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)

Both naturally occurring disease processes and experimental models of human disease in the Mongolian gerbil were reviewed. The gerbil was highly susceptible to cerebral infarction following unilateral ligation of one common carotid artery and was useful in studies of the pathogenesis of stroke. Spontaneous epileptiform seizures mimicked those of human idiopathic epilepsy, and both seizure-sensitive and resistant strains have been bred. Perhaps because of its more efficient nephron, the gerbil accumulated four to six times as much renal lead as the rat, and the gerbil has been proposed as an experimental model of lead nephropathy. On standard diets, about 10% of the animals became obese, and some showed decreased glucose tolerance, elevated serum immunoreactive insulin and diabetic changes in the pancreas and other organs. Some breeders exhibited hyperactivity of the adrenal cortex associated with hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia and degenerative vascular disease. Although dietary supplements of cholesterol were toxic and did not induce atherosclerosis, the gerbil was useful in other studies of cholesterol absorption and metabolism. Spontaneous, insidious periodontal disease became evident after about 6 months on standard diets, and dental caries were induced by cariogenic diets or by pathodontic streptococci. Spontaneous neoplasia occurred in 8.4--24% of gerbils, usually after 2 years of life. Adrenal cortical, ovarian and cutaneous tumors were the most consistently reported neoplasms.
...
PMID:The pathology of the Mongolian Gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus): a review. 9 95

1. The intravenous fat-tolerance test and serum lipid and lipoprotein measurements were carried out in ninety-three normal subjects, fifty-one patients with ischaemic heart disease and thirty patients with peripheral vascular disease. 2. The fractional turnover rate of exogenous triglyceride was significantly slower in patients with ischaemic heart disease and in patients with peripheral vascular disease than in normal men. The rate was also slower in normal men than normal women. 3. Serum triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations were higher in both vascular disease groups than in control subjects. 4. The proportion of both groups of patients who had a subnormal fractional turnover rate of exogenous triglyceride was 35%, and 32% of patients had hypertriglyceridaemia in the fasting state; 27% of patients were hypercholesterolaemic. 5. Although the intravenous fat-tolerance test did not provide significantly better discrimination between cardiovascular patients and control subjects than did measurement of serum triglyceride, the results suggest that hypertriglyceridaemia in such patients may be separable into a group in which impaired triglyceride clearance may be partly responsible, and a group in which overproduction of serum triglyceride may be the major mechanism of the hyperlipidaemia.
...
PMID:Intravenous fat-tolerance test in ischaemic heart disease and peripheral vascular disease. 18 30

Atherosclerotic vascular disease is very common in diabetic patients. It often occurs at an earlier age and is more severe than in nondiabetic individuals. The medical management of cardiac disease in diabetics is much the same as in nondiabetics. Risk factors such as obesity, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia must be vigorously treated, and smoking should be restricted.
...
PMID:Office management of cardiac disease in the diabetic. 46 80

Nine patients with atherosclerotic carotid artery disease associated with neck radiation were compared to 40 control patients. The data suggest that significant differences in age, incidence of coronary and peripheral vascular disease, elevated lipids and serum cholesterol, and the angiographic incidence of disseminated atherosclerosis justify the description of radiation-induced carotid disease as a clinical entity. Elevated serum cholesterol and hyperlipidemia may contribute to the development of radiation-induced vascular disease. Successful surgical reconstruction does not appear to be influenced by the prior radiotherapy, although periarterial fibrosis and increased difficulty in separating the plaques from the vascular media was encountered.
...
PMID:Radiation-induced carotid artery disease. 62 23

Thirty-one growth-hormone-deficient dwarfs were re-examined after a period of 10 to 12 years. These subjects had initially shown glucose intolerance, insulinopenia and hyperlipidemia comparable to those of diabetic patients matched for age and sex, but vascular complications were not present in dwarfs. After 10 years glucose tolerance became progessively more abnormal in dwarfs than could be accounted for by expected deterioration with age, and hyperglycemia after mixed meals remained greater than in control subjects. Serum lipid and serum lipoprotein concentrations were abnormal in over one third of the dwarfs. Despite the metabolic similarity to the diabetic patients, clinical complications of diabetes were absent in dwarfs: retinopathy did not occur, and the prevalence of hypertension and arteriosclerosis was considerably lower in dwarfs than in the diabetic subjects in both study periods. The follow-up data support the hypothesis that growth hormone has at least a supportive role in the pathogenesis of vascular disease in the diabetic state.
...
PMID:A follow-up study of vascular disease in growth-hormone-deficient dwarfs with diabetes. 65 62

In an attempt to assess cardiac risk in non-cardiac surgery, 1001 patients over 40 years of age who underwent major operative procedures were examined preoperatively, observed through surgery, studied with at least one postoperative electrocardiogram, and followed until hospital discharge or death. Documented postoperative myocardial infarction occurred in only 18 patients; though most of these patients had some pre-existing heart disease, there were few preoperative factors which were statistically correlated with postoperative infarction. Postoperative pulmonary edema was strongly correlated with preoperative heart failure, but 21 of the 36 patients who developed pulmonary edema did not have any prior history of heart failure. Nearly all of these 21 patients were elderly, had abnormal preoperative electrocardiograms, and had intraabdominal or intrathoracic surgery. In the absence of an acute infarction, bifascicular conduction defects, with or without PR interval prolongation, never progressed to complete heart block. Spinal anesthesia protected against postoperative heart failure but not against other cardiac complication. By multivariate regression analysis, postoperative cardiac death was significantly correlated with (a) myocardial infarction in the previous 6 months; (b) third heart sound or jugular venous distention immediately preoperatively; (c) more than five premature ventricular contractions per minute documented at any time preoperatively; (d) rhythm other than sinus, or premature atrial contractions on preoperative electrocardiogram; (e) age over 70 years; (f) significant valvular aortic stenosis; (g) emergency operation; (h) a 33% or greater fall in systolic blood pressure for more than 10 minutes intraoperatively. Notably unimportant factors included smoking, glucose intolerance, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, peripheral atherosclerotic vascular disease, angina, and distant myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Cardiac risk factors and complications in non-cardiac surgery. 66 58

