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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (gout)
5,192 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty-three patients suffering from hypertension of different origin (chronic renal failure, gout, or idiopathic) were treated with propranolol (121 +/- 12 mg q.d.) plus hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg q.d.) for 75 +/- 9 days. Blood pressure did not return to normal limits in 15 patients, who were continued on the same protocol plus 10 to 50 mg oxdralazine q.d. After an average of 68 +/- 35 days blood pressure fell from 180/110 mm Hg to 145/90 mm Hg without orthostatism, significant side effects, or changes in GFR. This combination seems particularly successful since propranolol will prevent the undesired rise in cardiac output due to oxdralazine as well as the activation of the renin-angiotensin axis due to diuretics. Thus, the antihypertensive properties of each agent will be enhanced by a reduction in side effects by the associated drug, resulting in optimal blood pressure control.
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PMID:Oxdralazine, a new peripheral vasodilator, combined with propranolol and hydrochlorothiazide: a rational approach to antihypertensive treatment. 53 72

Coffee as a rule develops stimulating effects on the central nervous system, heart and circulation which are mainly caused by caffeine. In certain cases coffee may also have a sedative effect and sometimes even it is useful to fall asleep quickly. Furthermore coffee may be advantageous in the treatment of some functional disorders caused by lacking of dopamine, because coffee is able to increase the dopamine formation in brain. Concerning the effects of coffee in the gastrointestinal-tract and liver-bile system caffeine is only of secondary importance. Hereby certain roasting substances, possibly also chlorogenic acid or caffeic acid should be responsible for the stimulating effects observed in these organs. These stimulating effects could be caused whether directly or indirect e.g. by liberating gastrin or other gastrointestinal hormones. Vitamin niacin, which is formed in greater amounts from trigonelline during the roasting process, may also be important from the nutritional standpoint. Therefore coffee may be prescribed as a true drug in cases of deficiency in vitamin niacin or also in the pellagra disease. By extensive epidemiological studies performed lately it could be demonstrated that there exists no correlation between coffee consumption and certain risk factors as hypertension, heart infarction, diabetes, gout or cancer diseases. Furthermore there was no evidence that coffee or its caffeine content are able to induce genetic alterations or even malformations.
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PMID:[Coffee and health]. 60 27

The importance of the gout is growing in the GDR as its frequency has been increasing since the sixties. The gout is a disease of metabolism with the following accompanying phenomena: renal lesion in gout, hypertension, cardiac diseases and peripheral arterial diseases. Besides, there are proved relations between hyperuricemia and obesity, hyperlipoproteinemia, diabetes mellitus as well as steatosis hepatis. In describing the nature of the gout the peculiarities of age are stressed. The treatment of the gout depends on the clinical state.
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PMID:[Gout in the age (author's transl)]. 61 69

To date, there is little information available on stroke risk factors in a major ethnic minority such as Mexican-Americans (M-A) in the USA. Forty-three M-A patients were admitted to The Methodist Hospital and Ben Taub General Hospital (Houston) for a 12-month period, with diagnosis of atherosclerotic stroke. Thrombosis was diagnosed in 31 patients (72%), embolism from atherosclerotic sources in seven (16.4%), and parenchymal hemorrhage in five (11.6%). Hypertension was a common risk factor in all groups, being higher in hemorrhage followed by thrombosis and embolism. Arteriosclerotic heart disease was a common risk to all stroke types. TIAs, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, associated atherosclerotic lesions, smoking, obesity, erythrocytosis and sedentary life were significantly associated with embolism; less so with thrombosis or hemorrhage. Gout was only associated with thrombosis. These results indicate similar risk factors for Anglo-saxons and M-A in the USA with some minor differences between the Mexican and the USA stroke series.
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PMID:Risk factors in stroke in a Mexican-American population (Houston). 61 32

