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)

Hypertension is one of the most important cardiovascular risk factors. Without therapy hypertension leads to stroke, coronary heart disease with angina pectoris and myocardial infarction, kidney failure and/or peripheral vascular disease. The association between blood pressure and these cardiovascular complications can be demonstrated over the entire blood pressure range. The risk of stroke, myocardial infarction, renal failure or peripheral vascular disease increases with increasing blood pressure. Additional cardiovascular risk factors such as hyperlipidemia, smoking and diabetes involve a further increase in risk. Today hypertension can be effectively treated. To that end, diuretics, betablockers, ACE-inhibitors or calcium antagonists can be used. Alpha receptor antagonists and angiotensin AT1 receptor antagonists are also of value. The antihypertensive effectiveness of these drugs is comparable but may vary in individual patients. During antihypertensive therapy, a reduction in cerebrovascular and cardiac complications has been demonstrated for alpha methyldopa, diuretics and betablockers. In these studies, fatal and non-fatal strokes were reduced by 42%, while the reduction in cardiac events was less pronounced (14%). The reasons for this greater efficacy of antihypertensive therapy in the cerebral circulation are not clear. Other risk factors may be particularly important in the pathogenesis of coronary artery disease (e.g. genetic factors, hyperlipidemia and others) or hypertensive vascular changes in the coronary circulation may not be as reversible as they are in the cerebral circulation. The well documented correlation between stroke, myocardial infarction and hypertension, as well as the proven efficacy of antihypertensive therapy in preventing cardiovascular events, underscores the importance of effective and sustained blood pressure control in these patients.
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PMID:[Heart, brain and hypertension]. 884 9

Creatinine clearance decreases with age by 1 ml/min/year after 40 years of age, although serum creatinine remains constant because of reduction of muscle mass. Reduction of water intake may occur in the elderly because of a reduced sensation of thirst; this is associated with a tendency to lose water with urine. The capacity to respond to sodium load is impaired in aged kidneys, thereby leading to ECV expansion and hypertension. But there is also, in the elderly, a reduced capacity for retaining sodium (FENa is higher than in young subjects), making old subjects sensitive to salt depletion and ECV contraction. Hypernatraemia (Nas > 150 mmol/l) is not infrequent in the elderly (1%) and is usually due to water deficiency (old subjects should be forced to drink), and rarely to iatrogenic excess of sodium. It is the abrupt occurrence of severe hypernatraemia that causes neurological symptoms due to dehydration and brain shrinking, which may lead to cerebral haemorrhage and death. Hyponatraemia (Nas < 130 mmol/l) is frequent among the elderly (7-11%) and is mainly due to water overload, which is usually iatrogenic. Hypovolaemic hyponatraemia occurs when salt depletion causes ECV contraction > 10%, and is due to water retention in an attempt to normalize ECV. Hypervolaemic hyponatraemia is due to ADH hypersecretion because of a decrease in 'effective' circulating blood volume. 'Pseudohyponatraemia' may occur because of hyperlipidaemia or hyperproteinaemia. It is the abrupt occurrence of severe hyponatraemia that causes neurological symptoms (water intoxication), secondary to the oedomatous swelling of the brain within the skull. While rapidly occurring hyponatraemia may be lethal, slowly occurring hyponatraemia is usually asymptomatic. Rapid correction of hyponatraemia may cause cerebral dehydration and 'osmotic demyelination syndrome' ('central pontine myelinosis'). Decrease (e.g. by diuretics) or increase (e.g. by ACE-inhibitors, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, beta-blockers) or serum potassium may occur in the elderly. Diuretics should be used with caution in elderly subjects to avoid salt depletion, hypotension and renal function impairment.
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PMID:Some sodium, potassium and water changes in the elderly and their treatment. 905 29

Free radical activity may contribute to atherosclerotic lesions which in diabetic subjects may frequently lead to vascular complications. It is known that oxidative stress is associated to diabetes. Protein glycation and glucose oxidation could be possible source of free radicals. 28 non insulin dependent diabetic subjects (NIDDM) were examined. 20 healthy subjects matched for age, sex and for the presence of hypertension and hyperlipidemia were also studied. Hydrogen peroxide, measured by intracellular levels of the fluorescent 2,7-dichloro-fluorescein (DCF), was considered as indicative parameter of free radical production. The results showed that in resting platelets the basal level of hydrogen peroxide was significantly higher in diabetic subjects than in controls. Moreover, after stimulation with thrombin, collagen, phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and platelet activating factor (PAF), platelets of diabetic subjects generated significantly higher amounts of hydrogen peroxide than controls. Moreover, platelet aggregation induced by adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) and plasma beta TG levels were higher in diabetics than in controls. In diabetic patients platelet free radical production and functional activity are increased and therefore could play a role in the elevated thrombotic risk described in diabetes.
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PMID:Hyperactivity and increased hydrogen peroxide formation in platelets of NIDDM patients. 917 36

