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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In an attempt to assess cardiac risk in non-cardiac surgery, 1001 patients over 40 years of age who underwent major operative procedures were examined preoperatively, observed through surgery, studied with at least one postoperative electrocardiogram, and followed until hospital discharge or death. Documented postoperative myocardial infarction occurred in only 18 patients; though most of these patients had some pre-existing
heart disease
, there were few preoperative factors which were statistically correlated with postoperative infarction. Postoperative pulmonary edema was strongly correlated with preoperative heart failure, but 21 of the 36 patients who developed pulmonary edema did not have any prior history of heart failure. Nearly all of these 21 patients were elderly, had abnormal preoperative electrocardiograms, and had intraabdominal or intrathoracic surgery. In the absence of an acute infarction, bifascicular conduction defects, with or without PR interval prolongation, never progressed to complete heart block. Spinal anesthesia protected against postoperative heart failure but not against other cardiac complication. By multivariate regression analysis, postoperative cardiac death was significantly correlated with (a) myocardial infarction in the previous 6 months; (b) third heart sound or jugular venous distention immediately preoperatively; (c) more than five premature ventricular contractions per minute documented at any time preoperatively; (d) rhythm other than sinus, or premature atrial contractions on preoperative electrocardiogram; (e) age over 70 years; (f) significant valvular aortic stenosis; (g) emergency operation; (h) a 33% or greater fall in systolic blood pressure for more than 10 minutes intraoperatively. Notably unimportant factors included smoking,
glucose intolerance
, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, peripheral atherosclerotic vascular disease, angina, and distant myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Cardiac risk factors and complications in non-cardiac surgery. 66 58
The aim was to determine if certain risk factors in the general population are more strongly related to peripheral arterial disease than to ischemic heart disease. Arterial disease in the lower limbs was measured by means of the World Health Organization questionnaire on intermittent claudication, the ankle brachial pressure index, and a reactive hyperemia test in 1,592 men and women aged 55-74 years selected randomly in 1988 from the age-sex registers of 10 general practices in Edinburgh, Scotland. Peripheral arterial disease was strongly related to lifetime cigarette smoking, with additional risks in current and exsmokers of less than 5 years. Multiple regression of risk factors on measures of peripheral arterial disease showed associations with diabetes mellitus (but not
impaired glucose tolerance
), systolic blood pressure, and serum cholesterol; inverse association with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; and only univariate association with triglycerides. In multiple logistic regressions of risk factors on six separate indicators of cardiovascular disease, the only consistent difference was that smoking increased the risk of peripheral arterial disease (range of odds ratios, 1.8-5.6) more than
heart disease
(range of odds ratios, 1.1-1.6). Diabetes mellitus was not a stronger risk factor for peripheral arterial disease.
...
PMID:Smoking, lipids, glucose intolerance, and blood pressure as risk factors for peripheral atherosclerosis compared with ischemic heart disease in the Edinburgh Artery Study. 155 87
Coronary heart disease risk factor levels were studied in 184 first-degree relatives (sisters and brothers) of non-insulin-dependent diabetic subjects (124 relatives with normoglycemia, 34 relatives with
impaired glucose tolerance
[IGT], and 26 relatives with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus [NIDDM]) and in 215 relatives of nondiabetic subjects (194 relatives with normoglycemia and 21 relatives with IGT). Subjects with IGT exhibited the highest insulin responses to an oral glucose load. Systolic blood pressure was significantly higher; serum high density lipoprotein cholesterol level was significantly lower; and total, low density lipoprotein, and very low density lipoprotein triglyceride levels were higher in the relatives with a family history of diabetes who had IGT or NIDDM than in the normoglycemic relatives without a family history of diabetes. These abnormal changes were not seen in normoglycemic relatives or relatives with IGT who had no family history of NIDDM. Thus, in relatives of diabetics, abnormal glucose tolerance seems to induce changes in cardiovascular
heart disease
risk factor levels that are similar to those observed in NIDDM. Therefore, a family history of diabetes adds substantially to the risk for atherosclerosis, particularly in subjects with IGT.
...