We studied the prevalence and the risk factor among the patients of gout in Mexico. Research was conducted in the National Institute of Cardiology and in our private practice. Prevalence of hiperuricemia and gout in the Institute of Cardiology was of 1% (970 out of nearly 100,000 patients). We divided those cases of two subgroups: Reumatology patients (333) and Cardiovascular patients (529). In the first group primary gout was (96.3), and (50.32% in the second. Risk factor was quite different too: nephropathy 9.9%, lithiasis 9.3%, pyelonephritis 2.7%, cardioangiosclerosis 12.9%, aortosclerosis 6.6%, coronary insufficiency 6.3%, myocardial infarction 0.9%, arterial hypertension 24.6% obesity 56.1% and diabetes 9.9% in the Reumatology group; in the Cardiovascular one, nephropathy 14.3%, lithiasis 12.2%, pyelonephritis 7.1%, cardioangiosclerosis 62.7%, aortosclerosis 31.7%, coronary insufficiency 24.9%, myocardial infarction 29%, arterial hypertension 51%, obesity 54.8% and diabetes 20.4%. Among the private practice patients prevalence was of 10.1% (961). In an early age (39 years) in men and a later one for women (53 years). Other characteristics of epidemiology and risk factor are: primary gout 89%, atherosclerosis 5%, coronary disease 4.6%, lithiasis 4.7%, nephropathy 2%, pyelonephritis 1%, obesity 43%, and diabetes 4.6%. In an small group of patients of our private practice we made an exhaustive study of risk factor and the metabolic disorder of lipids. We found the following frequency: 9.3 of nephropathy, 31.2% of lithiasis, 18.7% of pyelonephritis, 68.9% of cardioangiosclerosis, 46.8% de coronary insufficiency, 9.3% of myocardial infarction, 68.7% of arterial hypertension, 68.7% of obesity and 18.7% of diabetes. In the lipid profile we found an increase in triglicerids and prebeta lipoprotein. We have amply discussed the relation between hiperuricemia and pathology considered as a risk factor from the genetic point of view as well as the metabolic and circumstancial aspect. From all that we concluded that risk is multifactorial.
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PMID:[Various epidemiological aspects of hyperuricemia and gout in Mexico: incidence and the cardiovascular risk factor]. 72 44

A study of the clinical profile of gout-diagnosed patients was undertaken within general practice in Great Britain. At the time of the first attack of acute gouty arthritis, the mean age was 52.3 years and 15.6% of the total 1077 patients were female. Males had an earlier clinical onset than females and the average frequency of attacks of acute gouty arthritis was 0.91 per patient year. Ten per cent of the cases were believed to be secondary gout, with diuretic therapy the most frequent cause. The sample showed a highly significant association between gout and the higher social classes, a family history among blood relatives in 23% of cases, tophi were noted in 4.6% of cases where sought and 38.2% of cases were 10% or more overweight and significantly heavier than a non-gouty population. The great toe joint was most frequently involved, both in the first episode and in all acute episodes combined. The most frequently occurring associated chronic condition was hypertension which was present in 27.8% of cases. Renal stones occurred in 6.1% and renal impairment in 2.2%. Only 20.4% of the patients were referred to hospital, with the younger being referred more frequently than the older. Those with joint involvement other than the great toe had a greater chance of being referred, as did those who also had angina pectoris, myocardial infarction and hypertension. Allopurinol appeared to be the drug of choice for long-term control therapy and phenylbutazone for the acute attack.
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PMID:The gout patient in general practice. 73 15

The relationship between obesity and 18 different disease conditions was examined in a cross-sectional study of 73,000 weight-conscious women (TOPS Club members). The women reported an average of 1.6 disease conditions each (based on their responses on a questionnaire). Age-specific rates of occurrence for the age group 30-49 years were calculated for each disease condition. The conditions that were found to be significantly (P smaller than 0.001) correlated with obesity were diabetes, high blood pressure, gallbladder disease, gout, thyroid disease, heart disease, arthritis, and jaundice. When the crude relative risks of obesity for each disease condition were calculated, diabetes was found to be the highest (4.5), high blood pressure was second (3.3), and gallbladder disease was third (2.7).
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PMID:Relationship of ovesity and disease in 73,532 weight-conscious women. 80 96

