Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:[Various epidemiological aspects of hyperuricemia and gout in Mexico: incidence and the cardiovascular risk factor]. 72 44
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).
...
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.
...
PMID:[Myocardial infarction: comparative study of principal risk factors in the two sexes]. 82 69
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.
...
PMID:Diseases in urban and rural Black populations. 85 Aug 43
The diagnostics of hyperlipoproteinaemias is essentially based on the proof of biochemical parameters. The simultaneous determination of triglycerides and cholesterol in the serum is the most important measure for establishing disturbances of the lipid metabolism. The behaviour of these two lipids, the consideration of the serum and the lipoprotein electrophoresis in most cases make possible a classification according to the distributed all over the world and clinically relevant division according to Fredrickson. Loading tests for the early recognition of hyperlipoproteinaemias - analogus to protodiabetes - are hitherto not yet known. Within the diagnostics shoude be taken into consideration that hyperliproproteinaemias are frequently associated with other metabolic diseases (
obesity
,
gout
, diabetes mellitus, hypertension) as so-called metabolic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of primary hyperlipoproteinemias]. 90 91
Sumo is an ancient sport in Japan and there are at present over 800 professional sumo wrestlers (rikishis). After entrance into the wrestler society a wrestler takes strenuous daily training together with a very high calorie diet (more than 5,000 cal). Frequency of food intake is twice a day. The average diet of Japanese people contains of 2,279 calories and the meal frequency is generally three times a day. In 96 wrestlers average actual body weight and modified Broca index was 100.4 kg and 143.5%, respectively. In this group the prevalence of overweight with
obesity
, overweight without
obesity
, nonoverweight with
obesity
, and nonoverweight without
obesity
was 53.4, 39.1, 1.0, and 6.5%, respectively. Also mean serum levels of triglyceride, phospholipid, uric acid, and total protein were significantly higher than those obtained in 89 age-matched healthy males. The incidence of diabetes mellitus,
gout
, and hypertension in wrestlers was 5.2, 6.3, and 8.3%, respectively, all values being considerably higher than in controls. Weight correlated significantly with skinfold thickness, diastolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, and uric acid in each group. Multiple regression analyses were made treating weight or uric acid as dependent variables in both groups.
Obesity
, hyperlipidemia, and hyperuricemia in wrestlers were presumed to be caused chiefly by the high calorie diet and partially by the infrequent meal intake.
...
PMID:Some factors related to obesity in the Japanese sumo wrestler. 97 5
Obese
people, more than 45 kg above their ideal weight, can be treated by an intestinal by-pass. This operation must be reserved for patients where conservative treatment failed, where there is no organic origin, and given the operative risk be not increased by underlying serious disease. Good pre- and postoperative collaboration of the patient together with clinical and biological controls are essential. The operation consists of an end-to-side jejuno-ileostomy with proximal suture of the blind loops; or an end-to-end jejuno-ileostomy with implantation of the blind loops in the colon. Loss of weight to near ideal plus improvement of diabetes, hypertension,
gout
and hyperlipaemia can be expected. Diarhea will occur for a few months or one year. Biochemical values usually remain stable: values for lipids decrease to lower normal if elevated before the operation. During fast weight loss, there are changes in the liver structure and hepatic tests; these are transient and reversible.
...
PMID:[Intestinal by-pass for obesity (author's transl)]. 98 31
Historical evidence suggests that the Maori people of New Zealand were virtually untroubled by
gout
or
obesity
at a time when these disorders, along with other elements of the gouty diathesis, were rife in the best fed and hardest drinking sections of the Northern European population. By the mid 20th century, however, the apparent decline of the
gout
in Europe and North America and the breakup of the gouty diathesis in those lands had been more than compensated by their large-scale reappearance in the Maori and in other indigenous inhabitants of the Pacific Basin who, at first sight, appeared to have become one large gouty family. Half the Polynesian population of New Zealand, Rarotonga, Puka Puka, and the Tokelau Islands proved to be hyperuricemic by accepted European and North American standards, the associated
gout
rate reaching 10.2% in Maori males aged 20 and over. The trends towards hyperuricemia and
gout
, on the one hand, and towards
obesity
, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and associated degenerative vascular disorders, on the other hand, which manifest themselves separately in some Polynesian Pacific Islanders, run together in the Maori and Samoan people, presenting a combined problem of considerable importance to the public health. The appearance of these traits under conditions of plenty in the descendants of hardy and wide-ranging Polynesian voyagers, suggests the emergence of a formerly favorable ancestral polygenic variation through selection for survival under harder conditions. This may now have lost its primitive survival value with a paradoxic shift towards increased prevalence of
obesity
and the gouty diathesis in more affluent environmental conditions. This may now constitute a genetic load, with recent environmentally determined increase in morbidity and mortality rates from degenerative vascular disorders. There is no satisfactory evidence that overproduction of uric acid differs in mechanism from its European counterparts, although more work remains to be done to determine whether there is any difficulty in renal handling of an increased uric acid load. A high Maori morbidity rate from
gout
and morbidity and mortality rates from associated components of the gouty diathesis in the face of readily available skilled medical advice and care, indicate the need for greater future attention to help education and health care delivery, at least while conditions of plenty continue. Continuation of previous epidemiologic surveillance may then be required in order to provide a continuing index of the effectiveness of these measures, as well as an opportunity for further research into the interrelationships of these associated disorders.
...
PMID:Gout in Maoris. 110 93
1) Patients with myocardial infarction constituted 2.36% of all the hospitalized patients during 1961-1968. The mortality of the hospitalized patients with myocardial infarction during the same term was 19.1%. The ratio of the male to female patients with myocardial infarction was 5.2. 2) As the risk factors of myocardial infarction, the following items were considered to be of importance: 1.
gout
in past history, 2. angina pectoris in family history, 3. diabetes mellitus in family history, 4. cigaret smoking over 40 pieces per day, 5. diabetes mellitus in past history, 6. administrative occupation, 7. serum cholesterol level over 250 mg/100 ml, 8.
obesity
of 20% excess over standard body weight, 9. hypertension in family history. 3) According to the statistical analysis, several groups of risk factors and interrelationship of risk factors are recognized.
...
PMID:The incidence of myocardial infarction in hospitalized patients and the risk factors of myocardial infarction. 115 99
The effects of low-mineral content water (Adelholzener Primus-Quelle) in 62 patients were studied of which 14 were hypertonic. Changes of blood sodium, potassium, chloride and bicarbonate were not observed in either group. In the hypertonic patients, blood pressure decreased from a mean systolic value of 168 to 140 mmHg and mean distolic pressure from 105 to 88 mmHg. Observations to date suggest the following indications for a low-mineral content water diet: 1. hypertension, 2. renal insufficiency in stages of compensated and decompensated retention, especially in cases with high serum potassium levels, 3. in the initial therapy of diabetes,
gout
and
obesity
; patients with a high water demand should be treated with low-mineral content water until the optimal intake of electrolytes is established.
...
PMID:[Effects of water with a low mineral content on serum electrolytes and blood pressure]. 122 36
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>