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

It is known that local and systemic inflammatory processes play an important role in the genesis and development of atheroclerotic lesions and in the pathophysiology of acute coronary syndromes. This hypothesis is supported by findings of elevated parameters of the "inflammatory" reaction in the affected blood vessels but also in the blood of atherosclerotic patients. Known risk factors do not explain quite satisfactorily epidemiological cardiovascular phenomena and different manifestations of coronary heart disease. It is very probable that also Chlamydia pneumoniae is a risk factor. This assumption is based on evaluation of seroepidemiological data, examination of atherosclerotic plaques not only in humans but also in animal models with chlamydial infection. Based on retrospective and prospective evaluation of case-records the authors analyzed the incidence of cardiovascular complications in 83 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AIM), incl. 51 patients (31 men and 20 women, mean age 64.4 +/- 3.4 years who had a non-specific inflammation and chlamydial infection, and 32 patients (24 men and 8 women, mean age 64.7 +/- 3.6 years) who had chlamydial infections but no non-specific inflammation (in the blood). These patients were selected from all patients hospitalized during 1998-2001. When diagnosing acute myocardial infarction we applied WHO criteria, and the presence of at least two of three criteria was necessary: a history of prolonged (more than 20 min). stenocardia, electrocardiographic changes typical for ischaemia and/or necrosis and elevation of myocardial enzymes in serum, Non-specific inflammatory activity was present in patients (i.e. positive) if the following laboratory parameters were recorded: C-reactive protein > 5 mg/l assessed by the radial immunodiffusion method; fibrinogen > 4 mg/l assessed by the coagulation method according to Claus; leukocytes > 9.6 x 10(3)/microliter, leukocytes were counted automatically in a Coulter chamber; lymphocytes > 3.4 x 10(3)/microliter. Red cell sedimentation rate > 20 mm/hour. The activity was evaluated as positive when all parameters were elevated. The presence of chronic infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae was assessed qualitatively by antibody positivity (IgG) in serum using the microimmunoflurescent method (using a set from Labsystems Co.). The incidence of associated risk factors (obesity, smoking, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia and hypertension) is higher in the sub-group of patients with Chlamydia infections without inflammation, however, the difference is not statistically significant. The incidence of cardiovascular attacks was higher in the sub-group of patients with chlamydial infection and concurrent inflammation as compared with the sub-group of patients with chlamydial infection without inflammation. In case of re-infarction of the myocardium, a sudden cerebrovascular attack, death and arrhythmia the difference was statistically significant, while in case of cardiac failure and cardiogenic shock the difference was not significant. Patients with acute myocardial infarction with chlamydial infection and a concurrent non-specific inflammation had to be treated more often by combined (i.e. more intense) treatment, thrombolytic treatment, PTCA and surgery (bypass) of the coronary vessels as compared with patients with Chlamydia infections but without inflammation. The authors assume therefore that not only different risk factors but also the effect of non-specific inflammation and Chlamydia infection contribute towards the increased number of cardiovascular postinfarction complications. Therefore a therapeutic approach involving eradication of infection and suppression of the inflammatory reaction should be considered.
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PMID:[Effect of chronic Chlamydia infection with non-specific inflammation on cardiovascular complications in acute myocardial infarct]. 1272 71

Arteriosclerosis, atherosclerosis and vascular calcification are causally related to the high morbidity and mortality of patients with chronic renal failure. Oxidative stress and carbonyl stress of uremia, dialysis procedure and/or intravenous iron therapy result in AGE (advanced glycation end-product), ALE (advanced lipoxidation end-product) and AOPP (advanced oxidation protein product) formation, favouring together with elevated CRP (C-reactive protein) levels the development of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular complications. Enhanced plasma levels of homocysteine and ADMA (asymmetric dimethylarginine) contribute to this process. In addition, in chronic renal insufficiency hyperphosphatemia and an enhanced calcium x phosphorus ion product are associated with the morbidity and mortality of the patients, particularly in the presence of fetuin deficiency. Phosphorus, AGEs and AOPPs, beside other factors, catalyze the conversion of vascular smooth muscle cells to osteoblast--like cells (particularly in the presence of monocytes/macrophages), resulting in bone matrix protein formation. Other risk factors, such as age, male sex, smoking, hypertension, diabetes, chronic inflammation, insulin resistance or dyslipidemia (enhanced non-HDL-cholesterol) also contribute to the atherosclerotic risk profile of the patient with chronic renal insufficiency. While there is growing understanding of the mechanisms involved in arteriosclerosis, atherosclerosis and vascular calcification in uremia, we are still missing effective therapeutic maneuvers for reduction of excess mortality in uremic patients.
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PMID:[Atherosclerosis and uremia: signifance of non-traditional risk factors]. 1277 74