PMID:Early abnormalities in coronary heart disease risk factors in relatives of subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes. 159 Dec 29
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is one of the less common but ominous risk factors for coronary disease, stroke and cardiac failure. The chief determinants of LVH, aside from age, are elevated blood pressure, obesity, stature and
glucose intolerance
. Cardiac valve disease and chronic
heart disease
(CHD) also cause LVH. Downward trends in the prevalence of LVH over four decades indicate that LVH is preventable, and this has coincided with improved hypertension control. When evidence of LVH disappears, the risk of all-cause, cardiovascular and CHD mortality is substantially reduced. Cardiovascular events occur incrementally in relation to left ventricular mass with no discernible critical value identifying pathological hypertrophy. LVH as evidenced by electrocardiogram (ECG-LVH), manifested by repolarization abnormality as well as increased voltage, was a lethal finding; with 5 years, 33% of men and 21% of women were dead. ECG-LVH was associated with ventricular ectopy and a sudden death risk comparable to that of CHD or cardiac failure. ECG-LVH was associated with a 3-15-fold increase of cardiovascular events with greatest risk ratios for cardiac failure and stroke. However, CHD is the predominant clinical sequel. No other risk factor approaches LVH in potency. Anatomical (echocardiographic or X-ray) LVH and ECG-LVH each independently contribute to the risk of cardiovascular disease, and having both confers a greater risk than having either alone. LVH is a clinical finding which should be taken seriously and corrected as soon as detected. It should not be regarded as an innocuous adaptive process, augmenting cardiac function.
...
PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy as a risk factor: the Framingham experience. 183 65
318 records of male workers, 169 Spanish and 149 Arab were retrospectively studied in 1987 at the "Gabinete de Seguridad e Higiene en el Trabajo" (Council for Safety and Hygiene in the Workplace) in Ceuta in order to prove the hypothesis that 2 different ethnic groups living in the same geographic area have a non-equal distribution of cardiovascular risk factors. The Spanish group showed a higher prevalence in blood hypertension, diabetes,
glucose intolerance
, obesity and alcohol intake, compared to the Arab group. Smoking and high levels of seric cholesterol were similar in both groups, however, medium levels of seric cholesterol were lower in the Arab group. Family histories of cardiovascular disease were very rare in the latter mentioned group. These observations suggested a major predisposition to ischemic
cardiopathy
in the Spanish group.
...
PMID:[Cardiovascular risk factors in an Arab and Hispanic working population]. 193 89
The relation between fasting plasma glucose and mortality from ischemic heart disease was examined in a population of 3,458 nondiabetics (aged 40-79 years) in Rancho Bernardo, California, who were free of
heart disease
at baseline and were followed for an average of 14 years, from 1972 to 1987. A linear increase of age-adjusted ischemic heart disease mortality rates with fasting glucose was observed in men, and a threshold relation at 110 mg/100 ml plasma glucose was observed in women. On the basis of Cox proportional hazards analysis, the observed sex differential in the association between plasma glucose and ischemic heart disease mortality proved to be statistically significant and independent of the effects of age, systolic blood pressure, body mass index, plasma cholesterol, plasma triglyceride, and, in women, estrogen use. In sex-specific multivariate models, interaction terms representing a threshold effect at glucose levels greater than or equal to 110 mg/100 ml were statistically significant in women (p = 0.007), but not in men, and interaction between sex and the glucose threshold term was observed in multivariate analysis of men and women combined (p = 0.07). The authors conclude that sex differences in the effect of fasting glycemia on ischemic heart disease mortality among nondiabetics exist and are unexplained. Elucidation may hold a key to the sex difference in
heart disease
and the relatively greater importance of diabetes and
impaired glucose tolerance
as risk factors for ischemic heart disease in women compared with men.
...
PMID:Sex differences in fasting glycemia as a risk factor for ischemic heart disease death. 200 43
Heart disease
, a major women's health issue, is responsible for 28% of mortality among US females. Combined oral contraceptives (OCs) have been shown to interfere with the 3 phenomena--lipid metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, and the hemostatic system--most involved in the coronary heart disease process. Disturbances in these systems are believed to underlie the general risk markers of
heart disease
, although it is not known to what extent OC-induced changes in these systems increase the likelihood of disease. Also unknown is whether there is a residual risk of
heart disease
in past users of OCs. Both low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) levels are predictive of coronary heart disease in women.
