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)

Nitroglycerin and the long-acting nitrates are widely used in all of the anginal syndromes and have proven effectiveness in relieving or preventing myocardial ischemia. Recent developments into nitrate mechanisms of action provide new insights as to the many anti-ischemic effects of these agents. Important concepts relating to coronary arterial endothelial function are germane to nitrate therapy. Endothelial-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) is presently believed to be nitric oxide (NO), which exerts vasodilatory and/or antiplatelet actions by increasing intracellular cyclic guanosine monophosphate as a result of activation of the enzyme guanylate cyclase. In the setting of coronary atherosclerosis, or even hyperlipidemia without histologic vascular disease, endothelial dysfunction may be present, promoting a vasoconstrictor/proplatelet aggregatory milieu. Nitroglycerin and the organic nitrates are NO donors; NO is the final product of nitrate metabolism, and in the vascular smooth muscle NO induces relaxation, resulting in vasodilation of arteries and veins. In the presence of inadequate EDRF production and/or release, it appears that nitroglycerin may partially replenish EDRF-like activity. Nitrates have long been known to have major peripheral circulatory actions resulting in a marked decrease in cardiac work. Venodilation and arterial relaxation result in a decrease in intracardiac chamber size and pressures, with a resultant decrease in myocardial oxygen consumption. In addition, a variety of direct coronary circulatory actions of the nitrates have been documented. These include not only epicardial coronary artery dilation, but the prevention of coronary vasoconstriction, enhanced collateral flow, and coronary stenosis enlargement. Recent work suggests that the nitrates may also act by preventing distal coronary artery or collateral vasoconstriction, which can reduce blood flow downstream from a total coronary obstruction. Thus, there are many anti-ischemic mechanisms of action by which nitroglycerin and the organic nitrates may be beneficial in both acute and chronic ischemic heart disease syndromes. The unique salutory effects of the nitrates in subjects with left ventricular dysfunction or congestive heart failure make these drugs particularly attractive for patients with abnormal systolic function and intermittent myocardial ischemia. Finally, the emergent role of intravenous nitroglycerin in acute myocardial infarction offers new prospects that nitrate therapy may prove to be beneficial in acute myocardial infarction as well as postmyocardial infarction for the reduction of left ventricular remodeling.
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PMID:Mechanisms of action of the organic nitrates in the treatment of myocardial ischemia. 152 24

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

The effect of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and the combination of both on acute and chronic myocardial ischemia were evaluated in a total of 30 male rabbits. After preliminary hypertension and/or hyperlipidemic load by loading of the abdominal aorta and/or cholesterol feeding, acute ischemia was produced by clipping of the left coronary artery. The banding produced elevation of carotid arterial pressure and left ventricular hypertrophy. Cholesterol feeding resulted in severe atheromatous changes in all sizes of coronary arteries. The intimal thickening was due to foam cell accumulation in all arteries examined. Animals pretreated with the combination of hypertension and hyperlipidemia displayed the most severe cardiolmegaly with advanced coronary atherosclerosis and chronic ischemic lesions of the myocardium, i.e., perivascular patchy fibrosis in the subendocardial area. Furthermore, electron microscopic detection of ultrastructural myocardial damage, involving glycogen depletion, sarcoplasmic edema, mitochondrial swelling, and contractile abnormalities, was also most frequent in this group. These changes were quantitated using the ischemic score. These results confirm the hypothesis that fatal ischemic injuries may occur clinically in human hearts with coronary insufficiency due to coexistence of hypertensive cardiomegaly and severe coronary atherosclerosis. They offer a model for further study of these combined effects.
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PMID:An ultrastructural study on ischemic lesions in rabbits' hearts with pressure overload and hyperlipidemia. 315 60