Bromocriptine (BC), an ergot alkaloid with wide therapeutic use in humans, has been shown to inhibit proliferation of several abnormally hyperproliferative cells in vivo and in vitro. In the present study, direct effects of BC on mitogen-stimulated proliferation of rat vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) (A7r5 cells) and human aortic smooth muscle cells (HAOSMC) were examined in vitro. Twenty-four hour proliferative responses of quiescent A7r5 cells and HAOSMC to a variety of mitogens in the presence or absence of BC were determined by quantifying the incorporation of 3H-thymidine into DNA. BC at 1 microM inhibited the responses of A7r5 cells to various concentrations of fetal calf serum (FCS) by 50-70% without affecting the ED50 of FCS (2%). BC dose dependently inhibited the proliferation of A7r5 cells and HAOSMC stimulated by 2% FCS, with 52% inhibition at 1 and 0.1 microM, respectively. BC at 1 microM also completely inhibited the maximal mitogenic responses of A7r5 cells to prolactin, platelet-derived growth factor, insulin-like growth factor, and phorbol mysterate acetate (PMA), and BC at 1 microM completely inhibited the mitogenic response of HAOSMC to PMA. BC is a dopamine D2 agonist, a noradrenergic alpha 2 agonist, and an .alpha 1 antagonist, but the inhibitory effects of BC on A7r5 cell proliferation could not be mimicked by the specific D2 agonists, LY162502 and LY171555; the alpha 2 agonist, clonidine; or the alpha 1 antagonist, WB-4101. Neither dopamine nor the D2 agonist, LY162502, could inhibit HAOSMC proliferation induced by FCS. The PMA-induced stimulation of protein kinase C (PKC), a positive regulator of mitogenesis, could be completely blocked in A7r5 cells and HAOSMC by 1 and 0.1 microM BC, respectively. However, FPCS (2%)-induced activation of PKC in A7r5 cells and HAOSMC could only be blocked by 61 and 19% by BC (1 microM for A7r5 cells and 0.1 microM for HAOSMC), respectively. Given the existing evidence that BC reduces the severity of several other pathological conditions, such as insulin resistance, inflammation, and hyperlipidemia, which potentiate vascular disease, the current findings further suggest that BC use in the treatment of atherosclerosis and/or restenosis deserves further investigation.
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PMID:Inhibitory effects of bromocriptine on vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation. 925 5

IgA (immunoglobulin A) nephropathy is the most common form of primary glomerulonephritis worldwide. It generally has a good prognosis, with 15-year rates of kidney survival from the apparent onset of disease usually well in excess of 70%. Progression, when it occurs, is usually a slow, indolent process, and spontaneous remission of disease activity occurs in 7% of patients. It is possible to predict, from the initial presenting features and laboratory findings, renal biopsy and clinical course during follow-up, which patients are likely to have progressive renal disease. Identification of the factors likely to be associated with progression is of importance in helping to establish which patients will benefit from specific therapeutic intervention. For all patients, attention should be directed toward general health issues in an endeavour to reverse factors that are likely to have an adverse impact on renal function. This should include early detection and tight control of hypertension (present in 50% of all patients with IgA nephropathy during the course of their disease), along with utilisation of antihypertensive agents that have specific renoprotective effects, namely ACE inhibitors or calcium antagonists. Such therapy should also be considered in normotensive patients with heavy proteinuria, as a reduction of proteinuria is often achieved by this means. Other aims should include maintenance of desirable bodyweight, correction of hyperlipidaemia, cessation of smoking, participation in an active exercise programme, avoidance of exposure to nephrotoxins and maintenance of a high fluid intake. A low protein/low phosphate diet together with phosphate binder therapy should be commenced early in the course of renal impairment. Corticosteroid and/or cytotoxic drug therapy should be considered in the small percentage of patients with heavy proteinuria or a rapid decline in renal function. Such therapeutic endeavours are likely to delay the onset of renal failure in patients with progressive IgA nephropathy.
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PMID:Recognition and management of IgA nephropathy. 946 91

