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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Risk factor analysis in coronary artery disease was conducted in 303 patients who underwent coronary arteriography to identify associations between personal characteristics and the prevalence of coronary heart disease. Age, sex, obesity, smoking, alcohol intake, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, serum uric acid, total cholesterol, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglyceride, and atherogenic indices were statistically analyzed. All 13 variables were first compared between patients with positive and negative ergonovine tests. Only total cholesterol was significantly different, while significant differences in age, sex, history of diabetes, total cholesterol, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglyceride and atherosclerotic indices were observed between patients with and without organic coronary artery stenosis. A multivariate analysis was performed, and the resulting equation was tested using the remaining patients. Logistic analysis of all 13 variables identified 5 (age, sex, diabetes mellitus, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol) which accounted for the differences between patients with and without significant coronary artery disease and that were validated in the test group. The sensitivity for prediction of coronary artery disease was 75.8%, specificity 68.5%, and predictive accuracy 71.5% in the test group. Thus, risk factor analysis appears to be very valuable in screening subjects with high-risk organic coronary stenosis and in optimizing the preventive and therapeutic modalities, but not in predicting vasospastic subjects.
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PMID:Coronary risk factors used to predict coronary artery disease by logistic regression analysis. 147 44

In 50 normotonic patients with type 2 diabetes (NIDDM) and controls matched for sex and age with NIDDM and hypertension a statistically significant difference was found as regards S-peptide values on fasting, cholesterol, triglycerides, BMI and atherogenic index (cholesterol/HDL, p < 0.01). C-peptide values correlated positively with values of the systolic and median BP and the atherogenic index in both groups. In normotonic diabetics there was also a positive correlation with the BMI and in hypertonic subjects with the triglyceride levels. The results confirm the hypothesis that in NIDDM there is a direct relationship between arterial hypertension, unfavourable lipid parameters and insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinism resp. The authors discuss possible mechanisms by which hyperinsulinism mediates a rise of BP, hyperlipoproteinaemia, hyperglycaemia and hirsutism (hormonal metabolic syndrome X and 5H resp.). These phenomena are the main risk factors of cardiovascular diseases and lead via heart attacks and cerebrovascular attacks (IHD and stroke) to a high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in our population. The morbidity and mortality is steadily increasing and thus we are among civilized countries among those with the highest morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:[Insulin resistance and arterial hypertension. Hyperinsulinism as a basic etiopathogenic factor in essential arterial hypertension and associated phenomena]. 148 85

Hypertension is a powerful predisposing risk factor for cardiovascular disease at all ages and in both sexes. Epidemiological assessment indicates the largest risk ratios for stroke and congestive heart failure (CHF), but coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most common and most lethal sequela of hypertension. Examination of the risk of cardiovascular sequelae in the hypertensive population indicates that this is not uniform and varies over a 10-fold range, depending on the associated risk factors. Systolic pressure merits greater consideration than the diastole pressure because isolated systolic hypertension is a powerful cardiovascular risk at all ages. Furthermore, recent trials have indicated the benefit of therapy for systolic-based hypertension in the elderly, even using a diuretic, for coronary disease as well as stroke. Persons with hypertension have a high prevalence of associated cardiovascular risk factors, including elevated cholesterol, reduced HDL-C, diabetes, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), and obesity. About 9% under the age of 65 years have an associated overt cardiovascular disease; above age 65 about 30% are so afflicted. Each of these risk factors can double the risk associated with hypertension. Because they are so common, a large fraction of the disease sequelae of hypertension is attributable to these associated risk factors. The high risk of coronary disease in hypertensive patients is concentrated in those with a high total/HDL-cholesterol ratio, impaired glucose tolerance, high fibrinogen, ECG abnormalities, and cigarette smokers. Stroke risk in hypertensive persons is concentrated in those with cardiovascular disease, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, LVH and cigarette smoking.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Potency of vascular risk factors as the basis for antihypertensive therapy. 148 3

