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170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent reports suggest an association between Chlamydia pneumoniae and chronic coronary heart disease. This case-control study investigates the relationship between the presence of immunoglobin G (IgG) and immunoglobin A (IgA) when measured by means of microimmunofluorescence (MIF) and angiographically diagnosed coronary disease. Cases (n = 150) were angiography patients with at least one coronary artery lesion occupying at least 50% of the luminal diameter. Controls (n = 49) were angiography patients with no detectable signs of coronary artery disease and patients (n = 56) without signs or symptoms of coronary disease and with normal ECG results. No significant differences were revealed between the seroprevalence of IgG and IaA and geometric mean titers (GMT) as measured in cases and controls. When cases were compared with controls whose angiographic results were normal, after adjusting for established risk factors (cholesterol, smoking, hypertension, diabetes, age, gender and family history), the estimated risk of coronary artery disease was 0.79 (95% confidence interval (C.I.), 0.31-1.99) for the presence of IgG and was 0.94 (95 C.I., 0.37-2.39) for IgA. When cases were compared with controls with normal ECG results, the adjusted odds ratio (O.R.) for coronary artery disease was 1.17 (95%, C.I., 0.52-2.62) for the presence of IgG and 0.82 195% C.I., 0.36-1.86) for the presence of IgA. These results do not support an association between C. pneumoniae infection and coronary disease.
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PMID:Chlamydia pneumoniae antibodies and angiographically demonstrated coronary artery disease in a sample population from Italy. 1042 98

Since the Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae)-specific antibody was shown to be associated with acute myocardial infarction and chronic coronary heart disease, the role of C. pneumoniae in the etiology of cardiovascular disease has been studied by a number of groups. We investigated the association between the C. pneumoniae-specific antibody, measured by microimmunofluorescence, risk factors for cardiovascular disease, and atherosclerosis in a randomly selected urban population. Overall, immunoglobulin-G (IgG) seroprevalence to C. pneumoniae in this sample of 1,034 subjects was 58%, whereas IgA seroprevalence was 32%. There was a decline in seropositivity with age for IgG but not IgA. Men were more likely than women to be IgG (66% vs 51%, chi-square p = 0.001) and IgA seropositive (36% vs 28%, chi-square p = 0.005). Current smokers had higher IgA seropositivity than nonsmokers (43% vs 30%). Those patients with a family history of cerebrovascular disease were more likely to have IgG antibody than those without (75% vs 57%, chi-square p= 0.007). Neither IgG nor IgA seropositivity was associated with the standard risk factors of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, or family history of ischemic heart disease, nor was seropositivity associated with carotid intima medial thickening (IMT) or atherosclerotic plaque as measured by carotid B-mode ultrasound. There was no difference between those participants who were IgG or IgA seropositive and seronegative in measurements of mean IMT, prevalence of abnormal IMT, and percentage with atherosclerotic plaque. In conclusion, although C. pneumoniae was associated with several risk factors for cardiovascular disease in a large cross-sectional population, we found no independent association between seroprevalence to C. pneumoniae and carotid atherosclerosis as measured by carotid IMT.
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PMID:Lack of association between seropositivity to Chlamydia pneumoniae and carotid atherosclerosis. 1051 82

The MBL gene, encoding mannose-binding lectin, determines interindividual variation in susceptibility to certain infectious agents, such as Chlamydia pneumoniae. We examined whether infection-susceptibility alleles of MBL, called "non-A alleles," would be associated with increased carotid plaque area (CPA), an intermediate phenotype of atherosclerosis. In 164 subjects, we measured CPA with 2-dimensional ultrasound. We also determined traditional atherosclerosis risk factors and genotyped all subjects for MBL codons 52, 54, and 57. We used ANOVA to determine sources of variation for CPA and tested the hypothesis that the presence of a single MBL non-A "infection-susceptibility" allele was associated with increased CPA; 45.7% of subjects had at least one non-A allele. ANOVA showed that CPA was significantly associated with MBL genotype, age, smoking, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia (P < 0.05). When MBL was used as the sole independent variable in the regression analysis, the association with CPA was even more significant (P = 0.009). Subjects with at least one MBL non-A allele had significantly higher CPA than subjects homozygous for the MBL A allele and were significantly more likely to have CPA in excess of the sample median. Thus, infection-susceptibility alleles of MBL were associated with increased CPA in this study sample; these alleles may be a determinant of interindividual differences in atherosclerosis risk.
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PMID:Infection-susceptibility alleles of mannose-binding lectin are associated with increased carotid plaque area. 1082

