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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Studies on the pathogenic potential of the human cardiotropic enterovirus, coxsackievirus B5, show that this agent localizes and replicates in the aorta of mice. Nutritionally-induced hypercholesterolemia leads to an increased replication and persistence of virus in tissues, specifically the aorta. Coxsackievirus B cardiopathy is markedly augmented in the hypercholesterolemic host, resulting in a persistent cardiomyolysis which is not evident in virus-infected animals with normal cholesterol levels. Pathological changes in the aorta become evident only months after the acute infection, and only in hypercholesterolemic animals previously infected with coxsackievirus B5. Our findings of coxsackievirus B-induced angiopathy and cardiopathy in the hypercholesterolemic host extend the known pathogenic range of these human viruses, and further emphasizes their potential as etiological agents of cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Coxsackievirus B cardiopathy and angiopathy in the hypercholesterolemic host. 21 92

Groups of patients such as the elderly, the diabetic and women have been studied to evaluate the effectiveness of coronary revascularization. In this report 77 patients under age 40 years undergoing coronary revascularization were studied. There was a high prevalence rate of predisposing factors. Sixty-eight percent reported a family history of heart disease and 27 percent a history of diabetes; 57 percent were hypertensive, 43 percent were overweight, 91 percent smoked, 5 percent were diabetic and 16 percent had abnormal glucose tolerance curves. Sixty-four percent had hypercholesterolemia (cholesterol 250 mg/100 ml) and 56 percent hyperlipidemia. Forty-four percent had had a previous myocardial infarction; 95 percent had angina pectoris, 12 percent preinfarction angina and 9 percent congestive cardiac failure. There were no operative deaths. The incidence rate of perioperative myocardial infarction (new Q waves in the electrocardiogram) was 4 percent. The mean length of of follow-up was 26 months (range 6 months to 5 years). The late mortality rate was 4 percent. Eight percent had a late myocardial infarction. Overall graft patency was 85 percent. Sixty-seven percent of patients were free of angina, and 17 percent were in improved condition. Seventy-one percent returned to work, while 29 percent remained unemployed. This study shows that in young patients, coronary revascularization is associated with low mortality and morbidity rates and that, despite the wide prevalence of predisposing factors, the prognosis and graft patency rate of these patients are similar to those of other groups.
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PMID:Coronary revascularization under age 40 years. Risk factors and results of surgery. 62 35

Hypercholesterolemic and normal neonates from hypercholesterolemic kindreds were studied for 6 to 30 months. Sixteen of 22 hypercholesterolemic neonates and eight of 11 normal neonates came from families with "monogenic" hyperlipoproteinemia. At 6 or 12 months of age, plasma cholesterol level was greater than 200 mg/100 ml in eight of the 16 neonates with hypercholesterolemia. Four of these eight had cholesterol levels greater than or equal to 290 mg/100 ml at ages 6 to 18 months. On low cholesterol intake, at ages 6 to 12 months, five of seven infants with hypercholesterolemia had cholesterol levels less than 200 mg/100 ml. One of eight normal neonates from families with hypercholesterolemia had cholesterol levels greater than 200 mg/100 ml at ages 6 to 12 months. Neonatal diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolemia provides an opportunity for long-term primary prevention in a group at high genetic risk for premature is chemic heart disease.
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PMID:Neonatal familial hypercholesterolemia. 113 Mar 45

The known risk factors for atherosclerosis do not possess the same significance in young people as in the elderly. Hypercholesterolemia, diabetes and cigarette smoking appear to have a greater bearing below the age of 50 than later, particularly in myocardial infarction but also in apoplexy. On the other hand, hypertension is an important factor in the young and, especially in the case of apoplexy, even more so in advanced age. There is marked difference with regard to preexisting heart disease, which scarcely plays a role in myocardial infarction of the younger patient but is a factor in some 50% of hemiplegia cases. Only one fifth of elderly patients with this disease have no preexisting carcdiopathy. The similarity of the risk factors in elderly patients either with or without apoplexy is due to the fact that arteriosclerosis is already established in both groups and the risk factors which give rise to ischemia, thrombosis or embolism assume prominence. The therapeutic implications are briefly discussed.
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PMID:[Risk factors and age]. 113 58

