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)

Hyperlipidemia is a known risk factor for atherosclerosis systemically. To determine whether it causes changes in retinal arterioles, a group of 26 patients with hyperlipidemia (serum cholesterol or triglycerides greater than 95th percentile for age) were compared with 22 "normal" patients (comparison group) and 35 patients with contralateral branch retinal vein occlusion to determine the presence or absence of changes in the retinal arterioles. The arterioles of all groups were evaluated in a masked fashion to determine the presence of arteriovenous nicking, "sclerosis," narrowing, and tortuosity. No differences in the retinal arterioles between the patients with hyperlipidemia and the comparison group were found. Patients with branch retinal vein occlusion in the contralateral eye had significantly more arteriovenous nicking and "sclerosis" than the other groups. These data suggest that hyperlipidemia by itself is not a risk factor for the development of retinal arteriolar changes. Thus examining the retinal arterioles would not be helpful in detecting hyperlipidemia.
Retina 1988
PMID:Retinal arteriolar changes in patients with hyperlipidemias. 340 47

A 20-year-old woman with a 13-year history of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus presented with a history of malaise, fever, a non-healing ulcer of the great toe, and an insect bite incurred during recent travel to a foreign country. Milky white infiltrates accompanied by inflammatory cells located within close proximity to neovascular fronds in both vitreous cavities led to the suspicion of bilateral metastatic endophthalmitis. Studies conducted during hospitalization failed to show evidence of systemic blood born infection. A diagnostic vitrectomy in one eye failed to grow organisms, though lipid laden macrophages were identified by electron microscopy. The clinical appearance improved in both eyes during her hospitalization coincident with improved diabetic control. It was later concluded that the milky white infiltrates were associated with hyperlipidemia as a consequence of poorly controlled diabetes and a familial tendency toward hyperlipidemia.
Retina
PMID:Pseudo-endophthalmitis caused by intravitreal lipid transudation in association with proliferative diabetic retinopathy and hyperlipidemia. 348 55

Severe hypertriglyceridemia can give rise to a fundus appearance with whitish-colored retinal vessels called lipemia retinalis. A 52-year-old man with hypertriglyceridemia presented with a best-corrected visual acuity of 20/20 in both eyes and creamy-white retinal vessels on fundus. Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) revealed hyperreflective and engorged retinal vessels and white dots mainly accumulated in the inner nuclear and ganglion cell layer. Follow-up fundus examination after plasmapheresis sessions revealed normal retinal vessels. The hyperreflective appearance of the retinal vessels in OCT reversed rapidly 5 days after the treatment, whereas hyperreflective dots in retina disappeared slowly in 3 months. OCT is useful in demonstrating inner retinal changes associated with lipemia retinalis at histopathological level. The hyperreflective dots in inner retina associated with leakage from superficial retinal capillaries attested the correlation of their location with their origin. [Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina. 2016;47:589-592.].
Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina 2016 06 01
PMID:Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography Findings in Lipemia Retinalis. 2732 91