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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to identify previously undiagnosed cases of non-insulin dependent diabetes (NIDDM) in general practice, we measured non-fasting blood-glucose in all risk patients (n = 1,790) between 35-69 years old belonging to 29 general practices in Kolding. Patients at risk for NIDDM were defined as those suffering from one or more of the following: overweight, arterial hypertension,
coronary heart disease
, hyperlipidaemia, stroke,
gout
, cataract, Dupuytren's contracture, peripheral atherosclerosis or recurrent urinary- or skin-infections. A positive result, defined as a non-fasting blood-glucose of > or = 8.0 mmol/l using the same stix-lot-nr. on Refloflux S machines, was found in 86 individuals. These were then followed up with two fasting blood-glucose measurements carried out in a central laboratory, whereby 34 patients with NIDDM were identified. The newly-diagnosed NIDDM patients mostly suffered from diseases related to the insulin resistance syndrome, and we thus recommend measurement of non-fasting blood-glucose as a screening procedure in such patients. When carrying out measurements in general practice, it is important to know the precision and accuracy of the apparatus used.
...
PMID:[Selective screening for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. A study among 35-69 year-old patients at risk in general practice in Kolding]. 801 51
Experts agree that overweight and obesity pose a significant public health problem in the United States. Obesity is considered to be a complex, multifactorial disease involving genetics, physiology, psychology, and environment, and is influenced by cultural messages. Comorbidities linked to obesity include
coronary heart disease
, stroke, hypertension, diabetes mellitus,
gout
, dyslipidemias, cholecystitis, and gallstones. Pharmacists can help patients with dietary goals by understanding sound principles of weight management.
...
PMID:Nonpharmacologic treatment of obesity. 895 51
Recently atherosclerotic diseases, such as
coronary heart disease
and cerebrovascular disease have been considered as an important complication of hyperuricemia and
gout
. However, it is still controversial whether or not hyperuricemia is an independent risk factor of atherosclerotic diseases. On the other hand, several risk factors for
coronary heart disease
, for example hyperlipidemia and hypertension, are frequently observed in the patients with
gout
. Atherosclerosis in relation to hyperuricemia was discussed in view of definite and probable risk factors.
...
PMID:[Gout and atherosclerosis]. 897 9
Overweight and obese adults are at increased risk for morbidity and mortality associated with many acute and chronic medical conditions, including hypertension, dyslipidemia,
coronary heart disease
, diabetes mellitus, gallbladder disease, respiratory disease, some types of cancer,
gout
, and arthritis. In addition, overweight during childhood and adolescence is associated with overweight during adulthood, and previous reports have documented an increase in the prevalence of overweight among children, adolescents, and adults from 1976-1980 to 1988-1991. This report presents data from CDC's Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) (1988-1994) to provide the most recent national estimates of overweight among children (ages 6-11 years), adolescents (aged 12-17 years), and adults (aged > or = 20 years) in the United States. The findings indicate that the prevalence of overweight in the United States has continued to increase.
...
PMID:Update: prevalence of overweight among children, adolescents, and adults--United States, 1988-1994. 907 80
The present review summarizes the current knowledge on the multiple effects of alcohol overconsumption on the kidney function as well as on water, electrolyte and acid-base homeostasis. In contrast to the well known transitory diuretic effects, the overall long-term effect of chronic alcohol overconsumption is water and salt retention with expansion of extracellular volume. Furthermore, depletion of magnesium, phosphate and calcium is also frequently found in alcohol-dependent patients. These electrolyte disturbances may be associated with the alcohol-induced hypoparathyroidism and parathyroid hormone resistance of the skeletal muscle as well as with the decrease of serum osteocalcin. Metabolic acidosis with lower arterial blood pH and plasma bicarbonate concentrations was revealed in alcoholic patients upon admission and a significant correlation between chronic alcohol overconsumption and increased incidence of hyperuricemia and
gout
attacks was also reported. Alcohol seems to have dual effects on the blood pressure. Increased blood pressure was demonstrated in men above 80 g and in women above 40 g ethanol consumption daily. In contrast, young adults consuming only 10 to 20 g per day had lower blood pressure than the abstinent group indicating a J-curve relationship. This is in line with the lowered risk for
coronary heart disease
associated with regular consumption of small alcohol amounts. The mechanisms responsible for the association between alcohol overconsumption and postinfectious glomerulonephritis have not been elucidated yet. Finally severe alcohol abuse predisposes to acute renal failure and seems to be associated with the general catabolic effects.
