Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Trinidadians of South Asian origin have a high prevalence of cardiovascular disease and diabetes compared to Trinidadians of African origin. The degree to which these differences are related to genetic and/or environmental factors is unclear. To determine whether there might be a genetic basis for this difference in prevalence of deleterious phenotypes we examined allele frequencies for candidate genes in atherosclerosis and diabetes. We genotyped 81 consecutive neonates of African origin and 103 consecutive neonates of South Asian origin. We evaluated common polymorphisms in 11 candidate genes for atherosclerosis and diabetes. We found differences between the two subpopulations in the allele frequencies of several candidate genes, including APOE, LIPC, APOC3, PON1, PON2, and PPP1R3. However, the differences in the allele frequencies were not all consistent with the pattern of CHD expression between these two ethnic groups in adulthood. Thus, differences in genetic architecture alone may not explain the wide disparities in disease prevalence between these two subpopulations. It is very likely that environmental factors, or unmeasured genetic factors, influence the genetic susceptibility to disease in these subpopulations.
...
PMID:Allele frequencies for candidate genes in atherosclerosis and diabetes among Trinidadian neonates. 1151 79

The use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for cardiovascular risk reduction remains uncertain. Although previous epidemiological surveys have suggested a clear benefit and nearly 50% mortality risk reduction with HRT in postmenopausal women, recent randomised trials have largely failed to support this. The epidemiological surveys may have been biased in a number of ways including the possibility that HRT users in these studies may have been healthier and taken a greater interest in modifying cardiovascular risks. The aim of the present study was to determine to what extent the revelations from all these trials have influenced HRT prescribing in general practice, in relation to cardiovascular disease. We reviewed 140 women on HRT and 140 age-matched controls from one city centre general practice in the west of Birmingham who were randomly selected by computer. The main indication for HRT use was presence of symptoms associated with oestrogen deficiency. The prevention of osteoporosis accounted for 7.1% of HRT indications, while the primary prevention of CHD was not an issue discussed by either the patient or the GP. Among non-users, 86.4% did not have a known contraindication and many did not have serum lipid measurements or estimations of cardiovascular risk. There was no difference between HRT users and non-users for smoking habits and presence of cardiovascular risk factors including diabetes, hypertension and coronary heart disease. HRT users were also less likely to undergo investigations, such as cervical smear tests and mammograms. In conclusion, this survey reflects the current uncertainty surrounding the use of HRT for cardiovascular risk prevention. Importantly, women on HRT may not be any healthier than non-users, nor do they seek more preventive care than non-users. This is contrary to previous presumptions that selection and prevention bias were the explanation for the apparent cardioprotective effects of HRT.
...
PMID:The impact of coronary heart disease in determining use of hormone replacement therapy in a general practice population. 1216 52

Diabetes mellitus, especially type 2 diabetes, is a growing concern in America. Longitudinal trends show that obesity is more prevalent than in the past, and the incidence of type 2 diabetes is also increasing. Type 2 diabetes typically doubles the CHD risk in men and triples the risk in women. Intervening to control lipid levels and blood pressure has been shown to be especially helpful in preventing CHD, but the impact of better glycemic control on CHD risk is less convincing, especially in clinical trials. Revascularization studies in diabetics show that coronary bypass surgery is related to better outcomes than angioplasty procedures.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus and coronary heart disease. 1172 3

Diabetes is associated with significant morbidity and mortality in the setting of acute coronary syndromes. Exists a progressive relationship between glucose levels and cardiovascular risk. Hyperglycemy in fact produces endothelial dysfunction recognised to be a key accessory to diabetic microangiopathy and macroangiopathy. Furthermore diabetics present high levels of cholesterol which elevate the risk of CHD. The statins, for their effects, may represent the fit therapy. The beneficial effects of statins may extend beyond improving the lipid profile. There are several proposed mechanisms for event reduction by lipid-lowering therapy, which include improved endothelium-dependent vasodilation, stabilization of atherosclerotic lesions, reduction in inflammatory stimuli, and prevention, slowed progression, or regression of atherosclerotic lesions (pleiotropic effects). Cellular experiments suggest that statins have an impact on endothelial function by preventing oxidized LDL-induced reduction of nitric oxide production and increased nitric oxide synthesis. Statins also impact chronic inflammation by reducing mitogen (PDGF) responsiveness, inhibiting smooth muscle cell proliferation, inhibiting monocyte chemotaxis and migration, and by reducing macrophage protease production. The absolute clinical benefit achieved may be greater in diabetic than in nondiabetic patients with CHD because diabetic patients have a higher absolute risk of recurrent CHD events and other atherosclerotic events.
...
PMID:[Statine and endothelium dysfunction in diabetes]. 1183 Jul 20