Hypertension, dyslipidaemia, glucose intolerance (associated with insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinaemia) and other abnormalities are complementary coronary risk factors which often occur in association. A familial trait for essential hypertension seems to coexist commonly with defects in carbohydrate and lipoprotein metabolism which can be detected before the appearance of hypertension. Diabetes mellitus as well as obesity promotes the development of hypertension and dyslipidaemia. Moreover, certain drugs used for antihypertensive therapy can further modify lipoprotein and glucose metabolism. Thiazides in high dosage and loop-diuretics can increase serum low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and/or very-LDL-C and the total C/high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) ratio, while HDL-C is largely unchanged; triglycerides (Tg) are also often elevated. Premenopausal women may be protected from this side effect. Whether diuretic-induced dyslipidaemia is dose-dependent and low thiazide doses (i.e. hydrochlorothiazide < or = 12.5 mg daily) are less active, awaits clarification. The diuretic-antihypertensive agent, indapamide, given at a dose of 2.5 mg.day-1, seems to exert no relevant effect on serum lipoprotein or glucose metabolism. The potassium-sparing diuretic, spironolactone, also may be largely neutral with regard to lipids. Moreover, potassium sparing diuretics may possibly counteract, at least in part, a dyslipidaemic influence of potassium-loosing diuretics in medium dose. Drug-induced dyslipidaemia, as well as glucose intolerance, represent potentially adverse influences. In the hypertensive population, effective blood pressure control with traditional drug therapy based on thiazide-type diuretics in high dosage led to a distinct decrease in cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality, but a lesser decrease in coronary events.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of diuretics on the plasma lipid profile. 148 8

Ten patients have been studied for lipidic behaviour during hemodialysis using as anticoagulant heparin and prostacyclin. Hearing has been administered at infusion rate of 2000 U/h and prostacyclin in 5 ng/kg/min. Lipidic behaviour (before and after hemodialysis) has been studied for apolipoproteins A and B, total serum cholesterol and serum triglycerides, HDL-cholesterol, lipoprotein. Total serum cholesterol/HDL-cholesterol, apolipoproteins A/apolipoproteins B, apolipoproteins A/HDL-cholesterol ratios have been also studied. Our findings show that heparin produces acute changes in lipidic behaviour after hemodialysis and suggest that administrations may contribute to lipidic derangement of uremic dialytic patient while heparin free dialysis (prostacyclin infusion) doesn't show lipidic derangement after dialytic treatment. Prostacyclin infusion suggests that may be a useful anticoagulant and therapeutic drug especially in uremic dialytic subject with high atherosclerosis involvement, dyslipidemia and arterial hypertension.
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PMID:[Lipid behavior during hemodialysis using heparin and prostacyclin]. 149 59

A group of 196 outpatients among whom 112 non-insulin-dependent diabetics were divided into 4 subgroups according to whether they had vascular disorders or not. For statistical evaluation by means of correlation coefficient and chi-square test both risk factors (smoking, family history, arterial hypertension, BMI) and laboratory values (total and HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, fibrinogen, HbA1c, factor VIII, PF4, BTG) were taken into account. Our findings confirm the relevance of risk factors and the need for diabetic patients to be metabolically well balanced; PF4, BTG, and factor VII were normal in all patients which suggests that these are not suitable, as far as the present study is concerned, to be considered markers of vascular disorders. An interesting correlation was found between these factors and serum triglycerides, especially in the subgroup of diabetics with vascular disorders. An interesting finding was the increase of fibrinogen in subjects with vascular disorders especially in non-diabetics.
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PMID:[Atherosclerosis: the risk factors]. 149 67

Elevated insulin concentrations are independent predictors of coronary heart disease (CHD) and are related to high blood pressure, low serum HDL-cholesterol and elevated serum triglyceride. Insulin resistance is a major determinant of the plasma insulin concentration. Computer modelling of plasma glucose, insulin and C-peptide concentrations during an intravenous glucose tolerance test enables quantification of the determinants of plasma insulin concentration. The association between risk markers of CHD and model-derived measures of determinants of plasma insulin concentration in a group of healthy males has been investigated. In univariate linear regression analysis of the glucose, insulin and C-peptide data, the incremental insulin area during the second phase (10-180 min.) was found to be the strongest predictor of lipid, lipoprotein and blood pressure variables. Variations in insulin sensitivity and hepatic insulin throughput contribute to variation in the insulin response and may be secondary correlates of lipids, lipoproteins and blood pressure.
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PMID:Insulin resistance--modelling studies. 150 51