The prevalence of coronary heart disease (58%) in 43 patients with analgesic nephropathy with moderate to severe chronic renal failure was significantly higher than in the general population of the same age and sex. Mean serum triglyceride concentration and mean diastolic blood pressure were significantly higher in the group with coronary heart disease (214 mg/dl and 102 mm Hg, respectively) than in the group without it (162 and 94). Serum triglyceride values correlated inversely with GFR, indicating that hypertriglyceridemia was largely due to associated chronic renal failure; a specific effect of analgesic abuse on prevalence of heart disease, noted by others, could not be assessed in the absence of GFR-matched controls. The prevalence of coronary heart disease was significantly higher (81%) in the group with combined hyperlipidemia (hypertriglyceridemia and hypercholesteremia) compared to the groups without it or with normal serum triglyceride concentrations (44 and 41%, respectively). Hypotryptophanemia (a possible cause of hyperlipidemia in the nephrotic syndrome) was present in 77% of patients.
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PMID:Increased prevalence of coronary heart disease in analgesic nephropathy: relation to hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia and combined hyperlipidemia. 126 11

Women, like men, are susceptible to coronary atherosclerosis. Like men, more women die of heart disease than all forms of cancer combined. Coronary atherosclerosis is the result of the interplay of a number of factors, the most important of which are abnormal levels of circulating lipoproteins. As more has become known about the mechanisms by which abnormal levels of circulating lipoproteins promote atherosclerosis, certain risk factors have emerged as concerns for women, including: (1) diabetes mellitus as a risk factor, perhaps through its more profound effects on circulating lipoproteins; (2) serum triglyceride levels, and (3) changes in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. The widespread use of exogenous hormones in women as both oral contraceptives and postmenopausal hormone replacement may also play a role in developing atherosclerosis. In general, estrogen affects circulating lipoprotein levels favorably, whereas progestins have the opposite effect. The effects of estrogen/progestin combinations in either oral contraceptives or postmenopausal hormone replacement will depend on the relative dose and potency of each of these constituents. Epidemiologic studies indicate that the use of oral contraceptives has no profound effect on the long-term risk of heart disease, whereas unopposed estrogen (without progestin) in postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy may lower that risk considerably. Recent U.S. and European guidelines for the detection, evaluation, and treatment of hypercholesterolemia in adults make it imperative that obstetrician-gynecologists, in their dual role as primary-care physicians and prescribers of exogenous hormones, be aware of and informed about the relationship between circulating lipids and lipoproteins and coronary heart disease in women.
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PMID:Women, lipoproteins, and cardiovascular disease risk. 135 61

A case control study of transient global amnesia (TGA), transient ischaemic attacks (TIA) and normal controls is described. Each of the 51 TGA patients, selected between January 1985 and March 1990, was compared with four controls (two TIAs and two normals) for the presence of vascular risk factors (hypertension, diabetes, smoking habits, cholesterol, triglycerides and haematocrit levels, heart disease, previous stroke), previous TGA, migraine, psychiatric illness and recent head trauma. Patients with TGA had less diabetes, hypercholesterolaemia and hypertriglyceridaemia than TIA. TGA subjects had significantly more hypertension (odds ratio = 3.31) and migraine (odds ratio = 8.67) than normal controls. During a mean of 17.4 mths of follow-up (range 1-96 mths), three subjects had recurrent TGA, one sustained a TIA and a minor stroke, but none had seizures. Thrombo-embolism and epilepsy are unlikely to be the cause of this benign disorder. The role is stressed of appropriate precipitants, including haemodynamic changes, and of individual susceptibility (of which migraine is probably a marker) in the genesis of TGA.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia. A case control study. 155 58

