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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent prospective, epidemiological research has demonstrated the power of an increased waist/hip circumference ratio (WHR) to predict both cardiovascular disease (CVD) and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) in men and women. Obesity, defined as an increased total body fat mass, seems to interact synergistically in the development of NIDDM, but not of CVD. Increased WHR with obesity (abdominal obesity) seems to be associated with a cluster of metabolic risk factors, as well as
hypertension
. This
metabolic syndrome
is closely linked to visceral fat mass. Increased WHR without obesity may instead be associated with lift style factors such as smoking, alcohol intake, physical inactivity, coagulation abnormalities, psychosocial, psychological and psychiatric factors. Direct observations show, and the risk factor associations further strengthen the assumption, that abdominal (visceral) obesity is more closely associated to NIDDM than CVD, while an increased WHR without obesity may be more closely linked to CVD than NIDDM. It remains to be established to what extent, if any, an increased WHR in lean men, and particularly in lean women, indicates fat distribution. Other components of the WHR measurement might be of more importance in this connection.
...
PMID:Abdominal fat distribution and disease: an overview of epidemiological data. 157 56
Many studies have shown that hyperinsulinemia and/or insulin resistance are related to various metabolic and physiological disorders including
hypertension
, dyslipidemia, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. This syndrome has been termed Syndrome X. An important limitation of previous studies has been that they all have been cross sectional, and thus the presence of insulin resistance could be a consequence of the underlying metabolic disorders rather than its cause. We examined the relationship of fasting insulin concentration (as an indicator of insulin resistance) to the incidence of multiple metabolic abnormalities in the 8-yr follow-up of the cohort enrolled in the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. In univariate analyses, fasting insulin was related to the incidence of the following conditions:
hypertension
, decreased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration, increased triglyceride concentration, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Hyperinsulinemia was not related to increased low-density lipoprotein or total cholesterol concentration. In multivariate analyses, after adjustment for obesity and body fat distribution, fasting insulin continued to be significantly related to the incidence of decreased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and increased triglyceride concentrations and to the incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Baseline insulin concentrations were higher in subjects who subsequently developed multiple metabolic disorders. These results were not attributable to differences in baseline obesity and were similar in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. These results support the existence of a
metabolic syndrome
and the relationship of that syndrome to multiple metabolic disorders by showing that elevations of insulin concentration precede the development of numerous metabolic disorders.
...
PMID:Prospective analysis of the insulin-resistance syndrome (syndrome X). 158 98
Insulin resistance associated with hyperinsulinemia (
metabolic syndrome
) emerged in recent years as an important health risk which is present in approximately 25% of the normal population in western industrialized societies. Insulin resistance as assessed for the whole body arises from a reduced glucose utilization of skeletal muscle. If the
metabolic syndrome
persists over a prolonged period of time, detrimental influences on the cardiovascular system become apparent involving diabetes mellitus,
hypertension
, and arteriosclerosis. Of particular pathogenic relevance is an unbalanced influence of insulin arising either from a diminished or enhanced insulin action depending on whether the various tissues of the body exhibit a reduced or unchanged insulin sensitivity. Since insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia appear to be affected by various lifestyle factors, the unique opportunity exists of reducing cardiovascular mortality by correcting this syndrome at a time when degenerative changes have not occurred in the cardiovascular system. Of great importance is the finding that dietary factors can have a modulatory action on insulin sensitivity. In animal experiments, an increased intake of (saturated) fat and refined carbohydrates increased insulin resistance. Since psychosocial distress is expected to be associated with a sustained activation of the sympathoadrenal axis, it is likely also to aggravate the
metabolic syndrome
. A factor with a beneficial action appears to be physical exercise. In view of the high incidence of cardiovascular diseases, further research on lifestyle factors with an insulin-sensitizing or insulin-desensitizing action is required. Of prime importance is the reevaluation of established dietary recommendations and diets should be designed which take into account the individual cardiovascular risk factor profile.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, and cardiovascular disease. The need for novel dietary prevention strategies. 159 Jul 42
While the incidence of essential hypertension is not increased in type 1 diabetics, it is about three times as high in type 2 diabetics. Since in 50% of the cases,
hypertension
is present before the metabolic disorder becomes manifest, an association between the etiologies of the two disturbances was suspected as long as 65 years ago. A new understanding of the significance of insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia suggests that the two conditions are part of a single metabolic disorder. This is supported by the fact that normal-weight hypertensives can also manifest insulin resistance, and they more often develop a type 2 diabetes mellitus. These facts urge us to re-think our therapeutic approach to
hypertension
, and to employ, as far as possible, only those substances that have no negative influence on the incidence of the metabolic disorder. With the introduction of ACE-inhibitors capable of improving insulin sensitivity, we now have, for the first time, the possibility of improving the prognosis of the
metabolic syndrome
. Moreover, their molecular mechanism of action provides initial clues as to the possible etiology of the syndrome.
...
PMID:[Essential hypertension and diabetes mellitus]. 218 85
Serum total calcium concentrations (CaT) were increased, ionized calcium concentrations (CaI) normal, and the CaI/CaT ratios decreased in 125 geriatric diabetics as compared with 379 non-diabetic controls. In the whole population of 558 consecutive geriatric inpatients, the CaI/CaT ratios were inversely correlated with body weight, diastolic blood pressure and plasma glucose. The findings and calculations help to explain some inconsistencies and discrepancies in previous studies concerning calcaemia in diabetes,
hypertension
and the '
metabolic syndrome
' of clustered risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. They also demonstrate that CaT and the 'correction' of CaT for serum albumin concentration can be biased in diabetes and other conditions closely associated with cardiovascular risks. Increased serum free fatty acids could at least in part explain low ratios.