The present study has been designed to quantify and compare right and left carotid intima-media thicknesses (IMT) in type 2 diabetics and healthy controls. It was also intended to investigate the effects of various risk factors on the carotid IMT in these subjects. A total of 122 subjects; 70 patients with type 2 diabetes and 52 non-diabetic subjects as controls, were recruited for the study. Right and left common carotid artery stiffness indices were assessed with ultrasonography in both groups. Age, body mass index (BMI), duration of diabetes, cigarette smoking, lipid profile including lipoprotein a, Chlamydia pneumonia seropositivity, glycemic indices, fasting insulin levels, serum fibrinogen levels and presence of hypertension, coronary artery disease, degenerative complications of diabetes mellitus were all assessed in order to define their role as determinants of carotid artery IMT. The difference between the groups regarding mean carotid IMT was statistically significant for the left carotid arteries (p = 0.028) and borderline significance was found for the right carotid arteries (p = 0.055). Age has a very strong association with carotid IMT in diabetic patients (p < 0.0001) with univariate analysis. According to the results of multivariate analysis, age and BMI were found to be the most important independent determinants of carotid IMT for both sides. When age was excluded from the model, BMI and coronary artery disease were found to have strong association with IMT on the right (p = 0.0036 and 0.0249) and BMI was the only significant determinant for the left side (p = 0.0025). This study shows that carotid IMT is greater in diabetic subjects compared with healthy controls. For the diabetic subjects, age, BMI and presence of coronary heart disease have a strong influence on the atherosclerotic process of the carotid arteries.
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PMID:Major determinants of the carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetic patients: age and body mass index. 1120 Sep 31

To determine whether Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae) infection is associated with hypertension in Japanese adults, we measured serum levels of IgA (a marker of reinfection) and of IgG (a marker of previous infection) antibodies to C. pneumoniae by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 112 adults including normotensive and untreated hypertensive subjects and in 117 hypertensive subjects who had been receiving treatment for more than 3 years. In 112 adults, positivity rate for IgA was lower (P < .01) in hypertensive than in normotensive or borderline hypertensive subjects. Positivity rates for IgA and IgG together, which indicate persistent infection of C. pneumoniae, were lower (P < .01) in hypertensive than in normotensive subjects. IgA levels were inversely correlated with systolic blood pressure (SBP) (r = 0.530, P = .0001) and with diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (r = 0.398, P = .0001). In the 117 hypertensive subjects treated with medication, positivity rate for IgA was lower (P < .01) in subjects with poor control than in those with good control. Positivity rates for IgA and IgG together were lower (P < 0.01) in the poor control group than in the good or fair control groups. IgA levels were correlated inversely with SBP and DBP. In both 112 adults and 117 hypertensive patients, levels of SBP or DBP were inversely associated with positivity rates for IgA and IgG together in multiple logistic regression analysis. The results suggest an inverse relationship between high blood pressure and C. pneumoniae infection in Japanese adults.
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PMID:Inverse association of Chlamydia pneumoniae infection with high blood pressure in Japanese adults. 1120 73

Atherosclerosis constitutes the most common medical and surgical problem. This can be manifested clinically as stroke, coronary artery disease, or peripheral vascular disease. In the present review the microscopic appearance of the normal arterial wall, the definition of atherosclerosis and the five theories of atherogenesis are described. These are: the lipid theory, the hemodynamic theory, the fibrin incrustation theory, the nonspecific mesenchymal hypothesis and the response to injury hypothesis. Based on the above theories the sequence of events in atherogenesis is analyzed. The classification of the atherosclerotic lesions according to Stary (types I-VI) and their characteristics appear in a table. The epidemiology and the role of the following risk factors are presented in detail: age, sex, lipid abnormalities, cigarette smoking, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, physical inactivity, alcohol consumption, obesity, and hemostatic factors. In addition, less common genetically determined associations like homocystinuria, Tangier disease, Hutchinson-Gilford syndrome (progeria), Werner's syndrome, radiation induced atherosclerosis and the implications of Chlamydia pneumoniae on the arterial wall are discussed.
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PMID:The genesis of atherosclerosis and risk factors: a review. 1122 92

Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease of arteries, associated with multiple genetic and environmental factors, including hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking, modified and elevated LDL cholesterol, elevated plasma homocysteine, and infectious microorganisms such as Chlamydia pneumoniae and cytomegalovirus (CMV). CMV has been implicated in atherogenesis by epidemiological studies, animal research, and molecular analyses that have demonstrated CMV nucleic acids within human atherosclerotic lesions. Studies have suggested that CMV infection may alter lipid metabolism and lead to accumulation of cholesterol within atheromatous plaques. Few studies have examined the relationship between CMV infection and serum cholesterol levels in younger individuals when much of atherogenesis occurs. To test if CMV-seropositivity is associated with high levels of serum total cholesterol in relatively young patients, CMV IgG levels and total cholesterol concentrations were analyzed in serums from 172 patients, age < 50 yr. Based on univariate analysis of variance, serum total cholesterol was significantly correlated to age and to CMV-seropositivity when gender was a cofactor, but not to gender or CMV-seropositivity alone. In 39 CMV-seropositive women, serum total cholesterol concentration averaged 218 +/- 50 mg/dL (mean +/- SD), which was significantly higher than in 53 CMV-seronegative women (194 +/- 39 mg/dL, p < 0.02). No significant difference was observed between the serum total cholesterol concentrations in 26 CMV-seropositive men and 51 CMV-seronegative men (198 +/- 42 mg/dL versus 212 +/- 48 mg/dl, respectively). Thus, this study provides evidence that CMV-seropositivity is associated with higher serum total cholesterol levels in female patients under 50 yr of age, but not in male patients of comparable age.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus seropositivity and serum total cholesterol levels in young patients. 1133 5