...
PMID:Alcohol abuse: potential role in electrolyte disturbances and kidney diseases. 987 14
About the 'Omnipotence' of the Chelation Therapy In the eighties the 'method of treatment proven in many thousands of cases over 20 years' was transferred from the USA to Germany (enjoys a priori considerable faith) using very dubious promises. It was Clarke et al. who introduced this 'therapy' in 1955. The dubious promise was to maintain that the chelation therapy eliminates or alleviates symptoms in the case of the following illnesses: Alzheimer's disease, senility, schizophrenia, rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis,
gout
, renal calculus, apoplectic coma, gallstones, multiple sclerosis, osteoporosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, varicose veins, hypertension, failure of memory, scleroderma, Raynaud's disease, digitalis intoxication, intermittent claudication, diabetic ulcer, disturbance of the blood supply, ulcer on the legs, snake poison, impotence, emotional difficulties, defective hearing, vision disorder. There is not the slightest proof of effectiveness for any of the listed indications. The burden of proof lies with the supplier. Even in the case of the relatively often examined peripheral atherosclerotic changes (claudicatio intermittens) there is no proof that EDTA has a greater effect than placebo. For
coronary heart disease
too there is no evidence for any usefulness of the chelation therapy beyond that of a placebo effect. Only controlled studies can help to improve the therapy in the sense of 'Evidence-based medicine'. Retrospective investigations on thousands of patients cannot 'prove' anything, although this is maintained again andagain.
...
PMID:ber die laquo;Omnipotenz>> der Chelattherapie. 997 59
Aim of this paper is to describe and discuss, on the basis of the available current literature, the case of a female patient affected by a tophaceous
gout
associated with plurimetabolic syndrome. Hyperuricemia and
gout
may be seen today in all the populations of developed countries, with increasing frequency on the last fifty years. Increased production or reduced urinary excretion of uric acid (and hypoxanthine and xanthine) are the most important pathogenetic mechanisms of primary or secondary hyperuricemia.
Gout
is an acute rheumatic disorder (characterized by a limited range of manifestations) which occurs in humans in connection with deposition of crystals of monosodium urate (the final product of purine metabolism) in the articular and soft periarticular tissues. Hyperuricemia and/or
gout
are often associated with hyperinsulinemia, obesity, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipemia, hypertension and atherosclerosis to form the syndrome called "Plurimetabolic syndrome" or "Syndrome X". Here we report the clinical case of a 64-year-old female patient who had android obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia and hyperuricemia and had been suffering (over many years) from intermittent episodes of severe pain and inflammatory joint swelling (first metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints) with development of pronounced multiple tophi in bone articular and soft periarticular tissues. Hyperuricemia and acute episodes had never been treated with anti-hyperuricemic drugs because gouty arthritis had never been diagnosed. This severe tophaceous
gout
associated to multiple metabolic disorders prompted us to present knowledge on
gout
and to focus on the interrelationships between hyperuricemia and/or
gout
and plurimetabolic syndrome, important risk factors for
coronary heart disease
.
...
PMID:[Tophaceous gout in plurimetabolic syndrome]. 1021 66
The clinical features and laboratory findings of 91 Thai patients (33 males and 58 females) with CPPD crystal deposition disease were studied. Their average age was 71.54 years. Acute monoarthritis and oligoarthritis were the two most common forms of presentation and were seen in 89 per cent of cases. The knee, wrist and ankle were the three most common joints involved. Associated diseases were common and included hypertension (30 cases), renal insufficiency (23 cases), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (17 cases),
coronary heart disease
(13 cases) and diabetes mellitus (12 cases). Eleven patients had malignancies. Five patients had concomitant
gout
and CPPD crystal deposition disease. The knee and the wrist were the two most common sites of chondrocalcinosis. Of 67 patients who had thyroid function tested, 2 had hyperthyroidism and 5 had hypothyroidism. Hypomagnesemia was seen in 19 per cent. None had hypercalcemia, hypophosphatasia, hemochromatosis or hyperparathyroidism. In contrast to the western series, acute arthritis in our series responded well to oral colchicine alone.
