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

Delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) is best treated by first using behaviorally scheduled sleeping and arising times to realign the patient's sleep-wake cycle to local time and then by keeping the cycle in synchrony with local time by adherence to a strict daily schedule. Adjunct treatment with morning light exposure or evening melatonin may be useful, and sometimes necessary, to help establish and maintain the new schedule. Coexisting psychiatric or medical illness should be treated before or simultaneously with DSPS. Advanced sleep phase syndrome is rare, and though no treatment has been well studied, evening light exposure and morning melatonin may be helpful. Non-24-hour sleep-wake cycle is common in the blind but occurs rarely in normally sighted persons. Chronic use of evening melatonin may be necessary for these patients to maintain a useful, conventionally timed sleep-wake cycle. Irregular sleep-wake cycles are probably common in persons with multiple handicaps or dementia. Chronic use of melatonin in the evening and exposure to morning light may be useful. Jet lag varies from a minor annoyance to a source of severe impairment of vigilance in the workplace or while driving. Treatment strategies include avoiding naps in the new time zone, staying on the home schedule during short stays, assuming the schedule of the new time zone during longer stays, taking evening melatonin in the new time zone and on return, and using a short-term bedtime sedative in the new time zone and on return. Shift-work sleep disorder affects most night-shift workers, who never fully adjust to trying to sleep in the daytime after their work shifts, often fall asleep while at work, and are at increased risk of development of heart disease and gastrointestinal disorders. Splitting their sleep between after-work morning naps and before-work late-afternoon naps should enable them to get more sleep. Brighter light in the workplace and sleeping in complete darkness may also be of benefit. Long-term use of sedatives is inadvisable for shift workers.
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PMID:Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorders. 1109 17

The objective of this study was to determine the accuracy of administrative data (by use of hospital discharge codes) for measuring comorbidity in patients with heart disease. One thousand seven hundred and sixty-five medical records of subjects admitted to hospital for AMI, unstable angina, angina pectoris, chronic IHD or heart failure were reviewed. The number and types of comorbidities were determined from the medical records (regarded as the "gold standard"). These were compared with the 10 discharge codes obtained from the hospital administrative records (referred to as the "administrative data"). The rate of false-negative and false-positive comorbidity diagnoses were determined. Twenty of the 21 comorbidities studied were underreported in the administrative data. For these 20 comorbidities, the median false-negative rate was 49.5% and ranged from 11% for diabetes to 100% for dementia. False-positive rates were low, less than 1.5%, except for chronic arrythmia (4.8%) and hypertension (4.2%). Mean percent agreement was high, ranging from 88% for hypertension to 100% for AIDS/HIV. Administrative data based on hospital discharge codes consistently underestimate the presence of comorbid conditions in our population. This has implications for administrators when estimating mortality, length of stay and disability. Researchers also need to be aware when using administrative data based on hospital discharge codes to assess subject's comorbidities that they may be widely underreported.
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PMID:Accuracy of administrative data to assess comorbidity in patients with heart disease. an Australian perspective. 1143 9

The term "cardiogenic dementia" was introduced a few decades ago to indicate an alteration of consciousness and cognition due to heart disease. Although this term is now disused, the relationship between cardiovascular disease and cognitive impairment is currently of great interest, not only for its potential therapeutic implications. but also for the recently recognized important role that vascular factors appear to play in Alzheimer's disease. The aims of this review are therefore 1) to show data supporting the role of cardiac disease--namely congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction and atrial fibrillation--and other vascular risk factors--i.e., hypertension and diabetes--in the development or worsening of cognitive impairment; 2) to highlight recent observations on the relationship between presence and severity of congestive heart failure/ myocardial infarction/atrial fibrillation and Alzheimer's disease: and 3) to uncover the type of studies needed in this field in order to facilitate a more precise algorithm of dementia prevention as well as intervention in demented patients with cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Heart disease and vascular risk factors in the cognitively impaired elderly: implications for Alzheimer's dementia. 1144 5

Estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) is used not only for the short-term control of menopausal symptoms but long-term for disease prevention. This study examined the influence of selected clinical conditions on the use of ERT and the duration of ERT use among women enrolled in a state Medicaid program. We identified 60,531 women, aged >/=45 years, who were enrolled in Maryland Medicaid continuously for at least 2 of 3 years. ERT use was determined through prescription claims submitted for reimbursement. The presence or risk of selected clinical conditions (e.g., osteoporosis, heart disease, estrogen-sensitive cancers) was determined by screening Medicaid claims files for related diagnoses, procedures, or prescription claims. Multiple logistic regression was used to model ERT use, and proportional hazards regression was used to model duration of use. Fourteen percent of these women filled an ERT prescription, with use varying by age, race, and place of residence. Oral dosage forms were the most popular (80.8%), followed by vaginal cream or ring (22.2%), and transdermal patch (7.3%). In adjusted models, osteoporosis, heart disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, ovarian cancer, and thromboembolic disease were positively associated and dementia and breast cancer were negatively associated with ERT use. None of these medical conditions predicted the duration of estrogen therapy. Use of ERT was very low among these women despite coverage of prescription medications, and the presence of clinical indications had no influence on the length of therapy among these women despite known benefits for long-term preventive therapy.
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PMID:Clinical correlates of estrogen replacement therapy use and duration of use among medicaid recipients. 1170 94

Aspirin used in cardiovascular disease is probably the best evaluated and the most highly cost effective prophylactic available in clinical practice today. It has been evaluated in over 150 randomised controlled trials and a small daily dose of around 100 mg has been shown to reduce the risk of myocardial infarction and stroke by about 30 per cent. The saving of lives and prevention of vascular events in patients judged to be at increased risk of a vascular event for any reason is large. In healthy subjects, however, the risk of a vascular event is so low that prophylaxis by any drug is inappropriate. The earlier aspirin is given in the acute phase of a myocardial infarction the greater the saving of lives. Patients judged to be at increased risk of a vascular event, for any reason, should therefore be advised to carry aspirin and to chew and swallow one or two tablets immediately, if they experience sudden severe chest pain. Aspirin is derived from a salicylate, and salicylates are widely distributed in nature, with many functions in plants. Its use in cardiovascular disease derives from an effect on blood platelets, but other possible effects have led to suggestions that it may be of benefit in conditions other than heart disease and stroke. Current research is now focussing on the possible reduction by aspirin in the risk of dementia, certain cancers, retarded foetal growth and cataract.
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PMID:Reducing the risk: heart disease, stroke and aspirin. 1175 54

The potential for good health is largely dependent on the prevention and reduction of early onset of fatal disease and death. The male population, in particular, is at risk from early onset of fatal disease and death. Prevention strategies must be developed in order to reduce the risk factors leading to the currently most common causes of death (heart disease, cancer, accidents). Due to the increase in life expectancy, however, other illnesses generally affecting the elderly population (osteoporosis, dementia, cancer, heart attack, incontinence etc.) are gaining in significance. The above average reduction in life expectancy in men can be counteracted particularly through preventative measures and the active promotion of good health. In particular risk factors, such as, smoking, overweight, high blood pressure and metabolic disease, are responsible for the high mortality rate in men. New research areas must be defined for the male population, which particularLy focus on the ageing male. In the field of age related illness, gender specific investigations are definitely required. The main focus has to be on therapy and prevention of those diseases and their subsequent debilitating effects, that commonly effect the elderly. Particularly with men there is still a deficit of information with regards the role of hormones and their relationship with andropause and ageing.
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PMID:[Social medicine aspects of the aging man]. 1181 49

Caffeine is the most widely consumed behaviourally active substance in the western world. Neuroprotective effects of caffeine in low doses, chronically administered, have been shown in different experimental models. If caffeine intake could protect against neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's disease (AD), then higher levels of caffeine consumption in normal subjects as compared with AD patients should be detectable in the presumably long period before diagnosis when insidious pathogenic changes are taking place. A case-control study was used: cases were 54 patients with probable AD fulfilling the National Institute of Neurologic and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the AD and Related Disorders Association criteria, in a Dementia Clinics setting. Controls were 54 accompanying persons, cognitively normal, matched for age (+/-3 years) and sex. Patients with AD had an average daily caffeine intake of 73.9 +/- 97.9 mg during the 20 years that preceded diagnosis of AD, whereas the controls had an average daily caffeine intake of 198.7 +/- 135.7 mg during the corresponding 20 years of their lifetimes (P < 0.001, Wilcoxon signed ranks test). Using a logistic regression model, caffeine exposure during this period was found to be significantly inversely associated with AD (odds ratio=0.40, 95% confidence interval=0.25-0.67), whereas hypertension, diabetes, stroke, head trauma, smoking habits, alcohol consumption, non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs, vitamin E, gastric disorders, heart disease, education and family history of dementia were not statistically significantly associated with AD. Caffeine intake was associated with a significantly lower risk for AD, independently of other possible confounding variables. These results, if confirmed with future prospective studies, may have a major impact on the prevention of AD.
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PMID:Does caffeine intake protect from Alzheimer's disease? 1209 22

