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

In separate experiments, we fed 30 male and 25 female baboons a diet enriched in cholesterol and saturated fat for periods of 3.3 and 2.6 years. Using operant conditioning with water rewards, we trained the animals to puff on smoking machines in a human-like manner. Half of the animals smoked more than 40 cigarettes per day, while the remaining animals (controls) puffed air. Initially, the diet produced twofold (males) and threefold (females) elevations from baseline levels in serum cholesterol concentrations, but over the course of the experiments, the serum cholesterol decreased to 1.5 (males) and 2.0 (females) times baseline levels in both cigarette smokers and controls. Blood carbon monoxide concentration, plasma thiocyanate concentration, and urine cotinine concentration were significantly greater in smokers than in controls. Responses to smoking in males included lymphocytosis, elevated fasting blood glucose concentration, and decreased seminal vesicle weight. In females, hemoglobin and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentrations were elevated. The extent of atherosclerosis was examined after 2.8 (males) and 1.6 (females) years of smoking. Among males, the extent of lesions in carotid arteries was significantly greater in smokers than in controls, but there were no significant differences in atherosclerosis in the aorta or the brachial, iliac-femoral, or coronary arteries. Among females, there were no significant differences in atherosclerosis between smokers and controls in any artery. These experiments show little effect of 2 to 3 years of cigarette smoke inhalation and concurrent modest elevation of blood carboxyhemoglobin on experimental atherosclerosis in the presence of moderate hyperlipidemia.
...
PMID:Cigarette smoking, dietary hyperlipidemia, and experimental atherosclerosis in the baboon. 333 49

The case of a 7-year-old boy with virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome (VAHS) and serologically proven parvovirus B-19 infection is described. The patient with VAHS presented with fever, hepatosplenomegaly, pancytopenia, and hyperlipidemia type IV. After induction therapy with VP-16 and prednisone, partial remission was achieved. Despite maintenance therapy, reinductions, and the addition of cyclosporine A for 3 months, several relapses occurred. The therapy was stopped because of life-threatening complications (Klebsiella sepsis, neutropenic enterocolitis, and stercoral peritonitis). The complications were treated successfully. The patient status was stabilized after splenectomy. However, hepatomegaly progressed slowly and the hyperlipidemia endured. Ten months after the diagnosis leukocytosis with absolute T lymphocytosis appeared. Reactivation of VAHS was suspected and intravenous immunoglobin and then antilymphocyte immunoglobulin ALG therapy were started. The resultant decrease in leukocytosis was prompt, but lymphopenia did not occur. Virostatic treatment with foscarnet was introduced based on human herpesvirus-6 seroconversion. Twenty-six months after the diagnosis, the patient is well, without any sign of VAHS or lymphoproliferation.
...
PMID:Infection-associated hemophagocytic syndrome complicated by infectious lymphoproliferation: a case report. 872 Oct 28

Sudden cardiac death is the leading cause of death in industrialized countries. It is most frequently due to ventricular tachyarrhythmias occurring in the presence of coronary heart disease, but mechanisms linking sudden death to coronary atherosclerosis are still unclear. In autopsy studies of sudden death patients, the incidence of acute thrombotic coronary occlusions has varied between 4 and 74%. In over 600 consecutive patients with implantable cardioverter-defibrillators, we observed that appropriate shocks for electrogram-verified ventricular tachyarrhythmias was only very rarely followed by signs of acute myocardial infarction (< 3% of cases), not supporting the coronary occlusion theory of fatal arrhythmias. Cellular hypertrophy compensating for cell loss due to ischemia, intraventricular hypertension, cardiomyopathy, and myocarditis might play a role in arrhythmogenesis as evidenced by the fact that experimental induction and regression of hypertrophy are paralleled by changes in the inducibility of ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Atherogenic hyperlipidemias are associated with a systemic inflammatory response manifested by leukocytosis (lymphocytosis) and complex upregulations of proinflammatory-prothrombotic mediators, such as platelet-activating factor, cytokines, and hemostasis factors. The diurnal regulation of these mediators parallels circadian rhythms of coronary morbidity and mortality. Some upregulated mediators have been shown to exert direct arrhythmogenic effects. The potential contribution of hyperlipidemia-associated inflammatory factors to arrhythmogenesis is important, because it opens new molecular targets for antiarrhythmic drug design.
...
PMID:Sudden cardiac death: still more questions than answers. 947 68

We present the case of a 62-year-old African-American woman with medical history of hypertension and hyperlipidaemia who presented to dermatology clinic for 'bug bites'. Skin examination showed resolving bullae on the shins and postinflammatory pigment changes. Histopathology showed eosinophilic spongiosis and direct immunofluorescence (DIF) was negative for IgG, IgM, IgA and C3. After returning to clinic with recurrent severe bullous eruptions, the patient presented with anaemia, lymphocytosis, posterior cervical lymphadenopathy and weight loss. An exuberant bite reaction in the setting of lymphoma was suspected. Further workup with haematology revealed elevated IgG level and total protein levels. Flow cytometry showed a B cell lymphoma subtype. Extensive imaging was positive for diffuse lymphadenopathy, with accompanying evidence of Ebstein-Barr virus infection. Our case highlights the importance of considering exuberant arthropod bite reaction in the setting of undiagnosed lymphoma in a patient with bullous eruption and negative DIF.
...
PMID:Mantle cell lymphoma presenting with exaggerated skin reaction to insect bites. 3090 40