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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypertension in the elderly features differently from its younger counterpart in terms of diagnosis, associated condition, atypical manifestation, management and complication. Epidemiological study in this increasing age group in the community is, therefore, needed. 334 elderly subjects living in various parts of Bangkok were randomly recruited by appointment at 7 geriatric day centers situated in local health offices of Bangkok Metropolitan Authority. Each subject received blood tests before being interviewed and measured by digital sphygmomanometer. Blood pressure and heart rate changes were recorded during lying, sitting and standing. The prevalence of hypertension was 36.5 per cent, 33.2 per cent were already aware of its existence while 3.3 per cent were newly detected by the survey. Isolated systolic hypertension, a unique subtype found in the elderly, was 4.5 per cent of all or 37.5 per cent among the hypertensive group. The associated medical conditions among the case group were diabetes mellitus 22.9 per cent,
hyperlipidemia
13.9 per cent,
hyperuricemia
33.3 per cent and heart disease 18.0 per cent. As far as postural hypotension is concerned, 14.8 per cent of case group whereas 11.3 per cent of the control group were affected. On the other hand, the symptom of postural dizziness was found to be 31.1 per cent and 55.2 per cent in the case and control group respectively. Following the statistical logistic regression analysis, the independent associated factors in the hypertension group were: history of
hyperlipidemia
, increased serum uric acid and poor heart rate response after standing. These findings, as parts of the multiple pathology and potential complications prevalent among this group, should be of concern by any physician looking after the elderly.
...
PMID:Hypertension in the elderly: a community study. 962 17
The aim of this study was to assess whether the psychobehavioral pattern alexithymia is related to coronary artery spasm. Alexithymia, deficient psychological awareness, was examined using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory Alexithymia Scale in 100 patients with angina pectoris in whom coronary spasm, defined as > or = 99% coronary narrowing, was documented upon ergonovine provocation, and in 109 patients with chest pain syndrome who were shown to have almost normal coronaries without inducible coronary spasm on coronary angiogram (control group). Alexithymia was approximately twice as prevalent in the coronary spasm group (31%) as in the control group (14%) (p<0.01). Among various conventional risk factors including
hyperlipidemia
, obesity, diabetes mellitus, hypertension,
hyperuricemia
, or family history of ischemic heart disease, only male sex and smoking were more prevalent in the coronary spasm group than in the control group (p<0.001). The odds ratios of coronary spasm adjusted for all the other risk parameters including sex and age were 4.14 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.81-9.47] for alexithymia and 2.38 (95, CI 1.18-4.82) for smoking. A psychobehavioral pattern, alexithymia, relates to coronary spasm. This relationship is independent of the conventional coronary risk factors.
...
PMID:A psychobehavioral factor, alexithymia, is related to coronary spasm. 965 15
There are only a few reports concerning coexistent hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and vasospastic angina. Clinical characteristics in patients with both diseases have not been clarified yet. This study was designed to elucidate the relationship between chest pain and coronary vasospasm in HCM patients and to delineate clinical characteristics in patients with both HCM and coronary vasospasm. First, 36 patients with HCM underwent acetylcholine provocation test for coronary vasospasm and were divided into two groups on the basis of presence or absence of coronary vasospasm. Next, the following risk factors for coronary artery disease were compared between the two groups: hypertension, smoking,
hyperlipidemia
, diabetes mellitus, and
hyperuricemia
. Coronary vasospasm was induced in 10 (28%) of 36 patients with HCM. There were no significant differences in age and male gender between the two groups. Smoking was more prominent in HCM patients with than without coronary vasospasm (80% vs 35%, p<0.05), but there were no differences in the prevalence of other risk factors between the two groups. In conclusion, coronary vasospasm appears to play a significant role in the etiology of myocardial ischemia in Japanese patients with HCM, and smoking might be a major risk factor for coexistence of HCM and coronary vasospasm.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics in Japanese patients with coexistent hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and coronary vasospasm. 978 50
Aim of this paper is to describe and discuss, on the basis of the available current literature, the case of a female patient affected by a tophaceous gout associated with plurimetabolic syndrome.
Hyperuricemia
and gout may be seen today in all the populations of developed countries, with increasing frequency on the last fifty years. Increased production or reduced urinary excretion of uric acid (and hypoxanthine and xanthine) are the most important pathogenetic mechanisms of primary or secondary
hyperuricemia
. Gout is an acute rheumatic disorder (characterized by a limited range of manifestations) which occurs in humans in connection with deposition of crystals of monosodium urate (the final product of purine metabolism) in the articular and soft periarticular tissues.