The generation of nitric oxide by the vascular endothelium maintains a continuous vasodilator tone that is essential for the regulation of blood flow and blood pressure. Nitric oxide also contributes to the control of platelet aggregation and has important antiatherogenic effects. These properties are mediated by the action of constitutive nitric oxide synthase and subsequent activation by nitric oxide of soluble guanylate cyclase. Impaired release of nitric oxide occurs in most animal and human models of hypertension, contributing to the increased peripheral resistance and most likely to the development of cardiovascular complications. Antihypertensive medications (angiotensin-converting enzyme [ACE] inhibitors and calcium channel blockers) appear to prevent the impairment of nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation in experimental hypertension, though in humans the data are not as clear. Reduced nitric oxide release appears therefore to be a consequence rather than a cause of high blood pressure, and the reduction in blood pressure per se is most important. In hyperlipidaemia, endothelium-dependent relaxations are reduced probably due to the inhibitory action of oxidized low-density lipoproteins on endothelium-dependent relaxations. Lipid-lowering strategies and, more recently, ACE inhibition have been demonstrated to improve nitric oxide dependent coronary vasodilation in hypercholesterolaemic patients with and without atheromatous coronary disease. Nitric oxide dependent vasodilation is also impaired in insulin- and non-insulin-dependent diabetes as well as in healthy aging. Endothelial dysfunction may be improved in non-insulin-dependent diabetes by administration of the antioxidants, supporting the hypothesis that nitric oxide inactivation by oxygen-derived free radicals contributes to abnormal vascular reactivity in diabetes.
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PMID:Impairment and restoration of nitric oxide-dependent vasodilation in cardiovascular disease. 948 1

The group investigated comprised 60 workers under conditions of chronic exposure to metallic mercury vapours (mean exposure duration--9.3 yrs; mean age of subjects--38.5 yrs). The control group was composed of 24 non-exposed persons (mean age--39.9 yrs). The workers exposed were divided into three groups according to the air concentration of metallic mercury vapours at the workpost, group A--0.15-0.17 mg/m3, group B--0.03-0.08 mg/m3 and group C--0.02-0.03 mg/m3. The workers qualified for the study did not receive any medication containing acetylsalicylic acid derivatives, and did not consume alcoholic drinks for few days prior to the study. Persons with the diagnosis or the history of blood disorders, venous or arterial thrombosis as well as those with diabetes and hyperlipidaemia were excluded from the study. The haemostasis assessment was based on the results of laboratory tests, PLT, TBT, ACT, APTT, HTCT, INR and Fg, AT III, alpha 2 M, FDP, and FM concentrations. The comparison of the exposed and control groups revealed a statistically significant decrease in ACT and AT III concentrations. When particular groups under exposure were compared with one another and the controls, the increased INR and Fg concentrations were found in group A. Moreover, this group showed an increased platelet count, as well as decreased TBT and alpha 2 M concentrations. However, the differences between the groups were statistically insignificant. The results of the study indicated that chronic exposure to mercury may impair haemostasis and lead to hypercoagulability. The latter may result from the deficiency of natural coagulation inhibitors.
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PMID:[The effect of occupational exposure to metallic mercury on selected parameters of hemostasis]. 950 35

The prevention of coronary artery disease is based on the control of several factors associated with a disease or clinical condition and suspected to play a pathogenetic role, defined as 'risk factors'. Smoking is a powerful risk factor for coronary artery disease, with risk of events increasing in relation to the number of cigarettes smoked daily. Smoking cessation is associated within 3-4 years, with a significant reduction in cardiovascular risk. Hyperlipidaemia is a powerful predictor of coronary disease with a strong, independent, continuous and graded positive association between cholesterol levels and risk of coronary events. Several large studies have shown the benefit of cholesterol reduction, and there is clear evidence of the efficacy of statins in the reduction of events in primary and secondary prevention. Hypertension is a significant, strong and independent risk factor for coronary artery disease morbidity and mortality and the reduction of events and mortality by antihypertensive treatment is well documented. Obesity is associated with an increase in all-cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality, with a particularly high risk for subjects with central obesity. Central obesity is also part of the so-called 'metabolic X syndrome' including insulin resistance, which appears to be associated with a particularly high risk of coronary artery disease. Type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, especially in women. Several studies have shown that good metabolic control and multifactorial risk factor reduction significantly lower the coronary risk in these patients. Recent evidence is accumulating that some clotting factors (fibrinogen, factor VII, von Willebrand factor) and fibrinolytic factors (t-PA and PAI-1) are associated with an increased risk of coronary artery disease. The European Concerted Action on Thrombosis (ECAT) showed that the levels of fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor antigen, and t-PA antigen are independent predictors of subsequent coronary syndromes in patients with angina pectoris, and that low fibrinogen is associated with a low risk of events despite high cholesterol levels. Post-menopausal status is associated with increased risk of coronary artery disease, particularly when menopause is premature (before the age of 45) or abrupt (surgical). There is strong, thought not yet completely definite evidence that post-menopausal hormone replacement therapy may significantly reduce the risk of events and improve survival. Hyperhomocysteinaemia is an emerging risk factor independently associated with an increased risk of coronary artery disease, cerebral vascular disease, and peripheral vascular disease. The administration of vitamin B6, B12 or folate seems to be useful and is currently under further evaluation. Recently, attention has been focused on the correlation between coronary artery disease and genetic factors, such as ACE gene polymorphism or the gene polymorphism for the IIIa-moiety of the platelet fibrinogen receptor IIb-IIIa. In primary prevention, control of the major risk factors mainly in patients with clustered factors will substantially reduce the risk of ischaemic events. Secondary prevention of CHD is based on: aggressive behavioural advice, blood pressure reduction in hypertensives, good metabolic control of diabetes, and cholesterol reduction. Aspirin, beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, and oral anticoagulants, may be useful in selected patients.
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PMID:Classical risk factors and emerging elements in the risk profile for coronary artery disease. 951 44