The reported investigations were carried out on old breeding sows belonging to the Big White Polish Breed (BWPB) which were compared with a control group of young female pigs before fertilization, belonging to the same breed. In the perinatal period the animals were examined for presence of chronic ischaemic heart disease by clinical methods and ECG. In the interoestrus period determinations were performed in the serum of total cholesterol, free cholesterol, cholesterol esters, triglycerides, free fatty acids, total lipids and lipoprotein fractions. After killing the animals the heart and the coronary arteries were examined macroscopically and microscopically. Clinical examinations demonstrated coronary failure confirmed by ECG investigations. A correlation was found between hyperlipidaemia, particularly dyslipoproteinaemia, and advanced arteriomediosclerosis of the intramural vessels of the left ventricle, with selective, evident atherosclerotic changes in the left main coronary artery. Correlations and clinico-pathological interrelations are discussed between coronary failure, hyperlipidaemia and morphological changes in the left part of the heart.
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PMID:Coronary arterial disease and atheromatosis in breeding sows. 663 28

An increase of blood and plasma viscosity, an increased aggregation of erythrocytes and a decreased deformability of erythrocytes are pathogenetically important for a disturbance of the microcirculation. In rigidity of the vascular wall due to vasosclerosis according to Hagen-Poiseuille's law the fluidity of blood essentially determines the size of blood circulation, and a reduced blood flow by an impairment to the nutritive capillary blood supply leads to hypoxic tissue damages. For a series of pictures of a disease, such as polycythaemias, anaemias, paraproteinoses, diabetes mellitus, Raynaud's syndrome, myocardial infarction, degenerative angiopathies, are changes of the blood rheology of clinical relevancy. Own examinations on patients with chronic ischaemic heart disease resulted in a positive correlation between hyperviscosity and hyperlipidaemia. A treatment of the disturbed blood fluidity is at present possible by means of haemodilution, reduction of fibrinogen, improvement of the deformability of erythrocytes as well as of necessary by plasmapheresis.
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PMID:[The importance of hemorheology in internal medicine]. 675 Sep 41

Study aim was to investigate the association of lipoprotein (a) [Lp(a)] level with the development of cardiovascular complications in long-term follow-up period after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Patients with chronic ischemic heart disease (IHD) (n = 361, 88% men, mean age 55 +/- 9 years) who had had CABG were included in the study. Before surgery we assessed presence of classical risk factors, left ventricular ejection fraction, concentrations of lipids and Lp(a) in blood serum. During follow-up (from 1 to 140, mean 66 +/- 34 months) we registered cardiac deaths, nonfatal myocardial infarctions (MI), strokes, repeat procedures of revascularization, and hospitalizations due to relapse or progression of angina pectoris. Information on prognosis was obtained from 263 patients. In 109 of them we registered 142 serious events including cardiac death n = 20 (14%), nonfatal MI n = 14 (10%), myocardial revascularization (n = 35), 29 (20%) with stenting), repeat CABG n = 6 (4%), hospitalization due to angina pectoris n = 53 (37%), stroke n = 4 (3%), noncardiac outcome n = 16 (10%). In subjects with hyperlipidemia (a) [HLp(a) - Lp(a) > 30 mg/l] survival after CABG was lower (log rank p < 0.001): 11 of 93 (11.3%) and 9 of 170 (5.2%) patients died among those with Lp(a) > 30 and < 30 mg/I, respectively. Relative risk (RR) of any cardiovascular complication was 3.24 (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.18 to 4.83, p < 0.001), of death - 2.89 (95% CI 1.31 to 6.35, p < 0.01), and of MI A 1.01 (95% CI 1.00 to 1.02; p = 0.02). RR of development of MI and cardiac death in patients with HLp(a) in 5 years was 2.61 (95% CI 1.11 to 5.74; p = 0.02), in 10 years - 2.95 (95% CI 1.50 to 5.79; p < 0.001). In patients with chronic IHD high level of Lp(a) can serve as independent predictor of unfavorable events including death and nonfatal MI during 10 years after CABG.
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PMID:[High level of lipoprotein (a) as a predictor of poor long-term prognosis after coronary artery bypass surgery]. 2162 97