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

The influence of several diseases and conditions upon the prevalence of pulmonary embolism in autopsies performed over the July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1974 period at the University of Michigan Medical Center (Ann Arbor, Michigan) were analyzed. The prevalence of pulmonary was 12.3% in the 4600 necropsies in this sample. Patients with pulmonary fat emboli or tumor emboli and patients thought to have thrombosis of the pulmonary artery were not designated as having pulmonary thromboembolism. The patients were categorized with regard to heart disease on the basis of both clinical and necropsy findings. The major factors contributing to an increase in risk of development of pulmonary embolism include heart disease, certain types of cancer, obesity, acute paraplegia and accidental and operative trauma. Other risk factors which could not be assessed in this study include a prior history of venous thromboembolism, pregnancy and the puerperium, use of oral contraceptives, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Age plays a major role in the prevalence of pulmonary embolism. A portion of the effect of age is related to the age distribution of other diseases contributing to an increased risk, yet advanced age alone may have an independent influence. The risk factors defined should be used in a selective program designed to increase the rate of detection of deep venous thrombosis before pulmonary embolism occurs. Alternatively, patients at increased risk should be treated with prophylactic low dosage heparin during hospitalization.
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PMID:Risk factors in pulmonary embolism. 95 58

The role of circulatory congestion in the cardiorespiratory dysfunction of massive obesity was investigated in 18 patients. They were hypervolemic and had increased cardiac outputs proportionate to their weight. The average resting left ventricular filling pressure was within the upper limits of normal, but it increased to abnormally high levels with increased venous return of passive leg raising, and further during exercise. The elevations in pressure were associated with high resting central blood volumes which increased significantly with exertion. These findings are consistent with reduced distensibility of the central circulation in these congested patients. Weight reduction was accompanied by a decrease in central blood volumes and restoration of a normal left ventricular response in three of four patients and a return toward normal in one. The improvement in ventricular function with relief of edema and dyspnea. In 14 patients with normal or only minimal alveolar hypoventilation, there were no significant transpulmonary diastolic pressure gradients despite a marked increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressures. One patient, after regaining weight, subsequently had an abnormal gas exchange and an increased pulmonary vascular resistance. He and two others with severe alveolar hypoventilation demonstrated cor pulmonale on a background of left ventricular dysfunction and congestion of the circulation. Two other patients, the least obese of the group, had hypoventilation and cor pulmonale with normal left ventricular pressures. Hypervolemia and a hyperdynamic state are common features of the obese patients. High cardiac output is maintained despite marked circulatory congestion which may result in generalized anasarca and increased ventricular filling pressures. This clinical syndrome may be present in obese patients without intrinsic heart disease and may be reversible with weight reduction. The central circulatory congestion may contribute to the development of the alveolar hypoventilation syndrome in certain obese patients.
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PMID:Role of circulatory congestion in the cardiorespiratory failure of obesity. 102 Jul 53

Coronary- and LV-angiography in coronary heart disease are indicated I) to clarify whether or not surgery is required (e.g. aorto-coronary-bypass operation, aneurysmectomy) in 1) drug resistent angina pectoris, 2) myocardial aneurysms (or the suspicion of), 3) VSD following myocardial infarction and/or 4) as preoperative investigations in mitral regurgitation or 5) other valve lesions. II) These investigations are furthermore indicated in the under-50-yr.-old considering their prognosis and diagnosis 1) following myocardial infarction 2) to clarify a pathological exercise test with or without angina pectoris 3) in the differential diagnosis of myocardial diseases and 4) occasionally in patients with a number of risk factors or exposed to particular occupational hazards or from families with a high incidence of early deaths from heart disease. Coronary- and LV-angiography are contraindicated in 1) generalized stenosing atherosclerosis, 2) acute myocardial infarction, 3) failure from other organ-systems (e.g. kidney), 4) drug resistent endogenous risk factors and/or relevant obesity, 5) biological age over 60-65.6) continued nicotine dependence. In many cases the specific diagnostic investigations will include the assessment of coronary flow at rest and during maximal drug induced coronary dilatation. This enables us to estimate the coronary reserve and to diagnose coronary insufficiency in patients with normal coronary angiograms.- Instructive morphological and/or functional results illustrate this presentation.
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PMID:[Indications for coronary arteriography and left ventriculography in coronary heart disease (author's transl)]. 125 Nov 19

Two populations, one Montreal- and one Utah-based, were studied with respect to heart disease risk factors on a cross-sectional basis. The Utah population afforded consistently lower mean blood pressures than the Montreal population, although there was not evidence that the Utah population was less obese, or had a lower pulse rate. Also, in the Utah population, it was found that the proportion of persons with a family history of heart disease did not differ significantly in the hyper- and normo-tensive groups. Fourteen parameters were investigated in the Montreal population, and the analyses indicated that, when other variables are controlled, age, pulse rate, some measure of serum lipid levels, and a family history of heart disease generally assist in the discrimination between the hyper- and normo-tensive groups, but the obesity measurement did not. In that sense, obesity, on its own, may not be considered a risk factor for hypertension.
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PMID:A mathematical model of aging processes. IV. A multivariate analysis of blood pressure in a Montreal and a Utah population. 127 Jul 73