Chest pain is a hallmark symptom in patients with unstable angina pectoris (UAP). However, little is known regarding the prevalence of an atypical presentation among these patients and its relation to subsequent care. We examined the medical records of 4,167 randomly sampled Medicare patients hospitalized with unstable angina at 22 Alabama hospitals between 1993 and 1999. We defined typical presentation as (1) chest pain located substernally in the left or right chest, or (2) chest pain characterized as squeezing, tightness, aching, crushing, arm discomfort, dullness, fullness, heaviness, pressure, or pain aggravated by exercise or relieved with rest or nitroglycerin. Atypical presentation was defined as confirmed UAP without typical presentation. Among patients with confirmed UAP, 51.7% had atypical presentations. The most frequent symptoms associated with atypical presentation were dyspnea (69.4%), nausea (37.7%), diaphoresis (25.2%), syncope (10.6%), or pain in the arms (11.5%), epigastrium (8.1%), shoulder (7.4%), or neck (5.9%). Independent predictors of atypical presentation for patients with UAP were older age (odds ratio 1.09, 95% confidence interval 1.01 to 1.17/decade), history of dementia (odds ratio 1.49, 95% confidence interval 1.10 to 2.03), and absence of prior myocardial infarction, hypercholesterolemia, or family history of heart disease. Patients with atypical presentation received aspirin, heparin, and beta-blocker therapy less aggressively, but there was no difference in mortality. Thus, over half of Medicare patients with confirmed UAP had "atypical" presentations. National educational initiatives may need to redefine the classic presentation of UAP to include atypical presentations to ensure appropriate quality of care.
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PMID:Atypical presentations among Medicare beneficiaries with unstable angina pectoris. 1250 91

Chronic nutritional deficiencies in folate, choline, methionine, vitamin B-6 and/or vitamin B-12 can perturb the complex regulatory network that maintains normal one-carbon metabolism and homocysteine homeostasis. Genetic polymorphisms in these pathways can act synergistically with nutritional deficiencies to accelerate metabolic pathology associated with occlusive heart disease, birth defects and dementia. A major unanswered question is whether homocysteine is causally involved in disease pathogenesis or whether homocysteinemia is simply a passive and indirect indicator of a more complex mechanism. S-Adenosylmethionine and S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), as the substrate and product of methyltransferase reactions, are important metabolic indicators of cellular methylation status. Chronic elevation in homocysteine levels results in parallel increases in intracellular SAH and potent product inhibition of DNA methyltransferases. SAH-mediated DNA hypomethylation and associated alterations in gene expression and chromatin structure may provide new hypotheses for pathogenesis of diseases related to homocysteinemia.
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PMID:Elevation in S-adenosylhomocysteine and DNA hypomethylation: potential epigenetic mechanism for homocysteine-related pathology. 1216 93

A prospective analysis of risk factors for Alzheimer's disease was a major objective of the Canadian Study of Health and Aging, a nationwide, population-based study. Of 6,434 eligible subjects aged 65 years or older in 1991, 4,615 were alive in 1996 and participated in the follow-up study. All participants were cognitively normal in 1991 when they completed a risk factor questionnaire. Their cognitive status was reassessed 5 years later by using a similar two-phase procedure, including a screening interview, followed by a clinical examination when indicated. The analysis included 194 Alzheimer's disease cases and 3,894 cognitively normal controls. Increasing age, fewer years of education, and the apolipoprotein E epsilon4 allele were significantly associated with increased risk of Alzheimer's disease. Use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, wine consumption, coffee consumption, and regular physical activity were associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease. No statistically significant association was found for family history of dementia, sex, history of depression, estrogen replacement therapy, head trauma, antiperspirant or antacid use, smoking, high blood pressure, heart disease, or stroke. The protective associations warrant further study. In particular, regular physical activity could be an important component of a preventive strategy against Alzheimer's disease and many other conditions.
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PMID:Risk factors for Alzheimer's disease: a prospective analysis from the Canadian Study of Health and Aging. 1219 14


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