in current and exsmokers of less than 5 years. Multiple regression of risk factors on measures of peripheral arterial disease showed associations with
diabetes mellitus
(but not impaired glucose tolerance), systolic blood pressure, and serum cholesterol; inverse association with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; and only univariate association with triglycerides. In multiple logistic regressions of risk factors on six separate indicators of cardiovascular disease, the only consistent difference was that smoking increased the risk of peripheral arterial disease (range of odds ratios, 1.8-5.6) more than heart disease (range of odds ratios, 1.1-1.6).
Diabetes mellitus
was not a stronger risk factor for peripheral arterial disease.
...
PMID:Smoking, lipids, glucose intolerance, and blood pressure as risk factors for peripheral atherosclerosis compared with ischemic heart disease in the Edinburgh Artery Study. 155 87
Peripheral arterial disease
(
PAD
) is a frequent complication of
diabetes mellitus
. In the first phase of the San Luis Valley
Diabetes
Study, diagnostic criteria for
PAD
were evaluated in 607 controls and 343 diabetics. Normal ranges, and the lowest 2.5 percentile of the distribution of ankle/arm systolic blood pressure ratios were derived from a non-diabetic subset of the population with a very low probability of
PAD
. From this subgroup, abnormal ankle/arm ratios were defined as less than: 0.94 at rest, 0.73 after exercise, and 0.78 after reactive hyperemia. Using these criteria,
PAD
was identified in 130 subjects from the study population of 950 (prevalence of 13.7%). In contrast, a history of intermittent claudication, or an absent pulse in the extremity were uncommon findings in the study population, and thus had a low sensitivity and positive predictive value for
PAD
diagnosed by vascular laboratory criteria. We conclude that vascular laboratory tests provide a useful, and objective means of determining the prevalence of
PAD
in a geographically-based population of diabetic and control subjects.
...
PMID:Diagnostic methods for peripheral arterial disease in the San Luis Valley Diabetes Study. 218 49
The prevalence of peripheral arterial disease and its relationship to cardiovascular risk factors was investigated in 133 patients aged 45-64 years with newly diagnosed non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
and in 144 randomly selected non-diabetic subjects of the same age. History of intermittent claudication, absent foot pulses, decreased ankle-arm blood pressure ratio (less than 0.9) and radiologically detectable arterial calcifications of the lower limbs were used as indicators of the presence of peripheral arterial disease.
Peripheral arterial disease
tended to be somewhat more common in men with newly diagnosed non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
than in non-diabetic men, whereas no difference was found in prevalence of peripheral arterial disease between diabetic and non-diabetic women. The association of various indicators of peripheral arterial disease with cardiovascular risk factors and coronary heart disease was low or absent.
...
PMID:Peripheral arterial disease and its relationship to cardiovascular risk factors and coronary heart disease in newly diagnosed non-insulin-dependent diabetics. 377 96
The relationships between personality and risks of coronary heart disease have been studied widely, but little attention has been paid to other forms of atherosclerotic disease. The objective of this study was to determine relationships in the general population between hostile personality and Type A behavior pattern with asymptomatic and symptomatic chronic peripheral arterial disease. The Edinburgh Artery Study comprises a cross-sectional random sample survey of 1592 men and women aged 55 to 74 years sampled from age-sex registers of 10 general practices throughout the city.
Peripheral arterial disease
was measured using the WHO questionnaire on intermittent claudication, the ankle brachial pressure index, and a reactive hyperemia test. The Bedford Foulds personality deviance questionnaire was used to elicit extrapunitiveness, intropunitiveness, and dominance (including hostile acts); and the Bortner self-administered questionnaire was used to determine Type A/B personality. Hostile acts increased with severity of peripheral arterial disease; there was a mean score of 13.9 in normals and 14.6 in claudicants (p < .05). An increased risk of claudication associated with a one SD increase in hostile acts was significant (p < .05) only in males, odds ratio, 1.41 (95% confidence interval 1.01, 1.96) and was independent of cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, obesity, and
diabetes mellitus
. Dominance was also related to asymptomatic peripheral arterial disease in subjects who had neither intermittent claudication nor angina. Contrary to expectations, Type A personality behaviour scores decreased with the severity of peripheral arterial disease. We conclude that hostile personality may be an independent risk factor for chronic peripheral arterial disease in the general population, particularly among men.
