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)

The chemical composition of ultracentrifugal fractions of VLDL (d less than 1006), LDL (d 1006-1063) and HDL (d less than 1063) has been studied in males affected by atherosclerosis of different vascular beds. Thirty-seven subjects affected by post-infarction cardiopathy (M.I.) showed significantly higher values of total-C, VLDL-C and LDL-C when compared to 52 controls. Twenty-three patients affected by non-occlusive ischaemic heart disease (I.H.D.) showed higher values than controls of total-C, VLCL-C, LDL-C, total TG, VLDL-TG, and GDL-TG. Twenty-three patients with atherosclerosis of the inferior limbs (P.A.) were characterized by increased levels of total-TG, VLDL-TG, VLDL-C, HDL-C. A group of patients who had suffered a stroke from cerebro-vascular disease (C.V.D.) did not show any significant difference from controls. In the M.I. group, 56% of the patients had a high level of C-VLDL. Patients with I.H.D. were characterized mostly by an increase in C-LDL, Patients with P.A. showed the highest values of total -TG, VLDL-TG and LDL-TG. Some of the observed differences are probably due to different metabolic backgrounds. Some other differences may be due to variations in dietary habits after heart infarction. Patients with levels of plasma cholesterol and triglyceride beyond the 90th percentile of the normal group showed many abnormalities in the chemical composition of their lipoproteins. It is noteworthy that increased amounts of cholesterol may collect in lipoprotein classes different from LDL while increased amounts of triglyceride may collect in classes different from VLDL.
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PMID:Chemical composition of ultracentrifugal fractions in different patterns of human atheroslcerosis. 18 83

This study was designed to assess HDL levels in children of young men with IHD, compared with children of asymptomatic men. Like their fathers, sons of patients with heart disease, had significantly lower HDL cholesterols than controls. This difference was independent of fasting triglycerides, obesity, diet or physical activity, and was the only "coronary risk factor" in this young age group.
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PMID:High density lipoprotein levels in children of young men with ischaemic heart disease. 22 9

Plasma lipoprotein cholesterol and triglyceride levels were measured in 24 obese not-insulin dependent Pima Indian diabetics and 9 obese nondiabetic controls before and after 1-8 months on a 500 calorie diet. The diabetics were divided into 3 groups--severe, recent onset (n = 10), severe long-term (n = 6), and borderline (n = 8). The diet regimen resulted in weight loss and improved glucose tolerance in all of the diabetics, and insulin secretion increased in the 2 groups of severe diabetics. After the period of weight loss, total plasma cholesterol had declined greater than 20%, and LDL cholesterol decreased 25% in all diabetic groups and in the controls. In all diabetic groups, HDL cholesterol did not decline; therefore the ratio of HDL/LDL cholesterol after diet therapy was significantly increased. In the controls HDL cholesterol declined with weight loss, and the distribution of HDL/LDL cholesterol remained constant. Plasma and VLDL triglyceride levels decreased in all groups in those with initial triglyceride levels greater than 150 mg/dl. The results indicate that weight loss in not-insulin dependent diabetics not only improves glucose tolerance, but also lowerss plasma lipids and reverses the dyslipoproteinemia often associated with this disorder. This may influence the risk of arteriosclerotic heart disease in these individuals.
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PMID:Changes in plasma lipoproteins accompanying diet therapy in obese diabetics. 22 83

Cigarette smoking causes significant exposure to nicotine, which increases heart rate, blood pressure, and thus myocardial oxygen demand, and to carbon monoxide, which decreases the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood because of carboxyhemoglobin formation. Cigarette smoking also predisposes the patient to coronary vasoconstriction. Smoking cessation results in the early elimination of nicotine and carbon monoxide from the system and decreases the risks of ischemia based on these mechanisms. Over the long term, smoking cessation results in elimination of the increased risk of myocardial infarction in patients without previous heart disease as early as 2 years after smoking stops. In addition, for patients with known coronary artery disease, smoking cessation results in an increase in HDL level, which may result in a retardation of atherogenesis and reduced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. It is important for all physicians to reiterate both the short- and long-term risks of cigarette smoking as well as the good news-that smoking cessation results in a substantial, if not complete, reversal of the risk of myocardial infarction and death, particularly for patients with established coronary artery disease. In light of those established facts, efforts to develop more effective methods to help patients quit smoking must be increased so patients can realize these important health benefits.
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PMID:Cardiovascular benefits of smoking cessation. 134 4

The information explosion characteristic of recent years has presented a series of findings enabling a more effective prevention of ischemic heart disease by controlling low density lipoprotein (LDL) levels of cholesterol. The detection of LDL receptors has provided new information on the mechanisms regulating the level of plasma LDL. Data on competitive inhibitors of endogenous cholesterol synthesis have afforded new possibilities of pharmacological control of LDL levels. Studies of primary prevention of ischemic heart disease have yielded evidence showing that a 1% decrease of cholesterol level reduces coronary risk by 2%. A prospective study of the relationship between cholesterol levels and coronary mortality, absolutely unique as to its extent (368,000 middle-aged men followed up over a period of 6 years) has demonstrated that there is no borderline cholesterol level below which coronary risk would be absolutely excluded. Between total cholesterol level and coronary mortality there is a close, continual and graded relationship. In light of these findings, total cholesterol levels have been reclassified: desirable levels -5.2 x 10(-3) mol.l-1, borderline risk levels under 5.2-6.2 x 10(-3) mol.l-1, and high risk levels--above 6.2 x 10(-3) mol.l-1. In subjects with several risk factors (smoking, hypertension, familial occurrence of heart, heart disease, obesity, diabetes mellitus, HDL cholesterol below 0.9 x 10(-3) mol.l-1) the level of total cholesterol should be brought down below 4 x 10(-3) mol.l-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Plasma cholesterol levels and ischemic heart disease: new findings and new approaches]. 139 27

