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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten men aged 56 to 84 were hospitalized with a diagnosis of
periarteritis nodosa
, whereas they had multiple cholesterol embolism. The diagnosis was corrected post mortem in the first 3 patients and subsequently in live patients. The particularly misleading clinical manifestations were neurological (polyneuritis in 5 cases, mononeuritis in 1, central nervous system disorders in 3), pulmonary (alveolar haemorrhage in 2 cases, respiratory failure of unknown mechanism in 4) and pericardial (2 cases). Five patients had eosinophilia (more than 500 eosinophils/mm3). The elements that led to the correct diagnosis were the presence of vascular risk factors in all 10 patients (but
hyperlipidaemia
in only one), severe complications of the atheromatous disease in all cases, a precipitating or aggravating factor in 8 patients (anticoagulant therapy in 7, arteriography in 6) and the finding of purple or necrotic toes (6 cases). Histological (5 cases) and/or ophthalmological (2 cases) evidence was obtained in only 6 patients. Seven patients died 1 to 3 years after the onset of the disorders. Studies on low-density lipoprotein metabolism are in progress to determine the mechanism of clinical manifestations unexplainable by embolism.
...
PMID:[Multiple cholesterol embolism mimicking periarteritis nodosa]. 135 86
A genetic variant of the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) has been produced which becomes markedly obese as well as hypertensive, i.e. Obese/SHR weigh 800 g as against 300 g for non-obese cohorts. Serum enzymes (CPK, SGOT, SGPT and LDH) are frequently abnormally elevated, concomitantly with a high incidence of myocardial necrosis. Obese/SHR are hyperlipidaemic with severe fatty infiltration of the liver; they are hyperglycaemic with enormous islets of Langerhans and extensive beta-cell degranulation; despite elevated blood urea nitrogen (BUN) levels, they manifest little or no renal damage. Measurement of corticosterone, deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and aldosterone in Obese/SHR demonstrate marked hyper-responsiveness to moderate stress. Circulating prolactin levels are lower in Obese and non-obese/SHR compared to SHR, but Obese/SHR manifest unusually high increases incirculating prolactin levels in response to stress. Obese/SHR are hyperinsulinaemic and have subnormal growth-hormone levels. Desite mild hypertension, hyperglycaemia and
hyperlipidaemia
, Obese/SHR show no evidence of atheromatous change but do develop early
polyarteritis nodosa
. It is believed that the genetically programmed hypertension and hyperglycaemia is mediated by increased DOC, aldosterone and corticosterone production respectively, and that the obesity, hypertension, and diabetes in Obese/SHR may be likened to human Cushing's disease.
...
PMID:Pathophysiological differences between obese and non-obese spontaneously hypertensive rats. 742 76
The non-healing leg ulcer is examined by discussing three disease processes: peripheral vascular occlusive disease (PVOD), chronic venous insufficiency (CVI), and vasculitis. For PVOD, management decisions are based on risk factors and disease history. Comprehensive management includes the discontinuation of smoking, exercise conditioning and regulation of diabetes,
hyperlipidemia
, hypertension, and the appropriate application of anticoagulant/antiplatelet drugs. Methods of surgical management include bypass with autogenous or synthetic material in addition to reconstructive surgery with patch angioplasty or extra-anatomic bypass, amputation, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty/stents, thrombolytic infusion, atherectomy, intraluminal ultrasound, and angioscopy. The optimal healing environment for all ulcers prevents contamination, pain, and fluid loss. In CVI, higher venous pressure in the veins of the lower limb during exercise results in ambulatory venous hypertension and ulceration. Various theories are associated with the disease and ulceration process; the classic treatment of elevation, ambulation, and compression for venous disease remains unchallenged. Diagnosis is based on history, physical examination, invasive venography, and/or non-invasive studies. Two groups of vasculitic disorders that share varying degrees of vascular inflammation and necrosis are arteritis (lupus, erythematosus,
periarteritis nodosa
, dermatomyositis) and blood dyscrasias (sickle cell disease, thalassemia). Leg ulcers associated with vasculitis are due to inadequate tissue oxygenation at the local level, are typically chronic, slow to heal, and commonly recur.
...
PMID:The non-healing leg ulcer: peripheral vascular disease, chronic venous insufficiency, and ischemic vasculitis. 939 80
A simple high fat diet containing cholic acid has been devised for producing
hyperlipemia
and an increased incidence of thrombosis in the small coronary vessels of the rat, but without producing significant atherosclerotic lesions. The influence on this syndrome induced by six weeks of desoxycorticosterone administration, 2 mg. daily, and 10 weeks of oral saline (1%) ingestion was investigated in 30 115-g. male rats. Marked hypertension developed only when it was induced prior to beginning the dietary feeding. In comparison to the control groups, the group that was both hyperlipemic and hypertensive had severer hypertension, severer
hyperlipemia
, double the mortality due to thrombosis and fatty streaks in the aorta but very few lesions of
periarteritis nodosa
. However, the early atherosclerotic lesions did not seem to be responsible for the increased production of thrombosis. It is therefore probable that under these experimental conditions hypertension has a more direct action on the production of thrombotic effect than that of worsening the atherosclerotic lesions.
...
PMID:Hypertension, thrombosis, and atherosclerosis in the rat. 1398 37
Most collagen diseases are more common in women except
polyarteritis nodosa
, but aging makes this gender difference smaller in some of the diseases. In systemic lupus erythematosus the incidence difference between men and women diminishes while Sjogren syndrome is more common in women at all ages. Diabetes mellitus and
hyperlipidemia
are also very common complications with steroid treatment. DM is more common in those aged over 45 years old. On the contrary,
hyperlipidemia
is common at all ages with the peak in those 45-54 years old and only 22% over 75 years old have
hyperlipidemia
. According to the introduction of aggressive therapy for rheumatoid arthritis, complications in the elderly should be carefully managed.
...
PMID:[Age and gender difference in rheumatology]. 1640 3