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There is growing evidence that stress contributes to cardiovascular disease. Chronic stress contributes to the atherosclerotic process through increased allostatic load, which is mediated by the neuroendocrine and immune systems (sympathetic nervous system and hypothalamus-pituitary adrenal axis) and related chronic risk factors (insulin resistance syndrome, hypertension, diabetes, and hyperlipidemia). In addition, acute stress can trigger cardiovascular events predominantly through sympathetic nervous activation and potentiation of acute risk factors (blood pressure increase, endothelial cell dysfunction, increased blood viscosity, and platelet and hemostatic activation). Earthquakes provide a good example of naturally occurring acute and chronic stress, and in this review we focus mainly on the effects of the Hanshin-Awaji earthquake on the cardiovascular system. The Hanshin-Awaji earthquake resulted in a 3-fold increase of myocardial infarctions in people living close to the epicenter, particularly in women, with most of the increase occurring in nighttime-onset events. There was also a near doubling in the frequency of strokes. These effects may be mediated by changes in hemostatic factors, as demonstrated by an increase of D-dimer, von Willebrand factor, and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) antigen. Blood pressure also increased after the earthquake, and was prolonged for several weeks in patients with microalbuminuria.
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PMID:Disasters and the heart: a review of the effects of earthquake-induced stress on cardiovascular disease. 1288 26

With the increased attention being given to cardiovascular risk factor reduction, the opportunity exists to substantially decrease the largest cause of mortality in diabetic patients. The concept that type 2 diabetes and CVD are linked via a common etiologic pathway (metabolic syndrome) has substantial ramifications for the care of individual patients. Many of the metabolic abnormalities that contribute to both glycemic disorders and CVD are interrelated. For example, hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance coupled with abdominal obesity further worsens HTN and hyperlipidemia. Likewise, the procoagulant state and endothelial dysfunction increase with worsening glycemic control. Specific interventions include tobacco cessation, a food management and physical activity plan, choice of antidiabetic agent (such as metformin), and use of ACE inhibitors for hypertension and microalbuminuria (Table 5). Programs to enhance cardiovascular risk factor reduction as part of the comprehensive evaluation and management of diabetic patients have been described [95,99]. One community-based program provided free screening to diabetic patients with randomization to either annotated result reports provided to the patient and their physician or results provided by a project nurse (either face-to-face or over the phone). Greater improvements in mean glycohemoglobin, cholesterol, and blood pressure were noted with verbal presentation of results [99]. Recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Diabetes Cost-effectiveness Group support the idea that interventions to decrease CVD in diabetics are economically beneficial. Intensive management of hypertension, glycemic control, and hyperlipidemia each improved health outcomes. Hypertension control reduced costs. Although intensive treatment of glucose and hyperlipidemia increased costs, the increase was comparable to that of other frequently used health care interventions [100]. Further directions include further exploration of the implications and management of metabolic syndrome as it relates to CVD prevention. Interventions such as exercise, which can impact on all outcomes, require special attention. Efforts by physicians, health systems, and society are necessary to increase physical activity for individuals of all ages. It makes clinical sense that the recommendations for prevention of CVD in diabetics described in this article may also benefit patients with prediabetes (fasting glucose 110-125 mg/dl), but this remains to be definitively shown.
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PMID:Preventing cardiovascular disease in diabetes and glucose intolerance: evidence and implications for care. 1469 2

Type 2 diabetes is characterized by the association of insulin resistance and progressive failure of the beta cell function. This disease is frequently associated with the so-called syndrome X or polymetabolic syndrome which includes many cardiovascular risk factors: hyperinsulinism, hyperglycemia, postprandial hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia and various anomalies of the coagulation system. Glycemic control is fundamental and the goals have been defined to reach them; it is necessary to start with diet and to introduce various oral hypoglycemic agents given alone or in association, if necessary. Insulin treatment is often started late in the course of the disease and this strategy is questionable. Blood pressure must reach 130-80 mmHg and polytherapy is often required to reach this target. The treatment choices will be based on the clinical status of each patient and according to the presence of additional cardiovascular risk factors, increased levels of microalbuminuria or a history of myocardial infarction. Hyperlipidemia is frequent in type 2 diabetes. Statins or fibrates will be prescribed according to predominant lipid anomalies. Clearly, the management of such patients implies many drugs and compliance is difficult. In the near future, some drugs associations will be on the market and they will certainly make the treatment of type 2 diabetes easier and compliance better.
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PMID:[Treatment of type 2 diabetes]. 1505 51