Impaired glucose tolerance
and hyperinsulinemia are associated with other biochemical and physiological disturbances that increase the risk of
heart disease
, including changes in serum lipids and lipoproteins. High levels of fibrinogen and factor VII are additional important independent predictors of coronary heart disease. Depending on the sex hormone dose and the OC's composition, the pill has been shown to produce changes such as lowered HDL and HDL2 cholesterol levels, raised LDL cholesterol,
impaired glucose tolerance
, and increased insulin levels--metabolic disturbances common in those at increased risk of myocardial infarction. REcent studies have found that
impaired glucose tolerance
and hyperinsulinemia are associated with a set of biochemical and physiological disturbances--known as syndrome X--that occur regularly in OC users. The lowering of the estrogen and progestin dose in newer OCs, as well as the development of progestins intended to reduce metabolic effects, represent major advances. Continued evaluation of the various OCs in terms of risk markers is recommended, however.
...
PMID:Oral contraceptives and coronary heart disease. 204 75
The prevalence of hypercholesterolemia, according to the guidelines of the National Cholesterol Education Program, has been determined in a national survey of diabetes and
glucose intolerance
. Rates of elevated total cholesterol in people with diabetes in the United States are only slightly greater than in those without diabetes after adjusting for age and sex. Nevertheless, high or borderline high total cholesterol is common in diabetes and is present in 70% of adults with diagnosed diabetes and 77% with undiagnosed diabetes in the U.S. population. Of these individuals, 95% have evidence of coronary heart disease or two or more risk factors for
heart disease
and should therefore have their low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol measured. Based on our national data, LDL cholesterol levels warranting dietary treatment for hypercholesterolemia would be expected in 85% of these people. Although elevated LDL cholesterol is uncommon in people with diabetes who have total cholesterol of less than 200 mg/dl, other risk factors for coronary heart disease are very frequent (100% of men, 73% of women), and low total and LDL cholesterol may mask low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Therefore, investigation of blood lipid levels and coronary heart disease risk factors should be routine in all patients with diabetes, and treatment strategies should include management of lipid disorders and the multiple other risk factors for coronary heart disease that are highly prevalent in these patients.
...
PMID:Hypercholesterolemia in diabetes and glucose intolerance in the U.S. population. 206 Apr 48
It is now recognized that dietary carbohydrate components influence the prevalence and severity of common degenerative diseases such as dental problems, diabetes,
heart disease
and obesity. Fructose and sucrose have been evaluated and compared to glucose using glucose tolerance tests, but few such comparisons have been performed for a "natural" sugar source such as honey. In this study, 33 upper trimester chiropractic students volunteered for oral glucose tolerance testing comparing sucrose, fructose and honey during successive weeks. A 75-gm carbohydrate load in 250 ml of water was ingested and blood sugar readings were taken at 0, 30, 60, 90, 120 and 240 minutes. Fructose showed minimal changes in blood sugar levels, consistent with other studies. Sucrose gave higher blood sugar readings than honey at every measurement, producing significantly (p less than .05) greater
glucose intolerance
. Honey provided the fewest subjective symptoms of discomfort. Given that honey has a gentler effect on blood sugar levels on a per gram basis, and tastes sweeter than sucrose so that fewer grams would be consumed, it would seem prudent to recommend honey over sucrose.
...
PMID:Differential effects of honey, sucrose, and fructose on blood sugar levels. 200 97
Risk factor screening and establishing realistic goals are key steps for the dietitian to follow in planning strategies to prevent coronary heart disease. The major risk factors that are responsive to dietary intervention include: elevated plasma total cholesterol and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, elevated blood pressure,
glucose intolerance
, and obesity. The criteria used in assessing nutrition-related risk in coronary heart disease are presented. The long-term goals of preventive nutrition intervention in
heart disease
are discussed, with emphasis on a unified and progressive approach to diet planning.
...
PMID:Preventive nutrition intervention in coronary heart disease: risk assessment and formulating dietary goals. 376 Apr 31
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