Hypercholesterolemia is one of the major contributors to atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease in our society. The National Cholesterol Education Program of the National Institutes of Health has created a set of guidelines that standardize the clinical assessment and management of hypercholesterolemia for practicing physicians and other professionals in the medical community. In May 2001, the National Cholesterol Education Program released its third set of guidelines, reflecting changes in cholesterol management since their previous report in 1993. In addition to modifying current strategies of risk assessment, the new guidelines stress the importance of an aggressive therapeutic approach in the management of hypercholesterolemia. The major risk factors that modify low-density lipoprotein goals include age, smoking status, hypertension, high-density lipoprotein levels, and family history. The concept of "CHD equivalent" is introduced-conditions requiring the same vigilance used in patients with coronary heart disease. Patients with diabetes and those with a 10-year cardiac event risk of 20 percent or greater are considered CHD equivalents. Once low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is at an accepted level, physicians are advised to address the metabolic syndrome and hypertriglyceridemia.
...
PMID:Cholesterol treatment guidelines update. 1189 52

The bulk of the experimental data suggest beneficial effects of estrogen (both premenopausal use of OCs and postmenopausal use of ERT-HRT). An intriguing finding from the monkey studies is that social subordination, which induces estrogen deficiency in female monkeys, accelerates atherosclerosis premenopausally and predicts extent of postmenopausal atherosclerosis. This effect can be inhibited by exogenous estrogen, premenopausally. The results suggest that more effort on detecting and regulating premenopausal ovarian dysfunction may be justified. A complication in understanding estrogen action may be the result of varying extents of arterial damage. For example, primary prevention studies in both postmenopausal animals and women have provided strong evidence of atheroprotection with a variety of estrogens. In contrast, the results of secondary prevention studies [10,12] have in general suggested little cardioprotection with either ERT or HRT. Studies in rabbits suggest the antiatherogenic effect of estrogen may not be present when the endothelium is damaged [64]. The state of the endothelium may be critical for some estrogen actions. For those effects of estrogen that require the ER, be it ERalpha or ERbeta, the presence of the receptor may vary with age, disease state, or type of hormone therapy. If continuous combined HRT therapy decreases ER in the artery as it does in the uterus, this may eliminate those estrogen actions requiring the ER, but not others. Older women who have not been exposed to estrogens for many years may be more sensitive to some estrogen effects, and may need lower doses of ERT-HRT. Recent reports suggest that lower doses of estrogens maintain beneficial effects on lipoproteins and coagulation factors [95], while also requiring lower doses of progestogens to protect the uterus [96]. These beneficial findings are very promising in light of the improvements in CHD risk and decreased stroke risk reported with low-dose estrogens [5]. It ill be interesting to see if CRP is increased with lower doses of estrogens and whether these changes are associated with increased early risk of CHD. Perhaps older women with CHD are also more obese, may have diabetes, and may be more susceptible to inflammatory and thrombotic effects of higher doses of estrogens. There are many questions left unanswered. It is hoped that some of the answers may come from the WHI, which is a large prospective trial assessing ERT and HRT. The age range is also relatively large and may be able to determine if older women respond differently than younger women. Some initial data from the WHI have been made available suggesting a small increased risk in the first 2 years and a trend for decreasing risk in the last months of the first 2 years [34]. Just recently, the CEE + MPA arm of the study was stopped early by the data and-safety monitoring board as the overall health risks exceeded benefits with increases in both breast cancer and CVD [97]. The remainder of the study groups including an estrogen-only arm, are expected to continue until 2005.
...
PMID:Reproductive hormones and cardiovascular disease mechanism of action and clinical implications. 1235 69

