Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To ascertain the risk of the development of bilateral idiopathic preretinal macular fibrosis, we retrospectively studied 380 consecutive patients with idiopathic preretinal macular fibrosis. Eighty (21%) patients had bilateral involvement. Sixteen (39%) of 41 patients with diabetes, 40 (28%) of 144 with hypertension, and 12 of 21 (57%) with bilateral high myopia had bilateral involvement. The prevalence of bilateral involvement was significantly higher in patients with these three pathologies than in patients without these conditions (p < 0.01, p < 0.02 and p < 0.01, respectively). In patients with diabetes or hypertension, no significant difference was found in the prevalence of posterior vitreous detachment (PVD) between involved or uninvolved eyes. Diabetes, hypertension even without retinopathy, and high myopia may be risk factors for bilateral involvement of idiopathic preretinal macular fibrosis. Factors other than PVD may be involved in the development of idiopathic preretinal macular fibrosis in patients with diabetes or hypertension.
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PMID:Risk of bilateral idiopathic preretinal macular fibrosis. 771 52

A case-control study was conducted to determine the risk factors of primary angle-closure glaucoma (PACG). In this study, 103 cases of PACG patients and 95 cases of non-glaucoma controls were investigated. It was found that the risk factors of PACG were family history of glaucoma, irritable temper, short distance between eyes and workplace at work and high blood pressure. The results did not support that cigarette smoking, alcoholic consumption, diabetes mellitus, myopia and blood types were related with PACG.
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PMID:[The case-control study of risk factors in primary angle-closure glaucoma]. 776 27

A case-control study was planned as a part of the Casteldaccia Eye Study in order to investigate about risk factors of ocular hypertension and glaucoma. Cases were 44 subjects with glaucoma or intraocular pressure of 24 mm Hg or more. Controls were 220 subjects with intraocular pressure of 20 mm Hg or less and no signs of glaucoma. A number of environmental, behavioral, systemic and ocular variables were studied. Among the others we investigated the following: sunlight exposure, smoking, alcohol intake, pregnancies, systemic hypertension, diabetes, use of corticosteroids, refractive status, anterior chamber depth, lens nuclear sclerosis, iris color and texture. After univariate analysis the use of ocular corticosteroids and antibiotics, myopia, shallow anterior chamber and myopic macular degeneration were associated with ocular hypertension or glaucoma. However, the logistic regression showed that only the use of ocular corticosteroids (odds ratio = 7.79) and the myopia (odds ratio = 5.56) were independently associated.
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PMID:Risk factors of ocular hypertension and glaucoma. The Casteldaccia Eye Study. 792 48

The possible changes in protein structures of the cataractous human lens capsules of the immature patients with myopia and/or systemic hypertension have been investigated using Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) microspectroscopy. Second-derivative and deconvolution methods have been applied to obtain the position of the overlapping components of the amide I band and assign them to different secondary structures. Changes in the protein secondary structure and composition of amide I band were estimated quantitatively from Fourier self-deconvolution and curve fitting algorithms. The results indicate that myopia and/or systemic hypertension were found to significantly modify the protein secondary structure of the cataractous human lens capsules to increase the beta-type structure and random coil and decrease the alpha-helix structure. Myopia-induced conformational change in triple helix structure was more pronounced. In conclusion, myopia and/or systemic hypertension seem to modify the conformation of the protein structures in cataractous human lens capsule to change ionic permeation through lens capsule to accelerate the cataract formation of senile patients.
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PMID:Fourier transform infrared spectral evidences for protein conformational changes in immature cataractous human lens capsules accelerated by myopia and/or systemic hypertension. 925 66

The aim of the study was to determine whether certain factors are related to an increased risk of developing open-angle glaucoma. A total of 345 untreated glaucoma suspects with intraocular pressure (IOP) > or = 21 mmHg, cup to disc ratio 0.4 or less and no visual field defects, were followed up for 6 to 8 years (mean 7.3). During the follow-up 71 patients developed established glaucoma and were compared to the remaining 274 patients. The following factors were analysed: age, family history of glaucoma, IOP, Humphrey 30-2 visual fields, optic disc appearance, myopia, exfoliation, arterial hypertension and diabetes. Analysis yielded statistically significant results regarding a number of these factors in the patients who subsequently developed open-angle glaucoma. A significant association with the subsequent development of field loss in ocular hypertension (OHT) included: heredity (p < 0.001), age > or = 60 years (p = 0.013), axial myopia (0.001 < p < 0.01) and arterial hypertension (p = 0.05). About 20% of patients with ocular hypertension developed glaucoma over a period of seven years. Risk factors such as heredity, age, myopia and arterial hypertension, among others, must be considered in the follow-up of glaucoma suspects.
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PMID:Risk factors in ocular hypertension. 945 59

