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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cardiac size and geometry have an important influence on clinical prognosis in
heart disease
. The cardiac interstitium would appear to play a major role in modulating muscle configuration after ischaemic insults. Ischaemic reperfusion injury of the heart should not be viewed as confined to the myocyte compartment. There are major events occurring in the interstitial compartment which could ultimately determine the long-term configuration and topography of the heart. Thus, permanent plastic changes in cardiac dimensions appear to evolve after initial alterations in the
collagen
matrix. The physiological, cellular, biochemical, and molecular considerations in the cardiac interstitium are quite different from those of the myocyte compartment. Accordingly, therapeutic interventions to modulate cardiac geometry and remodelling may differ.
...
PMID:Post-ischaemic cardiac dilatation and remodelling: reperfusion injury of the interstitium. 837 Mar 59
Patients with chronic congestive heart failure manifest > or = 1 of the following abnormalities: diastolic dysfunction, systolic dysfunction, and arrhythmias. Diastolic dysfunction, one of the first symptoms to occur during hypertensive
cardiopathy
, depends on both active relaxation of the cardiac muscle and passive ventricular compliance. The ability of the ventricles to relax depends on normal calcium metabolism and adenosine triphosphate concentration. Ability to extrude intracellular calcium is depressed in the hypertrophied, overloaded heart as compared with the normal myocardium. Myocardial fibrosis is the major cause of increased diastolic ventricular stiffness. Left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and myocardial fibrosis also greatly increase the likelihood of ventricular arrhythmias, in particular by prolonging the QRS interval and facilitating the occurrence of reentry arrhythmias. Findings in animal studies have indicated that such fibrosis, which involves excessive
collagen
deposition, is independent of LV hypertrophy and that LV hypertrophy does not necessarily result in myocardial fibrosis. Instead, the development of myocardial fibrosis is sensitive to circulating levels of both angiotensin II and aldosterone, and the fibrotic response to each of these substances is independent. The aldosterone antagonist spironolactone prevents myocardial fibrosis in several animal models, thus confirming the importance of aldosterone in the genesis of excessive
collagen
deposition.
...
PMID:Role of mechanical and hormonal factors in cardiac remodeling and the biologic limits of myocardial adaptation. 842 5
Autopsy records from the Women and Infants' Hospital from January 1974 through January 1994 were reviewed to identify cardiac malformations in the presence of skeletal dysplasia. Of 24 cases of lethal fetal or neonatal osteochondrodysplasias, 4 were given diagnoses in which disorders of type II collagen are regarded as causative. These 4 were categorized in the spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia (SED) spectrum of disorders; specifically two patients with hypochondrogenesis and two with spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita were identified. Defects in cardiac septation were noted in the 2 patients with hypochondrogenesis. No cardiovascular abnormalities were present in the remaining cases, which included thanatophoric dysplasia, osteogenesis imperfecta, and asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy. Although cardiovascular malformations have been described in other types of osteochondrodysplasias, e.g., short rib polydactyly syndrome type II and chondroectodermal (Ellis-van Creveld) dysplasia, congenital
heart disease
has not been described in hypochondrogenesis. Type II
collagen
, which has been found to be abnormal in some patients with hypochondrogenesis, is considered to have a limited tissue distribution, and has not been detected as yet in human myocardium. The findings presented here suggest that type II collagen may function in human cardiogenesis.
...
PMID:Cardiac malformation in two infants with hypochondrogenesis. 859 52
Increased myocardial
collagen
accompanies pressure overload of the adult left ventricle. This phenomenon is poorly understood in infants. This study compares the myocardial volume fraction of
collagen
in infants who did not have primary
heart disease
with infants with isolated pressure overload of the right ventricle (tetralogy of Fallot [ToF]), and with infants with combined volume and pressure overload (aortic valve atresia [AVA]). The distribution of
collagen
in the neonatal myocardium was also determined. We measured the volume fraction of
collagen
from right ventricular biopsy specimens of cadaver hearts in normal infants (1 to 9 months old; n = 7), infants with ToF (1 day to 9 months old; n = 9), newborns with AVA (AVA-NB) (1 to 4 days old; n = 5), and older patients with AVA (AVA-I) (5 to 8 months old; n = 5). Myocardium from 3 patients undergoing repair of ToF (6 to 8 months old) was also analyzed. Specimens were stained with Masson's trichrome and myocardial volume fraction of
collagen
determined by point counting. Myocardial volume fraction of
collagen
was significantly higher (p = 0.02) in AVA-I patients (8.0 +/- 3.5%) versus normal (3.3 +/- 2.7%), ToF (3.2 +/- 1.8%), and AVA-NB (3.5 +/- 2.3%) patients. There was a tendency for increased
collagen
in the subendocardium, especially in AVA-I patients (p > 0.05). We conclude that patients with AVA-I have increased
collagen
relative to normal subjects, patients with ToF, and patients with AVA-NB, and that this increase is greatest in the subendocardium.
...
