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)

1. An increasing body of evidence suggests that certain types of fat have beneficial effects on human health. 2. Fish oils in particular have been shown to exert positive effects on atherosclerosis, heart disease and carcinogenesis. 3. These positive effects are thought to be mediated through eicosanoids derived from polyunsaturated fatty acids of the n-3 family which are present in large quantities in fish oils.
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PMID:The metabolic role of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids: relationship to human disease. 167 64

Epidemiologic studies of the relationship of alcohol consumption and breast cancer are generally in support of a direct association, although they are not entirely consistent. Studies supporting this finding have come from many countries around the world and from many investigators working with different study designs and types of populations. Ten of 16 case-control studies, and five of six cohort studies have produced results supporting a positive association. When evaluated together through techniques such as meta-analysis, these studies suggest that there is a 50% increase in breast cancer risk for women who average between one and two drinks per day. All types of alcoholic beverages seem to increase the risk, but there is little agreement between studies on dose-response relationships. No biologic explanation for alcohol's possible role in breast carcinogenesis is yet known, but several hypotheses have been advanced. In the absence of any effective method of primary breast cancer prevention, and because current risk factors explain so little of the incidence of this common cancer, alcohol consumption is of potential importance from both public health and etiologic perspectives. The possible protective effect of moderate alcohol consumption on heart disease should be considered when assessing the risks of this level of consumption on breast cancer.
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PMID:Alcohol consumption and breast cancer. 214 49

Females in western societies have higher plasma levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) than males. The difference in plasma lipids between the sexes is believed to contribute to differences in risk of heart disease. The evidence reviewed here demonstrates that plasma levels of HDL-C are also associated with factors influencing risk of breast cancer, a leading cause of death in women in western societies. Both breast cancer risk and HDL-C levels are higher in women who live in northern European countries than in those who live in Asia, in women who have never been pregnant compared with those who have, and in women of higher socioeconomic status. HDL-C levels are also affected by several other known or suspected factors in breast cancer risk; these include dietary fat intake, alcohol consumption, endogenous hormones, and premenopausal leanness. Increases in any of these factors are known to increase the level of HDL-C. Preliminary work has also shown HDL-C levels to be higher in subjects with mammographic dysplasia and a family history of breast cancer. Further, in serum-free culture systems, HDL-C appears to possess biologic properties that may be relevant to carcinogenesis. In other areas, evidence of a relationship between increased HDL-C levels and increased breast cancer risk is either incomplete or contradictory. These areas include obesity (in the risk of postmenopausal breast cancer), use of exogenous hormones (oral contraceptives or postmenopausal estrogens), and physical exercise. In addition, both elevated and depressed levels of HDL-C have been reported in women with breast cancer. Our findings suggest an association between high HDL-C levels and the epidemiology of breast cancer risk. We recommend additional studies of plasma lipid level as a possible risk factor for this disease.
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PMID:Evidence of association between plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and risk factors for breast cancer. 231 17

The variation in background radiation levels is an important source of information for estimating human risks associated with low-level exposure to ionizing radiation. Several studies conducted in the United States, correlating mortality rates for cancer with estimated background radiation levels, found an unexpected inverse relationship. Such results have been interpreted as suggesting that low levels of ionizing radiation may actually confer some benefit. An environmental factor strongly correlated with background radiation is altitude. Since there are important physiological adaptations associated with breathing thinner air, such changes may themselves influence risk. We therefore fit models that simultaneously incorporated altitude and background radiation as predictors of mortality. The negative correlations with background radiation seen for mortality from arteriosclerotic heart disease and cancers of the lung, the intestine, and the breast disappeared or became positive once altitude was included in the models. By contrast, the significant negative correlations with altitude persisted with adjustment for radiation. Interpretation of these results is problematic, but recent evidence implicating reactive forms of oxygen in carcinogenesis and atherosclerosis may be relevant. We conclude that the cancer correlational studies carried out in the United States using vital statistics data do not in themselves demonstrate a lack of carcinogenic effect of low radiation levels, and that reduced oxygen pressure of inspired air may be protective against certain causes of death.
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PMID:Altitude, radiation, and mortality from cancer and heart disease. 368 64