A study of the distribution of the various risk factors for coronary artery disease as a function of the age and sex of a homogenous population of 316 patients has brought to light the following findings: -- These was found to be a greater incidence (statistically significant) of hypertension disorders of glucose metabolism obesity and hypercholesterolaemia in the females, and of tobacco consumption (cigarettes) and, to a lesser extent, of hypertriglyceridaemia and of gout in the males; -- The females who 'tot up' risk factors have their myocardial infarction at a greater age than the males -- The risk factor which separates the two sexes in the consumption of cigarette tobacco. These findings agree with those already in the literature.
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PMID:[Myocardial infarction: comparative study of principal risk factors in the two sexes]. 82 69

Gouty arthritis in females is relatively infrequent, although the sex ratio may be somewhat altered in different races. A positive family history is relatively prevalent among females whose onset of gout is premenopausal. In those patients with a postmenopausal onset, the incidence of diuretic-associated gout is high. The bimodal distribution of serum urate might be related to some variance of genetic transmission in female gout. Hypertension and coronary heart disease are common coexisting conditions, as is true of gouty arthritis in males. Chronic urinary tract infection dating from previous pregnancies is a frequent complication. The relative prevalence of proteinuria and diminished renal function leads to increased hyperuricemia, with a tendency to a low urinary uric acid output. This explains in part the higher incidence of extensive tophaceous deposition but lower incidence of renal calculi. Diuretics are associated with a higher urine pH, likewise, they reduce the urinary uric acid excretion. This also may contribute to the lower incidence of renal calculi. There may be some statistical support for the low fertility rate among the gouty females. Only two females became pregnant after the onset of gouty arthritis. All other pregnancies occurred before the onset of arthritis. Even then, abnormal pregnancies were relatively frequent. Some hormonal malfunction among the gouty females cannot be discounted. Both renal calculi and tophi are frequent in female gout associated with blood dyscrasias. They may manifest early, preceding the first attack of acute gouty arthritis. In both the male and female secondary gout, the primary underlying disease governs the uric acid metabolism and the clinical symptomatology of gout. The predominant role in pathogenesis is the excessive rate of uric acid production, and its disposal is governed by the different stages of the underlying disease and the treatment. Thus, secondary gout in females appears to be somewhat different from primary gout in females, but not different from secondary gout in males.
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PMID:Some unusual features of gouty arthritis in females. 83 22

Diseases of urban and rural Blacks in South Africa are reviewed. In rural Blacks the major problems are infection and malnutrition. Other important disorders include cancer of the oesophagus, liver and cervix, and rheumatic heart disease and cardiomyopathy. The diseases in urban Blacks are those of a population in transition. Characterised by all gradations of socioeconomic development, from the relatively primitive to the completely westernised, these people exhibit a correspondingly wide and varied range of disease embracing the afflictions of rural dwellers and the new diseases of the city. Whereas the prevalence of some of the former, such as infection and malnutrition, is declining, they still constitute a considerable problem in urban Blacks. More important is the increasingly serious impact of the new disorders, which may be divided into two groups: (a) a large range and variety of alcohol-related disorders with serious effects at the social, economic, psychological and physical levels; and (b) most, if not all, of the diseases encountered in western populations. Some of these, such as obesity and hypertension, have not only attained epidemic proportions among urban Blacks, but their prevalence may actually have exceeded that among Whites. Other conditions, such as coronary heart disease, gout, gallstones and colonic cancer, which emerged later, are relatively uncommon or rare. A plea is made for much greater epidemiological research. This is necessary in order to obtain reliable knowledge of the prevalence of disease, to determine the best ways of applying present knowledge with existing and future resources, and to obtain knowledge regarding both old and new diseases of which the pathogenesis is still obscure.
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PMID:Diseases in urban and rural Black populations. 85 Aug 43


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