Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A higher prevalence of stroke is found in the patient with both diagnosed and undiagnosed diabetes and glucose intolerance. Because of local cerebral acidosis caused by ischemia and hyperglycemia, morbidity and mortality from a stroke are increased. Most studies show that individuals with admission serum glucose > 120 mg/dl (6.7 mM) have a higher morbidity and mortality from a stroke. The prevalence of cerebral infarcts, especially lacunar infarcts, is increased and the prevalence of subarachnoid hemorrhage, cerebral hemorrhage, and transient ischemic attacks are decreased in the diabetic patient. Age, race, hypertension, and the presence of diabetic nephropathy and coronary and peripheral vascular disease are risk factors for stroke in the diabetic patient, whereas obesity, smoking, hyperlipidemia, and glycemic control are not. Investigation and treatment of the diabetic patient with a stroke is discussed.
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PMID:Stroke in the diabetic patient. 817 50

The authors studied 31 cases of coronary artery disease with normal or minimally diseases coronary arteries in black Africans, 29.8% of 104 coronary patients undergoing coronary angiography in this series. These 31 cases comprised 16 cases of infarction, 10 cases of angina, 3 ventricular aneurysms and 2 cases of silent ischemia in diabetic patients. Twenty-five patients were men (80.6%). There were 6 women (19.3%) two of whom presented in the post-partum period. The average age of these patients was 45 years (males: 47.7 years; females: 41.8 years). The following risk factors were noted: smoking (60%), hypertension (25.8%), obesity (29%), diabetes (12.9%), serum cholesterol (average 2.15 g/l), serum triglycerides (average 1.25 g/l). The risk index per patient was 1.29. In comparison with coronary patients with angiographic coronary lesions (n = 73), the patients with normal angiography were significantly younger, comprised more females and had fewer risk factors (especially hypertension and diabetes), though this was not statistically significant. The prevalence of inaugural infarction was 81.2% in the cases of infarction with normal coronary arteries. These infarcts may be complicated by ventricular aneurysm formation. Spontaneous spasm was observed in 3 out of 31 patients (9.6%) at coronary angiography. A provocative test was performed in only 2 cases and 1 was positive. This deserves further study and may have therapeutic implications. The authors emphasise the high incidence of hemoglobin S or C traits (57.1%). These heterozygotic hemoglobinopathies could be a risk factor in these coronary patients with normal coronary angiography.
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PMID:[Coronary disease with normal coronarography in the black Africans: epidemiological and clinical data in 31 cases. Role of abnormal hemoglobins]. 823 68

We have evaluated in a case-control study the association of the main risk factors with cerebrovascular ischemic accidents in elderly patients. Two hundred and twenty patients aged 65 year or more (average age 77.3 +/- 7.3 yr, 93 males and 127 females) admitted to our Division for stroke (122) or transient ischemic attacks (TIA) (98) were enrolled: 220 hospitalized patients, age and sex-matched, without actual or previous cardiovascular clinical manifestations were the control group. Advanced senile decay, hepatic or renale failure and malignancies were considered exclusion criteria for both groups. The following risk factors have been considered: family history, obesity, cigarette smoking, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, atrial fibrillation, left ventricular hypertrophy, and related continuous variables. After logistic multiple regression analysis, atrial fibrillation, hypertension and blood cholesterol concentration above 240 mg/dl were significantly and independently associated with stroke, while only hypertension and hypercholesterolemia were associated with TIA. The unexpected finding of a significant association between hypercholesterolemia and cerebrovascular ischemia seems attributable to the choice of hospitalized patients as control group. These results indicate that hypertension and atrial fibrillation are independently associated with ischemic stroke even in advanced age.
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PMID:[Ischemic stroke and transient ischemic attacks: a case-control study of the risk factors in elderly hospitalized patients]. 848 30

