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

The mortality rates from ischaemic heart disease in the Hunter Region of New South Wales are among the highest in Australia. Within the Region substantial differences occur in death rates from heart disease among the five urban local government areas, the highest being in the coal-mining district of Cessnock and the lowest in the resort and dormitory area of Port Stephens. A recent survey in the Region of risk factors for heart disease has revealed prevalence patterns for high blood pressure, serum cholesterol levels, smoking and overweight and obesity which largely parallel the pattern of heart disease mortality. This suggests that changes in life-style in the communities could reduce the intraregional differences in mortality. In addition, the widespread prevalence of an unhealthy diet and a lack of exercise may explain the Region's high death rates from heart disease and suggests that mortality could be reduced by effective preventive measures.
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PMID:Risk factors and heart disease mortality. A regional perspective. 394 15

To determine the effect of obesity on prognosis in hypertensive subjects, a population of 1727 men 50 to 79 years of age was dichotomized by baseline body mass index (less than 27 and greater than or equal to 27 kg/m2) and systolic blood pressure (less than 160 and greater than or equal to 160 mm Hg). After 9 years of follow-up, age-adjusted all-cause, cardiovascular, and ischemic heart disease mortality rates were highest in the nonobese hypertensive subjects. The relative risk for mortality associated with a systolic blood pressure of 160 mm Hg or higher was significantly increased only in the nonobese group, with the largest difference in relative risk between obese and nonobese for ischemic heart disease. Results were consistent after separately excluding those with a history of heart disease, diabetes, current use of antihypertensive medication, and cigarette smoking, and those who died within 2 years of the baseline examination. When the independent effect of risk factors, including age, plasma cholesterol level, cigarette smoking, use of antihypertensive medication, and personal history of heart disease or diabetes was assessed with the Cox model, systolic blood pressure was a significant independent predictor of all-cause, cardiovascular, and ischemic heart disease death only in the nonobese subjects. We do not exclude an adverse effect of raised blood pressure in the obese. However, these data suggest that the prognosis is poorer in leaner hypertensive patients than in those who are overweight.
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PMID:Is hypertension more benign when associated with obesity? 400 36

The literature points out the meaning of risk factors causing stroke as well as their therapy or elimination as an effective prevention of cerebrovascular disease. Hypertension increases the risk of apoplexy by 4-fold, with regard to the diastolic values of blood pressure by the 5-fold up to the 10-fold. Consistent hypertension therapy decreases significantly the incidence of cerebral apoplectic attacks. Manifested diabetes mellitus and even reduced glucose tolerance raise the risk of stroke by the 3-fold, even though factors frequently associated with diabetes are taken into consideration. Hyperlipidemia, hypercholesteremia, and hypertriglyceridemia stipulate an increase of stroke incidence by the 2-fold to the 3-fold. Morbidity rate rises if these abnormalities coincide with further risk factors, up to the 6-fold. Nicotine consumption alone increases the risk of cerebral apoplectic attacks in relation to age, by the 3-fold up to the 5-fold. In combination with the use of hormonal contraceptive drugs, the risk of morbidity rate in women rises to the 7-fold. Overweight of more than 30% aggravates twice the risk of stroke. Heart diseases of different kind increase the risk of apoplectic attacks by the 2-fold, in combination with hypertension by the 5-fold. The intake of oral contraceptives (OCs) causes an increase of cerebral thromboembolic attacks by the 3-fold up to the 5-fold, whereby a relation to estrogen content and to hemorheology disturbances is proven. Blood coagulation disturbances, especially hypercoagulability with increase of blood level of fibrinogen, fibrin, and enhanced adhesiveness of thrombocytes in cerebrovascular disease are proven to be valid. By combination of various risk factors apoplexy risk is additionally increased. The possibility of surgical and neurosurgical prophylactic treatment in all stages of cerebral ischemia, caused by occlusive disease of the cartoid, vertebral, and intracranial arteries, exists in 75% of patients. With regard to the longterm results of patients with extraintracranial bypass surgery, due to stenosis or occlusion of the carotid artery in its high cervical or intracranial course, or of the middle cerebral artery, the operated group clearly was better than the nonoperated group in frequency of cerebral ischemia recurrence. The therapeutic effect of inhibitors of thrombocytic aggregates and of anticoagulants for the chemotherapeutic prevention of cerebral ischemia, is proven for acetylsalicylic acid and derivatives of coumarin. Both diminish significantly the rate of cerebral ischemia when compared with placebo-treated control groups.
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PMID:[Prevention of cerebrovascular circulatory disorders]. 404 14