BACKGROUND. In a national survey sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, 62% of primary care physicians of children (under age 18 years) believed that high levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in childhood had a great effect on subsequent heart disease risk. RESULTS. About 75% believed high blood pressure, smoking, and diabetes had similar effects. Although routine cholesterol screening in children under age 10 was infrequent, 72% of physicians screened high risk children. The age at which screening was done varied markedly; more pediatricians screened children younger than 5 years. The majority of physicians who saw children with high blood cholesterol instituted nondrug therapy, with pediatricians being most apt to do so. Low saturated fat diets were prescribed by 26% of these physicians and 9% of physicians prescribed increased polyunsaturated diets. Twelve percent of physicians treating hypercholesterolemic children used lipid-lowering drugs. Among those using drugs, 9% based drug use on total blood cholesterol measurements only. Factors that affected physician treatment of childhood hypercholesterolemia included physician specialty type, organization of practice (group or solo), and the age distribution of the pediatric patient population.
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PMID:Primary care physicians and children's blood cholesterol. 157 54

Coronary risk profile screening was performed in 1065 volunteers during the National Heart Week 1988 as part of the National Heart Association's campaign against the increasing incidence of ischaemic heart disease. Of particular importance was the use of a desktop analyser for lipid screening of total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. It was found that the mean serum cholesterol was 211 +/- 39.5 mg/dl, with 62% of the participants having a total cholesterol greater than 200 mg/dl and 23.1% having a total cholesterol greater than 240 mg/dl. For HDL cholesterol, the mean was 48.4 +/- 17 mg/dl, with 18.7% of the participants having a low HDL cholesterol of less than 35 mg/dl. The male Indians had a significantly lower HDL cholesterol compared to male Malays. Three or more risk factors for coronary artery disease was present in 21.7% of Chinese, 41.2% of Malays and 50% of Indians. We conclude therefore that a proportion of this volunteer population, the majority of which have no overt heart disease, is at risk from coronary artery disease from an elevated cholesterol or low HDL cholesterol level. A follow-up of 90 participants who were initially detected to have an elevated cholesterol in 1986, however, showed that only 54.4% still had an elevated cholesterol of greater than 240 mg/dl, thus suggesting that early detection may help to reduce this risk.
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PMID:Lipid screening in a volunteer population in Singapore. 159 Jun 57

The authors report on the results of a survey on cardiovascular accidents hospitalized between 01 April 1990 and 31 January 1991 carried out in the Services of Medicine and Cardiology in the Territorial Hospital Center of Papeete. This survey was: 56 cardiovascular accidents: 1/4 (hemorrhagic and 3/4 (42) ischemic. Mean age 59 (extremes 23-86). 36 males (64%); 20 females (36%). 50 Polynesians; 6 Chinese people. Among the risk factors recorded, 38 (68%) were hypertensed patients; 17 (30%) were due to tabagism and 15 (25%) to diabetes; 3 (5%) are known to be carriers of a hypercholesterolemia. 59% of the patients had no case history; 25% the cardiovascular accidents have been observed in patients with cardiopathy; 12.5% are recurrent cardiovascular accidents. Clinically, 5 transient ischemic accidents (12%) out of 42 cardiovascular ischemic accidents. High arterial tension was recognized in 12/14 (86%) of hemorrhagic cardiovascular accidents and in 26/42 (62%) of ischemic cardiovascular accidents. In 42 ischemic cardiovascular accidents, 31 patients suffered from cardiopathy (74%) of which 15 (36%) presented an embolic cardiopathy. Interest of echography and electrocardiogram are discussed. Ultrasonic exam of carotid vessels was found abnormal in almost half of the cases when utilized (12/26). Finally, etiological diagnosis was certain in 17 cases, of presumption in 16 cases, and in 9 cases, it was not possible to precise any cardiovascular etiology. Tomodensitometric tests are discussed. 86% of the ischemic cardiovascular accident were treated with anticoagulants/thrombocyte antiagglutination. 24% of the patients died, 50% recovered incompletely and 26% completely.
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PMID:[Cerebral vascular accidents in French Polynesia]. 160 53


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