...
PMID:Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition: a clinical and laboratory analysis of 91 Thai patients. 1044 78
A positive association between hyperuricemia and cardiovascular disease has been reported, but no study has evidenced yet the precise role of serum uric acid in the development of cardiovascular disease. In addition, no epidemiological studies have so far documented a decreased risk of cancer among people with hyperuricemia, even though the antioxidant action of uric acid has recently been stressed to inhibit DNA damage. The present prospective cohort study investigates the relationship between hyperuricemia and health hazards in a Japanese working population. The subjects were 49,413 Japanese male railroad workers, aged 25-60 years at enrollment. Serum uric acid and other baseline data were provided by annual health-survey records from 1975 to 1982. The vital status of the subjects was traced until the end of 1985 for those who remained alive. During an average 5.4-year study period, 984 deaths were recorded. Those with serum uric acid over 8.5 mg/dl showed elevated relative risks (RRs) of death in all causes (RR 1.62, p<0.01),
coronary heart disease
( RR 1.52), stroke (RR 2.33, p<0.01), hepatic disease (RR 3.58, p<0.01), and renal failure ( RR 8.52, p<0.01), as compared with those with serum uric acid levels of 5.0-6.4mg/dl. The RR of death in all causes still remains statistically significant when adjusted by age and serum total cholesterol (2.00, p<0.01), age and alcohol intake (1.85, p<0.001), age and smoking (1.69, p<0.001), age and
gout
treatment (1.61, p<0.05), and also age and BMI (1.50, p< 0.05). On the other hand, the RR of all causes decreased but was still above 1.0 when adjusted by age and blood glucose (1.62), age and systolic blood pressure (1.32), age and GOT (1.23), and also age and history of cardiovascular disease (1.17). These results showed that hyperuricemia has a strong association with the RRs of death in all causes,
coronary heart disease
, stroke, hepatic disease and renal failure, and indicated that serum uric acid seems to be a considerable risk factor for reduced life expectancy.
...
PMID:Does hyperuricemia affect mortality? A prospective cohort study of Japanese male workers. 1121 Jan 10
Overweight and obesity represent a rapidly growing threat to the health of populations in an increasing number of countries. Indeed they are now so common that they are replacing more traditional problems such as undernutrition and infectious diseases as the most significant causes of ill-health. Obesity comorbidities include
coronary heart disease
, hypertension and stroke, certain types of cancer, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, gallbladder disease, dyslipidaemia, osteoarthritis and
gout
, and pulmonary diseases, including sleep apnoea. In addition, the obese suffer from social bias, prejudice and discrimination, on the part not only of the general public but also of health professionals, and this may make them reluctant to seek medical assistance. WHO therefore convened a Consultation on obesity to review current epidemiological information, contributing factors and associated consequences, and this report presents its conclusions and recommendations. In particular, the Consultation considered the system for classifying overweight and obesity based on the body mass index, and concluded that a coherent system is now available and should be adopted internationally. The Consultation also concluded that the fundamental causes of the obesity epidemic are sedentary lifestyles and high-fat energy-dense diets, both resulting from the profound changes taking place in society and the behavioural patterns of communities as a consequence of increased urbanization and industrialization and the disappearance of traditional lifestyles. A reduction in fat intake to around 20-25% of energy is necessary to minimize energy imbalance and weight gain in sedentary individuals. While there is strong evidence that certain genes have an influence on body mass and body fat, most do not qualify as necessary genes, i.e. genes that cause obesity whenever two copies of the defective allele are present; it is likely to be many years before the results of genetic research can be applied to the problem. Methods for the treatment of obesity are described, including dietary management, physical activity and exercise, and antiobesity drugs, with gastrointestinal surgery being reserved for extreme cases.
...
PMID:Obesity: preventing and managing the global epidemic. Report of a WHO consultation. 1123 59
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