This study was designed to determine the prevalence of Chlamydia pneumoniae in carotid artery plaques. Although there have been numerous studies evaluating coronary plaques for this bacterium fewer studies have assessed noncoronary vasculature. In addition we wished to evaluate whether correlation exists between the presence of C. pneumoniae in carotid plaques and established risk factors for atherosclerosis. Sixty intact carotid artery plaques removed during surgery (carotid endarterectomy) were formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded according to conventional techniques. These samples were evaluated by polymerase chain reaction analysis to detect presence of C. pneumoniae DNA. Results were tabulated and compared against established risk factors for atherosclerosis: diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, age, and smoking. Forty-two (70.0%) of the 60 plaques that were evaluated tested positive for the presence of C. pneumoniae DNA by polymerase chain reaction analysis. In the sample defined as being from heavy smokers (greater than 15-pack-year history) 33 (94.3%) of 35 plaques tested positive whereas two (5.7%) tested negative. This correlation demonstrated statistical significance (P = 1.36 x 10(-6), two-tailed Fisher exact test). Presence of C. pneumoniae in carotid plaques demonstrated no statistically significant correlation with diabetes, hypertension, or hyperlipidemia. Age as a risk factor was examined but not statistically evaluated because of the narrow range within our patient sample. Analysis of the data reveals that C. pneumoniae is present in large numbers of atheromatous plaques as is consistent with emerging data. What is interesting though is that 33 (94.3%) of the 35 smokers had plaques that tested positive for the bacterium as opposed to only nine (36.0%) of the 25 nonsmokers. Identification of specific populations exhibiting a high prevalence of C. pneumoniae may serve to focus future studies. Ongoing investigation will seek to determine whether C. pneumoniae plays an active role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Chlamydia pneumoniae in atherosclerotic carotid artery plaques: high prevalence among heavy smokers. 1140 10

Traditional atherosclerotic risk factors such as hypertension, smoking, hyperlipidaemia and diabetes mellitus, account for only about 50% of the clinical occurrence of coronary heart disease (CHD). The infectious hypothesis proposes that various microorganisms, in particular, Chlamydia pneumoniae, may serve as potential etiological factors, linking inflammation and atherosclerosis (or its clinical manifestations). Evidence from seroepidemiology, pathology, animal models, molecular biology and immunology, and human antibiotic intervention studies, collectively have suggested a largely positive association between C. pneumoniae infection and CHD. As CHD is a multifactorial disease, it is possible that C. pneumoniae may interact with conventional cardiovascular risk factors and predispose certain genetically susceptible people to atherosclerotic disease. However, the precise nature of a causal or coincidental link between C. pneumoniae and CHD remains to be determined. The results of ongoing antibiotic intervention studies may help to further clarify the role of infection and inflammation in CHD, but until such a role is proven beyond reasonable doubt, antimicrobial therapy cannot yet be justified in the treatment or prevention of CHD. A current perspective is presented in this review.
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PMID:Inflammation, infection and antimicrobial therapy in coronary heart disease--where do we currently stand? 1146 18

Previous studies have shown higher levels of Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae, CP) antibody titers (CPIgG), C-reactive protein (CRP), and fibrinogen in patients with coronary artery disease. The role of these infectious and inflammatory markers in precipitating acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is unclear. We conducted a cross-sectional study on patients (n = 830, mean age 63 +/- 15 years, 57% male) admitted to the chest pain center of our institution. The differences in the CPIgG, CRP, and fibrinogen levels in patients who were diagnosed with ACS versus those who were not (non-ACS) were evaluated. CPIgG titers tended to be higher in the ACS group than in the non-ACS group. However, when different titers were used to define seropositivity, the difference achieved statistical significance only at the titer of > or =1:1,024 (35% vs 26%, p = 0.004). CRP (median 0.48 vs 0.33 mg/dl, p <0.0001), fibrinogen (median 317 vs 293 mg/dl, p <0.0001), and leukocyte count (median 7.7 vs 6.9 10(9)/L, p <0.0001) were higher in the ACS group. On multivariate analysis, CPIgG > or =1:1,024 (odds ratio [OR] 1.62), diabetes (OR 1.91), hypertension (OR 1.46), prior myocardial infarction (OR 1.78), smoking (OR 1.70), Caucasian race (OR 1.7), high-density lipoprotein (OR 0.98), and elevated troponin-T (OR 12.44) were the only factors independently associated with ACS. Thus, we found a strong association between high level seropositivity to CP and ACS. This may indicate recent re-infection or an exaggerated immune response to CP as an etiologic factor for ACS. This study also suggests that therapeutic interventions may need to be specifically targeted to these patients.
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PMID:Chlamydia pneumoniae exposure and inflammatory markers in acute coronary syndrome (CIMACS). 1177 42


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