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)

Dyslipidemia increases the risk of cardiovascular events among individuals with renal disease, and there is a growing body of evidence that it hastens the progression of renal disease itself. Children with nephrotic syndrome or renal transplants have easily recognized hyperlipidemia. Among those with chronic renal insufficiency or end-stage renal disease, detection of dyslipidemia requires more careful analysis and knowledge of normal pediatric ranges. Disordered lipoprotein metabolism results from complex interactions among many factors, including the primary disease process, use of medications such as corticosteroids, the presence of malnutrition or obesity, and diet. The systematic treatment of dyslipidemia in children with chronic renal disease is controversial because conclusive data regarding the risks and benefits are lacking. Hepatic 3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors (statins), fibrates, plant stanols, bile acid-binding resins, and dietary manipulation are options for individualized treatment. Prospective investigations are required to guide clinical management.
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PMID:Dyslipidemia in pediatric renal disease: epidemiology, pathophysiology, and management. 1198 Dec 90

In recent years several multicentric prospective studies have demonstrated the efficacy of some therapeutic measures to slow the progression of renal diseases. Inhibition of renin-angiotensin system (RAS) both by ACE inhibitors (ACEI) and angiotensin II receptor antagonists (ARA) is probably the strongest therapeutic alternative: The antiproteinuric effect of these drugs is an excellent surrogate marker and a predictor of the beneficial influences on the progression of renal failure. The type of renal disease, an inadequate control of blood pressure, and the presence of obesity may counteract the beneficial influences of RAS inhibition, whereas early treatment of all patients with significant proteinuria before the appearance of renal insufficiency and combined therapy with an ACEI and an ARA may augment it. Dietary protein restriction is a classic treatment of chronic renal insufficiency whose effectiveness has been validated by multicentric studies. However, a poor compliance of the patient and the risk of malnutrition with very strict protein restriction could limit the benefits of this treatment. Treatment of hyperlipidemia, prevention of obesity, avoidance of smoking, and regular physical exercise are interventions whose therapeutic potential is progressively recognized, particularly in type 2 diabetic nephropathy. Early correction of anemia may contribute to the slowing of renal disease progression. Although further studies are required, the accumulated evidence and the likelihood of additive beneficial effect of these therapeutic measures advise their combined implementation in patients with chronic renal diseases.
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PMID:Slowing the progression of renal failure. 1198 7

In Germany, some 4-6 million men, including 1.2 million diabetics, suffer from erectile dysfunction (ED). Various other diseases including heart disease, hypertension, arteriosclerosis, hyperlipidemia, endocrine disorders, chronic renal insufficiency, prior radical prostatectomy, neurological diseases, trauma and the abuse of alcohol, tobacco, and side effects of medications, are frequently associated with ED. Medical history, clinical examination, routine blood chemistry and sexual hormone levels may help clarify the etiology of ED. Normally, relaxation of the smooth muscles of the corpus cavernosum--mediated by cGMP and cAMP--together with dilatation of penile arteries and occlusion of venous outflow, results in an erection. The oral type V phosphodiesterase inhibitor, Sildenafil, or prostaglandin E1 injection elevates the cGMP and cAMP levels, respectively. Other therapeutic options include mechanical aids, surgery, hormone replacement or sublingual apomorphine. Since 1998, Sildenafil, an effective, simple and safe oral treatment, has been available.
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PMID:[Erectile dysfunction. An important manifestation of autonomic diabetic neuropathy]. 1253 21

Chronic glomerulonephritis (GN) is one of the leading causes of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The possibilities for successful treatment in the earliest stages are still limited. Immunosuppressive treatment leads to complete or partial remission only in some patients. Even then, a non-immunological evolution to chronic renal insufficiency often enters a progressive course. By applying a consistent strategy for their individual evaluation and management, it is possible to improve the outcome of patients with GN. The early referral to a nephrologist and an early histomorphological diagnosis; the precise assessment of the type of injury, i.e. proliferative or non-proliferative; the indices of activity and chronicity; and the prognostic indicators are helpful for the therapeutic approach. The goal of the management of GN has to be to suppress the disease with minimum side effects of the treatment. Many unanswered questions and controversies remain concerning the immunosuppressive therapy. A precise distinction is needed between the problematic assertions and evidence-based protocols. A common task for the treatment of all types of chronic GN should be the protection of renal structure and function: control of blood pressure, action on renal haemodynamics and proteinuria via pharmacological inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system, control of hyperlipidaemia and limitation of fibrosis. Some novel and promising pharmacological approaches to extracellular matrix accumulation and chronic interstitial fibrosis are in progress.
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PMID:The treatment of glomerular disease--a compromise between the standard and the individual approach. 1281 65

Metabolic and nutritional care implies procedures which involve normalization or improvement of metabolic deviations in chronic renal insufficiency and failure by dietary and medicamentous means. The therapeutic procedure not only improves some metabolic disorders associated with a decline of the excretory and metabolic endocrinological renal function but can have a positive impact also on progression of renal insufficiency. Conservative treatment thus involves low protein diets, modification of electrolyte and water intake, adjustment of the acid-base balance, Ca, P metabolism, haemogram, hypertension, proteinuria and hyperlipidaemia. In non-diabetic subjects it is sufficient to achieve a glomerular filtration of 0.2 ml/sec. and serum creatinine of 500-600 mumol/l.
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PMID:[Metabolic and nutrition care in patients with chronic renal insufficiency and chronic kidney failure]. 1290 71