Hyperuricemia
and/or gout are often associated with hyperinsulinemia, obesity, diabetes mellitus,
hyperlipemia
, hypertension and atherosclerosis to form the syndrome called "Plurimetabolic syndrome" or "Syndrome X". Here we report the clinical case of a 64-year-old female patient who had android obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia and
hyperuricemia
and had been suffering (over many years) from intermittent episodes of severe pain and inflammatory joint swelling (first metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints) with development of pronounced multiple tophi in bone articular and soft periarticular tissues.
Hyperuricemia
and acute episodes had never been treated with anti-hyperuricemic drugs because gouty arthritis had never been diagnosed. This severe tophaceous gout associated to multiple metabolic disorders prompted us to present knowledge on gout and to focus on the interrelationships between
hyperuricemia
and/or gout and plurimetabolic syndrome, important risk factors for coronary heart disease.
...
PMID:[Tophaceous gout in plurimetabolic syndrome]. 1021 66
Glycogen storage disease type 1 (GSD-1), also known as von Gierke disease, is caused by a deficiency in the activity of the enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase). It is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by hypoglycemia, hepatomegaly, kidney enlargement, growth retardation, lactic acidemia,
hyperlipidemia
and
hyperuricemia
. The disease presents with both clinical and biochemical heterogeneity consistent with the existence of two major subgroups, GSD-1a and GSD-1b, which have been confirmed at the molecular genetic level. GSD-1a, the most prevalent form, is caused by mutations in the G6Pase gene that abolish or greatly reduce enzymatic activity. The gene maps to chromosome 17q21 and encodes a microsomal transmembrane protein. Animal models of GSD-1a exist and are being exploited to delineate the disease more precisely. It has been proposed that GSD-1b is caused by a defect in the microsomal glucose-6-phosphate transporter. The gene responsible for GSD-1b has been mapped to chromosome 11q23 and a cDNA encoding a microsomal transmembrane protein has been identified. The function of this putative GSD-1b protein remains to be determined. These recent developments, along with newly characterized animal models of GSD-1a, are increasing our understanding of the interrelationship between the components of the G6Pase complex and type 1 glycogen storage diseases.
...
PMID:Molecular Genetics of Type 1 Glycogen Storage Diseases. 1032 3
Long-term prognosis in kidney transplant recipients depends on multiple factors. The purpose of this study was to quantify the influence of
hyperuricemia
and hyperglycemia (elements of the so-called 'syndrome X', i.e., a combination of metabolic disorders like
hyperuricemia
, diabetes mellitus,
hyperlipidemia
, and hypertension) on organ function in 350 kidney transplant recipients who had received 375 kidney transplants up to 1990 and in whom sex, age of recipient and donor, nephrologic disease, duration of dialysis, human leukocyte antigen (HLA) classification, and duration of transplant ischemia had been well matched. We found the influence of
hyperuricemia
on graft survival to be statistically significant (p < or = 0.05), while a statistically significant correlation between hyperglycemia and graft survival could not be detected in the present study. The transplant survival rates 2, 4, and 5 yr post-kidney-transplantation were 96.7, 80.7, and 78.7 in normogylcemic patients vs. 96.9, 85, and 82.7% in hyperglycemic ( > 100 mg,dL) kidney transplant recipients (p > 0.05). Transplant survival in hyperuricemic patients (male, > 8 mg dL; female, > 6.2 mg/dL) 2, 4, and 5 yr post-transplantation was significantly reduced (92.2, 70.6, and 68.8% vs. 98.1, 85.6, and 83.3%), as compared to normouricemic recipients. A combined presence of both
hyperuricemia
and hyperglycemia probably influencing the prognosis post-kidney-transplantation failed to reach the level of statistical significance. We found a significant correlation between age of recipients and plasma glucose (p < or = 0.01) and between serum uric acid concentrations and diuretic therapy (p < or = 0.05) and gender (p < or = 0.(5). In conclusion,
hyperuricemia
after kidney transplantation seems to reduce graft survival, whereas an influence of the carbohydrate metabolism has to be denied.
...
