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

Levels of blood coagulation factors, cholesterol and triglyceride were measured in human plasma. Prothrombin was significantly elevated in type IIa hyperlipidaemia; prothrombin and factors VII, IX and X in type IIb; and prothrombin and factors VII and IX in type V. Multiple regression analysis showed significant correlation between the levels of these plasma lipids and the vitamin K-dependent clotting factors (prothrombin, factors VII, IX and X). Higher cholesterol levels were associated with higher levels of prothrombin and factor X while higher triglyceride levels were associated with higher levels of these as well as factors VII and IX. Prothrombin showed a significant cholesterol-triglyceride interaction in that higher cholesterol levels were associated with higher prothrombin levels at all levels of triglyceride, with the most marked effects in subjects with higher triglyceride levels. Higher prothrombin levels were noted in subjects with high or moderately elevated (but not low) cholesterol levels. Ultracentrifugation of plasma in a density of 1.21 showed activity for prothrombin and factors VII and X only in the lipoprotein-free subnatant fraction. Thus, a true increase in clotting factor protein was probably present. The significance of the correlation between levels of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors and plasma lipids remains to be determined.
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PMID:Increased activity of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors in human hyperlipoproteinaemia - association with cholesterol and triglyceride levels. 57 89

Inbred Carworth Farms Nelson (CFN) congenitally hyperlipidemic rats had significantly shorter coagulation and prothrombin times and higher levels of coagulation factors, II, V, VII, VIII, and X than did controls. Conversely, congenitally hypolipidemic rats of the same strain had significantly longer coagulation and prothrombin times and lower levels of factors II, V, VII, X and XII and of blood platelets than did controls. A loop-shaped polyethylene cannula was inserted into the aorta to assess the potential for thrombosis. The hyperlipidemic group obstructed this significantly faster and the hypolipidemic group slower than did the controls. Normal CFN rats made hypertensive by unilateral renal artery clip developed hypertension together with significantly elevated serum cholesterol and factor VII and X levels. Rhesus monkeys with diet-induced hyperlipidemia showed shorter prothrombin times and higher factor X levels than did controls on normal diet. By selective breeding, two groups of squirrel monkeys were obtained. Both groups had similar serum cholesterol levels on a normal diet but one group (hyperresponders) showed higher serum cholesterol levels on a cholesterol-containing diet than did the other (hyporesponder) group. Both groups showed significantly elevated levels of factors II, V, VII, IX and X on a cholesterol-containing diet. There was good correlation between the levels of many coagulation factors and serum cholesterol in both rats and monkeys. If thrombosis is important in the genesis of atherosclerosis, these findings could indicate that elevation of plasma lipids may play a role, via the coagulation pathway, in the production of human vascular disease.
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PMID:Hyperlipidemia, hypercoagulability, and accelerated thrombosis: studies in congenitally hyperlipidemic rats and in rats and monkeys with induced hyperlipidemia. 81 75

Factors involved in the development of coronary atherosclerosis and the possible role of estrogens in its development are discussed. Risk factors in the development of atherosclerosis include hyperlipemia, hypertension, cigarette smoking, and diabetes. However, the incidence of heart disease and presence of risk factors are also related to heredity, geography, and socioeconomic conditions, and to diet, exercise, and emotional stress. Contrary to previous belief, high doses of estrogens aggravate the condition of men and menopausal women at risk of heart attack. Although estrogens do not markedly alter cholesterol levels, they do tend to elevate triglyceride levels and contribute to hyperlipemia. They are also associated with diabotegenic sequelae and hypertension. Pregnancy and estrogens increase blood clotting Factors VII and X, accelerate prothrombin time, shorten clotting time, and incre ase platelef aggregation. Further research into the role of estrogens in the development of atherosclerosis is recommended.
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PMID:Estrogens and atherosclerosis. 99 76

