Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lupus anticoagulants and anticardiolipin antibodies are antiphospholipid antibodies (APLAb) with related antigenic specificities and are newly recognized markers for an increased risk of thrombosis. We studied 48 patients who presented with cerebral or visual dysfunction associated with APLAb to help clarify the diagnostic, clinical, laboratory, radiologic, and pathologic features in these patients. Most patients presented with transient cerebral ischemia or cerebral infarction. Recurrent and stereotypic events were frequent. Visual disturbances resulted from amaurosis fugax, retinal arterial or venous occlusion, occipital ischemia, diplopia, and migraine-like disturbances. Three patients presented with severe atypical classic migraine. Recurrent infarcts of brain and eye were significantly associated with the presence of cigarette smoking, hyperlipidemia, and a positive antinuclear antibody. During 44.4 patient-years of prospective follow-up, the combined stroke and systemic thrombotic event rate was 0.27 events per patient-year and was 0.54 events per patient-year if TIA and death were included. Forty (83%) of the patients did not have systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Thrombocytopenia was present in 15 (31%) and a false-positive VDRL in 11 (23%) of the patients. Cerebral angiography was normal or revealed large-vessel occlusion or stenosis without changes suggestive of vasculitis. Patients with only transient dysfunction generally had normal radiologic studies, including angiography. Organs and arterial vessels studied pathologically revealed thrombotic occlusive disease without vasculitis. APLAb are strongly associated with an immune-mediated thrombotic tendency, generally in the absence of SLE. Other stroke risk factors may add to the risk of recurrent ischemic events in patients with APLAb.
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PMID:Cerebrovascular and neurologic disease associated with antiphospholipid antibodies: 48 cases. 238 25

From 1950 to 1980, the gross alteration in dietary habit in Japan was noted. Intake of total calories has markedly increased. This could be most likely due to a remarkable increase in intake of fat, especially animal fat, egg and milk products. A marked decrease of mortality rate due to cerebral hemorrhage and in contrast a marked increase of mortality rate due to cerebral infarction and ischemic heart disease were noted. An epidemiological study of the intake of fish meat (EPA intake) and the mortality rate of adult diseases was performed in a fishing area and in a farming area in Chiba Prefecture. Intake of fish meat (EPA) by the residents of the fishing area was 2-3 times higher than by the residents of the farming area. The mortality rate due to ischemic heart disease and cerebral vascular diseases tended to be lower in the fishing area than in the farming area. EPA manufactured from sardine oil was orally given to normal subjects and to patients with cerebro- and cardiovascular diseases for 4-16 weeks. Significantly decreased platelet aggregation, decreased platelet retention, lowered whole blood viscosity, prolonged bleeding time, increased erythrocyte deformability, improvement of hyperlipidemia, and clinical improvement in some patients were noted. 12-Lipoxygenase metabolites of EPA (12-HPEPE) and arachidonic acid (12-HPETE) have an equipotent inhibitory action on platelet function.
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PMID:Clinical and epidemiological studies of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) in Japan. 282 87

A 6.5-year prospective study of cerebral infarction among residents 40 years and older was conducted at the Akadani-Ijimino district in Shibata City, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. The response rate for the initial examination was 85% of 1,182 males and 93% of 1,469 females. Nine hundred and sixty males and 1,339 females who were initially free of stroke were followed up from July 1977 through December 1983. Statistically significant risk factors for cerebral infarction appeared to be age, elevated blood pressure, high R, ST-T changes and atrial fibrillation on ECG, and albuminuria. The ECG abnormalities and albuminuria were due to the high blood pressure persisted over a long period of time. The strength of association of blood pressure with cerebral infarction got weak in comparison with other factors, and funduscopic changes which had been regarded as a risk factor for stroke in 1965-1974 did not reach statistical significance because of the spread of the community-based hypertension control. Even in 1977-1983 when Japanese dietary habits were westernized, neither hyperlipidemia nor obesity appeared to be related to the development of cerebral infarction.
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PMID:Epidemiologic studies of stroke in Shibata, a Japanese provincial city: preliminary report on risk factors for cerebral infarction. 404 40

Heterogeneity of apolipoprotein E (apo E) was analyzed by isoelectric focusing of apo VLDL in patients with hyperlipidemia and/or atherosclerosis. Six major apo E phenotypes were shown, in agreement with the current genetic model which is composed of 3 major apo E isoproteins, apo E-4, apo E-3 and apo E-2, resulting from three apo E alleles, epsilon 4, epsilon 3 and epsilon 2, at a single genetic locus. We recognized an additional apolipoprotein band, which is located basic to apo E-4 on an isoelectric focusing gel, in 3 patients with hyperlipidemia. The new apolipoprotein component, named apo E-5, was identical with ordinary apo E in apparent molecular weight by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and in its interactions with heparin-Sepharose gel and with anti-apo E antibody. This mutant apo E isoprotein had an isoelectric point more basic by one unit of charge than apo E-4. Two of 3 patients had the phenotype E5/3, and the other the phenotype E5/4. Genetic analysis of the apo E phenotypes in family members of the patients indicated the presence of a new apo E allele (epsilon 5) at the same genetic locus as hitherto known alleles. Since most of the subjects above 50 years old with apo E-5 had ischemic heart disease or cerebral infarction, it was suggested that the mutant apo E-5 may possibly be related to the development of atherosclerosis.
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PMID:A new isoform of apolipoprotein E--apo E-5--associated with hyperlipidemia and atherosclerosis. 671 69