PMID:Influence of hyperglycemia and hyperuricemia on long-term transplant survival in kidney transplant recipients. 1051 17
We described a case of Werner's syndrome associated with osteosarcoma. A 37-year-old Japanese man was diagnosed as having Werner's syndrome by the presence of juvenile cataracts, skin sclerosis and hyperpigmentation of the feet, high-pitched voice, characteristic bird-like appearance of the face with beak-shaped nose, thinning of the entire skin and hyperkeratoses on soles,
hyperlipemia
,
hyperuricemia
, diabetes melitus, and the mutated responsible gene (WRN). He had a 3-month history of a tumor on his left forearm. Histologically, the tumor included four histological patterns; a malignant fibrous histiocytoma-like, a desmoid-like, a dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans-like, and a chondrosarcoma-like pattern. Tumoral osteoid formation was also found in the tumor. Therefore, the tumor was diagnosed as osteosarcoma.
...
PMID:A case of Werner's syndrome associated with osteosarcoma. 1055 36
Glycogen storage disease type 1a (GSD-1a), characterized by hypoglycemia, liver and kidney enlargement, growth retardation,
hyperlipidemia
, and
hyperuricemia
, is caused by a deficiency in glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), a key enzyme in glucose homeostasis. To evaluate the feasibility of gene replacement therapy for GSD-1a, we have infused adenoviral vector containing the murine G6Pase gene (Ad-mG6Pase) into G6Pase-deficient (G6Pase(-/-)) mice that manifest symptoms characteristic of human GSD-1a. Whereas <15% of G6Pase(-/-) mice under glucose therapy survived weaning, a 100% survival rate was achieved when G6Pase(-/-) mice were infused with Ad-mG6Pase, 90% of which lived to 3 months of age. Hepatic G6Pase activity in Ad-mG6Pase-infused mice was restored to 19% of that in G6Pase(+/+) mice at 7-14 days post-infusion; the activity persisted for at least 70 days. Ad-mG6Pase infusion also greatly improved growth of G6Pase(-/-) mice and normalized plasma glucose, cholesterol, triglyceride, and uric acid profiles. Furthermore, liver and kidney enlargement was less pronounced with near-normal levels of glycogen depositions in both organs. Our data demonstrate that a single administration of a recombinant adenoviral vector can alleviate the pathological manifestations of GSD-1a in mice, suggesting that this disorder in humans can potentially be corrected by gene therapy.
...
PMID:Correction of glycogen storage disease type 1a in a mouse model by gene therapy. 1062 14
Lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) is recognized as a new coronary risk factor, but few studies have quantitatively assessed the relationship of serum Lp(a) levels with other coronary risk factors in many patients undergoing coronary cineangiography. Seventeen coronary risk factors were quantified (i.e., age, gender, hypertension, impaired glucose tolerance, cerebrovascular accident,
hyperuricemia
, smoking, family history of ischemic heart disease (IHD), history of
hyperlipidemia
, Lp(a), total cholesterol, high density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, triglyceride, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol, apolipoproteins(apo)A-I,B, E) to determine their relationship with the numbers of involved coronary vessels using multiple regression test in 1,006 patients who underwent coronary cineangiogram (280 non-IHD patients: 144 men, 136 women; 726 IHD patients: 460 men, 266 women; age 16-84 years, mean 60.5+/-0.3). Multiple regression test indicated R = 0.506 and items that showed high beta weight and significant p level were age, Lp(a), impaired glucose tolerance, total cholesterol, cerebrovascular accidents, HDL-cholesterol, smoking, gender, family history of IHD, and apo-A-I (0.221, p<0.001; 0.174, p<0.001; 0.616, p<0.001; 0.138, p<0.001; 0.122, p<0.001; -0.12, p<0.001; 0.092, p<0.01; 0.091, p<0.01; 0.067, p<0.05; -0.065, p<0.05; respectively). It was concluded that Lp(a) is an independent, potential, and modifiable coronary risk factor, and that reduction of serum Lp(a) is important in the clinical management of patients with IHD.
...
PMID:Lipoprotein(a) is a potential coronary risk factor. 1065 Dec 7
Gout patients often have various characteristics of insulin resistance (IR) syndrome such as glucose intolerance,
hyperlipidemia
, hypertension and obesity. In addition, epidemiological data suggest that
hyperuricemia
is associated with higher rates of death due to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disorders. However, it has not conclusively been shown whether the association between
hyperuricemia
and increased death rate is secondary to the association between IR and death or
hyperuricemia
itself is an independent risk of death. It is of interest to examine the effects of insulin sensitizer which was developed recently on serum urate concentration because it may provide a new idea as to the mechanism of the association between IR,
hyperuricemia
and vascular disorders. In the present paper, we discuss the relevance of IR to
hyperuricemia
and gout, and show the data of urate and glucose metabolism obtained from control subjects or the patients with
hyperuricemia
, gout or type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:[Insulin sensitizer and urate metabolism]. 1070 71
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