...
PMID:Hostile personality and risks of peripheral arterial disease in the general population. 808 64
Data from the Framingham Study and other population studies indicate that intermittent claudication (IC) sharply increases in late middle age and is somewhat higher among men than women. Noninvasive testing in populations indicates that the true prevalence of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is at least five times higher than would be expected based on the reported prevalence of IC.
Peripheral arterial disease
correlates most strongly with cigarette smoking and either
diabetes
or impaired glucose tolerance. Other risk factors for PAD include hypertension; low levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; and high levels of triglycerides, apolipoprotein B, lipoprotein(a), homocysteine, fibrinogen and blood viscosity. Individuals with PAD are more likely to have coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular disease than those without PAD. Because of the high risk of both nonfatal and fatal cardiovascular disease (CVD) events in PAD patients, individuals with evidence of PAD should undergo both a careful examination of the entire cardiovascular system and aggressive modification of CVD risk factors.
...
PMID:The epidemiology of peripheral arterial disease: importance of identifying the population at risk. 954 71
The risk factors, epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment of peripheral arterial disease are reviewed.
Peripheral arterial disease
is characterized by a gradual reduction in blood flow to one or more limbs secondary to atherosclerosis. Risk factors include smoking,
diabetes mellitus
, hyperlipidemia, and hypertension. The most common clinical manifestation is intermittent claudication. The prevalence of intermittent claudication in people over the age of 50 is 2-7% for men and 1-2% for women. The ankle:brachial pressure index (ABPI) is a useful measure of disease severity; an ABPI of 0.5-0.9 is common in intermittent claudication. The goals of therapy are to relieve or reduce ischemic symptoms, alleviate disability, improve in functional capacity, prevent progression that may result in gangrene and limb loss, and prevent cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events. Treatment includes risk-factor modification, drug therapy (primarily with antiplatelet agents), and revascularization procedures. Aspirin has been shown to be effective in reducing the associated risk of myocardial infarction and stroke. Ticlopidine appears to be a reasonable alternative for patients who are hypersensitive to aspirin. Clopidogrel has been shown to be more effective than aspirin in patients with recent myocardial infarction, recent stroke, or established peripheral arterial disease. There is controversy over the appropriate treatment for acute arterial occlusions. Risk-factor modification and antiplatelet drugs are the mainstays of therapy for patients with intermittent claudication, the most common manifestation of peripheral arterial disease.
...
PMID:Management of peripheral arterial disease. 978 99
Peripheral arterial disease
has received less attention from epidemiologists than coronary and cerebrovascular disease. Prevalence and incidence data typically show that peripheral arterial disease increases with age, is more common in men than women, and that symptomatic disease is only the tip of the iceberg. Studies concerning the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease rely mainly on the Rose questionnaire, which is used to screen for intermittent claudication, and on the ankle/brachial index, used to detect asymptomatic disease. Although there is a certain parallel between the 2 sets of data, the figures for asymptomatic disease consistently surpass those for clinical disease, and there is a wide variation between frequencies obtained in individual studies. In general, the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease is estimated to be under 2% for men aged less than 50 years, increasing to over 5% in those aged more than 70 years. Women reach these rates almost 10 years after men, although this gender difference decreases with increasing age. Figures for incidence follow a similar trend. The incidence of chronic critical ischaemia is estimated to be between 0.05% and 0.1% of the population. Asymptomatic disease detected with noninvasive tests is 3 to 4 times more frequent than intermittent claudication: its prevalence increases from under 5% for individuals aged less than 50 years to over 20% for individuals aged more than 70 years. The classical risk factors for atherosclerosis also apply to peripheral arterial disease, although their order of importance may be different from that for coronary and carotid disease. Several studies have shown that peripheral arterial disease correlates most strongly with cigarette smoking. Smoking is also the single greatest predictor of the progression of peripheral arterial disease. Other risk factors include hypertension, raised lipid levels (cholesterol and triglycerides for severe disease),
diabetes