This study provides extended follow-up of a nonrandomized series of symptomatic patients who underwent subclavian stent-supported angioplasty (SSA) with emphasis on preprocedure factors that may have influenced outcome. The endpoints of mortality and restenosis were analyzed using backward stepwise logistic regression with the following clinical variables: coronary artery disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, smoking, diabetes mellitus, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic renal insufficiency/failure, and hypothyroidism. Restenosis is reported based on prospective serial noninvasive studies and/or angiography. Mortality was evaluated by retrospective database review and inquiry to the State Department of Health and Human Services' statistical registry in patients who were lost to follow-up. Over a 9-year period (mean follow-up, 36.1 +/- 30.4 months; maximum observation, 109.5 months), 101 stents were placed in 91 consecutive patients (37 male, 54 female). The mean age at intervention was 62.03 +/- 9.3. The procedure was technically successful in 89 patients 97% (mean pre- and postoperative stenosis and pressure gradients were 90.2% +/- 9.4% vs. 3.7% +/- 6.6%, P < 0.001, and 59.9 +/- 35.2 vs. 0 mm Hg, P < 0.001, respectively), with 13 minor complications and no immediate major complications. One patient died of unrelated causes within 30 days. Per Kaplan-Meier method, for years 1 through 5, the rates of overall patency were 96%, 91%, 86%, 77%, and 72%; likewise, overall patient survival was 93%, 88%, 8%4, 81%, and 76%. No clear predictors for restenosis were discovered, although a trend toward higher recurrence was noted in women (18.5% in female vs. and 8.6% in male; P > 0.05), but the same were less likely to die during follow-up (P > 0.001). Also, the presence of hypothyroidism (P = 0.004) and increasing age (P = 0.068) were positively correlated with all-cause mortality. This study suggests that SSA is predictable, safe, and durable. The diagnosis of symptomatic subclavian disease is of prognostic importance, with age and male gender representing important predictors of all-cause long-term mortality. The strong association of increased mortality with hypothyroidism is difficult to discard and raises the question of a yet to be described thyroid steal phenomena.
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PMID:Subclavian artery stenting: factors influencing long-term outcome. 1469 51

Early optimalization of the treatment of patients with chronic renal insufficiency can reduce morbidity and deaths. For each patient with a raised serum creatinine concentration, the creatinine clearance should be measured or calculated. When this is abnormal, the cause thereof should be investigated. Chronic renal insufficiency is often progressive, even when the initiating factors are no longer present. Progression can be delayed by treating the high blood pressure, proteinuria and hyperlipidemia by means of a restricted protein diet and advice not to smoke. Acute deterioration of an existing chronic renal dysfunction through dehydration and underfill or through the use of certain medications or toxic substances such as radio-opaque media should be avoided. In patients with chronic renal insufficiency specific attention should be paid not only to hypertension, lipid disturbances, smoking and weight, but also to the calcium-phosphate balance, anaemia and homocysteine levels. The blood pressure, oedema and weight of patients with a clearance between 30-59 ml/min should be checked 2-3 times a year, in addition to laboratory tests for Hb, Ht, creatinine, urea, potassium, calcium, phosphate, pH, bicarbonate and lipid spectrum. It is recommended that when creatinine clearance (< 50 ml/min) falls a nephrologist should be consulted at least once with respect to the strategy to be followed. Symptoms of chronic renal insufficiency can occur when the creatinine clearance is < 30 ml/min. This relates to: sodium retention, imbalances in the calcium and phosphate levels, anaemia, uraemia, water retention, potassium retention and metabolic acidosis. Referral should take place at a creatinine clearance of < or = 30 ml/min.
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PMID:[Treatment of patients with chronic renal insufficiency; a guideline for internists]. 1511 99

Cardiac transplantation has become an established intervention for end-stage heart disease. Clinical outcomes in older cardiac transplant patients have improved over the last decade and are almost similar to those in younger patients. Nevertheless, morbidity and mortality due to infections, cancer and chronic allograft vasculopathy remain problematic. On the other hand, older transplant patients seem to have lower incidences of acute rejection episodes than younger patients. Conventional immunosuppression with calcineurin-inhibiting drugs, azathioprine and corticosteroids is responsible for a number of adverse effects. Although these adverse effects can also be seen in younger patients, tolerance to these agents seems to decrease with increasing age. In particular, diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis and chronic renal insufficiency are associated with higher morbidity and mortality in older cardiac transplant patients. As the elderly become an ever-increasing segment of the cardiac transplant population, new and innovative immunosuppressive strategies will have to be developed and applied.Currently, the availability of new immunosuppressive drugs means more individualised immunosuppressive protocols can be used. New antibodies for induction therapy, a choice between ciclosporin and tacrolimus, and the advent of mycophenolate mofetil as well as proliferation signal inhibitors (everolimus, sirolimus) have changed immunosuppressive protocols dramatically. Therefore, a generalised protocol for all patients has been replaced by individualised immunosuppression depending on the patient group. Moreover, protocols can be modified during follow-up depending on the individual patient's requirements and problems. Hypertension and hyperlipidaemia could be influenced by the selection of tacrolimus over ciclosporin, and weaning of corticosteroids might have a positive impact on osteoporosis or diabetes. There is also no clear evidence that tacrolimus is associated with a higher risk for new onset of diabetes. Chronic renal insufficiency can be managed with calcineurin inhibitor-free immunosuppression consisting of mycophenolate mofetil and proliferation signal inhibitors. Both everolimus and sirolimus also seem to have a protective effect against the onset of graft vasculopathy and some sorts of cancer after cardiac transplantation. As a general rule, however, older cardiac transplant patients should be treated with lower doses and fewer immunosuppressive drugs to avoid over-immunosuppression.
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PMID:Immunosuppressive therapy in older cardiac transplant patients. 1795 59

