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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Male rats of the JCR:LA-corpulent strain spontaneously develop atherosclerosis and myocardial lesions if corpulent. The corpulent rats exhibit a marked very low density hyperlipidemia and insulin resistance. The incidence of both vascular and myocardial lesions correlates strongly with the hyperinsulinemia, but not with the hyperlipidemia. Corpulent male rats were chronically treated with nifedipine or acetylsalicylic acid to explore the roles of smooth muscle spasm and platelet activity in induction of the myocardial lesions. Acetylsalicylic acid treatment was associated with no significant changes in fasting glucose, insulin, or lipid concentrations. Nifedipine caused no significant changes in glucose concentration but was associated with mildly increased insulin levels. Treatment with nifedipine resulted in significant decreases in serum triglyceride concentrations. The decreases were confined to longer-chain triacylglycerol molecular species with no change in the concentration of molecular species with 48 or 50 acyl carbon atoms. There was no effect on myocardial lesion frequency with acetylsalicylic acid treatment. In contrast, nifedipine prevented the development of old organized scarred lesions. This effect is similar to that seen with treatments that markedly reduce the insulin resistance. These findings suggest that platelet-initiated thrombus formation is not an important factor in lesion formation in the JCR:LA-cp rat, but that smooth muscle spasm is probably important.
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PMID:Prevention of myocardial lesions in JCR:LA-corpulent rats by nifedipine. 219 41

The epidemiology and etiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, clinical presentation, complications, and treatment of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) are reviewed. Major risk factors for AMI include age, sex (men greater than women), family history, race, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, cigarette smoking, diabetes mellitus, and diet. AMI occurs when there is a prolonged decrease in oxygen supply to the myocardium caused by coronary thrombosis or coronary vascular spasm. Traditional drug treatment of uncomplicated AMI includes oxygen, laxatives, and analgesics. For analgesia, narcotic agonists are generally preferred, although intravenous nitroglycerin is of value for both reducing infarct size and relieving pain. Fibrinolytic therapy is also indicated in these patients. Low-dose heparin should be initiated on admission to the hospital. Beta-adrenergic blocking agents have proven useful in reducing the incidence of ventricular fibrillation and sudden death. Antiplatelet agents may also be used to decrease long-term mortality. Recent studies have focused on reduction of infarct size using agents such as beta blockers, calcium-channel blockers, nitroglycerin, and thrombolytics. Revascularization procedures are required in some patients to re-establish adequate coronary perfusion. Most patients who survive AMI initially have a relatively uncomplicated clinical course. An increasing number of therapeutic interventions are available for acute and chronic treatment of AMI.
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PMID:Current concepts in clinical therapeutics: acute myocardial infarction. 352 26

All contributory factors to the unusual occurrence of stroke in young people were evaluated in patients under age 40 admitted to the Stroke Unit of the Austin Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Over the August 1977 to December 1980 period there were 700 admissions. Of these 14 patients were under the age of 40. There were 7 males and 7 females whose ages ranged from 17-38 years. Each patient was screened for factors which might contribute to premature vascular disease including hypertension, diabetes, smoking, obesity, and hyperlipidemia. In addition, the following tests were performed to exclude an arteritic process: full blood examination; ESR; protein electrophoresis; syphilis serology; and the presence of antinuclear factor. Each of the 14 patients suffered cerebral infarction. A summary of each case is presented in a table. In 9 patients, infarction occurred in the carotid territory of supply. Large cortical infarcts with or without subcortical involvement occurred in cases 1-8, of whom 5 had major vessel occlusion demonstrated angiographically and another had stenosing and ulcerative atheromatous disease at the extracranial carotid bifurcation. In a further 4 patients, infarction occurred within the vertebrobasilar territory and was either confined to the brain stem, the occiptal cortex, or involved both. Angiograms were performed in 2 of these patients and showed irregular narrowing of the vertebral artery which was interpreted as spasm and segmentally narrowing of the basilar artery. The final patient had several ischemic events which included right sided amaurosis fugax, and left frontal, right parieto-occipital and left occipital infarctions. Angiography was normal. All patients survived the stroke and were able to go home. There may be an interrelationship between the pathological findings of Irey et al. (1978) and the effect oral contraceptives (OCs) has on migraine. This is relevant to Case 13. Sustained exposure to OCs may produce the pathological changes described (visible as segmental narrowing angiographically). In 2 patients cerebral infarction was caused by atheromatous or hypertensive occlusive vascular disease. In Case 3 an embolus occluded the middle cerebral artery. Infarction complicating migraine was diagnosed confidently in 4 patients on the basis of typical migrainous symptomatology in the past and accompanying the stroke. Of the 12 patients fully evaluated, there were no cases of polycythemia or thrombocytosis. There were no abnormalities of the clotting factors. Almost every patient had some form of emotional upset, and there were 7 who had significant psychiatric illness and emotional problems of extreme magnitide.
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PMID:Stroke syndromes in young people. 692 82