Forty-one heterozygous patients with familial hyperbetalipoproteinaemia have been studied. Twenty-two of these patients have been observed for four years'. Transient flitting inflammatory joint symptoms were noted in thirteen patients of this group. In six patients clinical, biochemical, radiological and radio-isotope studies have been carried out during the acute episode. These investigations suggest that this syndrome is due to acute inflammatory periarthritis and peritendinitis. Radio-active xenon clearance is not prolonged as occurs in inflammatory synovitis although there is elevation of the ratio-active technetium uptake over the affected joints suggesting that the blood flow to the affected area is increased. This is the largest group of patients with this complication reported to date and the recognition of this may prove to be an important aspect of case finding in this disorder. The treatment of hyperlipidaemia at an early stage may well contribute to a reduction in the morbidity and mortality from vascular disease. No further elucidation of the pathogenesis of the arthropathy has been made but a possible relationship between undue exercise and the onset of joint symptoms was again observed.
...
PMID:Transient polyarthritis associated with familial hyperbetalipoproteinaemia. 71 68

Inbred Carworth Farms Nelson (CFN) congenitally hyperlipidemic rats had significantly shorter coagulation and prothrombin times and higher levels of coagulation factors, II, V, VII, VIII, and X than did controls. Conversely, congenitally hypolipidemic rats of the same strain had significantly longer coagulation and prothrombin times and lower levels of factors II, V, VII, X and XII and of blood platelets than did controls. A loop-shaped polyethylene cannula was inserted into the aorta to assess the potential for thrombosis. The hyperlipidemic group obstructed this significantly faster and the hypolipidemic group slower than did the controls. Normal CFN rats made hypertensive by unilateral renal artery clip developed hypertension together with significantly elevated serum cholesterol and factor VII and X levels. Rhesus monkeys with diet-induced hyperlipidemia showed shorter prothrombin times and higher factor X levels than did controls on normal diet. By selective breeding, two groups of squirrel monkeys were obtained. Both groups had similar serum cholesterol levels on a normal diet but one group (hyperresponders) showed higher serum cholesterol levels on a cholesterol-containing diet than did the other (hyporesponder) group. Both groups showed significantly elevated levels of factors II, V, VII, IX and X on a cholesterol-containing diet. There was good correlation between the levels of many coagulation factors and serum cholesterol in both rats and monkeys. If thrombosis is important in the genesis of atherosclerosis, these findings could indicate that elevation of plasma lipids may play a role, via the coagulation pathway, in the production of human vascular disease.
...
PMID:Hyperlipidemia, hypercoagulability, and accelerated thrombosis: studies in congenitally hyperlipidemic rats and in rats and monkeys with induced hyperlipidemia. 81 75

One unit (500 ml) of 10% Intralipid (an intravenous soy bean oil-egg yolk lecithin preparation) was infused into 20 normal subjects over 4 hr. Serum triglyceride concentration and plasma optic density (at 700 nm) increased to maximal levels of 339 +/- 102 mg/100 ml and 1.14 +/- 0.41, respectively, at the completion of the infusion, and returned to basal levels in most subjects within 4 hr. Pulmonary membrane diffusion was decreased in six subjects at rest and with exercise at 25 and 50% maximum oxygen uptake. Only one subject showed a minor change in PO2 and none showed clinical signs of ischemia. The changes in pulmonary diffusion reverted to basal levels when serum lipids were cleared. Heparin (60 IU/kg) prevented the marked increase in serum lipids and, as a consequence, the changes in pulmonary function. Changes in pulmonary function from Intralipid-induced lipemia are similar to those known to result from diet-induced lipemia. The findings suggest that in the presence of normal vasculature and pulmonary function, Intralipid-induced lipemia should cause no clinical consequences. However, patients with preexisting pulmonary or vascular disease may be at greater risk after Intralipid-induced lipemia.
...
PMID:Relationship between Intralipid-induced hyperlipemia and pulmonary function. 81 3

Primary hypothyroidism was found to be the cause of hyperlipidemia in 22 patients. The mean age was 46 years, 59% were males, 27% had vascular disease, 14% had xanthomas and 86% had thyroid antibodies. Familial involvement was shown in 3 propositi. All patients were treated with L-thyroxine, 0.05--0.2 mg/day for a mean of 16 months. Combined hyperlipidemia was common (77%), and lipoprotein phenotyping revealed types IIB hyperlipopro-teinemia in 11, IIA in 5, III in 3 and IV in 3 patients. With treatment, normal plasma cholesterol (less than 265 mg/dl) and triglycerides (less than 200 mg/dl) were obtained in 91% and 86%, respectively. The mean maintenance L-thyroxine dose was 0.15 mg/day, but smaller doses often showed marked hypolipidemic effect. The mean +/- S. D. pretreatment fasting plasma cholesterol and triglycerides were 387 +/- 120 and 328 +/-247 mg/dl and on thyroid treatment the mean minimum levels were 205 +/- 46 and 133 +/- 65 mg/dl, respectively (both p values less than 0.005). Hypothyroidism has proved to be a common reversible form of hyperlipidemia. One cardiac patient died and three others had to have their L-thyroxine titrated to prevent angina. Family screening has been of use in case finding for auto-immune disease in 3 families.
...
PMID:Hypothyroidism, an important cause of reversible hyperlipidemia. 83 19


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>