Metabolic syndrome also can be named insulin resistance syndrome. The main clinical manifestations include metabolic disorders of glucose and lipid and some diseases caused by the metabolic disorder, such as impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes, obesity, hyperlipemia, fatty liver, hypertension, coronary heart disease, microalbuminuria, etc. According to the theory of zang-fu organs (viscera) in traditional Chinese medicine, these diseases all result from the deficiency of spleen-qi. They are characterized by deficiency in the Ben (root) and excess in the Biao (branch). The Ben (root) is the failure of the spleen in transportation, and the Biao (branch) is stagnation of qi, blood, phlegm, fire, dampness and food. In the prevention and treatment of metabolic syndrome, it is advocated that the intervention of medicine should be used as early as possible, so as to slow down the occurrence and development of insulin resistance, and that emphasis should be transferred from decreasing blood glucose alone to comprehensive prevention of risk factors, especially to the prevention of cardiovascular events. The effect of traditional Chinese herbs is not as good as the western drugs in decreasing the blood pressure and glucose. However, the traditional Chinese herbs have distinctive superiority in ameliorating the insulin resistance, protecting the injury of vascular endothelial cells, regulating the metabolism of lipid, inhibiting the hypercoagulability, and treating the inflammation. Moreover, they are relatively safe. Therefore, the integration of the traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine is worth further research.
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PMID:[Prevention and treatment of metabolic syndrome with integrated traditional Chinese and western medicine]. 1538 69

The earliest clinical evidence of diabetic nephropathy is microalbuminuria. Progression from microalbuminuria to overt nephropathy occurs in 20-40% within a 10-year period with approximately 20% of these patients progressing to end-stage renal disease. End-stage renal disease develops in 50% of type-1 diabetes patients with overt nephropathy within 10 years and in more than 75% by 20 years in the absence of treatment. In type-2 diabetes, a greater proportion of patients have microalbuminuria and overt nephropathy at or shortly after diagnosis of diabetes. The incidence of diabetes is increasing worldwide, with subsequent increase in the incidence of diabetic nephropathy. The risk factors identified in the development of DN from longitudinal and cross-sectional studies include race, genetic susceptibility, hypertension, hyperglycemia, hyperfiltration, smoking, advanced age, male sex, and high-protein diet. Treatment interventions in diabetic nephropathy include glycemic control, treatment of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, cessation of smoking, protein restriction, and renal replacement therapy. Multifactorial approach includes combined therapy targeting hyperglycemia, hypertension, microalbuminuria, and dyslipidemia.
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PMID:Diabetic nephropathy--a review of the natural history, burden, risk factors and treatment. 1558 48

Cardiovascular complications in diabetic patients, especially type 2, can be classified as microvascular (renal, ophthalmologic and neurologic) and macrovascular (coronary, cerebrovascular and peripheral vascular). Type 1 and 2 diabetic patients have increased cardiovascular risk, especially for coronary artery disease. This has been well established through high-quality studies, as have interventions to ameliorate the major risk factors. The main risk factors for increased incidence of coronary artery disease in diabetic patients include hyperlipidemia, hypertension, smoking, microalbuminuria and hyperglycemia. The therapeutic approach to the type 2 diabetic patient should include--if there is no individual contraindication--diet control, physical exercise, smoking cessation and, particularly, pharmacologic interventions with antiplatelets (mainly aspirin and clopidogrel) and/or anticoagulants (warfarin), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor antagonists, beta-blockers and anti-dyslipidemics (mainly statins), as well as oral antidiabetics (or insulin). In this paper we present and discuss the results of lowering cardiovascular risk in these patients, which should lead to a marked decrease in the incidence of coronary artery, cerebrovascular and peripheral vascular disease, with consequent improvement in prognosis.
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PMID:Coronary heart disease in diabetes mellitus: risk factors and epidemiology. 1564 Dec 98

