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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fluoride contributes to stability of both teeth and bones and to reduction of caries, especially if ingested before eruption of teeth. Reduction of caries continues at about 60% in persons drinking fluoridated water only as long as fluoride washes over teeth. One-half the population of the US does not have access to water with an optimal fluoride concentration of about 1 mg/L. Misinformation about fluoridation contributes to reluctance of communities to supplement the natural but inadequate fluoride of those water supplies. Fluoridation of water has no positive or negative effect on incidence or mortality rates due to cancer,
heart disease
, intracranial lesions, nephritis,
cirrhosis
, mongoloid births, or from all causes together. The collective decision to increase the natural fluoride content of water supplies is not an infringement of civil rights, nor does it establish a precedent in the binding sense of the law. Supplemental fluoride in water makes it available to all members of the community in a safe, practical, economical and reliable manner. Fluoridation saves money in dental costs and time lost from work. Fluoridation is an appropriate action of government in promoting the health and welfare of society.
...
PMID:Thirty years of fluoridation: a review. 391 99
Alcohol has acute and chronic cardiovascular effects. Acutely, alcohol depresses cardiac function and alters regional blood flow. Even when withdrawn from alcohol for several days, alcoholics may still manifest evidence of left ventricular dysfunction. In some alcoholics a severe muscle disorder may ensue with the clinical features of a dilated cardiomyopathy. The concomitant presence of a thiamine deficiency or
cirrhosis
may produce hemodynamic changes that can obscure the clinical features of alcohol-induced heart muscle disease. Alcoholics may also develop acute myocardial infarction with patent coronary arteries; some may have cardiac arrhythmias even without other evidence of
heart disease
. Although epidemiological studies suggest that moderate users of alcohol have fewer coronary events than teetotalers, such studies also demonstrate a relation between alcohol abuse and hypertension and an increased occurrence of coronary disease. Thus, the injurious cardiovascular effects of alcohol must be considered when establishing recommendations for its use.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular effects of alcohol with particular reference to the heart. 639 13
Optimum nutrition is the level of intake that should promote the highest level of health. Although excess caloric intake will lead to obesity, a deficit in nutrition may result in a tissue depletion of essential nutrients that can lead to biochemical changes and eventually to clinical signs and symptoms. Nutrition requirements may differ according to sex, age, activity, or physiological state and can be influenced by drugs, smoking, alcohol, and other factors. With ever-increasing sedentary life styles and less physically demanding jobs, the resulting reduced caloric requirements have made it more difficult to make nutritionally sound food choices. Nutrition is the single most important component of preventive health care. Diet has been associated with cancer,
heart disease
, diabetes, stroke and hypertension, arteriosclerosis, and
cirrhosis of the liver
. The ability of the human to respond to stresses, such as altitude, heat, trauma, surgery, and infection can be influenced by nutritional status. Nutritional status is reflected in a variety of metabolic processes that provide the basis for a number of methods for its assessment.
...
PMID:Implications of nutritional status on human biochemistry, physiology, and health. 642 73
As part of a systematic program to evaluate the late effects of antineoplastic therapy in randomized clinical trials, patients enrolled in the low-dose thio-TEPA (TSPA) and 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine (FdUrd) adjuvant colorectal cancer protocols of the Veterans Administration (VA) Surgical Oncology Group between 1958 and 1964 were studied. All patients received surgery with curative intent; 470 also received TSPA, 176 received FdUrd, and 867 received surgery only. The unique VA system permitted complete follow-up through 1977, with 10,902 person-years of observation accrued among 1,613 male patients (mean survival = 6.8 yr). Expected mortality and cancer incidence were computed by applying U.S. Mortality Statistics and Connecticut Tumor Registry age-, race-, sex-, and calendar time-specific rates to the person-years of observation. The mortality experience of the 3 groups was similar. Overall, there was a significant excess in total mortality (observed/expected = 1,359/553) attributable mainly to colorectal cancer (584/14), arteriosclerotic
heart disease
(258/215.9), pneumonia (41/17), gastric and duodenal ulcers (15/4), and
cirrhosis
(14/6). No excess mortality from noncolorectal cancers was apparent, nor were there significant differences by treatment: TSPA (22/22), FdUrd (9/12), and surgery only (50/42). Among 1,402 white patients, no significant excess of incident noncolorectal cancers were observed among patients treated with TSPA (30/31, FdUrd (14/15), or surgery only (63/58). Seven incident cases of leukemia developed (4.1 expected) among all patients of various groups: TSPA (3/1.3), FdUrd (1/0.6), and surgery only (3/2.2). No excess of new primary cancers was observed among 211 nonwhite patients. An inverse relationship between the occurrence of second primary cancer and age at diagnosis, irrespective of therapy, was suggested. The results demonstrated the feasibility of this approach for assessment of late complications of anticancer therapy and suggested no measurable carcinogenic effect following very low doses of TSPA and FdUrd in a population of this size.
...