Therapy for atherosclerotic occlusive subclavian arterial disease is undergoing a paradigm shift from open to endoluminal therapy. The aim of this study was to review the changing patterns of presentation and clinical outcomes based on presenting symptoms of subclavian artery revascularization. We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients treated for symptomatic atherosclerotic occlusive subclavian arterial disease from 1992 through 2006. Mean follow-up was 4 years. One hundred fourteen patients with a mean age of 63 years (range 33-89, 61% female) underwent 137 procedures. Of these, 89% had hypertension, 32% were diabetic, 69% had hyperlipidemia, and 13% had chronic renal insufficiency. Sixty-seven primary stent attempts (five technical failures) and 70 open (64 carotid-subclavian bypasses, six subclavian-carotid transpositions) were performed. No deaths occurred within the 30-day perioperative period. Fifty-seven percent of the patients presented with symptoms of arm ischemia: exertional pain (84%), rest pain (12%), and ulceration (4%). The assisted primary patency was 81 +/- 7% and 80 +/- 10% at 5 and 10 years, respectively. Symptoms resolved in all patients, and none required major or minor amputations. Freedom from recurrent arm symptoms was 71 +/- 8% and 71 +/- 10% at 5 and 10 years, respectively. Twenty-five percent of the patients presented with a cardiac indication: preparation for a left internal mammary artery (IMA) bypass in 61% and recurrent cardiac ischemia in the remainder. The assisted primary patency was 97 +/- 6% at 5 years. No IMAs were abandoned in this group, and the freedom from recurrent cardiac symptoms related to IMA distribution was 79 +/- 10% at 5 years. Eighteen percent of patients presented with posterior circulation symptoms secondary to vertebrobasilar disease. The assisted primary patency was 100 +/- 0% and 100 +/- 0% at 5 and 10 years, respectively. Freedom from recurrent vertebrobasilar symptoms was 95 +/- 6% and 95 +/- 10% at 5 and 10 years, respectively. Subclavian artery revascularization is safe and effective, but long-term outcomes are determined by the presenting symptomatology.
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PMID:Subclavian artery revascularization: an outcome analysis based on mode of therapy and presenting symptoms. 1808 31

The aim of this study was to determine if significant differences in plaque composition exist between the popliteal and tibial vessels in patients with severe peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Forty-four patients with PAD required either above-knee (n = 38), below-knee (n = 5), or through-knee (n = 1) amputation for pedal sepsis/gangrene. The 51 vessels (anterior tibial, n = 9; posterior tibial, n = 10; peroneal, n = 3; popliteal, n = 29) were obtained and underwent intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) evaluation ex vivo within 24 hr of amputation. Sequential IVUS data were obtained at known intervals throughout the vessel length and then analyzed with radiofrequency techniques for quantification of plaque composition, plaque volume, and total vessel volume. Plaque composition was categorized as fibrous, fibro-fatty, necrotic core, and dense calcium. Clinical data were obtained via review of electronic records at the time of amputation. Two-sided t-tests were performed to compare components within each plaque. Results are expressed as mean percentage +/- standard error of the mean. Tibial vessels had more dense calcium within these plaques than popliteal arteries (33.8 +/- 5.6% vs. 10.6 +/- 1.9%, p < 0.001). Consequently, distal vessels had less fibro-fatty and fibrous plaque than popliteal arteries (7.7 +/- 1.4% vs. 13.1 +/- 1.2%, p < 0.005; 42.4 +/- 4.7% vs. 61.4 +/- 2.2%, p < 0.001, respectively). Necrotic core plaque composition was found to be similar when comparing tibial versus popliteal arteries (16.1% vs. 14.9%, p = nonsignificant). Clinical factors including diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and chronic renal insufficiency were not associated with plaque composition differences using a univariate analysis. As we progress distally in the arterial tree of patients with PAD, calcium plaque content increases with decreasing burden of fibro-fatty plaque. Clinical and demographic factors, with the exception of smoking, were not found to be associated with atherosclerotic plaque composition.
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PMID:Arterial calcification increases in distal arteries in patients with peripheral arterial disease. 1864 Aug 12


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