Along with menopause goes an increase of cardiovascular heart disease risk, and at the same time a change in certain risk factors. Those risk factor changes are analysed. The most obvious change is cholesterol increase, mostly on its LDL fraction linked to a decrease of its regular epuration. Today, the influence of replacement therapy on cardiovascular heart disease risk is not well known, and this is due mostly to the fact that there are no randomized studies. Thus exists a selection of women with low risk levels, either at the beginning or during follow-up. As a consequence results are necessarily optimized. It is possible to extrapolate the risk factor evolution under treatment only if its mechanism is known. Thus, when estradiol is given not the oral route, lipidic balance is brought back to its premenopausal state, without any noticeable influence on other known risk factors. It is thus reasonable to see there a favorable influence. When estradiol or any other similar molecule is given the oral route, one can notice, depending on the dose and the molecule, similar changes, along however with other variations which actual consequences remain unknown, like the increase of certain coagulation factors, of angiotensinogen, of triglycerides on HDL cholesterol. In particular, one does not know if those last pharmacological changes do not have a negative effect on predisposed patients.
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PMID:[Menopause and cardiovascular risk factors. Influence of treatments]. 161 74

When aggressive lipid-altering therapy is compared with conventional therapy in patients at very high risk for CHD, i.e. those who have abnormal lipid profiles, established coronary disease, and symptomatic heart disease, aggressive therapy halves the expected frequency of progression, triples the frequency of regression, favours the net regression of disease, and reduces clinical events by nearly 75%. These benefits correlate with reductions in LDL cholesterol, systolic blood pressure and increases in HDL cholesterol, and are highly significant, not only statistically but also clinically. This finding is consistent with the observation that there is a persistent relationship between coronary morbidity and mortality across the spectrum of cholesterol levels, and that this risk can be reduced in men with CHD and abnormal lipid metabolism through aggressive lipid management.
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PMID:Effect of lovastatin or niacin combined with colestipol and regression of coronary atherosclerosis. 164 95

Thirty-one patients, mean age 54 years, had been on chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) for an average of 38 months. Mean values (mg/dl) for triglycerides (567), total-C (267), LDL-C (133), and Apo-B (154) were elevated, and HDL-C (30) were low. The low values for total-C/Apo-B and LDL-C/Apo-B suggest an increase in the number of low density lipoprotein (LDL) particles, rather than in the amount of cholesterol per LDL particle. Without knowledge of lipids, ischemic heart disease for the 31 patients was categorized into five grades in the following manner. All patients were graded based on history (angina, myocardial infarction, and bypass surgery), electrocardiogram (EKG), and echocardiography. In addition, five patients underwent coronary angiography, the results of which were considered in their grading. The five grades were assigned as follows: Grade I, no evidence (n = 15); Grade II, angina with EKG ischemia (n = 4); Grade III, myocardial infarction (MI) (n = 1); Grade IV, MI with dyskinesia-akinesia on echo (n = 4); Grade V, severe three vessel disease on angiography, or multiple infarcts, or Grade IV with heart failure (n = 7). Only Apo-B (r = 0.56) and total-C/HDL-C (r = 0.57) correlated with severity of grade, with p less than 0.001. When patients with and without detectable ischemic heart disease were compared by stepwise logistic regression, Apo-B was the only variable that independently predicted heart disease (p = 0.001). However, contribution of the lipid changes induced by CAPD has not been established.
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PMID:Ischemic heart disease, serum cholesterol, and apolipoproteins in CAPD. 175 Dec 58

The study concerned 206 diabetic patients, aged 35-54 years, from the urban Kragujevac area. Of this number 40.3 per cent had macrovascular disease, including vascular heart disease (34.9%), diseased leg blood vessels (12.1%) and cerebral stroke (2.4%). According to the results of discriminative analysis of potential risk factors (age, sex, body weight index, cigarette smoking, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, glycemia, triglycerides, lipoproteins, total cholesterol, HDL and LDL cholesterol, onset and duration of diabetes, family history) diabetic patients with macrovascular disease and patients with vascular heart disease predominated in female population with early onset of diabetes and high level of diastolic blood pressure.
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PMID:[Microvascular disease in diabetics--discrimination analysis of risk factors]. 179 79

Low concentrations of total and LDL cholesterol are associated with minimal risk of atherosclerosis. Aerobic exercise has been similarly associated with a low risk of heart disease. The literature is inconclusive as to whether there is an association between total and LDL cholesterol and exercise. Further, previous work has, almost exclusively, examined male runners. Therefore, we examined 176 male and female cross-country skiers, participating in the National Master's Championships, for body composition, dietary habits, exercise habits, and serum lipid levels. Our results show markedly low concentrations of serum LDL cholesterol and total cholesterol, as well as the expected high concentrations of HDL cholesterol and low concentrations of triglycerides, in these lean skiers. Their diets contained 30% fat, and they exercised 9 h weekly. Although it is difficult to separate the effects of diet, leanness, and exercise on the lipid profile, it is apparent that the lifestyle led by these people is associated with a lipid profile that confers an extremely low risk of atherosclerotic disease.
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PMID:Influence of lifetime cross-country skiing on plasma lipids and lipoproteins. 188 77


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