This study examines the relationship between plasma Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) activity and the PAI-1 4G/5G polymorphism, and their association with the risk of myocardial infarction (MI). Furthermore, this study explores whether a high level of PAI-1 or whether the PAI-1 4G/5G polymorphism synergistically interacts with any established environmental risk factor for MI. This case-referent study of subjects aged 45-70 and living in Stockholm includes 851 men and 361 women with first-time MI and 1051 men and 505 women who were randomly chosen as referents from a population register. The adjusted odds ratio (OR) of MI was 1.9 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.4-2.8) for men with a plasma PAI-1 activity level greater than the 90 th percentile value of referents. The corresponding OR for women was 1.5 (95% CI 0.9-2.5). A strong indication of synergistic interaction was found in men for the co-exposure to high plasma PAI-1 activity and current smoking, an adjusted synergy index score of 3.9 (95% CI 1.2-13.2). In women, the 4G allele was associated slightly with an increased risk of MI, OR 1.4 (95% CI 1.0-1.9). This association was not found in men. There were no clear indications of synergistic interaction effects involving the PAI-1 4G/5G polymorphism and the environmental exposures considered (cigarette smoking, physical inactivity, overweight, diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolaemia, hypertension, high C-reactive protein and hypertriglyceridaemia).
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PMID:PAI-1 level and the PAI-1 4G/5G polymorphism in relation to risk of non-fatal myocardial infarction: results from the Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program (SHEEP). 1278 20

Peripheral arterial disease, which is caused by atherosclerotic stenosis or occlusion of the leg arteries, is an important manifestation of systemic atherosclerosis. The age-adjusted prevalence of symptomatic and asymptomatic peripheral arterial disease is approximately 12% in the general population. The overall prevalence and incidence of the disease is likely to increase with the aging of the population. Peripheral arterial disease is a relatively benign condition in terms of local disease. Five years after the diagnosis, 75% of the patients remain clinically stable. On the contrary, life expectancy, even in the absence of any history of myocardial infarction or ischemic stroke, has decreased by 10 years. These patients have approximately the same relative risk of death from cardiovascular causes as do patients with history of coronary or cerebrovascular disease. Moreover, the severity of peripheral arterial disease is closely associated with the risk of myocardial infarction and death from vascular disease. The lower the ankle-brachial index, the greater the risk of cardiovascular events. Furthermore, peripheral arterial disease is a significant independent predictor for cardiovascular mortality also in coronary patients. The risk factors associated with peripheral arterial disease are essentially the same as for coronary heart disease: older age, cigarette smoking, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia. The excess morbidity and mortality for cardiovascular disease in these patients has not been fully explained. Patients with peripheral arterial disease show a systemic endothelial dysfunction and an increase in the serum concentration of activated white blood cells, endothelin, and C-reactive protein that may trigger acute coronary syndromes. In peripheral arterial disease the functional status is often severely impaired. Peak exercise performance has decreased to about 50% of that of age-matched controls, equivalent to moderate-severe heart failure. Epidemiological studies support the concept that patients affected by peripheral arterial disease, without established coronary heart disease, have a coronary heart disease high risk equivalent. In spite of this, peripheral arterial disease remains an underdiagnosed and undertreated disease. As the role of cardiologists is expanding, the purpose of this review was to awaken the clinician to the significance of lower limb atherosclerotic occlusive diseases.
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PMID:[Why are cardiologists to be concerned about obliterating arterial disease of the lower leg?]. 1278 66

