Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The influence of fibrinogen on the risk of cardiovascular disease is examined over 16 years of follow-up in 1314 subjects who were initially free of cardiovascular disease in the Framingham Study. Of these subjects, 46 men and 43 women developed diabetes, and 56 men and 53 women had blood sugar levels that exceeded 120 mg/dl. Diabetes predisposed subjects to all of the 408 major cardiovascular disease outcomes. Diabetics had higher levels of fibrinogen, hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia, and obesity, but lower HDL cholesterol values. The influence of diabetes on cardiovascular disease was greatly dependent on these coexistent risk factors, but there was a substantial independent effect of glucose intolerance when all the standard risk factors had been taken into account. There was a rise in fibrinogen values throughout the range of blood sugar levels, which suggests a thrombogenic explanation for the unique diabetic effect. However, multivariate analysis indicates no further reduction in diabetic cardiovascular risk ratios after adjustment for fibrinogen; thus, there is a residual effect for glucose intolerance after all of the standard risk factors and fibrinogen have been taken into account.
...
PMID:Diabetes, fibrinogen, and risk of cardiovascular disease: the Framingham experience. 238 2

A group of grossly obese individuals were put on a 300 kcal diet for 15 days. Blood rheology was quantified by measuring blood and plasma viscosity, haematocrit, red cell aggregation and deformability, fibrinogen and ESR. After 15 days blood viscosity had decreased and red cell deformability increased. The results suggest that the rheological deficit in obesity can be partly normalized by low calorie diets.
...
PMID:Changes in blood rheology of grossly obese individuals during a very low calorie diet. 261 16

The authors evaluated whole blood filterability (VB) in 29 post-menopausal obese women with (n = 14) or without (n = 15) hypertension, and in 22 age matched women with normal body weight. After 3 months of a low-calorie (18 kcal/kg IBW) and moderately low-salt (max 6 g NaCl/day) diet, the obese subjects were restudied. In all women plasma fibrinogen values and various indices of metabolic status were evaluated before and after the diet and correlated to VB values. VB values and plasma fibrinogen concentrations were similar in normal controls and in women with simple obesity, whereas they were, respectively, significantly lower and higher in obese subjects with hypertension. Three months of diet significantly improved whole blood filterability and decreased fibrinogen levels in these patients. Before the diet a significant negative correlation was found between VB and plasma fibrinogen values in hypertensive obese patients. Metabolic parameters did not change in the different groups before and after the diet and did not correlate with VB values. The present study indicates that low-calorie, low-salt diet decreases plasma fibrinogen levels and improves whole blood filterability in elderly obese women with hypertension.
...
PMID:Effect of diet and weight loss on whole blood filterability and plasma fibrinogen values in hypertensive obese postmenopausal women. 262 50

It is clear that the control of plasma fibrinogen levels is complex, involving not only many environmental factors such as alcohol intake, smoking habit, age, obesity and the acute phase response, but also genetic factors as shown by the association of the Bcl I RFLP of the beta-fibrinogen gene with plasma fibrinogen levels. The advent of recombinant DNA technology has made the dissection of the different factors controlling plasma fibrinogen levels a valid proposition, and great progress is already being made. The goals of this research are twofold. First, it may be possible to develop DNA tests to identify individuals who, on the basis of their genotype, are at high risk of ischaemic heart disease. Once identified, the subsequent risk of these individuals can be reduced by modifying life-style or by drug therapy to reduce other known risk factors such as cholesterol levels. Second, once the mechanisms controlling fibrinogen concentration are better understood at the molecular level, it may be possible to develop directed therapeutic strategies that will reduce fibrinogen synthesis in a specific manner, an approach that is not possible at present. In the future, such pharmacological agents may have as wide an impact on reducing ischaemic heart disease as cholesterol-lowering drugs do today.
...
PMID:Control of plasma fibrinogen levels. 268 60

