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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To examine the predictive value of family history in detecting children with high blood cholesterol, finger-stick screening was done in 1,118 children ages 9-10 whose parents provided parental and grandparental history of
cardiovascular disease
events and risk factors. Mean blood total cholesterol was 167.7 mg/dl with no significant gender or ethnic differences. Of 157 children with blood cholesterol 200 mg/dl or greater, only 61 (38.9%) had a family history of early myocardial infarction or
hyperlipidemia
; however, the prevalence of a positive family history varied from 2.8% in Vietnamese-Americans to 38.5% in Spanish-surnamed students to 52.6% in all other children. Adherence to current policies recommending screening only children with a positive family history will result in failing to detect a majority of children whose blood cholesterol levels exceed desirable levels for adults, particularly those from ethnic families recently arrived in the U.S.
...
PMID:Family history fails to detect the majority of children with high capillary blood total cholesterol. 201 63
More than a decade has passed since the introduction of the concept that inhibition of platelet function may be helpful in preventing the initiation of thrombus formation. Aspirin has been recognized as inhibiting normal platelet function and the mechanism has been clearly delineated. Legions of patients have been studied to answer the question of whether aspirin is efficacious in the primary prevention of acute myocardial infarction. At the present time, however, a solid, clear answer is not available and firm recommendations cannot be made. A large number of studies evaluating aspirin and other antiplatelet agents in the prevention or delay of recurrent myocardial infarction (secondary prevention) have been completed and those studies reporting a favorable beneficial effect are in the minority. In these secondary prevention studies reporting success, the doses of aspirin employed were large enough to inhibit both the cyclo-oxygenase system and thromboxane A2 production as well as the synthesis of prostacyclin. Thus, in these studies if aspirin is effective in reducing adverse cardiovascular events, its efficacy is being mediated by an unknown mechanism. If the reader of the few studies that report positive results is convinced of the benefit of aspirin, it must be emphasized that thoughtful, cautious patient selection based upon the individual's cardiovascular risk profile must be exercised. Individual variation may exist with respect to aspirin's beneficial effect. It must be absolutely recognized that aspirin or any antiplatelet agent does not in any way substitute for the removal or treatment of coexisting risk factors such as tobacco, obesity, hypercholesterolemia,
hyperlipidemia
, hypertension, and metabolic disease. In contrast to aspirin, control of the above risk factors has been established as beneficial. Aspirin is not free of undesirable side-effects; fatalities secondary to hemorrhage have been reported, and these must be known in detail and understood by both physician and patient before this agent is prescribed in the prophylactic treatment of
cardiovascular disease
.
...
PMID:Aspirin in the prevention of thrombosis. 203 Jun 40
Elevated fasting insulin is an independent risk factor for
hyperlipidemia
, hypertension, and
cardiovascular disease
, but determinants of insulin other than age and body mass remain poorly described. Potentially modifiable factors associated with insulin were identified by correlating anthropometric, dietary and physical activity data in the CARDIA cohort of 2643 black and 2472 white men and women aged 18-30 years. Insulin was positively correlated with serum glucose, body mass index (BMI), skinfold thickness, waist/hip ratio and sucrose intake, and negatively correlated with heavy physical activity score, treadmill exercise duration, and magnesium intake (each p less than 0.01). After adjustment for other covariates, the positive association of insulin with waist/hip ratio, skinfold thickness, and sucrose intake remained in the group as a whole, as did the negative associations with magnesium and treadmill duration. These relationships provide insight into potentially modifiable factors affecting insulin levels, and should be considered in interpreting associations between insulin levels and
cardiovascular disease
.
...