Both type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus have a cumulative risk of 25-40% for the development of microalbuminuria 25 years into the disease. In type 2 diabetes micro- and macroangiopathic complications, and frequently hypertension, may also develop. This means that the risk of a type 2 diabetic with microalbuminuria of developing cardiovascular disease is three times greater than that of a diabetic with no renal involvement. Annual screening for microalbuminuria should therefore be obligatory. An increasing albumin excretion rate (AER) is considered an indication for an elevated cardiovascular risk. Studies have shown that the rate of cardiovascular events in diabetics with microalbuminuria and hypertension can be reduced only by the combined treatment of hypertension, hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia and microalbuminuria.
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PMID:[Microalbuminuria in diabetes: setting the points for treatment]. 1679 85

Microalbuminuria (MA) is an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Postprandial lipemia is also associated with excess cardiovascular risk. However, the association between MA and postprandial lipemia in diabetes has not been investigated. A total of 64 patients with T2DM, 30 with and 34 without MA, were examined. Plasma total triglycerides (TGs), triglycerides contained in chylomicrons (CM-TG), and TGs in CM-deficient plasma were measured at baseline and every 2 h for 6 h after a mixed meal. Postheparin LPL and HL activities were also determined. Plasma levels of apolipoprotein A-V (apoA-V), apoC-II, and apoC-III were measured in the fasting state and 2 h postprandially. Patients with MA had higher postprandial total TG levels than those without MA (P < 0.001); this increase been attributed mainly to CM-TG. LPL activity and fasting concentrations of the measured apolipoproteins were not different between the studied groups, whereas HL activity was higher in the patients with MA. ApoC-II and apoC-III levels did not change postprandially in either study group, whereas apoA-V increased more in the patients with MA. These data demonstrate for the first time that MA is characterized by increased postprandial lipemia in patients with T2DM and may explain in part the excess cardiovascular risk in these patients.
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PMID:High postprandial triglyceridemia in patients with type 2 diabetes and microalbuminuria. 1701 86

Microalbuminuria is an established risk factor for renal disease, especially in the diabetic population. Recent studies have shown that microalbuminuria has also a highly relevant predictive value for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. From normal to overt proteinuria levels, albuminuria shows a continuous marked increase in cardiovascular risk. This association is independent of other "classical" cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia or smoking. Furthermore it has a predictive value not only for patients with diabetic or renal disease, but also for hypertensive individuals or the general population. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers have been shown to display not only reno--but also cardioprotective effects. Their unique ability to lower albuminuria by 40% is related to a significant risk reduction in cardiovascular mortality. New clinical trials are needed to define "normal" albuminuria levels and how low we should go.
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PMID:[Microalbuminuria--a new cardiovascular risk factor?]. 1704 69

Essential hypertension can be defined as a rise in blood pressure of unknown cause that increases risk for cerebral, cardiac, and renal events. In industrialised countries, the risk of becoming hypertensive (blood pressure >140/90 mm Hg) during a lifetime exceeds 90%. Essential hypertension usually clusters with other cardiovascular risk factors such as ageing, being overweight, insulin resistance, diabetes, and hyperlipidaemia. Subtle target-organ damage such as left-ventricular hypertrophy, microalbuminuria, and cognitive dysfunction takes place early in the course of hypertensive cardiovascular disease, although catastrophic events such as stroke, heart attack, renal failure, and dementia usually happen after long periods of uncontrolled hypertension only. All antihypertensive drugs lower blood pressure (by definition) and this decline is the best determinant of cardiovascular risk reduction. However, differences between drugs exist with respect to reduction of target-organ disease and prevention of major cardiovascular events. Most hypertensive patients need two or more drugs for blood-pressure control and concomitant statin treatment for risk factor reduction. Despite the availability of effective and safe antihypertensive drugs, hypertension and its concomitant risk factors remain uncontrolled in most patients.
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PMID:Essential hypertension. 1770 55


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