The fibrinogen and orosomucoid levels in plasma were studied in 249 patients within 24 h after admission to the coronary care unit because of suspected unstable coronary artery disease (CAD), i.e. unstable angina pectoris or non-Q-wave myocardial infarction (MI). Of these patients, 127 were considered to have unstable CAD either because of symptoms and signs of coronary insufficiency at a pre-discharge exercise test (n = 66) or because of the development of a probable or definite non-Q-wave MI (n = 61). The other chest pain patients without objective signs of myocardial ischaemia constituted the control group. A diagnosis of unstable CAD, and the occurrence of obesity or current smoking contributed independently to elevated fibrinogen and orosomucoid levels. In patients with non-Q-wave MI both the fibrinogen and orosomucoid levels were high regardless of obesity and smoking, indicating myocardial necrosis as a prominent cause for the elevation of these acute phase reactants. Obesity and smoking seemed to influence the metabolism of fibrinogen and orosomucoid and change their basal level and/or exaggerate their response to inflammatory stimuli. The increased fibrinogen level in unstable CAD might reflect a hypercoagulable state that contributes toward a progression of coronary lesions.
...
PMID:Plasma fibrinogen in unstable coronary artery disease. 272 17

Recent studies suggest that cardiovascular disease is associated with abdominal distribution of adipose tissue rather than obesity in terms of total body fat. A number of other variables, known to be associated with obesity, were therefore examined in a cohort of randomly selected middle-aged men in relation to abdominal distribution of adipose tissue, measured as the ratio of the circumferences of the waist and hips (WHR), as well as to degree of obesity, measured as body mass index (BMI). These variables included anthropometric variables, cardiovascular risk factors as well as socioeconomic factors and physical health. Increased WHR, independent of BMI, was negatively associated with height, and hip circumference. Positive associations were found with blood pressure, cholesterol, triglycerides, fibrinogen and smoking. In addition positive associations were found with low social class and social group, illness in terms of sick leave, frequent use of health facilities such as X-rays, as well as diseases such as peptic ulcer. In sharp contrast to this, BMI, independent of WHR, was not associated with physical health variables or social class. Generalized obesity seemed to be associated with good health in the variables measured. There were positive associations to various anthropometric variables, including lean body mass. High BMI was also associated with elevated blood pressure and triglycerides. Several of the indicators of poor health traditionally associated with obesity thus do not seem to be characteristic for obesity in middle-aged men selected at random from the population but rather for an abdominal fat distribution, independent of obesity.
...
PMID:Obesity, adipose tissue distribution and health in men--the study of men born in 1913. 278 65

Due to the recent knowledge that the distribution of fat deposits would be a better predictor of cardiovascular disease than the degree of obesity, some risk factors for atherosclerosis were evaluated in middle age type II male diabetics and in obese subjects with and without glucose intolerance. In non-insulin dependent diabetes, abdominal adiposity reflected by the waist/hip-circumference (WHR) was related to parameters of metabolic control, lipid parameters, blood rheology, insulin status, hypertension and known vascular complications in three different groups. In the groups with abdominal obesity, the mean annual HbA1 is significantly (p less than 0.01) higher than the group without an abdominal fat mass distribution. Atherogenic index is significantly increased in the group with the highest WHR. HDL-cholesterol levels are significantly decreased in both groups with upper body fat distribution. A highly significant (p less than 0.001) correlation was present between WHR and HDL-cholesterol and WHR and total/HDL-cholesterol ratio; this significant correlation remains after correction for body mass index. Whole blood and plasma viscosity and fibrinogen levels are significantly (p less than 0.05) increased in diabetics with upper body fat accumulation and could be compared to patients with proven coronary ischemic heart disease. The frequency of peripheral vascular disease, coronary ischemic heart disease and hypertension is most prominent in diabetics with an abdominal fat mass distribution. Systolic blood pressure even seems to be increased in non-obese diabetics with the highest WHR. A correlation could be found between WHR and both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. When corrected for body mass index the same significant correlation between WHR and blood pressure remained. Both fasting and postprandial insulin and C-peptide values may be the link between abdominal fat deposits and all metabolic disturbances. These results confirm the negative effect of an excess of abdominally located fat cells, even without manifest obesity, on diabetes metabolic control, lipid fractions, hypertension, insulin behaviour, blood rheology and cardiovascular complications. In obese patients with upper body fat accumulation a higher prevalence of glucose intolerance and diabetes is present, in contrast to their counterparts with lower body fat deposit. Both fasting glycemia, insulin and insulin area are significantly (p less than 0.005) increased in the group with the greatest WHR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Body fat mass distribution. Influence on metabolic and atherosclerotic parameters in non-insulin dependent diabetics and obese subjects with and without impaired glucose tolerance. Influence of weight reduction. 280 Jun 85