Colestipol hydrochloride is an insoluble, nonabsorbable copolymer with bile-acid-binding capacity. It prevents reabsorption of cholates from the intestinal tract into the enterohepatic circulation causing a net loss of bile acids, and therefore of cholesterol. Sixty subjects with cholesterol levels over 250 mg/100 ml were studied for 104 weeks. Patients with normal phenotypes, types 2,3, and 4, were given 5 gm three times daily and experienced an average drop of 40 mg/100 ml (14%). While patients with types 2,3, and 4 hyperlipidemia responded effectively, cholesterol levels in type 2 patients dropped earliest and most consistently with an average decrease of 58 mg/100 ml (19%). A comparable group of patients with hyperlipidemia taking placebo showed on average no change in serum cholesterol. Serum triglyceride values were not altered significantly. The resin is not absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and produces a slight increase in fecal volume. Results of chemistries, enzyme assays, prothrombin times, hematology, and urinalysis and body weights wer unaltered. There was no evidence of lithogenic bile production. Colestipol is a tasteless and ordorless copolymer with high acceptability. Side effects were limited to occasional bloating, gas, and constipation. The drug is a safe, effective, palatable hypolipedmic agent.
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PMID:Colestipol hydrochloride, a new hypolipidemic drug: a two-year study. 109 Oct 1

The present studies were undertaken to elucidate the pathophysiological effects of postalimentary lipemia(PAL) induced by the intake of much animal fat in patients with ischemic heart disease(IHD) and the preventive measures against them. Results obtained were as follows: 1) Occurrence of augmentation of ischemic changes in ECG was demonstrated after fat intake. 2) After fat intake, lowering of arterial oxygen tension and heparin-induced increase in arterio-venous difference of oxygen tension in the forearm were observed. 3) PAL resulted in an acceleration of platelet adhesiveness as well as a shortening of plasms recalcification time and that of plasma prothrombin time. 4) It was revealed that red blood cells adsorbed fat on their membrane and then readily agglutinate together. 5) Removal of chylomicrons from the blood stream was accelerated by the intravenous injection of glucose. These results lead to the following conclusions: 1)PAL exerts a deleterious effect on the oxygen supply to the myocardium in patients with IHD and it is probably due to the disturbance of pulmonary function and that of oxygen diffusion and blood flow in the myocardium. 2) As one of preventive measures against the concurrent intake of carbohydrate in an appropriate quantity appears to be of use.
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PMID:Studies on pathophysiological effects of postalimentary lipemia in patients with ischemic heart disease. 111 85

There is evidence that increased reactivity of blood plasma to thrombogenic surfaces (hypercoagulability) may contribute to the risk of thrombotic occlusion of a coronary artery in coronary heart disease. The Northwick Park Heart Study found raised levels of factor VII coagulant (VIIc) activity and fibrinogen in men at high risk of a coronary event. Several other European studies have confirmed the latter finding, but the Northwick Park Heart Study is the only study to report formally on VIIc to date. Plasma VIIc is increased in the presence of hyperlipidemia and on a high fat diet, and falls with lipid-lowering therapy and a reduction in fat intake. Fibrinogen concentration is raised in smokers and decreases when the habit is given up. Thus, these markers of thrombogenic risk are readily controlled by standard preventive measures against coronary heart disease. Unresolved issues include: (1) whether the distinctive features of the Northwick Park VII bioassay improve the value of VIIc as a predictor of coronary heart disease; (2) the separate extent to which activation of factor VII and increases in factor VII concentration account for the raised VIIc in hyperlipidemia; (3) the basis of the raised fibrinogen in men at high coronary heart disease risk, even among nonsmokers; and (4) the usefulness of plasma levels of activation peptides of factors IX, X, and prothrombin as markers of thrombogenic risk.
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PMID:Hemostasis and cardiovascular risk. The British and European experience. 145 78

Among 389 consecutive chronic alcoholics in whom a liver biopsy was performed for diagnostic purposes, nine patients (2.3%) had histological changes of "alcoholic foamy degeneration" (AFD), characterized by numerous small fat droplets in the swollen hepatocytes of the centrilobular area. In five cases, there were non-specific clinical features, while the other four cases presented acute hepatic decompensation with jaundice and a reduced prothrombin activity. Seven patients had high serum lipid concentrations including hypertriglyceridemia and hypercholesterolemia, which improved after withdrawal of alcohol intake. In conclusion, AFD has a broad clinicopathological spectrum including asymptomatic patients and other cases with severe liver decompensation manifested by jaundice and reduced prothrombin activity. AFD is usually associated with hyperlipemia.
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PMID:Alcoholic foamy degeneration in Spain. Prevalence and clinico-pathological features. 270 53