The information explosion characteristic of recent years has presented a series of findings enabling a more effective prevention of ischemic heart disease by controlling low density lipoprotein (LDL) levels of cholesterol. The detection of LDL receptors has provided new information on the mechanisms regulating the level of plasma LDL. Data on competitive inhibitors of endogenous cholesterol synthesis have afforded new possibilities of pharmacological control of LDL levels. Studies of primary prevention of ischemic heart disease have yielded evidence showing that a 1% decrease of cholesterol level reduces coronary risk by 2%. A prospective study of the relationship between cholesterol levels and coronary mortality, absolutely unique as to its extent (368,000 middle-aged men followed up over a period of 6 years) has demonstrated that there is no borderline cholesterol level below which coronary risk would be absolutely excluded. Between total cholesterol level and coronary mortality there is a close, continual and graded relationship. In light of these findings, total cholesterol levels have been reclassified: desirable levels -5.2 x 10(-3) mol.l-1, borderline risk levels under 5.2-6.2 x 10(-3) mol.l-1, and high risk levels--above 6.2 x 10(-3) mol.l-1. In subjects with several risk factors (smoking, hypertension, familial occurrence of heart, heart disease, obesity, diabetes mellitus, HDL cholesterol below 0.9 x 10(-3) mol.l-1) the level of total cholesterol should be brought down below 4 x 10(-3) mol.l-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Plasma cholesterol levels and ischemic heart disease: new findings and new approaches]. 139 27

Excessive intake of dietary fat is associated with a number of nutrition-related disorders, including obesity, heart disease, and cancer. The over-consumption of fat may be related to its palatability, high energy density, or physiological effects. This article reviews possible reasons why fat intake is high, examines the relationship between diet composition and body weight, and explores potential fat reduction strategies. It is concluded that low-fat or fat-free products could be useful in reducing the percentage of calories derived from fat, although this assertion needs to be further tested in controlled laboratory experiments and validated on a population basis.
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PMID:The influence of dietary fat on food intake and body weight. 143 63

Despite public health efforts, heart disease remains a leading cause of death and disease in the United States. There is sufficient evidence to justify the inclusion of regular exercise in efforts to reduce overall coronary heart disease (CHD) morbidity and mortality. This paper reviews the supportive evidence for this stance as well as the role of exercise in managing the major CHD risk factors of atherogenic serum lipids, hypertension, and obesity. Recognition of exercise as a lifestyle behavior is addressed and recommendations for prescribing exercise for adults interested in preventing CHD are presented.
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PMID:The role of exercise in reducing coronary heart disease and associated risk factors. 147 18

Equilibrium pool scintigraphy was performed in 11 obese subjects (BMI 34 +/- 2) and in 14 normal control subjects. Temporal and spatial smoothing of the data was then performed followed by time-activity curve generation using a semiautomatic second derivative edge-detection algorithm. The increase in counts during the first third of diastole divided by the total change in number of counts during diastole was determined as the one-third filling fraction. This index of diastolic filling was significantly decreased in obese subjects as compared to the control group. These findings indicate that diastolic abnormalities may be an early finding in obesity-linked heart disease, occurring in the presence of normal systolic function (E.F. = 65 +/- 5%).
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PMID:[Preclinical changes in left ventricular function in obesity. An angioscintigraphic study]. 149 60

We discuss how to identify the child at risk for developing or having heart disease. We describe both the child at risk for developing adult-onset heart disease and the child or fetus at risk for having congenital heart disease. With respect to the child at risk for developing adult-onset heart disease, we concentrate on how four risk factors (cigarette smoking, hyperlipidemia, reduced physical activity, and obesity) affect the development of cardiovascular disease, and we review the types of therapy currently being used to modify them. We also discuss the etiological factors related to the risk of developing congenital heart disease, such as single-gene conditions, known cardiac teratogens, chromosomal anomalies, and multifactorial inheritance.
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PMID:The child at risk for developing heart disease. 3. 156 69

Since the time that coronary artery disease was first described in the transplanted human heart, attempts have been made to define risk factors for its development. Although recent reports have emphasized immunologic and infectious (i.e., cytomegalovirus) mechanisms in the development of transplant coronary disease, the influence of several nonimmunologic risk factors has also been studied. Some of the nonimmunologic risk factors that have been evaluated include recipient characteristics (age, sex, obesity, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus, pretransplantation heart disease), donor characteristics (age, sex), immunosuppressive agents/protocols, and nonimmune mechanisms of endothelial injury (cyclosporine, ischemic time). Studies evaluating the role of these risk factors have produced variable results. One or more studies, however, have suggested an effect of recipient age and sex, donor age and sex, obesity, hyperlipidemia, pretransplantation diagnosis, and ischemic time on the development of transplant coronary disease. The most consistently described relationship has been between hyperlipidemia and transplant coronary disease. Hyperlipidemia is common after heart transplantation, with elevations noted in total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglycerides. The cause of posttransplantation hyperlipidemia is not well defined, but obesity and the immunosuppressive agents prednisone and cyclosporine play a role. Treatment of posttransplantation hyperlipidemia can be difficult because commonly used lipid-lowering agents have side effects and interactions with immunosuppressive drugs that necessitate caution in their use in the posttransplantation population. Transplant coronary disease almost certainly has a multifactorial cause, with endothelial injury and nonimmunologic risk factors, particularly hyperlipidemia, playing contributory roles. Because hyperlipidemia and the obesity that commonly accompany it are modifiable risk factors, weight loss and treatment of hyperlipidemia are recommended.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Transplant coronary disease: nonimmunologic risk factors. 162 91


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