In this chapter, we have reviewed many of the steps necessary for effective CHD risk reduction. The first step in the office setting is to assess the individual CHD risk. This combines the evaluation of current CHD or a "secondary risk equivalent" with the counting of risk factors and in many cases, the absolute risk calculation. The next steps are to consider each of the major modifiable risk factors (hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, smoking status) to set goals for each and then work to achieve those goals through lifestyle changes and medication therapy. We reviewed each of these risk factors in detail and then turned to a discussion of emerging risk factors that may help "fine-tune" the risk assessment in some borderline cases. We also discussed additional non-invasive testing that is available to the clinician to help refine the assessment of current burden of disease. Finally, we discuss some of the barriers that exist on both a global and local level to effective treatment of CHD risk factors.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease prevention. 1252 4

CHD mortality is extremely low in Japan, particularly in rural districts, when compared with that in Western countries. This has been partly attributed to the difference in dietary lifestyle. We investigated the factors influencing CHD mortality in a rural coastal district of Japan, comprising mercantile, farming, and fishing areas with distinct dietary habits. We prospectively examined the incidence of CHD from 1994 to 1998, as well as coronary risk factors and serum fatty acid concentrations. The incidence of angina pectoris was significantly (P=0.01) lower in the fishing area than in the mercantile and farming areas. Blood pressure, physical activity, prevalence of diabetes, serum levels of uric acid and HDL-cholesterol were similar between the three areas. Total- and LDL-cholesterol levels were significantly lower but the smoking rate was markedly higher in the fishing area than in the other two areas. Serum levels of saturated fatty acids and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) were lowest in the fishing area, but n-3 PUFA did not differ significantly. The n-6:n-3 PUFA ratio was lowest and eicosapentaenoic:arachidonic acid was highest in the fishing area. Although many previous studies have emphasized the beneficial effect of n-3 PUFA in preventing CHD, the present study indicated that a lower intake of n-6 PUFA and saturated fatty acids has an additional preventive effect on CHD even when the serum level of n-3 PUFA is high because of high dietary fish consumption.
...
PMID:Serum fatty acid levels, dietary style and coronary heart disease in three neighbouring areas in Japan: the Kumihama study. 1257 11

Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) plays a central role in triglyceride metabolism, and the LPL gene T495G HindIII polymorphism has been associated with variations in lipid levels and heart disease in Caucasians with the more common H+ allele being associated with adverse lipid profiles and increased risk of CHD. We investigated this polymorphism in 785 Chinese subjects with varying components of the metabolic syndrome, including 61.4% with early-onset type 2 diabetes (age at diagnosis < or = 40 years), and 167 healthy control subjects using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) method. The allele and genotype frequencies were similar in the patients and control subjects. When grouped above or below standard cutoffs for triglyceride levels, the H+ allele was more frequent in hypertriglyceridemic than that in normotriglyceridemic subjects in the total population (81.5% v 76.1%) and early-onset type 2 diabetics (84.4% v 77.4%, both P <.05). Moreover, H+H+ carriers had significantly higher plasma triglyceride and lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol levels when compared to subjects with the H- allele in the total population, and in patients with early-onset diabetics (both P <.05). In the total population and the early-onset diabetic patients, this relationship was confined to males when gender was considered. We conclude that the H+ allele of the LPL gene HindIII polymorphism is associated with higher plasma triglyceride and lower HDL-cholesterol levels in Chinese patients with early-onset diabetes.
...
PMID:The lipoprotein lipase gene HindIII polymorphism is associated with lipid levels in early-onset type 2 diabetic patients. 1264 73

Unlike the rare and severe genetic defects that cause monogenic diseases, the genetic factors that modulate the individual susceptibility to multifactorial diseases (cardiovascular diseases, cancers, diabetes, etc.) are common, functionally different, forms of genes (polymorphisms), which generally have a modest effect at an individual level but, because of their high frequency in the population, can be associated with a high attributable risk. Environmental factors can reveal or facilitate the phenotypic expression of such susceptibility genes. Indeed, in common diseases genetic effects can be considerably amplified in the presence of triggering factors. There is now accumulating evidence that most of the susceptibility genes for common diseases do not have a primary aetiological role in predisposition to disease, but rather act as response modifiers to exogenous factors such as stress, environment, disease, drug intake. A better characterisation of the interactions between environmental and genetic factors constitute a key issue in the understanding of the pathogenesis of multifactorial diseases. The present paper will review three examples of gene-environment interactions in the field of CHD.
...
PMID:Gene-environment interaction: a central concept in multifactorial diseases. 1269 Nov 75


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>