I have presented a picture of cardiovascular aging that resembles the situation with vision, where in the absence of actual disease, near vision changes with age and cataracts appear with age but after these are corrected, vision remains markedly unchanged with age. For the undiseased heart, intrinsic cardiac muscle function and the inotropic response to nonsympathetic mediators, along with coronary perfusion, are well maintained with age. There are, however, some changes that do occur with age. Cellular hypertrophy occurs, both because of cell drop out and because of some chamber hypertrophy secondary to increased impedance to left ventricular ejection. As a result of the hypertrophy, there is some prolongation of systole secondary to delayed relaxation. This is typical of what occurs in hypertension induced hypertrophy as well. These age-related changes are of critical importance and are the background for the entire discussion of the interplay between hypertension and disease. The large arteries do in fact stiffen with age. Thus, even without hypertension, there is an age-related increased impedance to ejection, a greater systolic load, a lower coronary perfusion pressure, and an increased pulse wave velocity. Added to this is the failure of the entire beta-sympathetic system to respond as well in the elderly as in the younger individuals with a resultant decrease in the vasodilating response. Both the chronotropic and inotropic response to sympathetic mediation is diminished so that states that put sudden loads on the left ventricle, such as accelerated hypertension or myocardial infarction, have more severe results in the elderly. Also acute hypertension may produce less hypertrophy in the elderly and therefore place more hemodynamic stress on the left ventricle than in young adults.
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PMID:Aging, changes in the cardiovascular system, and responses to stress. 954 36

Symptoms of primary open-angle glaucoma can be divided into main and accessory and risk factors. The main symptoms are increased intraocular pressure and changes in the visual field and optic disk characteristic of glaucoma. The accessory symptoms and risk factors are a family history of glaucoma, diabetes mellitus, myopia, poor discharge of aqueous humor, pseudoexfoliative syndrome, elements of goniodysgenesis and depositions of pigmented granules in the anterior chamber corner, and asymmetric intraocular pressure, humor discharge, and extent of optic disk excavation. Causes and diagnosis of nonglaucomatous hypertension and normal-pressure glaucoma are discussed.
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PMID:[Main principles of diagnosis of primary open-angle glaucoma]. 962 10

The authors report the conclusions of their analysis of 308 operated eyes for primary open-angle glaucoma with Cairns trabeculectomy procedure. The analysed period is 1991-1995--and the patients have been operated in the Ophthalmology Clinic of the University Hospital of Bucharest. The work contains: 1) General epidemiologic characters: number of eyes, number of patients, sex, age. 2) The analysis of the surgical intervention's efficiency by the following parametres (TIO, visual acuity, field loss, fundus oculi changes) after 6 months, 12 months, 24 months ... to 5 years. 3) The repartition of the cases clinical forms of glaucoma: primary glaucoma, pigmentary glaucoma, myopic glaucoma > 6D, exfoliative glaucoma, glaucoma with normal pressure. 4) The efficiency of the trabeculectomy depending on the moment of the surgical intervention: first stadium, second stadium, advanced stadium. 5) The analysis of the risk factors: familial antecedents of glaucoma, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, thrombosis of the central retinal vein, myopia > 6D. 6) The cataractogen effect of the trabeculectomy.
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PMID:[The efficacy of Cairns trabeculectomy in open-angle glaucoma]. 971 1