Genetic and cultural heritability of plasma fibrinogen concentration was estimated by path analysis with environmental indices in 85 families identified by means of probands with early myocardial infarction and in 85 families randomly selected from the general population. A substantial proportion of the variance of the plasma fibrinogen level, 51%, was accounted for by genetic heritability, whereas the cultural heritability was negligible. No intergenerational differences were indicated in genetic or cultural heritability. The combined effect of obesity and smoking was found to explain 3% of the variance of the plasma fibrinogen level. The demonstration of such substantial genetic control further supports the view that plasma fibrinogen is a primary risk factor for CHD rather than a reflection of the severity of manifest disease.
...
PMID:Genetic and cultural inheritance of plasma fibrinogen concentration. 288 59

Seventy-three (58 men and 15 women) survivors of myocardial infarction below 45 years of age and 73 healthy matched controls were investigated regarding in vitro platelet aggregability to ADP and collagen, platelet sensitivity to prostacyclin and plasma levels of beta-thromboglobulin, platelet factor 4 and fibrinogen. The patients, studied 3-6 months after the acute event, had a reduced platelet sensitivity to prostacyclin. They did not differ from the controls regarding the other platelet function tests. Females had higher platelet reactivity than men. Smoking, obesity or beta-blocker treatment did not influence platelet function. The patients had higher fibrinogen levels than the controls. Gender did not influence, while smoking and obesity increased plasma fibrinogen. Patients on beta-blockade had lower fibrinogen levels than patients without this therapy. The high fibrinogen level and the low platelet sensitivity to prostacyclin might indicate an increased thrombotic liability in young myocardial infarction patients.
...
PMID:Platelet function and plasma fibrinogen and their relations to gender, smoking habits, obesity and beta-blocker treatment in young survivors of myocardial infarction. 290 76

We investigated the prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis and its association with serum lipoprotein cholesterol fractions in 412 Eastern Finnish men ages 42, 48, 54, or 60 years who were examined between February and December 1987 in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Carotid atherosclerosis was assessed with high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography. Of the participants, 37% had thickening of the intimal or medial layer of the arterial wall, 10% had plaques, 2% had stenosis in the right or left common carotid artery or in the carotid bifurcation, and only 51% were free of any detectable carotid atherosclerosis. The prevalence of atherosclerosis was 14.1%, 32.0%, 67.7%, and 81.9% in the four age groups, respectively. The mean age-adjusted serum low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentration was 3.67 mmol/l (142 mg/dl) in men free of carotid atherosclerosis and 4.02 mmol/l (155 mg/dl) in those with at least intimal thickening (p = 0.003 for difference). The mean age-adjusted serum cholesterol concentration in the high density lipoprotein (HDL) fraction was 1.34 mmol/l (52 mg/dl) in the atherosclerosis-free and 1.27 mmol/l (49 mg/dl) in the atherosclerotic men (p = 0.029 for difference). There was a similar difference in both the serum HDL2 and the HDL3 cholesterol levels. Serum LDL and HDL (inverse) cholesterol were significant determinants of severity of carotid atherosclerosis in a multivariate regression model adjusting for age, obesity, plasma fibrinogen, cigarette-years, and duration of hypertension. Our data reveal the high prevalence of atherosclerosis in middle-aged Eastern Finnish men and provide further evidence of the roles of LDL and HDL cholesterol in atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis and serum cholesterol levels in eastern Finland. 319 22


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>