There is recent interest in the possibility that angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE inhibitors) may reduce the damage inflicted on the arterial wall by common cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and ageing. The efficacy of these drugs in blood pressure reduction is accepted, but whether there is an excess benefit on arterial structure and function, conferred by use of ACE inhibitors over more traditional antihypertensives, is still under debate. There is also evidence in animal models to suggest that ACE inhibition is effective in reduction of arterial damage due to experimental hyperlipidaemia. ACE inhibitors not only reduce the conversion of angiotensin I and angiotensin II, which can interact with the sympathetic nervous system, but also prevent the degradation of bradykinin. This means that ACE inhibitors have several potential mechanisms through which they could suppress intimal hypertrophy and prevent endothelial dysfunction, which is believed to precede arteriosclerosis in man. Although much further work is needed to clarify the mechanism underlying the beneficial effects on the arterial wall of this group of drugs, they do appear to have significant potential in the effort to reduce cardiovascular mortality and morbidity, especially in high risk groups.
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PMID:The impact of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors on the arterial wall. 954 23

Circulating soluble E-selectin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), and vascular adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) concentrations were evaluated in 93 nonobese essential hypertensive patients, of whom 16 had impaired glucose tolerance and hyperlipidemia (group I); 25 had impaired glucose tolerance (group II); 28 had hyperlipidemia (group III); and 24 had no metabolic abnormalities (group IV). A group of 22 healthy volunteers served as a control group. All groups were without clinical or ultrasound evidence of vascular lesion and were matched for age, sex, and BMI. Endothelial soluble adhesion molecules were measured at baseline, during an oral glucose tolerance test, and after 12 weeks of either enalapril or placebo treatments. Plasma soluble E-selectin, ICAM-1, and VCAM-1 were higher (P < 0.05) in group I and II than in the other groups (group I: E-selectin, 96.1+/-27.1; ICAM-1, 304.0+/-102.1; VCAM-1, 626.1+/-156.2 microg/l. Group II: E-selectin, 88.0+/-18.0; ICAM-1, 268.0+/-84.1; VCAM-1, 594.1+/-140.9 microg/I. Group III: E-selectin, 70.1+/-18.1; ICAM-1, 195.1+/-68.0; VCAM-1, 495.9+/-110.1 microg/l. Group IV: E-selectin, 65.1+/-16.1; ICAM-1, 168.1+/-64.0; VCAM-1, 472.1+/-108.2 microg/l). Soluble adhesins levels were not higher than normal in groups III and IV. Plasma soluble ICAM-1 concentrations increased in group I after glucose administration and were directly correlated with 2-h insulin levels (r=0.648, P=0.007). Compared with placebo, 12 weeks of enalapril treatment significantly (P < 0.0001) reduced soluble E-selectin, ICAM-1, and VCAM-1. Decrements of soluble adhesins were not dependent on enalapril-related blood pressure changes. Therefore, an early endothelial activation was present in essential hypertensive patients with impaired glucose tolerance, regardless of the presence of hyperlipidemia. ACE inhibition counteracted such endothelial activation.
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PMID:Early activation of vascular endothelium in nonobese, nondiabetic essential hypertensive patients with multiple metabolic abnormalities. 956 1


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