The optic disc and retinal neovascularization are less prominent and less frequent in myopic eyes in patients suffering from diabetes mellitus. The exact mechanisms of this phenomenon are not well known, but there is some evidence that there is a reduced blood flow in myopic eyes which is associated with less damaged microcirculation in eyes of patients with diabetes mellitus. The aim of our study was to evaluate the correlation between myopic refractive error and degree of diabetic retinopathy. We conducted a retrospective study in a group of randomized patients, divided into the following groups according to their refractive error: emmetropia (30 eyes), myopia simplex (30 eyes) and high myopia, over -6.5 dsph (21 eyes). Among patients with high myopia, seven had monocular myopia. All patients suffered from non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus for more than ten years, and their average age was 52.37-3.48 years. We did not observe patients with rubeosis iridis and neovascular glaucoma or patients with myopia less than -2.0 dsph. Our results indicated that there was no significant difference in the appearance of fundus between the studied groups. In all patients the incidence rate of non proliferative and proliferative diabetic retinopathy was the same as well as the absence of retinopathy (Fisher's test). The only exception were the patients with monocular myopia over -13.o dsph who had no signs of diabetic retinopathy in myopic eye, while the other, emmetropic eye, showed various stages of retinopathy, from severe non proliferative to proliferative. Some of the risk factors which influence the incidence rate of ocular complications in diabetic patients are well known, as are duration of diabetes mellitus, blood sugar level, blood pressure, ocular pressure and eye perfusion. On the other hand, it is also known that amblyopia, optic atrophy, low blood pressure in central retinal artery and retinitis pigmentosa are ocular conditions which are not associated with proliferative diabetic retinopathy. It was also noticed that complications of diabetes in high myopic eyes are less prominent than in emmetropic eyes. This finding is in harmony with our results. Sultanov et al. observed diabetic changes in the retina in 40.9% of myopic refraction patients, 65.2% of emmetropia cases and 70.4% of hypermetropia cases. The severity of involvement was less in myopia than in other types of refraction. In medium severe myopia, no proliferative diabetic retinopathy was observed, and in high myopia (10 eyes) no diabetic involvement of the fundus oculi was found. In anisometropia diabetic symptoms on the myopic side were either absent or poorly manifest. The possible cause of such findings could be the changes in retinal perfusion in myopic eyes and eyes in patients with diabetes mellitus. In 1973 a lower blood flow was detected in the retina and the choroid, proportionally to the degree of myopia. In 1982, Perkins indicated that the circulation time and pulsation rate in the central retinal artery in myopic eyes were reduced proportionally to the degree of myopia. In cases with early diabetic retinopathy Coscas detected a lesser blood flow in retinal veins. On the other hand, it has been found that high blood pressure increases the risk of diabetic retinopathy. These data suggest that the reduced blood flow in high myopia is a protective factor regarding the occurrence of complications in diabetes. Anisometropia and amblyopia in cases with monocular myopia, which presents a particular group in our study, could be factors which also prevent the occurrence of proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Instead of conclusion, we would like to point out that pathophysiologic mechanisms of these phenomena are not discussed enough. It is, nevertheless, important to appropriately examine the fundus in patients with high myopia and diabetes mellitus, because if the complications appear, they may be disastrous and must be treated immediately.
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PMID:[Occurrence of changes in the eye in diabetic retinopathy with significant myopia]. 992 Oct 19

The present study was designed as a hospital-based, group-matched, case-control investigation into the risk factors associated with age-related cataract in central India. The study included 262 cases of age-related cataract and an equal number of controls. A total of 21 risk factors were evaluated: namely, low socioeconomic status (SES), illiteracy, marital status, history of diarrhoea, history of diabetes, glaucoma, use of cholinesterase inhibitors, steroids, spironolactone, nifedipine, analgesics, myopia early in life, renal failure, heavy smoking, heavy alcohol consumption, hypertension, low body mass index (BMI), use of cheaper cooking fuel, working in direct sunlight, family history of cataract, and occupational exposure. In univariate analysis, except marital status, low BMI, renal failure, use of steroids, spironolactone, analgesics, and occupational exposure, all 14 other risk factors were found significantly associated with age-related cataract. Unconditional multiple logistic regression analysis confirmed the significance of low SES, illiteracy, history of diarrhoea, diabetes, glaucoma, myopia, smoking, hypertension and cheap cooking fuel. The etiological role of these risk factors in the outcome of cataract is confirmed by the estimates of attributable risk proportion. The estimates of population attributable risk proportion for these factors highlight the impact of elimination of these risk factors on the reduction of cataract in this population.
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PMID:Risk factors for cataract: a case control study. 1021 5


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