The study reports on plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) levels in Tunisian patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) and those treated with hemodialysis (HD) and renal transplant (RT). The aims of the study were to identify the determinants of tHcy concentration and to test the association between hyperhomocysteinemia and atherothrombotic disease in end-stage renal disease (ESRD). A total of 35 CRF patients on conservative treatment, 50 HD patients, and 30 RT recipients, and 31 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects were included. Plasma tHcy was assessed by a fluorescent-polarizing immunoassay method. Multivariate analysis was applied to identify the main determinants of tHcy concentration and to assess the relationship between hyperhomocysteinemia and cardiovascular disease. Plasma mean tHcy concentration was significantly increased (p < 0.001) in CRF patients (mean +/- SD) (28.9 +/- 9.8 micromol/l), in HD patients (29.4 +/- 11.1 micromol/l), and in RT (19.3 +/- 6.3 micromol/l) patients compared to controls (11.9 +/- 4.1 micromol/l). Multivariate analysis using GLM ANOVA modeling demonstrated that tHcy was significantly higher in males (p = 0.02), and was related to age (p = 0.008), albumin (p = 0.005), vitamin B12 (p = 0.002), folate (p = 0.00001), and creatinine clearance (p = 0.0008). However, tHcy was not associated with C-reactive protein and did not significantly differ between CRF, HD, or RT patients. The upper quartile of tHcy concentration was significantly associated with atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease (unadjusted odds ratio (OR) = 3.09; 95% CI, 1.11-8.61; p = 0.01). This association remained significant after adjusting for sex, age, hypertension, and smoking (multi-adjusted OR = 4.78; 95% CI, 1.92-11.9; p = 0.0008). The mean tHcy concentration was 2 to 3 times higher in ESRD patients than in subjects with normal renal function. This increase could be related to glomerular filtration rate reduction and functional B vitamins deficiency, but was not associated with inflammation. The upper quartile of tHcy concentrations confers 4.78-fold increased independent risk for atherothrombotic events in ESRD patients.
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PMID:Hyperhomocysteinemia and end-stage renal disease: determinants and association with cardiovascular disease in Tunisian patients. 1281 66

To examine the association of low-grade systemic inflammation with diabetes, as well as its heterogeneity across subgroups, we designed a case-cohort study representing the approximately 9-year experience of 10,275 Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study participants. Analytes were measured on stored plasma of 581 incident cases of diabetes and 572 noncases. Statistically significant hazard ratios of developing diabetes for those in the fourth (versus first) quartile of inflammation markers, adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity, study center, parental history of diabetes, and hypertension, ranged from 1.9 to 2.8 for sialic acid, orosomucoid, interleukin-6, and C-reactive protein. After additional adjustment for BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, and fasting glucose and insulin, only the interleukin-6 association remained statistically significant (HR = 1.6, 1.01-2.7). Exclusion of GAD antibody-positive individuals changed associations minimally. An overall inflammation score based on these four markers plus white cell count and fibrinogen predicted diabetes in whites but not African Americans (interaction P = 0.005) and in nonsmokers but not smokers (interaction P = 0.13). The fully adjusted hazard ratio comparing white nonsmokers with score extremes was 3.7 (P for linear trend = 0.008). In conclusion, a low-grade inflammation predicts incident type 2 diabetes. The association is absent in smokers and African-Americans.
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PMID:Low-grade systemic inflammation and the development of type 2 diabetes: the atherosclerosis risk in communities study. 1282 49

Epidemiological studies have identified several risk factors for coronary heart disease (CHD), many of which are present in young people. [For the purpose of this review, the phrase "young people" embraces both children and adolescents.] One such risk factor is hypertension. In adults, exercise is thought to have a positive effect on blood pressure levels; however, findings are inconclusive for young people. Despite its association with CHD, obesity is on the increase in Western society's young population; prevention and intervention during early years is needed. An active lifestyle is considered to have a beneficial effect on body fatness. Lipoprotein profiles are directly associated with CHD status. In adults, there is some evidence that physical activity and/or fitness have a favourable effect on lipoprotein levels. Although information regarding the younger population is more ambiguous, it tends to concur with these findings. High levels of lipoprotein(a), are considered an independent risk factor for CHD. Relatively little has been written on young people, although some studies have postulated a favourable relationship with physical activity. An inverse relationship between aerobic fitness and CHD has been confirmed in adults; an association is not as easily verified for young people. Physical activity is similarly deemed to have a beneficial effect on health status. A high-fat diet has been linked to CHD in adults, and evidence to date reports similar findings for young people. Smoking increases the risk of CHD and even moderate smoking during youth could have damaging long-term consequences. There is some evidence that smoking is related to physical activity and fitness levels in young people. In adults, high levels of homocyst(e)ine have been associated with CHD. As yet, little has been written on the relationship between physical activity or physical fitness and homocysteine status in young people. High levels of plasma fibrinogen have been linked to CHD. Several studies have explored the relationship between plasma fibrinogen and physical activity and/or fitness in adults, but findings are inconclusive; for young people, the ambiguity is even greater. C-reactive protein is a molecular marker for CHD but, to date, little attention has been given to this aspect, especially amongst young people. The link between high levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and CHD has been confirmed, although the essence of this relationship is not established. There is a paucity of data on the younger population and the relevance of collating such information is questionable. For the younger population, most research is limited to the established CHD risk factors and further investigations of recently identified CHD risk factors are needed.
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PMID:Established and recently identified coronary heart disease risk factors in young people: the influence of physical activity and physical fitness. 1284 88

