Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
519 patients with angina pectoris studied by selective coronary arteriography and left ventriculogram, were followed for a period ranging from 18 months to 7 years. The mean follow-up was 42.2 months. The patients showed a survival probability of 81% at the 7th year. After 5 years the survival probability was 83.2% for patients with typical stable angina, 70.3% for patients with
unstable angina
, 96.7% for patients with atypical angina. The survival probability was 78.8% for the male sex and 94.6% for the female (at the 5th year). Age, a long-lasting angina, the presence of: previous infarction, myocardial failure, cigarette smoking,
hyperlipidemia
, cardiomegaly and an ischemic resting EKG were factors with poor prognostic value. The prognostic value of significant coronary stenosis was confirmed. The survival probability at the 5th year of the patients without critical stenosis was 96.6%, of patients with stenosis of 1, 2 and 3 main coronary arteries was respectively: 87.6%, 79% 54.7%. Significative prognostic differences were observed in patients with normal left ventricle kinesia (survival probability at the 5th year: 90%), compared with patients with severe VS ipokinesia (62.7%) and with VS diskinesia (69%). In the follow-up period an incidence of 9% of myocardial infarctions was observed. The degree of each stenosis and the number of vessels involved, the type of angina, the presence of risk factors or previous myocardial infarction did not affect the clinical evolution of angina.
...
PMID:[Natural history of angina pectoris: follow-up on 519 unoperated patients (author's transl)]. 71 Jul 62
Fifty patients who suffered from an acute myocardial infarction at age 40 or below and underwent coronary arteriography, were studied from 8 to 184 months after the infarction (mean follow-up 56 months).
Hyperlipidaemia
(60%) and cigarette-smoking (82%) were the most common risk factors, while hypertension and diabetes mellitus were found in 10% of all patients. Thirty-seven patients had two or more risk factors.
Preinfarction angina
was present in 7 subjects. Death rate was 14% within five years and was related to the severity of symptoms. Out of the patients with normal coronary arteriogram (6 patients) or with a single vessel disease 21 were free of angina and 30 did not suffer a reinfarction. Out of 17 patients with two or more coronary vessel disease, angina was present in 14 and reinfarction was seen in 5.
...
PMID:[Myocardial infarction in the young: evolution and clinico-coronarographic correlation (author's transl)]. 87 96
It is generally recognized that formation of a platelet-fibrin-rich thrombus in an atherosclerotic coronary artery is the basis of
unstable angina
and acute myocardial infarction. Platelet hyperactivity has been identified in coronary risk factors such as
hyperlipidemia
and diabetes mellitus. Persistent activation of these cells results in release of growth factors that may contribute to the progression of atherosclerosis. Several recent studies show that endothelium, by generating or metabolizing a host of vasoactive substances, plays a critical role in the modulation of vascular tone. Important among these substances are prostacyclin (PGI2) and endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF). The endothelium-dependent modulation of coronary artery tone correlates with the severity of atherosclerosis and the number of coronary risk factors. Procedures such as angioplasty and coronary bypass surgery injure the endothelium. The loss of endothelial smooth muscle relaxant function may contribute to the vasoconstriction and thrombosis often observed soon after these procedures. Thrombolysis (and subsequent reperfusion of the coronary artery) is also associated with severe endothelial dysfunction, with a resulting vasoconstrictor influence on the coronary vascular bed. Activation of leukocytes and their presence in the reperfused myocardium contribute to progression of myocardial injury by release of oxygen free radicals and proteolytic enzymes. Thus, it seems that a perturbation in this delicate equilibrium in cellular interactions relates to genesis and progression of myocardial ischemia.
...
PMID:Platelet-leukocyte-endothelial interactions in coronary artery disease. 154 43
The paper deals with the rheological properties of the blood of 38 male patients affected by ischaemic heart diseases (age: 40-75 years) and 19 healthy test persons of comparable age. The following haemorheological properties were measured. 1. Relative plasma viscosity 2. Erythrocyte aggregation 3. Erythrocyte deformability 4. Thrombocyte aggregation and 5. Whole blood viscosity. For the purpose of representing and assessing the results of measurement obtained a division was made into different groups according to the appearances of ischaemic heart disease (chronic ischaemic heart disease,
unstable angina
pectoris, acute heart infarct) and risk factors (smoking, diabetes mellitus, blood high pressure and
hyperlipidaemia
). The methods 1-3 proved to be especially suitable for representing gradual differences in the examined rheological parameters. The results obtained are discussed and evaluated.
...
PMID:[Hemorheologic findings in patients with ischemic heart disease]. 248 31
Late changes are frequent in saphenous vein grafts. About 10 to 12 years after bypass, about one-third are occluded, one-third have wall irregularities and narrowings attributed to atherosclerosis and one-third are seemingly intact. These changes are associated with recurrence of angina and other deleterious clinical events such as
unstable angina
, acute myocardial infarction, heart failure and death. Intimal fibrous hyperplasia may be a precursor of these changes, which could be minimized by appropriate surgical technologies and perhaps antiplatelet therapy. These late changes appear related to serum
hyperlipidemia
and smoking. Optimal control of these risk factors may retard their development and subsequent clinical deterioration. Although internal mammary artery (IMA) graft is the conduit of choice because of its apparent immunity to premature atherosclerosis, and hence its longer durability, saphenous vein grafts are still placed in many old patients and others, when a short operation time is a priority, and above all in combination with IMA grafts in order to obtain complete revascularization.
...