PMID:Late effects of low-dose adjuvant chemotherapy in colorectal cancer. 644 45
To evaluate the potential carcinogenic effects of formaldehyde, we examined the proportionate mortality experience of embalmers licensed to practice in California. Mortality was significantly elevated for total cancer, arteriosclerotic
heart disease
, and suicide, whereas significant deficits were noted in mortality from diseases of the respiratory and genitourinary systems. Deaths from cancers of the brain, colon, and prostate and leukemia were significantly higher than expected. No increased mortality was seen for cancers of the respiratory tract, including the nasal passages, where an effect might be expected based on animal studies. A parallel mortality survey of embalmers from New York State showed similar findings, with excesses of brain tumors, leukemia, colon cancer, arteriosclerotic
heart disease
, and
cirrhosis
. Further investigation is needed to determine whether any of these outcomes is related to formaldehyde exposure.
...
PMID:Cancer and other causes of death among embalmers. 646 19
Mortality data on the leading causes of death conceal the relationship to underlying risk factors; if we classified deaths according to risk factors, annually there might be an estimated 350,000 smoking-related deaths, 200,000 alcohol-related deaths and 135,000 nutrition-related cancer deaths. Similarly, five causes of death-
heart disease
, lung cancer,
cirrhosis of the liver
, suicide and motor vehicle accidents-contribute most to the risk of dying in the next ten years for a 40-year-old white man. Review of protective factors shows that adopting and maintaining a healthful life-style can contribute to reducing risk. Practicing physicians can assume both direct and indirect roles in promoting personal health maintenance.
...
PMID:Personal health promotion. 652 57
A 10.5 year old girl with
liver cirrhosis
due to AAT-deficiency (Pi type ZZ) developed cyanosis and clubbing of finger and toes. Clinical aspect of a cyanotic
heart disease
appeared with 10 years, 7 years after diagnosis of
cirrhosis
. By contrast echocardiography existence of intrapulmonary arterio-venous shunts was demonstrated. When determined during the first year of life, serum-alpha-1-globulin-fraction of the patient was found to be normal. The result indicates, that even in severe AAT-deficiency of Pi type ZZ direct determination of AAT is necessary for diagnosis of the disease.
...
PMID:[Liver cirrhosis due in alpha-1-antitrypsinin deficiency and development of an arteriovenous shunts of the lungs]. 660 21
The number of deaths by cause, race, and sex among 2,709 workers (1,003 white males, 789 black males, 517 white females, and 400 black females) in the tobacco industry identified from obituary listings of the Tobacco Workers' International Union from 1957 to 1978 were compared to expected numbers based on the experience of the U.S. population. The frequency of deaths from cancer of the colon was slightly elevated among each race-sex group [proportionate mortality ratios (PMRs) from 129 to 163]. Although unexplained, this resembles the excess of cancer of the digestive system previously reported among cigarette manufacturers. The excess deaths from cancer of the lung occurred only among white females and may represent chance findings. Among non-neoplastic causes of death, PMRs for arteriosclerotic
heart disease
, motor vehicle accidents, and suicides were high among most race-sex groups, while PMRs for respiratory disease and
cirrhosis of the liver
were low.
...
PMID:Causes of death among workers in the tobacco industry. 661 3
A systematic 20-year follow-up study of 1,221 diabetic patients was carried out in Osaka, Japan. The mean annual mortality rates were 2.55% for men and 1.64% for women. The ratios of observed to expected numbers of deaths were 1.50 for men and 1.39 for women, indicating an excess mortality for diabetic patients of both sexes, and higher mortality in men than in women. Factors that predisposed diabetic patients to premature death were early age of onset, albuminuria, diabetic retinopathy and fasting glucose level greater than 11.1 mmol/l at the initial examination. Insulin dependence was also associated with poor prognosis. Cerebro-cardiovascular and renal diseases were the major causes of death in the diabetic patients;
heart disease
was the cause of death in 16.9%, cerebrovascular disease in 16.4% and renal disease in 11.9%. The relatively high incidence of renal disease as cause of death in diabetic patients was striking. Malignant neoplasms of liver and of pancreas and
cirrhosis
were also associated with increased ratio of observed to expected number of deaths in the patients.
...
PMID:A long-term follow-up study of Japanese diabetic patients: mortality and causes of death. 664 95
This paper discusses a first-stage analysis of the link of unemployment rates, as well as other economic, social and environmental health risk factors, to mortality rates in postwar Britain. The results presented represent part of an international study of the impact of economic change on mortality patterns in industrialized countries. The mortality patterns examined include total and infant mortality and (by cause) cardiovascular (total), cerebrovascular and
heart disease
,
cirrhosis of the liver
, and suicide, homicide and motor vehicle accidents. Among the most prominent factors that beneficially influence postwar mortality patterns in England/Wales and Scotland are economic growth and stability and health service availability. A principal detrimental factor to health is a high rate of unemployment. Additional factors that have an adverse influence on mortality rates are cigarette consumption and heavy alcohol use and unusually cold winter temperatures (especially in Scotland). The model of mortality that includes both economic changes and behavioral and environmental risk factors was successfully applied to infant mortality rates in the interwar period. In addition, the "simple" economic change model of mortality (using only economic indicators) was applied to other industrialized countries. In Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Sweden, the simple version of the economic change model could be successfully applied only if the analysis was begun before World War II; for analysis beginning in the postwar era, the more sophisticated economic change model, including behavioral and environmental risk factors, was required. In France, West Germany, Italy, and Spain, by contrast, some success was achieved using the simple economic change model.
...
PMID:Mortality and economic instability: detailed analyses for Britain and comparative analyses for selected industrialized countries. 664 12
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