The social and cultural environment may act as a precipitant of disease, as with stressful life events; or it may influence predisposition e.g. by the level of social support. There has not been a concerted research programme to determine to what extent social and cultural variations in coronary heart disease (CHD) may be explained by similar variations in 'stress' or predisposition to it. Japanese culture is characterised by a high degree of social support. There is evidence that this may contribute to the low rate of heart disease in Japan, and among Japanese-Americans who retain their traditional culture. Preliminary findings indicate that the higher rate of heart disease in lower income groups in Britain may be associated with less social support, as well as a greater concentration of other coronary risk factors such as smoking and overweight. The link between Type-A behaviour and CHD has been replicated in women as well as men, and in Europe and the U.S.A. But the distribution in the population of Type-A behaviour does not follow the distribution of CHD.
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PMID:Stress, social and cultural variations in heart disease. 666 64

Levels of coronary risk factors in 3,090 adults who sought screening over a 2-year period in Perth, Western Australia, were compared with those in 722 subjects who were selected at random to attend the screening center. Self-referred (SR) subjects were less likely than random-sample (RS) subjects to have suffered from, or be on treatment for, heart disease, hypertension, gout, or diabetes but were more likely to have a family history of premature heart disease. They were less likely to be current smokers and overweight (women only) but more likely to be sedentary at work and have higher mean serum cholesterol levels. SR also had more knowledge about coronary heart disease (CHD) and its causes and were more likely to believe that this knowledge had influenced their behavior, but were less likely than RS to be satisfied with their knowledge level. Smokers among SR were more likely to express a wish to give up smoking than smokers in the RS. These findings are consistent with previous observations. The differences, although statistically significant, were generally small and did not clearly favor one group with respect to total risk of CHD. Therefore the effectiveness of risk factor modification following screening should not be greatly affected by self-selection for screening. Effectiveness may be greater in self-selected subjects because of their apparently greater motivation toward risk factor change.
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PMID:A comparison of populations self-selected and randomly selected for coronary risk factor screening. 687 96

We studied 10 obese volunteers, mean age 36.5 +/- 10.3 years, who weighed 123.56 +/- 28.7 g and were 69.96 +/- 22.5 kg overweight. The subjects did not have diabetes, arterial hypertension or signs of cardiac and respiratory failure or disease and all underwent right- and left-heart catheterization. cardiac output and stroke volume were high, according to increased oxygen consumption and to the degree of obesity. Ventricular end-diastolic and atrial pressures ranged from normal to high and correlated with body weight, signs of volume overloading and reduced left ventricular (LV) compliance. The mean pulmonary artery pressure was elevated and correlated well with weight, pulmonary resistance being normal; mean aortic pressure did not correlate with weight, and systemic arterial resistance tended to have a negative correlation. The LV function curve showed impaired ventricular function, particularly for the heaviest subjects, in whom Vmax and the ratio of the stroke work index to LV end-diastolic pressure were reduced. These indexes correlated well with each other and both correlated negatively with the degree of obesity. In contrast, maximal dP/dt was normal and did not correlate with excess weight. These observations show that depressed LV function is already present in relatively young obese people, even if they are free from signs of cardiopathy and other associate diseases. The degree of impairment of heart function seems to parallel the degree of obesity.
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PMID:Obesity and cardiac function. 726 Dec 80