PMID:Correlates of fasting insulin levels in young adults: the CARDIA study. 203 62
The need for treatment of mild and apparently asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) is questioned, but a raised incidence of
cardiovascular disease
has been regarded as evidence in favour of surgery. While it is well known that several risk factors for
cardiovascular disease
(hypertension,
hyperlipidaemia
and diabetes mellitus/impaired glucose tolerance) are overrepresented in HPT, it is not known whether surgery provides long-term normalization in these respects and reduces the risk of premature death. In a 15-year follow-up of a cohort of 172 subjects in whom mild hypercalcaemia was initially detected during a health screening, it was found that 56 subjects had died. 17 individuals had been operated on for HPT, 47 individuals were persistently hypercalcaemic, while 45 subjects had serum calcium within the normal range (seven individuals were lost to follow-up). There had been no significant differences in blood pressure between these groups of mildly hypercalcaemic patients and age- and sex-matched controls at the initial screening, but at follow-up blood pressure was significantly higher not only in subjects with persistent hypercalcaemia, but also in those who had been successfully operated on for HPT. Neither of the hypercalcaemic groups showed any significant deviations from the controls with regard to indices of lipid or glucose metabolism. These findings suggest that there is no simple cause-and-effect relationship to account for the propensity toward high blood pressure in primary HPT. Consequently it cannot be assumed that surgery for HPT will eliminate the increased risk of
cardiovascular disease
in patients with mild HPT.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors in primary hyperparathyroidism: a 15-year follow-up of operated and unoperated cases. 206 9
A number of experimental studies have reported that dietary fish oil can attenuate the development of atherosclerosis in cholesterol-fed rats, quails, rabbits, pigs, and monkeys. Epidemiologic studies suggest that dietary fish oil can reduce the development of
cardiovascular disease
in humans. Data are limited but suggest that laboratory animals, normal volunteers, and patients with
hyperlipidemia
show similar responses to the consumption of fish oil. The major effect of dietary fish oil on serum lipoproteins is a reduction in plasma triglyceride levels, with inconsistent effects on plasma cholesterol and HDL-cholesterol. Dietary fish oil induces a significant reduction of platelet aggregation associated with a prolonged bleeding time. This antithrombotic effect may be partially related to a decreased thromboxane A2 and to an increased prostacyclin level. Dietary fish oil may also have anti-inflammatory and anti-immunologic effects through an elevation of prostaglandins and a reduction in the level of leukotriene B4. Recent experimental data suggest that either fish oil or verapamil can bring on a regression in atherosclerosis in cholesterol-fed rabbits put on a normal diet; however, there was no additive effect of the combination of these agents. Overall, data suggest that fish oil may have a role in attenuating the development of atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Modification of experimental and clinical atherosclerosis by dietary fish oil. 210 47
The authors report the case of a 18 year old man with a chronic corticosteroid-refractory nephrotic syndrome complicated by carotid artery thrombosis and myocardial infarction. Thromboembolism is one of the most serious complications of the nephrotic syndrome. Serious clotting factor disturbances are observed: changes in platelet function (hyperaggregability) increased plasma zymogens and cofactors, increased plasma fibrinogen, abnormalities of the fibrinolytic system and acquired deficiencies of coagulation inhibitors. The respective role of each of these abnormalities have not been clearly established, but it is likely that increased platelet aggregation and antithrombin III deficiency are important factors in producing a hypercoagulable state in the nephrotic syndrome.
Hyperlipidemia
is also a characteristic feature of the nephrotic syndrome: these is a wide spectrum of lipoprotein patterns with increased low density lipoproteins (LDL) or very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) or both; contradictory results have been reported with respect to the high density lipoproteins (HDL): decreased, normal or even increased plasma levels have been observed. In addition, changes in the distribution and composition of LDL and VLDL subclasses have been detected. Most of these changes have an atherogenic potential but controversy still surrounds the question of the prevalence of ischaemic heart disease in the nephrotic syndrome; it is unlikely that nephrotic syndromes of short duration have any influence on the incidence of coronary events, but patients with chronic heavy protein urea and long-term exposure to abnormalities of haemostasis and lipid profiles appear to have a significant risk of developing
cardiovascular disease
and may require long-term anticoagulant therapy.
...