Comparative international epidemiological data indicate that the difference between the highest and lowest colon cancer incidence is approximately 10-fold. This suggests that the dominant causes of colon cancer are environmental rather than genetic in origin, with the dominant environmental cause being the typical diet of Western industrialized countries. Many epidemiological and experimental studies have suggested an important role for dietary fiber in the prevention of colon cancer. Using the Fischer-344 rat as the experimental model, data clearly demonstrate a strong protective effect of a diet that is low in fat, high in fiber and high in calcium (low-risk diet). Such a diet prevents the development of both preneoplastic aberrant crypt foci (ACF) and colon tumors. Recent experiments have also demonstrated a direct relationship between a ras point mutation in ACF at different stages of rat colon carcinogenesis, and a ras point mutation that is subsequently present in colon tumors. Using wheat bran as the model dietary fiber source, its effects were compared to the effects of psyllium, phytic acid, vitamin E, beta-carotene, folic acid, alone or in combination, for their ability to prevent colon cancer in rats on high-risk Western-style diets. Our studies clearly demonstrated the ability of wheat bran to reduce ACF and colon tumors in rats that consumed high-fat, Western-style diets. Although phytic acid, which is a constituent of wheat bran, alone demonstrated strong cancer-preventive potential, our experiments provided evidence for the cancer-preventive effect of the crude fiber fraction that is independent of the effect of phytic acid. The synergistic combination of wheat bran with the soluble fiber psyllium led to enhanced protection; while the combination of wheat bran with beta-carotene showed only an additive effect. Beta-carotene appeared to show higher protection than wheat bran at an intake level that is nutritionally relevant to humans, suggesting the possibility of using beta-carotene to enhance the effects of dietary fiber in high-risk Western populations. Using ACF as an intermediate endpoint, it was also shown that vitamin E and beta-carotene appear to inhibit progression of ACF to colon cancer, while wheat bran and folic acid appeared to have weak cancer-preventive potential at this late stage of carcinogenesis. In conclusion, wheat bran alone, or in combination with psyllium, appears to have greater potential to inhibit earlier phases of carcinogenesis, while beta-carotene and vitamin E may also inhibit later stages of carcinogenesis. Despite considerable epidemiological and experimental evidence that increasing the fiber and lowering the fat content of the Western diet could substantially reduce the risk of cancer and heart disease, the real challenge is to find effective ways to educate and motivate people to overcome their intrinsic cultural resistance to such changes in their eating habits.
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PMID:Dietary fiber and the chemopreventive modelation of colon carcinogenesis. 865 80

Chemoprevention is a promising strategy for cancer prevention that is international in application and may be more immediate in worldwide impact than either dietary modification or prevention of exposure to carcinogens. Precedent for a chemopreventive approach is found in cardiology, where cholesterol-lowering, antihypertensive and antiplatelet agents are administered to prevent heart disease progression in high-risk individuals. The multistep nature of carcinogenesis provides many opportunities for chemopreventive interventions with agents targeted to specific mechanisms involved in cancer initiation, promotion and progression. The well-defined strategy for development of chemopreventive agents includes evaluation of leads from epidemiological and experimental research; preclinical efficacy testing of candidate agents; and assessments of the preclinical and clinical safety, toxicity, bioavailability and pharmacokinetics of those that are the most promising. Short-term clinical trials then determine optimal dosing and characterize the efficacy of the best agents against intermediate biomarkers of cancer. Large-scale randomized trials, the final stage of this strategy, evaluate whether the chemopreventive agents actually do reduce cancer risk. The systematic development of agents is coupled with basic research into mechanisms of action and subsequent application of the findings to agent design and discovery. Major objectives of chemopreventive drug development include identification and validation of intermediate biomarkers that are accurate predictors of future cancer incidence and that can serve as surrogate and points for clinical disease. Complementary international efforts to standardize chemopreventive trial designs and protocols among communities worldwide would help ensure a valid comparison of results across countries and more efficient and effective cancer-preventive regimens.
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PMID:The role of chemoprevention in cancer control. 892 16

In 1980, two carotenoids, beta-carotene (BC) and canthaxanthine (CX) with and without pro-vitamin A activity, respectively, were orally administered to female Swiss albino mice and were found to substantially prevent skin carcinogenesis induced by benzo(a)pyrene (BP). This preventive effect was observed in darkness by means of photocarcinogenic enhancement (PCE) following UV (300 to 400 nm) irradiation. In 1984, the same experiment produced antitumorigenic activity when applied to breast carcinogenesis induced in mice by 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) plus UV-A light and, in 1985, when directed toward gastric carcinogenesis induced in rats by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG). These data suggested a rationale for human intervention to prevent, by carotenoid supplementation, a second primary malignancy after the primary malignancy has been radically excised. In the 1980s, a pilot clinical study (15 cases) showed a longer than expected disease-free interval in all surviving patients. It was also subsequently found that, if treated daily with 20 mg of BC and intermittently with retinol 150 to 300,000 IU daily for seven days just prior to menses, women suffering from cyclical mastalgia were relieved from pain, without any toxic side effects. When BC was given in high daily doses (60 mg) to 60 drug addicts suffering from AIDS-related complex (ARC), they recovered from their objective and subjective symptoms (but not from lymphadenopathy) with improvement in their general health and increased performance status. At higher doses, BC (with or without hyperthermia) was effective even in patients in advanced stages of AIDS. A debate has arisen concerning a recent statement by the U.S. Government that "beta-carotene supplements do not protect Americans against cancer or heart disease, and may actually increase the risk of deadly lung tumors in smokers".
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PMID:Carotenoids in cancer, mastalgia, and AIDS: prevention and treatment--an overview. 921 91