In contrast to deficiencies of vitamins A, D and K, little is known of the prevalence, clinical manifestations and mechanisms of vitamin E deficiency in adult patients with cholestasis. We measured serum vitamin E levels in 45 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis, 20 with primary sclerosing cholangitis, 9 with cryptogenic cirrhosis and 12 with alcoholic cirrhosis. To correct for the hyperlipidemia often found in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and primary sclerosing cholangitis, total serum lipids were measured and vitamin E levels were expressed as the vitamin E/total serum lipid ratio. Serum vitamin A and D levels and prothrombin time were also determined. Six of 45 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (13%) but none of the patients with sclerosing cholangitis, cryptogenic cirrhosis or alcoholic cirrhosis and subnormal vitamin E/total serum lipids ratios. Vitamin E deficiency was found in two of eight patients with asymptomatic primary biliary cirrhosis. There was no correlation between standard liver biochemical tests, fasting serum cholylglycine and vitamin E levels. Patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and primary sclerosing cholangitis had significantly lower vitamin E/total serum lipids ratios than patients with either cryptogenic or alcoholic cirrhosis. Twenty-three percent of patients with primary biliary cirrhosis were vitamin D deficient and 14% had low vitamin A levels. Two of the six patients with vitamin E deficiency were also deficient in vitamin D, only one was vitamin A deficient and none had prolonged prothrombin time. We also investigated the gastrointestinal absorption of vitamin E in nine patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and normal vitamin E levels as well as in six normal controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Vitamin E deficiency in primary biliary cirrhosis: gastrointestinal malabsorption, frequency and relationship to other lipid-soluble vitamins. 292 55

The results are reported of a clinical and laboratory evaluation of the use of a random-access centrifugal analyzer linked to a personal computer in the management of the routine workload of a hemostasis laboratory. Over a three-month period, prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), thrombin clotting time (TCT), and derived fibrinogen (Fib) were performed on a total of 929 samples. Included in the study were 448 samples from patients receiving anticoagulants (oral anticoagulants, 228; heparin, 166; heparin and warfarin, 130) and 351 samples from patients requiring coagulation screens (PT, APTT, TCT, Fib). Tests were done in parallel with tilt-tube manual techniques and the results correlated. The correlation coefficients were PT, 0.99; TCT, 0.72; APTT, 0.96; Fib, 0.97. Discrepancies were analyzed and were due to hypofibrinogenemia and hyperlipidemia. The poorer correlation coefficient of TCT was attributable both to lower reproducibility of the manual test and the effect of dysfibrinogenemia or FDPs in liver disease. In no case was an abnormality or diagnosis missed using the centrifugal analyzer. In several cases the increased sensitivity of the analyzer improved the detection of the lupus anticoagulant. The use of automation was accompanied by a major reduction in workload and reagent costs. The machine has been used to assay a wide range of coagulation tests by clot based and chromogenic substrate methods. In conclusion, a programmed centrifugal analyzer is a safe, efficient, and flexible way of automating routine coagulation tests. It widens the reportoire of tests performed in the Hemostasis laboratory by using a machine capable of being used in other areas of pathology.
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PMID:Automation of routine coagulation testing using a random access centrifugal analyzer. 334 69

Blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in pregnancy with or without hyperlipidemia were studied. Blood samples were taken from 36 cases with early pregnancy, 59 cases with late pregnancy, and the relationship between the hemostatic changes and the concentrations of lipids was examined. The following results were obtained: 1. In early pregnancy, all cases were non-hyperlipidemic, but in 41% of late pregnancy cases, hyperlipidemia was found. 2. In late pregnancy without hyperlipidemia, shortening of prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time, increases in platelet epinephrine, collagen aggregation, fibrinogen, and plasminogen, and a decrease in alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor were marked compared with those in early pregnancy without hyperlipidemia. 3. In late pregnancy with hyperlipidemia, the platelet count and fibrinogen were increased, and prothrombin and activated partial thromboplastin time were shortened compared with late pregnancy without hyperlipidemia. The platelet epinephrine aggregation was slightly decreased. Antithrombin III was increased and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor was slightly decreased. 4. In the same subjects, the relationship between changes in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in early and late pregnancies and total cholesterol was studied by the independent matched pair test. There were significant correlations (p less than 0.02, p less than 0.05) between activated partial thromboplastin time (r = -0.5998) and fibrinogen (r = 0.6230). From these results the author concluded that late pregnancy was a hypercoagulable state and this tendency was more obvious in late pregnancy with hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:[Hemostatic changes during pregnancy in reference to hyperlipidemia]. 339 35


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