PMID:Late changes in saphenous vein coronary artery bypass grafts and their implications in clinical practice. 350 31
The importance of a positive family history as a primary risk factor for coronary heart disease was examined in a case history study. Of 792 consecutive male patients aged under 60 years who survived a first episode of
unstable angina
or myocardial infarction, 326 had a negative family history, 298 had a positive history, and in 168 a family history could not be established with certainty. There was no significant difference in the distribution of the three primary coronary risk factors--cigarette smoking, hypertension, and hypercholesterolaemia--between those with and those without a positive family history. The 133 subjects with a positive family history of premature coronary heart disease (occurrence in near relatives under 60 years) were significantly younger than those with a negative family history. It is concluded that there is little evidence to confirm a positive family history as an important independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, although there may be familial aggregation of subjects with a high susceptibility to the effects of the three primary risk factors, cigarette smoking, hypertension, and
hyperlipidaemia
.
...
PMID:Is a family history of coronary heart disease an independent coronary risk factor? 398 54
The impact of black-white differences in the prevalence of risk factors for coronary heart disease on the outcome of coronary bypass surgery has not been well defined. Preoperative status, coronary anatomy, and surgical results were reviewed in 54 black males operated on between December 1970 and August 1983. With the use of criteria established by the New York Heart Association, five patients were classified in class II, 34 were in class III, and 15 were in class IV. Five patients had
unstable angina
. The most common risk factor, cigarette smoking, occurred in 43 patients (80%). Thirty patients (56%) had hypertension, 10 (19%) were diabetic, 14 (26%) were obese, and 23 (43%) had a family history of coronary disease. Elevated cholesterol and triglyceride levels were present in 8 and 12 patients, respectively. An average of 2.9 grafts per patient was placed. Overall operative mortality was 5.6%. Prior to the use of cardioplegia in 1978, there were two deaths among 14 patients (mortality, 14%). Since 1978 there has been one death among 40 patients (mortality, 2.5%). Although immediate operative mortality appears not to be affected by black-white status, long-term prognosis may be influenced significantly by the high prevalence of hypertension and diabetes and the lower prevalence of
hyperlipidemia
among black patients.
...
PMID:Results of myocardial revascularization in black males. 647 39
There is an abundance of information suggesting that prostaglandins are involved in the development and clinical expression of atherosclerosis. Many studies demonstrate a relationship between prostaglandins and the risk factors for peripheral and coronary artery disease. Thus, part of the mechanism by which
hyperlipidemia
, diabetes mellitus, smoking, hypertension, sex hormones, age, heredity, emotional stress and diet contribute to the development and progression of atherosclerosis may be through an imbalance between thromboxane A2 and prostaglandin I2. Recent studies show a temporal relationship between acute ischemic events (specifically,
unstable angina
) and a transcardiac increase in thromboxane B2, while others demonstrate a salutary effect of disaggregatory and vasodilatory prostaglandins in such patients. If prostaglandins and thromboxane prove important in ischemic vascular disease, attention will be directed at the correction of their pathologic imbalance. This may be accomplished by dietary manipulation as well as by the development of prostaglandin receptor antagonists or inhibitors of specific prostaglandin pathways.
...
PMID:Prostaglandins and ischemic heart disease. 703 86
Each year in the United Kingdom about 250,000 people die from acute myocardial infarction, other ischaemic heart disease or stroke. Many will already have evidence of established vascular disease that predisposes to such an event--such as angina, peripheral vascular disease, atrial fibrillation, transient ischaemic attacks or a previous myocardial infarction or stroke. Others will have risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus or
hyperlipidaemia
, but the stroke or heart attack is the first evidence of established vascular disease. Aspirin was first discovered to have antiplatelet properties 30 years ago and since then many randomised clinical trials have sought to determine whether it (or other antiplatelet agents) can protect patients from heart attack or stroke. In this article we review the evidence and update our earlier conclusions on stroke, myocardial infarction, and
unstable angina
, arguing that aspirin should be widely used to reduce cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in certain high-risk patients.
...
PMID:Aspirin to prevent heart attack or stroke. 763 3
Health services researchers rely heavily on administrative data bases, but incomplete or incorrect coding may bias risk models based on administrative data. The best method for validating administrative data is to collect detailed information about the same cases from independent sources, but this approach may be too costly or technically difficult. We used data on coronary artery bypass surgery from four sites (Duke University; Minneapolis--St Paul; California; and Manitoba) to demonstrate an alternative approach for assessing diagnostic coding and to explore the implications of miscoding. The first two sites have clinical data; the second two have administrative data. The prevalences of 14 comorbidities and the associated risk ratios for short-term mortality were compared across data sets. Some comorbidities could not be precisely mapped to ICD-9-CM. Chronic or asymptomatic conditions such as mitral insufficiency, cardiomegaly, previous myocardial infarction, tobacco use, and
hyperlipidemia
were far less prevalent in administrative data than in clinical data. The prevalence of diabetes,
unstable angina
, and congestive heart failure were similar in administrative and clinical data. Estimates of relative risk derived from clinical data equalled or surpassed those derived from administrative data for all conditions. Hospitals should be encouraged to improve reporting of coexisting conditions on discharge abstracts and claims. In the meantime, researchers using administrative data should assess the vulnerability of their risk models to bias caused by selective underreporting.
...
PMID:A comparison of administrative versus clinical data: coronary artery bypass surgery as an example. Ischemic Heart Disease Patient Outcomes Research Team. 813 35
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>