PMID:Collagen content in normal, pressure, and pressure-volume overloaded developing human hearts. 865 Nov 25
The effects of consuming a soy protein isolate beverage powder (60 g/d for 28 d) vs. a casein supplement was evaluated in 20 male subjects who were randomly allocated into the two groups. A dramatic rise in plasma isoflavone concentrations was observed after supplementation in the soy protein group, the levels reaching 907 +/- 245 nmol/L for genistein (a 110-fold increase) and 498 +/- 102 nmol/L for daidzein (a 150-fold increase) as measured by isotope dilution gas chromatography - mass spectrometry. These concentrations are higher than previously reported for the plasma of Japanese subjects consuming a traditional diet (276 nmol/L and 107 nmol/L, respectively). No significant differences in
collagen
- or 9,11-dideoxy-11alpha, 9alpha-epoxymethanoprostaglandin F2alpha (U46619)-induced platelet aggregation were observed in platelet-rich plasma from the two groups; the increase in plasma isoflavonoids from soy protein supplementation is not sufficient to significantly inhibit platelet aggregation ex vivo. Similarly, plasma total and HDL-cholesterol were not affected by protein supplementation, possibly because the men were normocholesterolemic at entry. Analysis of plasma phospholipid polyunsaturated fatty acid composition showed no differences between soy protein and casein supplementation. Previous investigations reported a significant alteration in fatty acid status in animals fed soy protein relative to those fed casein. The present studies indicate that although soy protein supplementation to a typical Western diet can increase plasma concentrations of isoflavones, this may not necessarily be sufficient to counter
heart disease
risk factors such as high plasma cholesterol and platelet aggregation.
...
PMID:A soy protein isolate rich in genistein and daidzein and its effects on plasma isoflavone concentrations, platelet aggregation, blood lipids and fatty acid composition of plasma phospholipid in normal men. 875 72
Cerebral infarction before the age of 45 years accounts for 4-6% of all strokes. The etiology remains unexplained in a significant proportion of patients even after extensive investigations. The reported risk factors of this age group are cardiopathies, hypertension, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, reduction of anticoagulant proteins, hypercoagulable states, antiphospholipid antibodies primary syndrome, antiphospholipid antibodies secondary syndrome, some hemoglobinopathies, hyperviscosity syndromes, vasculitis,
collagen
vascular diseases, fibromuscular dysplasia, arterial dissections, migraine, myopathy encephalopathy lactic acidosis stroke like episodes, homocystinuria, familial amyloid angiopathy, microangiopathy with retinopathy encephalopathy and deafness, systemic lupus erythematosus, use of cocaine, traumas or manipulations of neck, AIDS. From 1/1/94 to 04/30/95 we observed 19 patients with cerebral infarctions and 9 patients with transitory ischemic attacks in young people. The aim of our study was to apply a diagnostic protocol by sequential tests of first level and second level. According to this protocol we found that the more common risk factors were ischemic
cardiopathy
, hypertension, smoking and hypercholesterolemia. Moreover we observed other independent risk factors, although less frequent, like the antiphospholipid antibodies, neurolupus, AIDS, deficit of protein S.
...
PMID:[The application of a new diagnostic protocol for stroke in the young]. 876 46
An insertion(I)/deletion(D) polymorphism in the angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) gene seems to be associated with clinical
heart disease
in patients with diabetes mellitus. It is not known whether increased atherosclerosis or other factors among individuals with certain ACE-gene subtypes form the basis for the increased prevalence of
heart disease
among these subjects. We measured, at autopsy, the extent of macroscopically visible aortic atherosclerosis in 22 diabetic and 39 non-diabetic subjects and determined the ACE-genotype of all individuals by the polymerase chain reaction. The percentage of aortic surface area covered with atherosclerotic lesions was 29 +/- 8 (n = 6), 71 +/- 7 (n = 9), and 65 +/- 7 (n = 5) in the II-, ID-, and DD-genotype subgroups, respectively, among diabetes patients (mean +/- SEM) (2 p < 0.01, when comparing values from the ID and DD groups to the II group). The values were 37 +/- 9 (n = 11), 40 +/- 5 (n = 14) and 37 +/- 6 (n = 11) in the II-, ID-, and DD-genotypes in the non-diabetic group. There were no differences in sex ratio or age in any of the ACE-gene subtypes. The previously described relationship between
heart disease
and the ACE-gene polymorphism in diabetes could thus be founded in an increased extent of atherosclerosis among patients with the ID- and DD-ACE-gene subtypes. Patients with diabetes have several alterations in the composition of the collagenous components in the arterial wall. We also analysed for associations between total
collagen
and type IV and type V
collagen
content in the aortic vessel wall and the ACE-gene subtypes. We were, however, not able to disclose correlations between the polymorphism and any of these parameters. In conclusion, our data show an association between the ACE-I/D polymorphism and the degree of aortic atherosclerosis in diabetes; however, we did not observe correlations between the polymorphism and data concerning arterial collagenous components.
...