PMID:[Carotid artery thrombosis and myocardial infarction in nephrotic syndrome]. 210 97
Recent studies have shown the predictive power of abdominal distribution of adipose tissue for the development of
cardiovascular disease
, stroke, diabetes as well as strong associations to the previously known risk factors for these endpoints. The reason for the accumulation of abdominal fat might be due to an imbalance between cortisol and sex steroid hormones. Cortisol receptor density seems to be particularly high in abdominal adipose tissue, leading to expression of lipoprotein lipase activity primarily here. Progesterone and testosterone seems to counteract this, the former perhaps through competition with the cortisol receptor. Accumulation of intraabdominal fat, particularly in the tissues drained by the portal circulation, probably leads to high free fatty acid concentrations in the portal vein, because of the high lipolytic sensitivity of these tissues. This in turn seems to inhibit hepatic clearance of portal insulin, leading to peripheral hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, perhaps hypertension as well as
hyperlipidemia
via drive by free fatty acids of lipoprotein synthesis in the liver. These are risk factors for diabetes,
cardiovascular disease
and stroke. It is of interest that subjects with abdominal adipose tissue have several factors leading to increased cortisol and low sex steroid hormone secretion, including stress, high alcohol consumption and smoking. This might provide some of the background to this syndrome.
...
PMID:Obesity and adipose tissue distribution as risk factors for the development of disease. A review. 214 Jan 8
Clinical, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic findings of 69 subjects aged 80 years or over were analyzed in order to assess the prevalence of left ventricular mass,
hyperlipidemia
, hypertension and cigarette smoking. Of the 69 subjects studied, 41 had no symptoms or sign of
cardiovascular disease
, 28 had one or more cardiac symptoms (NYHA stage 2-4). 25 had electrocardiographic evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy and there were no differences between the asymptomatic and symptomatic groups. Echocardiographically, the left ventricular mass index ranged between 103 to 247 g/m2 in men and 170 to 251 g/m2 in women. In 36 subjects with high left ventricular mass index, the ventricular septal thicknesses ranged from 12 mm to 15 mm in 19 subjects, and posterior wall thicknesses ranged from 12 mm to 16 mm in 17 subjects. Of the 58 patients with an adequate echocardiogram, 47 had clinically diagnosed hypertension (81%). In our study population, a prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (62%), isolated systolic hypertension (26%), definite hypertension (33.3%), high LDL-cholesterol (63%), low HDL-cholesterol (26%), abnormal Q wave (16%), cigarette smoking (47.8%) and diabetes mellitus (1.4%) were found.
...
PMID:Left ventricular mass index and prevalence of heart disease in the population aged 80 years and over. 214 63
From 1975 to 1985 mortality from cardiovascular causes has decreased from 170.6 to 164.5 per 100,000 while its relative participation among all causes has increased from 23.0 to 27.6%. Total cardiovascular and ischemic deaths in the 35 to 74 year age range has also decreased. A lower mortality from ischemic heart disease but a higher one from cerebro vascular disease in all age groups compared to those reported in USA is shown by these data. Differences in the prevalence of risk factors such as diet,
hyperlipidemia
, hypertension and smoking may underlie this different mortality pattern from
cardiovascular disease
.
...
PMID:[Has cardiovascular mortality increased in Chile?]. 215 26
Erythrocyte sodium-lithium countertransport was measured in normolipidaemic and hyperlipidaemic hypertensive patients, hyperlipidaemic normotensive patients and normal controls. Hypertension and
hyperlipidaemia
were each independently associated with raised sodium-lithium countertransport (by analysis of variance, P less than 0.01 and P less than 0.01). The effects were additive so that
hyperlipidaemia
could not explain raised sodium-lithium countertransport in hypertension. In hyperlipidaemic hypertensive patients, levels of plasma cholesterol, triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) cholesterol were increased, and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol was reduced. Of these patients, 73.3% had a known family history of hypertension. Their normotensive first degree relatives were studied, and 48% of these also had raised sodium-lithium countertransport and abnormal plasma lipids (raised cholesterol, triglycerides and LDL cholesterol, and reduced HDL cholesterol). Relatives with normal sodium-lithium countertransport had normal lipids. Therefore, raised sodium-lithium countertransport was associated with the inheritance of both hypertension and
hyperlipidaemia
, and this could explain why raised sodium-lithium countertransport has been associated with a family history of both hypertension and associated
cardiovascular disease
.
...
PMID:Elevated sodium-lithium countertransport: a familial marker of hyperlipidaemia and hypertension? 216 76
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