The coronary atherosclerotic plaque progresses in successive stages, determined by phenomena such as spasm, thrombosis and inflammation. Studies of regression are hindered by methodological problems involving the variability of angiographic results over intervals of several years. Longitudinal clinical studies are probably more useful. For long-term clinical outcome, it appears that stabilisation of young plaques is more important than regression of older plaques. To this end, cessation of smoking seems the most effective means; progressive plaques are most often seen early in the disease, in patients under 60 years of age, of whom more than 70% are smokers. The inevitable lack of studies as rigorous as those dealing with hyperlipidaemia reduction should not be used as a pretext for scruples leading to ignoring the results of clinical practice. Prevention by diet is no doubt essential, but prospective studies are still rare and biases are numerous. The same is true for physical exercise.
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PMID:[Secondary prevention of atherosclerosis: effects on coronary plaques and on myocardial ischemia]. 857 Oct 44

The effects of BQ-485, a selective endothelin (ET)-A receptor antagonist, on the vasomotion induced by a low dose of ET were investigated. In the isolated rat heart perfused with Krebs-Henseleit solution at a constant flow, intracoronary bolus injection of ET-1 or ET-3 (10 pmol) elicited a rapid transient decrease, followed by a slight sustained increase, in the coronary perfusion pressure (CPP). The decrease in CPP induced by ET-1 was similar in magnitude to (approximately 30%) but shorter in duration than that induced by ET-3. Pretreatment of the heart with saponin (30 micrograms/ml) to denude the coronary endothelium abolished the decrease and markedly enhanced the increase in CPP induced by ETs, indicating that the vasorelaxing action of ETs is endothelium-dependent. The selective ETA receptor antagonist BQ-485 (1 microM) significantly prolonged the duration of the ET-1-induced decrease in CPP, made the vasodilatation by ET-1 indistinguishable from that by ET-3, and eliminated the subsequent increase in CPP. In the saponin-treated heart, BQ-485 also eliminated the ET-1-mediated increase in CPP. These findings suggest that, in rat coronary vascular beds, a low dose of ET-1 elicits vasoconstriction and endothelium-dependent vasodilatation through the ETA receptor on the vascular smooth muscle and presumably the ETB receptor on the endothelium, respectively. Furthermore, it is expected that selective ETA receptor antagonists, including BQ-485, may be able to protect the heart against ET-1-induced coronary spasm in situations, such as hyperlipidemia or artherosclerosis, in which the release and/or function of endothelium-derived vasorelaxing substances is impaired.
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PMID:Effects of BQ-485, a selective ETA antagonist, on endothelin-mediated vasomotion in rat coronary vascular beds. 858 27

The clinical significance of coronary arteriosclerosis and coronary risk factors was investigated in patients with coronary spasm. Coronary spasm induction test with acetylcholine was performed in 140 consecutive patients (85 males and 55 females) with chest pain in our hospital. The patients were divided into positive, borderline, and negative groups according to the results of the test. The positive and borderline groups were categorized as the coronary contractive group. The coronary sclerosis index was used to evaluate the degree of coronary arteriosclerosis. Coronary risk factors were evaluated in terms of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, obesity, history of smoking and drinking, and family history of cardiovascular events. Patients could be divided into 34.3% in the positive group and 23.6% in the borderline group, i.e. 57.9% in the coronary contractive group, and 42.1% in the negative group. There were more males than females in both positive and coronary contractive groups. The proportion of males in the coronary contractive group was higher in patients over 60 years of age than in patients under 60. In contrast, the proportion of females was higher in patients under 60 than in patients over 60. In male patients, the coronary sclerosis indices in the positive, borderline, and coronary contractive groups were higher than those in the negative group. The indices in female patients in the positive and coronary contractive groups were higher than the index in the negative group. There were no differences in terms of the presence or absence, or the degree of organic stenosis between spastic sites and nonspastic branches in the positive group. The history of smoking in male patients was significantly more common in the positive group than in the negative group. The family history was more relevant in female patients in the positive or coronary contractive group compared to the negative group. Moreover, the history of smoking in the coronary contractive group was significantly more common than that in the negative group. The development of coronary spasm may be determined, at least in part, by the degree of coronary sclerosis as well as by gender and age. Smoking habits in both sexes and family history in females are proposed as the most important risk factors for coronary spasm.
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PMID:[Significance of coronary risk factors and coronary arteriosclerosis for coronary vasospasm]. 955 76

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.
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PMID:A psychobehavioral factor, alexithymia, is related to coronary spasm. 965 15