PMID:Aortic atherosclerosis in diabetes mellitus is associated with an insertion/deletion polymorphism in the angiotensin I-converting enzyme gene. No relation between the polymorphism and aortic collagen content. 878 65
The existence of coronary endoarterial cushions (CEC) in the human heart as nonpathological, functional entities has been debated, and CEC have been sparsely reported in animals. Arterial cushions are localized thickenings that protrude into the lumen of specific arteries. We have identified CEC in the rhesus monkey, dog, sheep, goat, pig, rabbit and rat, and in the human heart. Two distinct types are described: the ovoid CEC arranged singly, in pairs, or in groups of three to four, and the less common polypoid CEC seen primarily in humans. The highest incidence of CEC in rabbits and humans was in the left ventricle in arteries 150-488 microns in diameter. Light and electron microscopy demonstrated intimal location with smooth muscle cells surrounded by ground substance,
collagen
and elastin fibers in a highly organized pattern. Nerve fibers identified by their immunoreactivity with antiserum to the vasodilatory calcitonin-gene-related peptide contacted the CEC along the tunica media and were occasionally seen within CEC. Arrangement and histological composition of CEC suggest a role in the regulation of local blood flow and myocardial perfusion. In human hearts, the CEC density index correlated highly with the degree of
heart disease
. In subjects with high
heart disease
rating, increased connective tissue, lipid-like infiltration and calcification was seen within CEC, and foam cells were present in CEC of obese rabbits. This suggests that CEC in coronary arteries could be predisposed sites of atherosclerosis, and that injured CEC can cause coronary artery spasm and ischemia. We conclude that CEC occur in animals and humans as innervated intimal smooth muscle cushions that might have a role in myocardial perfusion and
heart disease
.
...
PMID:Intramyocardial arterial cushions of coronary vessels in animals and humans: morphology, occurrence and relation to heart disease. 892 19
Chagas' disease is a chronic form caused by a parasite, the Trypanosoma Cruzi, endemic of Latin America. The Trypanosoma Cruzi is transmitted by hematophageous bugs, particularly in dilapidated rural areas. Three phases of the disease can be distinguished: 1) acute phase, with high tissue and blood parasitic involvement; 2) undetermined phase, in which the diagnosis requires sophisticated clinical investigations; 3) chronic phase (10-30 years following the infection), characterized particularly by cardiac disease manifestations. The present 120 patients were subdivided into four groups: 1) 43 asymptomatic serum-positive subjects; 2) 25 serum-positive patients with electrocardiographic abnormalities; 3) 14 serum-positive patients with cardiomegaly; 4) 38 with classic chagasic
cardiopathy
. Comparative studies among these four groups were carried out employing Holter monitoring (24h), ergometric and phonomechanographic tests, M-mode and bidimensional echography and radionuclide ventriculography. A significant difference between the first 3 groups and, respectively, the fourth group (p < 0.001) was found. Deadly-risk (p < 0.001) manifestation were pointed out, such as a third tone, right bundle branch block with left anterior hemiblock and left ventricle's dilation. Autoptic controls were performed and in 4 patients the myocardial biopsy showed C3 and IgG deposition in capillaries and myocardial fibers, at electron microscopic examination, some thickening of capillary and myocytic basal membrane, interstitial
collagen
proliferation, besides non-specific myocellular abnormalities were detected.
...
PMID:[Anatomo-clinical and epidemiologic study of Chagas disease]. 892 46
Recent studies have suggested that omega 3-fats of marine origin may have a protective role in
heart disease
. This study aimed to compare the effects of fish or fish oil, in the setting of a high- or low-fat diet, on platelet aggregation and platelet thromboxane in men with increased risk of cardiovascular disease. One hundred twenty men who were nonsmokers, 30 to 60 years old, with mildly elevated blood pressure and cholesterol were randomly allocated to one of five high-fat (40% of daily energy) or two low-fat (30%) groups for 12 weeks. The five high-fat groups took either 6 or 12 fish oil capsules daily; fish; a combination of fish and fish oil; or placebo capsules. The two low-fat groups took either fish or placebo capsules. Fish meals provided 1.3 g of eicosapentaenoic acid daily, equivalent to 6 fish oil capsules, and contained an average of 3.65 g/d of omega 3-fatty acids. Multiple regression analysis of the combined groups showed that all groups taking omega 3-fatty acids reduced platelet aggregation to both
collagen
(P < .0001) and platelet-activating factor (PAF) (P < .05) and platelet thromboxane B2 responses (P < .05) to
collagen
-induced aggregation. The low-fat diet alone had no effect on PAF-induced platelet aggregation and only a small effect on platelet responses to
collagen
(P < .05). Platelet aggregation responses to PAF were reduced more by fish oil than fish in a high-fat diet, whereas fish had a greater effect when part of a low-fat rather than a high-fat diet. There was no significant difference in
collagen
-induced platelet aggregation or platelet thromboxane between fish and fish oils on a high or low fat intake. In conjunction with our previous findings of improvements in lipoproteins, blood pressure, and heart rate in this population, these results on platelet function suggest that dietary omega 3-fatty acids incorporated into a low- rather than a high-fat diet have a wider spectrum of more favorable effects on cardiovascular risk factors.
...
PMID:Interactions between dietary fat, fish, and fish oils and their effects on platelet function in men at risk of cardiovascular disease. 908 82
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