Obese Zucker rats are susceptible to increased hepatic ischemia/reperfusion (I/RP) injury. Increased lipid peroxidation occurs in this model with warm ischemia. We hypothesized that a severe depletion of phospholipids (PL) occurs with warm I/RP in fatty livers. Obese (Ob) and lean (Ln) Zucker rats were subjected to 90 min of in vivo partial hepatic warm I followed by RP. Total lipids extracted from one gm of liver (median lobe) taken at the end of 1, 2 and 6 hr of RP and sham (Sh) surgery (n=5 Ln & Ob) were analyzed by 202.3 MHz 31P NMR, which provided good resolution of individual PL. Obese (Sh) rats contained 22% more PL than Ln (P= < 0.01). Ischemia caused similar decreases in PL in both Ob (to 67% Sh) and Ln rats (62%). Following 2 hr RP, PL in Ob rats decreased further (46% Sh) and recovered only marginally at 6 hr (53%), in marked contrast to the rapid recovery in Ln to preischemic levels (110% Sh at both 2 and 6 hr; P=<0.001). Mole percents of individual PL did not change significantly except for lysophosphatidylcholine, which increased from 0.43 to 1.3% (Sh vs. 6 hr RP) in the Ob, but decreased from 0.98 to 0.52% in Ln animals (P = <0.001). Fatty livers thus are more vulnerable to phospholipid depletion in response to warm ischemia/reperfusion than normal livers.
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PMID:31P nuclear magnetic resonance study of phospholipids in ischemia/reperfusion injury in a rat fatty liver model. 861 Apr 9

Organ transplantation has become a viable treatment for an increasing number of patients suffering from irreversible organ failure. In response to the steeply rising demand for transplantation, both the number of transplant centers and the number of patients on waiting lists have grown rapidly. Because organ donation has not kept pace with demand, each year a greater number of patients die while awaiting donor organs. (About 9% of all patients on the list in 1993 but not transplanted died. Death rates were highest, 19% and 16% respectively, for patients awaiting hearts and livers.) Among the factors contributing to the organ shortage are cultural and psychological barriers to donation and missed opportunities to request donation. An accompanying diminution in traumatic deaths of potential young donors has made older and other marginal, or higher-risk, donors the focus of studies on expansion of the donor pool. The studies reviewed herein evaluated donor risk factors such as age, disease (including infection), obesity, cold ischemia time, suboptimal organ function, and nontraumatic causes of death. Overall, broadened criteria for acceptable donor kidneys, hearts, and livers appear to lessen graft survival rates somewhat compared with rates for ideal donor organs. Nonetheless, use of higher-risk organs allows lifesaving transplants that could not otherwise be performed and results in acceptable prognoses for survival. Further research is needed to identify better tests for evaluating donor organs, provide longer-term follow-up of recipients of higher-risk organs, and develop alternative means to fill the donor-organ shortfall.
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PMID:Expanding the donor pool: use of marginal donors for solid organ transplantation. 865 91

Although the vascular anatomy of the transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap has been well described, poor flap perfusion can lead to partial or total flap ischemia. To minimize the potential for flap loss, criteria have been developed to identify those patients who are deemed to be high risk. Some of these high-risk patients include smokers and those with previous abdominal surgery, obesity, and/or poor medical health. Despite our diligence in patient and operative selection, 2 patients with no preexisting risk factors have recently had venous congestion of their transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous flap, necessitating a delayed procedure. The cases are presented here and the potential etiology for this venous congestion explored.
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PMID:Unexpected vascular compromise in transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous (TRAM) flap reconstruction: a report of two patients. 865 46

We evaluated the effect of intravenous diltiazem infusion in 105 noncardiac surgical patients. Subjects were elective surgical patients with coronary artery disease and coronary risk factors which were hypertension (WHO standards), diabetes mellitus, hyperlipemia (total cholesterol > or = 220 mg.dl-1), obesity (body mass index : male > or = 26 kg.m-2, female > or = 25) and old age (70 years old or above). The prophylactic intravenous diltiazem infusion (1.0 micrograms.kg-1.min-1) was started immediately after induction of general anesthesia or epidural analgesia and continued until the end of operation. All patients were monitored by ST trend graph during anesthesia, and ischemia pattern was defined as > or = 1 mm ST changes and lasting over 1 min. Ischemic ST-T changes were noted in 4 cases in the operating room. ST depression was noted in 2 cases before starting anesthesia and these 2 cases showed improvement with diltiazem infusion lasting until the end of operation. ST-T changes were noted in 2 cases during surgery and these 2 cases showed improvement with diltiazem isosorbide dinitrate. We conclude that prophylactic intravenous diltiazem infusion may prevent ischemia during noncardiac surgery.
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PMID:[The effect of prophylactic intravenous diltiazem drip infusion on myocardial ischemia during noncardiac surgery]. 922 91