All contributory factors to the unusual occurrence of stroke in young people were evaluated in patients under age 40 admitted to the Stroke Unit of the Austin Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Over the August 1977 to December 1980 period there were 700 admissions. Of these 14 patients were under the age of 40. There were 7 males and 7 females whose ages ranged from 17-38 years. Each patient was screened for factors which might contribute to premature vascular disease including hypertension, diabetes, smoking, obesity, and hyperlipidemia. In addition, the following tests were performed to exclude an arteritic process: full blood examination; ESR; protein electrophoresis; syphilis serology; and the presence of antinuclear factor. Each of the 14 patients suffered cerebral infarction. A summary of each case is presented in a table. In 9 patients, infarction occurred in the carotid territory of supply. Large cortical infarcts with or without subcortical involvement occurred in cases 1-8, of whom 5 had major vessel occlusion demonstrated angiographically and another had stenosing and ulcerative atheromatous disease at the extracranial carotid bifurcation. In a further 4 patients, infarction occurred within the vertebrobasilar territory and was either confined to the brain stem, the occiptal cortex, or involved both. Angiograms were performed in 2 of these patients and showed irregular narrowing of the vertebral artery which was interpreted as spasm and segmentally narrowing of the basilar artery. The final patient had several ischemic events which included right sided amaurosis fugax, and left frontal, right parieto-occipital and left occipital infarctions. Angiography was normal. All patients survived the stroke and were able to go home. There may be an interrelationship between the pathological findings of Irey et al. (1978) and the effect oral contraceptives (OCs) has on migraine. This is relevant to Case 13. Sustained exposure to OCs may produce the pathological changes described (visible as segmental narrowing angiographically). In 2 patients cerebral infarction was caused by atheromatous or hypertensive occlusive vascular disease. In Case 3 an embolus occluded the middle cerebral artery. Infarction complicating migraine was diagnosed confidently in 4 patients on the basis of typical migrainous symptomatology in the past and accompanying the stroke. Of the 12 patients fully evaluated, there were no cases of polycythemia or thrombocytosis. There were no abnormalities of the clotting factors. Almost every patient had some form of emotional upset, and there were 7 who had significant psychiatric illness and emotional problems of extreme magnitide.
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PMID:Stroke syndromes in young people. 692 82

HDL-cholesterol levels were determined by a heparin-Ca precipitation method in 89 survivors of cerebral infarction (CI) (75 males, 14 females) and 14 patients with transient ischemic attacks (TIA) (8 males, 6 females). The mean values of HDL-cholesterol concentration and HDL:LDL-cholesterol ratio for both sexes of CI patients were significantly lower than those of the healthy controls (37 males, 14 females). These values for CI patients were significantly lower than in patients with various diseases excluding cardiovascular disease, hepatic disease, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus and degenerative disorders of the nervous system (46 males, 43 females). In patients with TIA, these differences were statistically significant only for men. Based on the patient's history, clinical signs and symptoms and the findings of computerized tomography and 4-vessel angiography, male CI patients were divided into 2 sub-groups, CI believed to be in the distribution of a perforating artery and CI in the distribution of a cortical artery; it was found that the HDL-cholesterol level and HDL:LDL-cholesterol ratio were significantly lower in the cortical artery group than in the perforating artery group, suggesting that these lipoprotein abnormalities may play a part in the pathogenesis of CI, particularly of the cortical artery area infarction.
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PMID:Lipoprotein abnormalities in the pathogenesis of cerebral infarction and transient ischemic attack. 723 60

Victims of atherothrombotic infarction of the brain, the most common variety of stroke, frequently have recurrent strokes. Risk factors believed to accelerate such events include hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, atherosclerotic disease (of heart, aortocervical and intracranial vessels), erythrocythemia, stress, tobacco smoking, hyperuricemia, and perhaps obesity. Most prior studies indicate average anticipated 5 year mortality of 35 to 65 percent and stroke recurrence rate of 20 to 40 percent. A consistent effort to control risk factors in 88 survivors of a first cerebral infarction yielded 17 percent mortality and 16 percent stroke recurrence rates during the 5 years following first stroke. This sustained and systematic approach to risk factor management seemed beneficial to these stroke victims.
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PMID:Prevention of recurrent stroke. 730 62