A five-year follow-up of 53 diabetic patients admitted for their first stroke in 1972--73 has been performed. They were compared with two groups of 53 non-diabetic patients each with cerebrovascular disease (CVD), one randomly selected and one matched with the diabetics for age, sex and diagnosis of CVD at discharge. All patients could be traced at follow-up. The mean age at the time of first stroke was 66.5 years in male and 73.2 years in female diabetics. Manifest diabetes was diagnosed in 19% during hospitalization for stroke; of the remainder, 74% had had diabetes since less than ten years. In 85% of the diabetics there were no signs of severe angiopathy affecting eyes, kidneys or lower extremities. The majority of diabetic as well as non-diabetic CVD patients had a history of hypertension and/or heart disease. Few were overweight. Case fatality rate was significantly higher in diabetics than in non-diabetics throughout the follow-up (p less than 0.01 for diabetics vs. matched non-diabetics, p less than 0.001 for diabetics vs. randomly selected non-diabetics). The presence of heart disorder predicted mortality in the diabetic subjects. Surprisingly, hypertension diagnosed before stroke involved a more favourable long-term prognosis in all three groups (p less than 0.05). The major causes of death in diabetic CVD patients were cardiac disorders (50%) and stroke (47%). Previous investigations have identified diabetes as a risk factor for stroke. This study shows that diabetes also adversely affects the short-term as well as the long-term outcome in stroke.
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PMID:The natural history of stroke in diabetic patients. 738 35

Using linear regression, the authors demonstrated a strong association between State-specific coronary heart disease mortality rates and State prevalence of sedentary lifestyle (r2 = 0.34; P = 0.0002) that remained significant after controlling for the prevalence of diagnosed hypertension, smoking, and overweight among the State's population. This ecologic analysis suggests that sedentary lifestyle may explain State variation in coronary heart disease mortality and reinforces the need to include physical activity promotion as a part of programs in the States to prevent heart disease.
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PMID:Sedentary lifestyle and state variation in coronary heart disease mortality. 783 33

Obesity and overweight have great clinical and social significance and are associated with a number of medical and surgical complications. We attempt here to summarize current knowledge on the subject and describe the research we are presently carrying out in this field. After a brief introduction, definition, and discussion of etiopathogenesis, the indexes of ponderal excess and epidemiology are illustrated. The cardiovascular adjustments and the relationships between obesity and hypertension, ischemic heart disease and congestive heart failure are then treated. One aim of our investigation was to study the modifications of an entire set of biological and clinical parameters which could concretely formulate and/or identify some pathophysiological links between obesity and heart disease. We thus studied obese subjects with hypertension, diabetes and multiple cardiovascular risk factors. We also studied a group of asymptomatic obese subjects, whom we define as "the healthy obese". Our results, supported by the medical literature, led to the conclusion that obesity is an important and/or independent cardiovascular risk factor. We think, however, that it would be prudent to await for the results of interventional trials and follow-up studies involving a large number of young, healthy obese subjects in order to monitor the most important biological variables over the long term.
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PMID:Obesity and cardiovascular diseases. 800 89

A cross-sectional study of 1385 Saudi females attending 15 health centres in urban and rural areas in the Riyadh region was conducted during September and October 1992 to determine the prevalence of obesity and its associated factors. The mean age was 32.2 +/- 11.7 years and body mass index (BMI) 29.2 +/- 7.0 kg m-2. Only 26.1% of subjects were their ideal weight (BMI < 25 kg m-2), while 26.8% were overweight (BMI 25-29.9 kg m-2), 41.9% were moderately obese (BMI 30-40 kg m-2) and 5.1% were morbidly obese (BMI > 40 kg m-2). High-risk groups for obesity were mostly middle aged, multiparous housewives. Patients living in rural areas had greater BMIs than those living in urban areas (P < 0.01). Thirty per cent of overweight participants did not think they were overweight. The study emphasizes the need for community based programmes for preventing and reducing obesity since weight control is effective in ameliorating most of the disorders associated with obesity such as Type 2 non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, heart disease, sleep apnoea syndrome and osteoarthritis of the knees. The focus of efforts should be directed towards young mothers who are at risk of developing obesity and who play a central role in perpetuating it in their offspring.
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PMID:High prevalence of clinical obesity among Saudi females: a prospective, cross-sectional study in the Riyadh region. 800 60


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