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)

Accelerated coronary atherosclerosis is a major risk limiting long-term survival after heart transplantation and is commonly associated with dyslipoproteinemia even in subjects who were not dyslipoproteinemic before intervention. The purpose of this study was to analyse the abnormalities in the lipid profiles of 2 different groups of heart-transplanted males: 18 subjects with underlying ischemic heart disease (IHD) and 19 subjects with non-obstructive cardiomyopathy of unknown aetiology (CM). Both groups were compared to 33 healthy males. All patients were under immunosuppressive therapy including prednisone, cyclosporin A and azathioprine. A moderate hyperlipidemia was found in all transplant recipients, associated with high HDL-cholesterol concentrations in the CM group (1.80 +/- 0.37 vs. 1.29 +/- 0.23 mmol/l) and normal HDL-cholesterol levels in the IHD group (1.40 +/- 0.23 mmol/l). HDL subfractionation showed a marked increase in HDL2-cholesterol (CM: 1.12 +/- 0.32; IHD: 0.69 +/- 0.28; control: 0.40 +/- 0.17 mmol/l) while HDL3-cholesterol was significantly lower than in the control group. Analysis of HDL particle sizes showed in all transplant subjects an increase of an intermediate size particle HDL2a (diameter 9.0 +/- 0.10 nm) which is a minor form in control subjects. In the CM group, both the common HDL2b (10.2 +/- 0.13 nm) and HDL2a were abundant in 13 of 17 patients. The pattern was more heterogeneous in the IHD group but witnessed to a high frequency of HDL2a particles either alone (5/14) or associated with larger HDL2b (4/14) or with small HDL3 (4/14).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Serum lipid abnormalities in heart transplant recipients: predominance of HDL2-like particles in the HDL pattern. 232 20

It has been shown that low-density plasma lipoproteins in patients with ischemic heart disease and hypertriglyceridemia are heavier in density, smaller in size, more negatively charged and more inclined to peroxide modification and aggregation than in healthy persons. The protein in the composition of such lipoproteins deviates towards the water phase, which may result in the masking of the domen, recognized by the BE-receptor and may lead to hyperlipidemia of a retaining character.
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PMID:[Properties of plasma low density lipoproteins in patients with hypertriglyceridemia and ischemic heart disease]. 239 21

Coronary arteriography was performed in 1,029 consecutive patients with ischemic heart disease and the relationship between the arteriographic features of coronary atherosclerosis and coronary risk factors was analyzed by case control studies. Patients were divided into four groups according to coronary arteriographic findings. Patients with normal or near normal coronary arteriograms (Group I) showed a high prevalence of smoking habit and a higher value of serum uric acid compared with the control group, so smoking and hyperuricemia were considered to be the risk factors for coronary atherosclerosis in patients of group. Four selected variables: smoking, hyperuricemia, hypertension and hyperlipidemia, were identified to be risk factors for the patients with minor plaques in the coronary arteries (Group II). As in Group I, smoking and hyperuricemia had a close relationship to solitary tight plaque in a branch of the coronary artery (Group III). Multiple tight stenoses in the coronary arteries (Group IV) correlated closely with smoking, hyperuricemia, hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes mellitus. Thus, there were many strong risk factors for patients with diffuse, extended coronary atherosclerosis (Group II and Group IV), while only two factors, smoking and hyperuricemia, were considered to be risk factors for the patients with near normal coronary arteries ies or a solitary plaque in a branch of the coronary artery. These findings suggest that the role of the coronary risk factors on the pathogenesis of coronary atherosclerosis is not uniform but variable depending on the morphologic variability of the coronary atherosclerosis and on the pathophysiology of the ischemic heart disease.
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PMID:Relationship between coronary risk factor and arteriographic feature of coronary atherosclerosis. 239 25

The paper deals with the rheological properties of the blood of 38 male patients affected by ischaemic heart diseases (age: 40-75 years) and 19 healthy test persons of comparable age. The following haemorheological properties were measured. 1. Relative plasma viscosity 2. Erythrocyte aggregation 3. Erythrocyte deformability 4. Thrombocyte aggregation and 5. Whole blood viscosity. For the purpose of representing and assessing the results of measurement obtained a division was made into different groups according to the appearances of ischaemic heart disease (chronic ischaemic heart disease, unstable angina pectoris, acute heart infarct) and risk factors (smoking, diabetes mellitus, blood high pressure and hyperlipidaemia). The methods 1-3 proved to be especially suitable for representing gradual differences in the examined rheological parameters. The results obtained are discussed and evaluated.
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PMID:[Hemorheologic findings in patients with ischemic heart disease]. 248 31