, increased plasma viscosity, fibrinogen and homocysteine levels. Divergent views have been expressed in individual epidemiological studies with regard to the respective contribution of these risk factors to the development and progression of peripheral arterial disease. The natural history of peripheral arterial disease is characterised by a relatively benign local evolution. It can be estimated that, in general, 3 of 4 men presenting with intermittent claudication will never have a serious problem necessitating vascular intervention, and that no more than 5% are ever likely to require a major amputation. However, the underlying atherosclerotic pathology progresses with time: nondiseased arteries become obliterated and disease with an initially unilateral pattern frequently progresses to become bilateral. In addition, the few patients who do progress to critical ischaemia are at a significantly higher risk of amputation. The general prognosis for patients with peripheral arterial disease is particularly negative. There is a high prevalence of coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular disease in such patients, although the exact percentages depend on the patient population selected and on the method used for their evaluation. Coronary heart disease is detected in 40 to 60% of patients through a medical history combined with electrocardiography, while systematic coronary angiography detects coronary heart disease in 90% of those undergoing surgery. Although few patients with peripheral arterial disease have a history of stroke, in studies of surgical patients almost 30% appear to have significant extracranial disease. Patients with peripheral arterial disease have a poor life expectancy: the mortality rate is 3 to 5% per year in those with intermittent claudication and 20% per year in those with critical ischaemia. Coronary heart disease accounts for half of the total mortality, while vascular disease in general accounts for almost two-thirds.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology and prognosis of peripheral obliterative arteriopathy]. 984 97
Peripheral arterial disease
of the lower limbs is a manifestation of atherosclerosis, and may also affect other vascular territories such as the coronary and cerebral arteries. Progressive narrowing of the vessels up to total occlusion can present as intermittent claudication or pain at rest, with or without cutaneous lesions. Patients with intermittent claudication are at a low risk of amputation, and the symptom has to be regarded as a warning signal for myocardial infarction and stroke. Nevertheless, if the patient's walking distance is too limited to allow a near-normal life, symptomatic treatment to improve quality of life should be considered. Treatment may consist of walking exercise, surgical or interventional radiological revascularisation, or, in some cases, administration of vasoactive drugs. Antiplatelet agents should be administered in an attempt to limit disease progression and prevent cardiac and cerebrovascular complications, together with active measures to reduce established risk factors such as smoking,
diabetes
, hyperlipidaemia, and arterial hypertension. The presence of pain at rest indicates that a lower limb is jeopardised, especially when the criteria for critical ischaemia have also been met. These criteria include the presence of chronic (lasting for more than 2 weeks) symptoms of ischaemia at rest and a systolic blood pressure less than 50 mm Hg or 30 mm Hg at the ankle or big toe, respectively. In such a situation, revascularisation should be attempted whenever possible. If this is not possible or if the procedure has failed, prostacyclin administered intravenously for days or weeks is an alternative. After revascularisation, early reocclusion may be prevented by administering anticoagulants and late reocclusion by antiplatelet agents, in conjunction with eradication of risk factors. In all situations, therapeutic decision-making should be undertaken in a multidisciplinary setting and should include the following: specialists in angiology (an internist) and interventional radiology; a vascular surgeon; an orthopaedic surgeon, if necessary; and
diabetes
and infectious disease specialists.
...
PMID:[Drug treatment strategies for peripheral obliterative arteriopathy]. 984 99
Peripheral arterial disease
affects at least 10% of adults older than 70 years. Risk factors such as
diabetes
, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, history of smoking, and genetics increase the incidence of the disease. Intermittent claudication, experienced as calf pain or cramping, is the primary symptom in patients with lower-extremity peripheral arterial disease. Patients with claudication are unable to walk even moderate distances. As a result, they often lead lives that are profoundly restricted. Medical therapeutic options available for patients with intermittent claudication are limited to a small number of medications and walking exercise rehabilitation. Walking exercise training can significantly increase ability and decrease calf discomfort for many patients. Nurses can have a major impact on improving the quality of life of patients with claudication, not only by seeking referrals to established institutional walking exercise programs, but also by helping patients in the community develop a personalized walking program. In this article, a nursing plan of care including short-term and long-term goals is addressed. A case study will illustrate the effectiveness and improved quality of life that an individualized program of walking exercise had for one community-based client.
...
PMID:Relieving intermittent claudication: a nursing approach. 1081 85
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