We present a new hypothesis to explain the development of salt-dependent hypertension in humans. We propose that hypertension has two phases: an early phase in which elevations in blood pressure (BP) are mainly episodic and are mediated by a hyperactive sympathetic nervous or renin-angiotensin system, and a second phase in which BP is persistently elevated and that is primarily mediated by an impaired ability of the kidney to excrete salt (NaCl). We propose that the transition from the first phase to the second occurs as a consequence of catecholamine-induced elevations in BP that preferentially damage regions of the kidney (juxtamedullary and medullary regions) that do not autoregulate well to changes in renal perfusion pressure. The catecholamine response is associated with both an increase in peritubular capillary pressure and a reduction in peritubular capillary plasma flow, resulting in injury to the peritubular capillaries with ischemia to the tubules and interstitium. The local injury triggers the release or activation (angiotensin II, adenosine, renal sympathetic nerves) or inhibition (nitric oxide, prostaglandins, dopamine) of vasoactive mediators that further augment ischemia and result in abnormal tubuloglomerular feedback and enhanced NaCl reabsorption. The peritubular capillary injury with rarefaction simultaneously blunts the pressure natriuresis mechanism. The combined effect of enhanced tubuloglomerular feedback and impaired pressure natriuresis results in a defect in NaCl excretion which, on the exposure to salt, results in the development of persistent hypertension. Evidence is provided to suggest that this may be the major mechanism for the development of salt-dependent hypertension, and particularly for the hypertension associated with blacks, aging and obesity. Thus, essential hypertension may be a type of acquired tubulointerstitial renal disease.
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PMID:Hypothesis: the role of acquired tubulointerstitial disease in the pathogenesis of salt-dependent hypertension. 935 Jun 40

Results obtained with intra-aortic balloon pumps (IABPs) at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center from 1990 to 1995 were reviewed to analyze the indications for its use as well as the incidence and types of vascular complications that occurred. Of 86 patients (53 men and 33 women) in whom pumps were used, 66 underwent coronary bypass, 14 underwent valve replacement, and 6 underwent both coronary bypass/valve replacement. Thirteen (15%) deaths occurred (8 coronary bypass patients, 4 valve replacement patients, and 1 coronary bypass/valve replacement patient). The indications for IABP were broadly classified as prophylactic or inability to wean. Prophylactic IABP placement preoperatively occurred in 35 (41%) patients for profound ventricular dysfunction (27 patients), compelling coronary anatomy including critical left main disease (7 patients), and unstable angina (1 patient). Inability to wean occurred in 51 (59%) patients. Three patients (3.5%) developed major vascular complications resulting in limb ischemia. All three underwent thrombectomies, fasciotomies, and above-knee amputations; two patients subsequently died. Vascular reconstruction was performed in two patients as a direct result of their vascular process. All three vascular complications occurred in women. Besides gender, there was no difference between IABP patients with or without vascular complications in terms of age or presence of diabetes, hypertension, smoking history, obesity, or known peripheral vascular disease. These results indicate that IABPs are effective both prophylactically and intraoperatively in patients who would not otherwise survive cardiac surgery.
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PMID:Intra-aortic balloon pump: indications and complications. 954 76

Uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) uncouples respiration from oxidative phosphorylation and may contribute to obesity through effects on energy metabolism. Because basal metabolic rate is decreased in obesity, UCP2 expression is predicted to be reduced. Paradoxically, hepatic expression of UCP2 mRNA is increased in genetically obese (ob/ob) mice. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemical analysis of ob/ob livers demonstrate that UCP2 mRNA and protein expression are increased in hepatocytes, which do not express UCP2 in lean mice. Mitochondria isolated from ob/ob livers exhibit an increased rate of H+ leak which partially dissipates the mitochondrial membrane potential when the rate of electron transport is suppressed. In addition, hepatic ATP stores are reduced and these livers are more vulnerable to necrosis after transient hepatic ischemia. Hence, hepatocytes adapt to obesity by up-regulating UCP2. However, because this decreases the efficiency of energy trapping, the cells become vulnerable to ATP depletion when energy needs increase acutely.
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PMID:Obesity induces expression of uncoupling protein-2 in hepatocytes and promotes liver ATP depletion. 1002 88


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