We sought to determine the strength of the evidence suggesting that estrogen and postmenopausal replacement hormones play a role in the development of breast cancer. We reviewed the existing English language literature in MEDLINE on hormones and breast cancer, including reports on cell proliferation and endogenous hormone levels, as well as epidemiologic studies of the relationship between the use of postmenopausal hormones and the risk of breast cancer in women. A factor that increases the probability that cancer will develop in an individual has been defined as a cancer cause. The Hill criteria for demonstrating a link between environmental factors and disease were used to review the evidence for a causal relationship between female hormones and breast cancer. We found evidence of a causal relationship between these hormones and breast cancer, based on the following criteria: consistency, dose-response pattern, biologic plausibility, temporality, strength of association, and coherence. The magnitude of the increase in breast cancer risk per year of hormone use is comparable to that associated with delaying menopause by a year. The positive relationship between endogenous hormone levels in postmenopausal women and risk of breast cancer supports a biologic mechanism for the relationship between use of hormones and increased risk of this disease. The finding that the increase in risk of breast cancer associated with increasing duration of hormone use does not vary substantially across studies offers further evidence for a causal relationship. We conclude that existing evidence supports a causal relationship between use of estrogens and progestins, levels of endogenous estrogens, and breast cancer incidence in postmenopausal women. Hormones may act to promote the late stages of carcinogenesis among postmenopausal women and to facilitate the proliferation of malignant cells. Strategies that do not cause breast cancer are urgently needed for the relief of menopausal symptoms and the long-term prevention of osteoporosis and heart disease.
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PMID:Relationship between estrogen levels, use of hormone replacement therapy, and breast cancer. 962 69

Resveratrol (trans-3,4',5-trihydroxystibene) is a phytopolyphenol isolated from the seeds and skins of grapes. Recent studies indicate that resveratrol can block the process of multistep carcinogenesis, namely, tumor initiation, promotion and progression. Resveratrol can also reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease in man. The molecular mechanisms of resveratrol in chemoprevention of cancer and cardiovascular disease are interesting and under intensive investigation. Resveratrol was found to strongly inhibit nitric oxide (NO) generation in activated macrophages, as measured by the amount of nitrite released into the culture medium, and resveratrol strongly reduced the amount of cytosolic inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) protein. The activation of nuclear factor kappa B (NF kappa B) induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was inhibited by resveratrol. The phosphorylation and degradation of nuclear factor inhibitor kappa B alpha (I kappa B alpha) were inhibited by resveratrol simultaneously. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are regarded as having carcinogenic potential and have been associated with tumor promotion. Resveratrol may act as a reactive oxygen species scavenger to suppress tumor development. In addition, resveratrol may block multistep carcinogenesis through mitotic signal transduction blockade. Reactive oxygen species are pivotal factors in the genesis of heart disease. Meanwhile, efficient endogenous antioxidants, including superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GSHPx), and catalase, are present in tissues. A fine balance between reactive oxygen species and endogenous antioxidants is believed to exist. Any disturbance of this balance in favor of reactive oxygen species causes an increase in oxidative stress and initiates subcellular changes, leading to cardiomyopathy and heart failure. The experimental results indicate that exogenous antioxidant resveratrol is of value in chemopreventing the development of heart disease. It is urgent that more efforts be made to investigate newer therapies employing antioxidants for the chemoprevention of cardiovascular disease and cancer.
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PMID:Chemoprevention of cancer and cardiovascular disease by resveratrol. 1049 90

Nicotine, the addictive component of tobacco, is thought to be at least partially responsible for the deleterious effects of smoking such as heart disease and cancer. Evidence shows that nicotine is an immunomodulator and that one of its possible mechanisms is regulation of apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in immune cells. This study examined the effects and the mechanisms of action of nicotine on dexamethasone (DEX)-induced apoptosis in murine immune cells by examining the expression of levels of the 17-kDa active caspase-3, a marker of apoptosis. Thymocytes and splenocytes from adult BALB/c female mice were incubated with concentrations of nicotine correlating to those found in the blood and tissue of smokers (0.01 microg/ml [0.022 microM] and 1 microg/ml [2.2 microM]), concurrently with 100 nM DEX, to induce apoptosis. Cytosolic protein fractions were analyzed by Western blotting with polyclonal antibodies that recognize the active form of caspase-3. The data showed that nicotine significantly blocked the formation of the DEX-induced 17-kDa caspase-3 subunit expression. This downregulation ranged from 65% to 100% of the active caspase-3 expressed in cultures treated with DEX alone. Addition of d-tubocurarine chloride (dTC), a general nicotinic receptor antagonist, inhibited nicotine downregulation of the DEX-induced active caspase-3 expression, providing evidence that this action of nicotine was receptor-mediated. These data support that nicotine is an important immunomodulator at the level of immune cell apoptosis, a process thought to be a contributory mechanism of autoimmunity, cardiovascular disease, and carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Nicotine inhibition of apoptosis in murine immune cells. 1168 2


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