In a cohort of 1824 middle-aged men followed for 25 years, intake of dietary cholesterol was associated with risk of death from ischaemic heart disease, from other cardiovascular diseases combined, from all cardiovascular diseases combined, and from all causes combined. The relative hazard of death from all cardiovascular diseases combined, associated with the difference between the mean of the first and fifth quintiles of cholesterol intake (a difference of 184 mg cholesterol/1000 kcal intake) was 1.46 (95% confidence interval 1.10-1.94) after adjustment for age, intake of other dietary lipids, and other coronary risk factors (including serum cholesterol). When stratified into three groups according to serum cholesterol (less than 220 mg/dl, 220-259 mg/dl, and 260 mg/dl or above), the corresponding relative hazards were 1.58, 1.50, and 1.41, respectively. These results are further evidence for the concepts that dietary cholesterol is atherogenic in man, and that the effect is partly independent of total serum cholesterol. They reinforce the recommendation that intake of dietary cholesterol should be low in people without overt hyperlipidaemia as well as those with raised serum cholesterol.
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PMID:Dietary cholesterol and ischaemic heart disease. 257 Sep 77

In any therapeutic situation, the choice of drug therapy depends on an estimation of relative risk and benefit. With respect to moderate hypertension, and with less certainty, mild hypertension, the use of drug therapy has resulted in a decrease in overall mortality, a decrease in the incidence of stroke and renal impairment, but little or no change in the incidence of ischemic heart disease. For several years, the choice of first drug in these situations has rested between thiazide diuretics and beta-adrenoceptor blocking agents. There is probably little to choose between these two groups in terms of efficacy, and equally there is little evidence that patient response to one or other agents can be predicted either on demographic or biochemical evidence. There are, however, several studies both in Africa and America suggesting that black patients have a relatively greater hypotensive response to thiazides than to beta-blockers. The adverse reaction profile of these two groups is quite different. There is currently much debate whether the administration of large doses of thiazide diuretics (for example, 10 mg bendrofluazide per day) may cause a constellation of metabolic side effects (hyperlipemia, hypokalemia, abnormal glucose tolerance, and hyperuricemia) which may result in an increase of the risk of developing coronary artery disease in spite of lowering blood pressure. Further, there is no good evidence that the hypotensive effect of diuretics is dose dependent. On the other hand, the evidence that beta-blockers when used as antihypertensive agents have a primary preventive effect for ischemic heart disease is currently very small.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition in clinical practice. Re-examination of step care: choice of first drug. 258 Jan 63

In a study of the effect of lipoproteins of atherogenic classes on proliferative activity of peripheral lymphocytes in patients (n = 44) with ischemic heart disease (IHD) and healthy subjects (n = 16), VLDL isolated from hyperlipidemia blood were shown to have a more suppressive effect on proliferation of PHA-induced lymphocytes than those from healthy subjects. Effect analysis of VLDL isolated from patients with different hyperlipidemia types revealed that VLDL obtained from high triglyceride plasma depressed proliferation 85-75%, while VLDL withdrawn from high cholesterol plasma 45-55% (p less than 0.05). With addition of modified (oxidized) VLDL to PHA-activated lymphocytes oxidized VLDL were demonstrated to have a greater inhibitory effect as compared with intact VLDL. The observed peculiarities of the VLDL effect in hyperlipidemia may underlie the reduced functional activity of lymphocytes, discovered in IHD patients (n = 81).
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PMID:[Characteristics of the action of modified atherogenic-class lipoproteins on the functional activity of peripheral blood lymphocytes in patients with ischemic heart disease]. 259 87