The recent focus on emerging cardiovascular risk factors, such as C-reactive protein, homocysteine, and small, dense low-density lipoprotein (LDL), may give the false impression that the current approach to the assessment of cardiovascular disease risk fails to identify a large section of the high-risk population. On the contrary, the new guidelines of the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP ATP III) propose classifying an enormous number of individuals, including people with any form of atherosclerotic disease, diabetes, and a combination of major risk factors, into the category of high risk (>20% likelihood of a major coronary event or stroke in 10 years). Considering the widespread prevalence of the metabolic syndrome-a high-risk condition characterized by mild hypertension, mild dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, and visceral obesity-we may be faced with the challenge of implementing aggressive risk reduction therapies in as much as 30% of the adult US population. From the point of view of risk assessment, a practical approach is to follow the NCEP guidelines (ie, place patients with diabetes and those with atherosclerotic complications in the highest risk category), apply the Framingham calculation to determine risk in people with common risk factors, and initiate early intervention in people who have familial hypercholesterolemia (LDL cholesterol >200 mg/dL) or a family history of early cardiovascular disease. The emerging risk factors may be useful for further stratifying risk in individuals with intermediate risk and the presence of risk factors not included in the Framingham calculation.
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PMID:A practical approach to risk assessment to prevent coronary artery disease and its complications. 1286 51

Inflammation plays a central role in the pathogenesis of many forms of vascular disease, including atherosclerosis. Atherogenesis begins with endothelial damage, and the damaged endothelium expresses adhesion molecules, chemokines, and proinflammatory cytokines that direct atherosclerotic plaque formation and spill into the circulation as biomarkers of atherosclerotic disease risk. Menopausal hormone therapy, including a variety of estrogen preparations with or without a progestin, has negative modulatory effects on most of these soluble inflammatory markers, including E-selectin, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, inconsistent effects on interleukin-6, and stimulatory effects on transforming growth factor-beta, a vasoprotective cytokine. In contrast, C-reactive protein, a circulating proinflammatory cytokine produced in both liver and atherosclerotic arteries, increases in response to oral conjugated estrogens but not to transdermal estrogen. Although C-reactive protein is clearly linked to increased cardiovascular disease risk in women, the hormone-induced rise in this biomarker is not associated with increased risk and may be related to a first-pass effect of C-reactive protein production in the liver after oral estrogen absorption. Many important questions about the effects of ovarian hormones on vascular inflammation and the pathogenesis of vascular disease cannot be answered in human subjects. Insights from fundamental mechanistic studies in animal models are needed to delineate the cellular/molecular events that determine whether these hormones protect or injure blood vessels.
Hypertension 2003 Oct
PMID:Hormone replacement therapy and inflammation: interactions in cardiovascular disease. 1291 55

Traditional risk factors for atherosclerosis are well known and their control decreases importantly the appearance of the disease. These factors are the genetic charge, dyslipidemia, smoking, systemic arterial hypertension, diabetes, obesity, gender, age, stress, estrogen levels in women, and life style. However, in the last decade, new risk factors have been identified especially for coronary and cerebrovascular atherosclerosis. Among these factors, the inflammatory process has been pointed out in which acute stage reactants participate, such as C-reactive protein, leukocyte count, globular sedimentation, multiple cytokines, alpha tumor necrosis factor, vascular and cellular adhesion molecules, some metalloproteinases, pregnancy-associated plasma protein A, lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2, angiotensin II, and very probably infection. This article discusses the mechanism by which these markers participate in the atherosclerotic process and their value as predictors of future coronary events, as well as to what extent current therapeutics can contribute to decrease these events and to improve patient care.
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PMID:[Inflammation in atherosclerosis]. 1296 66


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