The relation between plasma lipid peroxide and coronary heart disease was investigated at Harapan Hospital in Kita Jakarta. Ninety-eight patients (83 males and 15 females), below 75 years old were included in the study. The samples consisted of 47 cases with angina and 22 cases with myocardial infarction which were proven to suffer from coronary atherosclerosis by the presence of clinical symptoms, ECG abnormalities, angiography and myocardial enzyme measurement. Controls were patients who did not show any abnormalities in the parameters used. Controls and patients were classified into several groups based on the presence or absence of risk factors (smoking, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, obesity, family history). The results of the study showed that plasma lipid peroxide in patients with angina and myocardial infarction which were 3.26 +/- 1.07 mumol and 3.20 +/- 0.82 mumol/l, respectively, were significantly higher (p less than 0.05) than controls 2.50 +/- 0.45 mumol/l. There was no differences in total cholesterol, LDL and triglyceride contents between control and patients with coronary heart disease; whereas HDL cholesterol level was significantly higher in the patients with angina, 38.7 +/- 10.5 mg/dl vs 31.5 +/- 6.76 mg/dl in patients with myocardial infarction. Univariate analysis of various risk factors revealed a strong correlation between plasma lipid peroxide and the chance in developing coronary heart disease. The present study showed that plasma lipid peroxide was increased in coronary heart disease and that it might be used as a determinant in the assessment of the severity of the disease. An investigation on the effects of antioxidants in these patients is planned.
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PMID:Plasma lipid peroxides in coronary heart disease. 150 21

The primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular diseases and, therefore, the therapy of hyperlipidemia is essential in strategies to lower morbidity and mortality from coronary heart disease (CHD), the most relevant atherosclerosis-associated disease. These programs imply not only a medical but also an economic challenge to our health system. That is why all therapeutic measures have to be evaluated regarding their cost-effectiveness. A cost-effectiveness profile was calculated for all the therapies of hyperlipidemia (nutritional therapy, dietetic nutritionals, drugs and LDL-apheresis) with respect to the following parameters: total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol and triglycerides. The daily costs of all interventional measures are compared to the success rate, whereby an index of daily therapy costs and 1% change per lipid parameter was calculated. Nutritional therapy is by far the cheapest, and LDL-apheresis the most expensive but also the most effective and reliable therapeutic measure. It has to be considered, however, that dietary intervention can be very successful in overnutrition while in rare cases of severe homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia there is no therapeutic alternative to LDL-apheresis. Life-style modifications, such as changing nutritional habits, may contribute towards reducing or removing one or more risk factor(s) (e.g. malnutrition is associated with overweight, hyperlipoproteinemia (HLP), hyperinsulinemia (syndrome X), hyperfibrinogenemia and hypertension). But neither health politicians nor the population seem to be conscious of the fact that life-style changes help to reduce medical expenditure. Considering the fact that nearly every medical service is getting more and more expensive, the need to introduce financial regulations is evident.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Economic aspects of therapy for lipid metabolism disorders]. 150 39

Home blood pressure readings by self-monitoring (14 readings in 7 days) have been compared to readings taken in the clinic in 937 participants of the Tecumseh Blood Pressure Study. In the absence of firm criteria "hypertension at home" was defined as having home readings in the upper decile of the whole population. If a clinic reading exceeded 140 and/or 90 mmHg a subject was categorized as having clinic "hypertension". Two hypertensive groups emerged; one with both clinic and home hypertension ("sustained" N = 47) and one with high clinic but normal home blood pressure ("white coat" N = 50). Groups with "white coat" and "sustained" hypertension were very similar. Both groups were overweight, had faster heart rates, elevated cholesterol, insulin, triglyceride and decreased HDL levels. Blood pressure readings at previous exams (age 5, 8, 21 and 22) were elevated in both the "sustained" and white coat hypertension group compared to the normotensive controls. Subjects with white coat hypertension were not hyperresponders to the stress of mental arrythmetrics or to isometric exercise. The white coat hypertensives did not show abnormal anger, excessive submissiveness, or anxiety. The pathophysiology of the reproducible elevation of the clinic blood pressure in the white coat hypertensives remains unclear. Because of a higher risk of coronary heart disease and a risk for late development of sustained hypertension, subjects with white coat hypertension should be counselled on nonpharmacologic methods to control the blood pressure elevation and to ameliorate coronary risk factors.
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PMID:White coat hypertension: a follow-up. 154 Oct 46


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