A 26-year old woman, who was diagnosed as having systemic lupus erythematosus at the age of 23 year old, presented diarrhea and headache. She showed severe hypoproteinemia (serum total protein 3.7 g/dl, serum albumin 1.4 g/dl) and hyperlipidemia. She revealed to have protein-losing enteropathy with the result of alpha-1-antitrypsin clearance test using stool. Increase of prednisolone improved the loss of albumin into the bowel and abnormal laboratory findings. She also showed watershed infarction in the area of middle cerebral artery and posterior cerebral artery. Protein-losing enteropathy is a rare complication of SLE, only 18 cases are available on literature. No case is found to have cerebral infarction in patients with protein-losing enteropathy associated with SLE. It is known that blood levels of anticoagulation factors decrease in protein-losing enteropathy due to the leakage of plasma protein into intestinal lumen. Serum antithrombin III was decreased in this case. Hyperlipidemia found in this case seems to be caused by same mechanism in nephrotic syndrome. Lupus anticoagulant was also positive in this patient. These factors seems to be related to the occurrence of cerebral infarction. This case suggests the possibility of cerebral infarction in patients with protein-losing enteropathy in SLE.
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PMID:[Protein-losing enteropathy and cerebral infarction associated with systemic lupus erythematosus]. 814 30

Statistically identified information on the relationships between the sites of lesions in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), risk factors such as a smoking or drinking habit, anamnesis, and biochemical data through blood tests will extend assistance to neuromedical clinicians on their daily clinical duties. It will provide them with a useful guide to determine the method of treatment. Also, it will be a basic research material for their clinical studies on diagnosis, progress, or prognosis in ICH. In order to obtain such statistics with the help of the computer, we need to have a computationally effective image database system. As is generally known, medical image data especially requires a great amount of storage; high-speed processing techniques are therefore also needed to deal with such data effectively. In addition, it is desired that we have outputs from the analysis edited with well-visualized effect, using 3D computer graphics, etc. These are why most existing image processing systems have been designed to work on comparatively large-scale computers. So far as we know, it is hard to find a practical and inexpensive personal computer-based application system for visualized statistical analysis of lesional images in ICH. We have developed a desk top computer-based program for statistical analysis of lesional image data of ICH. With this system, we can organize a medical image database that consists of the personal data of patients with ICH (sex, age, occupation, diagnosis, symptoms, part of physical disorder, etc.), risk factors, anamnesis (cerebral apoplexy, hypertension, hypotension, corpulence, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, atrial fibrillation, valvular endocarditis, etc.), biochemical data of blood, and lesional image data from CT or MRI. This system consists of the following components: 1) database management, 2) information retrieval (IR), 3) lesional image processing, 4) statistical analysis, and 5) prognostic prediction. The images are drawn manually on prescribed data sheets by tracing CT or MRI films and are read through the image scanner; then the compressed data of the digitized images is recorded in the database. Each recorded image data consists of the following two components: the frame image that corresponds to the contour of tissues of interest on the corresponding sliced section, and the actual image that corresponds to the lesion itself. In our system, these two images are separately stored and managed so that we can effectively perform subsequent image analysis. Other variables in the database (risk factors, anamnesis, etc.) are mainly used as search keys for making the aggregate of image data by the IR subsystem. In any aggregate, its elements, namely image data, have common medical background descriptions with the search keys. These aggregates can be used as input for the lesional image processing subsystem. With this subsystem, we can obtain the accumulated distribution of frequencies within a specified range of any sliced section, display planar color maps and profiles associated with the distribution, reconstruct it in 3D form, perform transformations of 3D images (zooming, enhancement, rotation, etc.), and test the significant difference of frequencies between any two different sites. We have been making practical use of this system to find the neurological relationship between the symptom (dysarthria, and paralysis of upper/lower limbs) and the site of lesion with cerebral infarction in pons. This study is quite important since the distributions of pyramidal tract related to the above symptom in pons are not well-known compared to those in cerebral cortex, internal capsule, or cerebral peduncle. With our system, we have obtained several findings expected to be helpful for this study. However, since this study is still in the initial phases, we will only present the outcome as a working example of our system. Our system was originally developed for analyzing lesional images with ICH. However, it could
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PMID:A desk top computer program for visualized statistical analysis of lesional images in intracerebral hemorrhage. 859 83

A 34-year-old male with a history of angina pectoris suddenly developed weakness in the right upper and lower limbs, and consulted our hospital. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) suggested cerebral infarction. Cerebral angiography revealed stenosis at the M1 portion of the left middle cerebral artery. Hypertension, diabetes, tobacco or hyperlipidemia were not considered as risk factors for cerebral infarction. The lipoprotein (a) [Lp(a)] level was high. In the present case, medication with a nicotinic acid agent, niceritrol, for hyperlipoproteinemia and low density lipoprotein (LDL) apheresis were performed. Concerning family history, the patient's mother and younger sister had hyperlipoproteinemia. Recent studies have reported that increased Lp(a) levels are an independent risk factor even in cerebral infarction and coronary artery disease. Measurement of Lp(a) levels and treatment for increased Lp (a) levels may be important.
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PMID:[Juvenile cerebral infarction with familial hyperlipoproteinemia (a)--case report]. 916 61


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