Although patients with medically treated vasospastic angina have a good outcome, few data exist regarding the role of underlying lesion severity associated with or without hyperlipidemia in the prognosis. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to assess the relationship between the long-term outcome of vasospastic angina and the factors influencing its prognosis. A total of 256 patients (219 men, 37 women; mean age, 54.1+/-9.2) who had coronary spasm with or without underlying lesions and were being treated with calcium channel antagonists were enrolled and followed for 13.6+/-3.7 years. Cardiac events consisted of cardiac death and ischemic events, which included acute myocardial infarction and unstable angina. Cox analysis selected coronary artery stenosis (CAS, >/=50%) and risk factors such as age, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C), sex and smoking. There were 19 cases of cardiac death (7.4%) and 58 of ischemic events (22.7%) during the follow-up period. The presence of significant CAS was an independent predictor of event-free survival (hazard ratio (HR) =2.84, 95% confidence interval (CI) =1.79-4.52, p<0.0001). In 193 patients without significant CAS, there were 10 cases of cardiac death (5.2%, p<0.05) and 34 of ischemic events (17.6%, p<0.01). In that group, high LDL-C was the independent predictor of event-free survival (HR = 3.89, 95% CI = 1.20-12.6, p=0.02). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis revealed significantly lower event-free survival in patients with than in those without lesions (p<0.0001 by log-rank test). These results demonstrate that the most important factor for long-term prognosis of vasospastic angina treated with calcium channel antagonists is significant CAS. High LDL-C, which might alter the underlying coronary endothelial function and/or accelerate atherosclerotic lesions, could also contribute to the occurrence of cardiac events, particularly in patients without significant CAS.
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PMID:Lesion severity and hypercholesterolemia determine long-term prognosis of vasospastic angina treated with calcium channel antagonists. 1463 19

We report the case of a 32-year-old man who presented at the emergency department with severe chest pressure, left arm pain, and dizziness. These symptoms were described as intermittent, occurring after exercise and at rest. He had undergone several stress tests during the past 8 years, but no objective evidence of ischemia was produced. His history of hyperlipidemia and increasing frequency of symptoms prompted us to perform coronary angiography, which showed a single coronary artery with an ostium at the right sinus of Valsalva. The vessel had an initial, mixed common trunk that gave rise to both the right coronary artery proper and to the left coronary artery. The left main trunk followed a prepulmonic course. The anatomic features were eventually confirmed by computed tomographic angiography. The left main stem had a fixed 50% to 60% area narrowing, at baseline study. A treadmill stress myocardial perfusion study showed no evidence of ischemia. The patient was referred to a 2nd facility, where intravascular ultrasonography, at baseline, revealed 63% left main narrowing without evidence of atherosclerosis. Acetylcholine provocation demonstrated worsening of the stenosis to about 80%, with reproduction of angina and ST-segment depression, which indicated that medical management of spasm might provide symptomatic relief.
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PMID:Single coronary artery with prepulmonic coursing left main coronary artery manifesting as prinzmetal's angina. 1817 28

1. Coronary artery spasm (CAS) is known to be a major cause of myocardial ischaemia. Multivessel coronary spasm (MVS) in particular is likely to induce more severe and prolonged myocardial ischaemia than single vessel spasm (SVS). 2. In the present study, a total of 1082 consecutive patients without significant coronary artery disease who underwent an acetylcholine (ACh) provocation test between March 2004 and April 2009 were investigated. Patients were divided into three groups: an MVS group (n = 275), an SVS group (n = 376) and a non-CAS group (n = 431). Differences in clinical and angiographic characteristics following the ACh provocation test were evaluated between the MVS, SVS and non-CAS groups. 3. At baseline, patients in the MVS group had the highest prevalence of peripheral artery disease (PAD), hyperlipidaemia, smoking and old age, as well as the highest triglyceride levels. Calcium channel blockers were most frequently prescribed in MVS patients before the ACh test. During the ACh test, the highest prevalence of chest pain, ischaemic electrocardiogram changes, baseline spasms and diffuse and severe spasms were observed in the MVS group. The response rate to lower ACh doses that induce CAS was also higher in the MVS group. Multivariate analysis showed that the presence of PAD (odds ratio (OR) 2.0; P = 0.006) and baseline spasm (OR 1.4; P = 0.045) were independent predictors of ACh-induced MVS. 4. In conclusion, ischaemic symptoms, diffuse and severe spasm and baseline spasm were more frequently associated with MVS patients, suggesting more intensive medical therapies and close clinical follow up would be required for this patient group.
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PMID:Multivessel versus single vessel spasm, as assessed by the intracoronary acetylcholine provocation test, in Korean patients. 2193 25


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