Preliminary evidences suggest that both the frequency of ischemic heart disease and the plasma cholesterol levels are increasing in the Spanish population, whose dietary habits are becoming progressively "westernized". In the present work we used the food frequency method to evaluate the dietary habits of 30 hypercholesterolemic subjects. These and another 65 free-living individuals of both sexes, ages 18-77 yrs, with plasma cholesterol 301 +/- 41 mg/dl or 7.80 +/- 1.06 mmol/l (means +/- SD) were submitted to a hypolipidemic diet similar to the mediterranean diet in order to assess effects on plasma lipids and lipoprotein cholesterol. The usual diet contained (% kcal/day): total fat 37, saturated fat (S) 12, monoinsaturated fat 16 and poliinsaturated fat (P) 6, with P/S = 0.5 and a daily cholesterol intake of 506 mg. During dietary intervention, respective changes were: -7%, -5%, -1%, +2%, +0.6, and -304 mg. After a 3 - month dietary period, significant (p less than 0.001) decreases occurred in total plasma cholesterol (-40 mg/dl or -1.04 mmol/l, -14%), LDL-cholesterol (-35 mg/dl or -0.91 mmol/l, -16%) and triglycerides (-5 mg/dl or -0.28 mmol/l, -14%), while HDL-cholesterol and body weight did not change. Similar effects were obtained when diet was continued for 1 yr in a subgroup of 40 individuals. The responses of plasma cholesterol to dietary change had a normal distribution, with 17% hyporresponses and 15% hyperresponses. A marked decrease (-36%) of plasma triglycerides was observed in 12 subjects with IIb hyperlipidemia. The total cholesterol/HDL-cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol/HDL-cholesterol ratios improved in both men and women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Excessive intake of fats and cholesterol in hypercholesterolemic individuals. Effects of dietary intervention on plasma lipids and lipoprotein cholesterol]. 270 86

We evaluated the relation between smoking and myocardial infarction using data from a hospital-based case-control study conducted in Northern Italy on 262 young and middle-age women with acute myocardial infarction (median age: 49 years) and 519 controls (median age: 47 years), admitted for a series of acute conditions unrelated to any of the established or potential risk factors for ischaemic heart disease. With reference to lifelong non-smokers, the multivariate relative risk was not significantly higher for ex-smokers, but rose progressively with the number of cigarettes smoked. The risk estimates were 2.3, 5.9 and 11.0 for less than 15, 15-24, greater than or equal to 25 cigarettes per day. This trend in risk was statistically significant. Smoking-related risks were similar below and above 50 years of age; they were consistently and substantially higher in various strata of other major determinants of myocardial infarction (hyperlipidaemia, hypertension) or correlated lifestyle habits (alcohol and coffee). In terms of population attributable risk, 48% of all myocardial infarction in this data could be attributed to smoking. Although myocardial infarction is less frequent in Italian women compared to Northern European or American women, our data indicate that cigarette smoking is undoubtedly its most prominent cause. This confirms, once again, the urgent need to intervene and eliminate this risk factor.
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PMID:[Cigarette smoking and the risk of myocardial infarction. A case-controlled study in northern Italy]. 274 20

Between January 1980 and December 1986, 2573 patients underwent simple first time coronary artery bypass grafting, of whom 73 (65 males and 8 females) aged 34-69 years (mean 51.3 yrs) had repeat bypass grafts at Wythenshawe Hospital, Manchester. Of these 73 patients, 15 had a previous myocardial infarction, 5 hyperlipidaemia, 4 systemic hypertension, and 12 had a strong family history of ischemic heart disease. There was an overall deterioration of left ventricular function at the time of reoperation. The interval between the two operations was 5-131 months (mean 34.2 mths); recurrence of angina occurred earlier (mean 18.4 mths). Vessels grafted at the first operation were LAD (59), RCA (46), circumflex (41) and diagonal (13). The corresponding data at reoperation were LAD (55), RCA (46), circumflex (28) and diagonal (10). Blocked grafts were seen in 67 patients and new lesions noticed in 29. Reoperation was done using saphenous vein (129), internal mammary artery (5), arm veins (2) and tubular Gortex grafts (2). One patient had concurrent excision of a left ventricular aneurysm. Coronary anastomoses were performed with elective ventricular fibrillation (47) or cardioplegic arrest (91). Aortic cross clamp time varied from 0-92 minutes. Seven patients required intra-aortic balloon support. These patients died in the first 30 days, an operative mortality rate of 4.1%, and two 18 months after surgery. Sixty-eight percent of patients seen at 1 year were totally symptom free. We conclude that reoperation for coronary artery disease can be done with a low mortality and good immediate relief of symptoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Re-operation for recurrent coronary artery and graft disease. A review of 73 patients in a group of 2573 consecutive first operations. 278 23


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