Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although worksite health promotion programs have proliferated, little is known about the population they reach. This study of employees of a large utility company compared whether the same characteristics which predict recruitment also predict extended participation. The study also prospectively assessed how risk factors are related to employees' on-going extended participation. The findings demonstrate that sociodemographic predictors of recruitment are almost mirror images of the predictors of extended participation. Over time employees who are at higher risk for cardiovascular disease participated in on-going sessions less frequently. Data suggest that referral to targeted sessions does not result in higher rates of attendance by employees with a particular risk factor, although there is no evidence of selective avoidance. Organizational influences on participation evident from the beginning are sustained through four sessions. Programs targeting higher risk employees nested within worksite-wide programs may be useful to increase the extended participation of individuals at elevated risk for heart disease.
...
PMID:Predictors of employee involvement in a worksite health promotion program. 226 20

Substantial geographic variation of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality within the U.S. has been recognized for decades. Analyses reported here address the question of whether relative geographic inequality has increased or decreased during the period of rapidly declining CVD mortality 1962-1982. Trends in geographic inequality, as measured by the weighted coefficient of variation of State Economic Area rates, are analyzed for whites and blacks by sex for 10-year age groups 35-44 to 85 and over. The average annual percent change in the coefficient of variation for each demographic group is presented for all cause mortality, all CVD, stroke and ischemic heart disease. In general, geographic inequalities declined in total mortality for all except the youngest age group. This is consistent with reports of a strong convergence of age-adjusted cancer mortality in U.S. counties. By contrast, increasing geographic inequality dominates in the CVD categories, especially for whites in heart disease and stroke. At younger ages, increases in the coefficient of variation for all race-sex groups exceeded 1% per year in stroke and 2% per year in heart disease. These results suggest that factors influencing the percent decline of CVD mortality are not reaching communities of the U.S. equally. Since increases in relative inequality are strongest in the younger age groups, the pattern of inequality may be accentuated as these cohorts move into ages of higher mortality.
...
PMID:Trends in the geographic inequality of cardiovascular disease mortality in the United States, 1962-1982. 230 23

Twelve patients more than 8 years of age with complex congenital heart disease were evaluated prospectively with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging and with echocardiographic and angiographic imaging techniques. The subpulmonary region, main pulmonary artery, right and left pulmonary arteries, and aorticopulmonary shunts were clearly visualized by means of NMR imaging in all patients. Angiography defined the subpulmonary region and main pulmonary artery in all patients, the right and left pulmonary arteries along their length in 11 of 12 patients, and aorticopulmonary shunts in seven of eight patients. Except for the right pulmonary artery, echocardiography defined the remaining structures in less than or equal to 50% of patients. Measurement of the pulmonary artery diameters on NMR images correlated well with the angiographic measurements of both the left (r = 0.96) and right (r = 0.94) pulmonary arteries. These results suggest that NMR imaging may be the preferable noninvasive imaging technique for defining the anatomy of the subpulmonary region, main and left pulmonary arteries, and aorticopulmonary shunts in older patients with congenital cardiovascular disease and that it compares well with the angiographic standard.
...
PMID:Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging of the pulmonary arteries, subpulmonary region, and aorticopulmonary shunts: a comparative study with two-dimensional echocardiography and angiography. 233 Aug 69

Heart disease is the leading cause of mortality and a major cause of morbidity in women in the United States. Premenopausal and postmenopausal risk factors for cardiac disease must be reduced to protect women from this major health hazard. The main coronary risk factors for premenopausal women are hypertension, smoking, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and diabetes. Postmenopausal women have these risk factors in addition to a lack of estrogen. Most studies have shown that replacing estrogen in the menopausal woman reduces cardiovascular disease, probably by increasing HDL and decreasing LDL.
...
PMID:Protecting older women from their growing risk of cardiac disease. 233 76

Abnormalities of left ventricular (LV) filling may occur prior to systolic dysfunction in patients with both coronary and noncoronary heart disease. To determine the incidence of diastolic dysfunction and to assess the relationship of such dysfunction to systolic performance, we measured systolic and diastolic function at rest in a series of healthy volunteers (n = 10) and in patients with cardiovascular disease (n = 42). Twenty patients had coronary artery disease (CAD) with prior myocardial infarction, six patients had CAD without myocardial infarction, and the remaining 16 patients had a variety of noncoronary heart diseases, including valvular heart disease, dilated cardiomyopathy, and hypertensive disease. The 42 patients manifested a wide variation in LV systolic function (ejection fractions ranged from 6% to 65%). Patients with reduced LV ejection fraction (EF) manifested a reduction in cardiac output and peak ejection rate proportionate to the reduction in EF. Diastolic function showed a fall in LV peak (PFR) and average (AFR) filling rates; these were reduced in proportion to the fall in EF. Heart rate was an insensitive index of the magnitude of impairment of LV systolic function. These data suggest that measurements of diastolic function do not provide additional information in patients with impaired systolic function.
...
PMID:Evaluation of left ventricular diastolic function using an ambulatory radionuclide monitor: relationship to left ventricular systolic performance. 236 May 21