...
PMID:Low serum ionized to total calcium ratio: association with geriatric diabetes mellitus and with other cardiovascular risk factors? 227 24
Data from a health screening survey with over 18,000 adult participants were used to determine the relations between serum calcium concentration and the cardiovascular risk factors
hypertension
, hyperglycaemia, and hyperlipidaemia. Blood pressure and serum glucose and cholesterol concentrations were all positively related to each other independent of age, sex, kidney function, and obesity. Similar relations between the risk factors were found in subjects with
hypertension
or hyperglycaemia independent of the degree of overweight. These results suggested that there might be a
metabolic syndrome
of cardiovascular risk factors. Serum calcium concentration was positively related to systolic and diastolic blood pressures and serum glucose and cholesterol concentrations. Thus a common feature in the syndrome is an increased serum calcium concentration. The relations between serum calcium concentrations and the cardiovascular risk factors were not limited to the upper parts of the distribution, being seen over a wide range. Changes in calcium metabolism seem to be related to a
metabolic syndrome
of
hypertension
, impaired glucose tolerance, and hyperlipidaemia.
...
PMID:Relation of serum calcium concentration to metabolic risk factors for cardiovascular disease. 314 67
There is a close epidemiological association between obesity and elevated blood pressure for all age groups, although not every obese individual becomes hypertensive. In populations without age-related increases in body weight, an elevation of blood pressure with age is not seen. Mechanisms included in the development of
hypertension
in obesity are hyperinsulinemia, insulin induced sodium retention and increased sympathetic tone. Overnutrition with over intake of sodium and lack of physical exercise contribute to the
metabolic syndrome
of obesity. Thus, weight reduction by decreased energy uptake and increased physical exercise is recommended in the treatment of
hypertension
in obese patients. The resulting fall in insulin levels may lead to decreased sodium absorption in the kidney. Although treatment of obesity by weight loss decreases blood pressure substantially, a minority of patients do not respond to the weight loss. Blood pressure generally decreases before normal weight is achieved. Salt intake reduction does not appear to explain why weight reduction lowers blood pressure. Reduced levels of plasma renin activity, serum aldosterone levels, catecholamine levels and serum insulin levels may be involved in the blood pressure lowering associated with weight loss. Since the risk of cardiovascular disease in the hypertensive patient is not only determined by the blood pressure, an overall treatment which aims at reduction of other risk factors such as glucose intolerance and hyperlipoproteinemia is advocated. Thus, in any obese hypertensive patient normalization of excess body weight and increased physical activity appears to be the first and most important step of any rational therapeutic strategy.
...
PMID:Obesity and hypertension: epidemiology, mechanisms, treatment. 636 45
Of 250 diabetics with a duration of the disease between 15 and 54 years the relations between the renal function and the cardiovascular risk profile were examined. The clearly increased serum creatinine values the frequency of persons with overweight was lower than in diabetics with very favourable creatinine levels. The increasing concentration of the serum led to an increase of the frequency of hyperuricaemia, whereas the frequencies of
hypertension
hypertriglyceridaemia and hypercholesterolaemia did not show any significant changes. The habits of smoking of long-term diabetics with and without renal insufficiency did not differ from each other qualitatively. Particularly after the 50th year of age long-term diabetics more frequently had diabetic blood-relatives than newly detected diabetic patients of the same age. Patients with familial occurrence of diabetes (relatives of 1st degree) in comparison to diabetics without known diabetic relatives showed an identical cardiovascular risk profile, so that there is no influence of the heredity of diabetes on the formation of the non-diabetic sizes of influence of the
metabolic syndrome
.
...
PMID:[The cardiovascular risk profile of long-term diabetics and its relation to kidney function]. 710 5
The essential hypertension, at present scarcely existing as isolated and unique disease, proves to be one of the main participants in multimorbidity. The evaluation of the own patients of the past 10 years according to the concomitant diseases of
hypertension
leads unconventionally to a subdivision in two groups: a "coloured" in which
hypertension
together appears with another chronic disease or also various diseases and a second group, in which the
hypertension
appears in a constantly composed "standardized" connection of diseases: with adiposis, hyperlipoproteinaemia, diabetes, frequently still with hyperuricaemia and cholelithiasis. In this hypertensive-
metabolic syndrome
we have to acknowledge a characteristic form of manifestation of
hypertension
, under simultaneous degradation to the symptom of a more comprehensive complex of disturbances. From the cooperation of the present individual diseases results a unique concentration of arteriosclerotic risk factors, so that course and result in the hypertensive-
metabolic syndrome
are characterized by the arteriosclerosis with its organ manifestations, above all on heart and brain.
...
PMID:[Hypertension as a clinical syndrome]. 721 Jul 53
The cardiovasculary risk profile of 105 newly detected, but still untreated, high age diabetics with an average of 69,1 years showing diabetes heredity in relatives of first degree was compared with a corresponding group (same age and same number of patients) without diabetes heredity. Taking into consideration exclusively the danger magnitudes overweight,
hypertension
, hypertriglyceridaemia, hypercholesterolaemia and hyperuricaemia, one sees an identical risk profile for both groups (the groups of patients were chosen according the principle of biostatistical gemini forming). For the showing of pathogenic magnitudes of influence within the
metabolic syndrome
the environmental factors seem to have a far greater importance than hereditary diabetogenic ones.
...
PMID:[The influence of diabetes heredity on cardiovasculary risk profile in patients with high age diabetes (author's transl)]. 730 31
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