Heart disease and stroke have been the first and third leading causes of death, respectively, in the United States for many years, and the importance of primary and secondary prevention in reducing morbidity and mortality from these two disease entities has been well established. Additional confirmatory information continues to accumulate, but it is accepted that hypertension, smoking, and serum lipids are important risk factors in coronary heart disease and stroke. Although this discussion deals primarily with cardiovascular disease, many of the issues related to prevention and medical education are generic and are equally relevant to the prevention of other diseases, including HIV infection. Moreover, the way in which medical education approaches preventive cardiology is likely to be similar to the way in which prevention issues are approached in general.
...
PMID:Perspectives on prevention and medical education for the 1990s. 238 7

By examining coverage, concordance, and costs, this project evaluated four methods of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk screening at a work site with 1821 central office employees of an energy company in Houston, Tex. Screening methods included a health risk appraisal mail questionnaire (HRA), an HRA plus brief physical assessment, an analysis of medical claims data, and an analysis of absenteeism data. Coverage ranged from 99% of employees for the absenteeism method to about 30% for the HRA method. Combining the first three screening methods, 18% of families had at least one member with a CVD or related diagnosis or one of four major CVD risk factors. The absenteeism method yielded 12.1% of the central office employees with 9 or more days absent. Although the absenteeism method identified high-cost families, only 9% had a heart disease or related diagnosis. This lack of concordance also occurs with other methods. For example, only 9.4% of families identified with the claims data were also identified by the HRA. Therefore, the methods identify different groups of high-risk families. Findings are discussed in relation to costs and other factors important to firms' selection of screening methods.
...
PMID:Identifying families at high risk of cardiovascular disease: alternative work site approaches. 239 72

The site of origin of ventricular premature beats (VPBs) was estimated by QRS maps and its distribution in two patient groups was studied. VPB origin was determined by comparing the body surface map of VPBs with that during electrical stimuli applied at various sites of the ventricle. Subjects were 100 patients without obvious underlying cardiovascular disease (Group N) and 289 patients with various heart diseases (Group D). Nine sites of origin of VPB were identified. In group N, VPBs of right ventricular origin were noted in 69%, those of left ventricular origin in 6%. There was a relatively high incidence of VPBs with foci estimated to be the divisions of the left bundle branch, and the age of patients with these VPBs was young. In Group D, VPBs of left ventricular origin showed a higher incidence (34.6%) and those of right ventricular origin a lower incidence (41.2%) than those in group N. The data suggest that VPBs originating from the apex and base of the ventricle strongly indicate the presence of basic heart disease and that VPBs originating in or near the divisions of the left bundle branch in younger subjects do not necessarily indicate cardiac disease.
...
PMID:Sites of origin of ventricular premature beats in patients with and without cardiovascular disease evaluated by body surface mapping. 245 62

Cardiovascular diseases represent a major cause of morbidity and mortality in both obese and diabetic patients. The mechanisms by which diabetes or obesity cause the cardiac lesions is poorly understood. A number of risk factors associated with the development of atherosclerotic vascular disease, a precursor of heart disease, are found in diabetes and obesity. There is evidence that diabetes or obesity may even cause a primary cardiomyopathy. The use of animal models with obesity or diabetes with various combinations of risk factors may clarify what each component contributes to the expression of cardiovascular disease. This report summarizes some of the current information on the cardiovascular complications found in various animal models of obesity and diabetes.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease in genotypes for obesity and diabetes. 252 Feb 59

Nine hundred ninety-four patients were enrolled in a field trial in which ambulance crews were randomly assigned to use simultaneous compression-ventilation (SC-V) CPR or conventional CPR procedures in the prehospital setting. Survival to hospital admission and to discharge was superior in the conventional CPR group vs. the experimental group (p less than .01). In a subset of adult cases whose causes of arrest were nontraumatic, survivor rates still favored the conventional CPR group: 33.5% of 337 vs. 22.5% of 365 (p less than .001). In limited cases where cardiac arrest was due to other heart disease, was vascular in origin or secondary to other natural diseases or from hypertensive cardiovascular disease, or when ECG on arrival was an agonal rhythm, survival was better (but not statistically significantly) in the experimental group. There were no statistically significant differences in the Glasgow coma scores between surviving patients in either group at 24 h post-hospital admission or discharge. It is concluded that survival in the SC-V CPR group was lower, likely reflecting a deleterious effect of the experimental technique of resuscitation. Also noted was that 14% of the control patients and 6% of the experimental patients survived with manual CPR alone.
...
PMID:Comparison of prehospital conventional and simultaneous compression-ventilation cardiopulmonary resuscitation. 259 Dec 21


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