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)

At present 3 treatment alternatives for primary varicose veins are available: surgical stripping and ligation, injection/compression sclerotherapy, and a combination of the 2. At least 4 factors contribute to the decision of whether to treat the patient: pregnancy, obesity, oral contraceptive (OC) use, and age. Since varicose veins in pregnant women may later recede, only palliative treatment is recommended before delivery. Deep vein thrombosis may develop as a result of OC use during varicose vein treatment, leading some to advise OC discontinuation. Numerous clinical trials have endeavored to examine the relative effectiveness of treatment methods currently in use. The only randomized trial to evaluate all 3 treatment options over a 3-year period found that surgical stripping was significantly more effective than a combination of ligation and sclerotherapy, and that the combination was significantly more effective than sclerotherapy alone. Surgery appears to be the recommended treatment when the saphenous system is involved; surgery is also preferred for patients 35-64 years of age and for those presenting with signs of ankle edema and flare. Sclerotherapy seems to be more effective for dilated superficial veins and incompetent perforating veins in the lower leg. In addition, sclerotherapy is the most acceptable and least expensive method for the patient. The prevalence of primary varicose veins has been estimated at 20% in Europe and North America, with a female:male ratio of 5:1.
...
PMID:Selecting a treatment for primary varicose veins. 389 Oct 60

Focus in this discussion of pulmonary embolism is on the following: risk factors (age, heredity and blood type, obesity, estrogen and oral contraceptive use/pregnancy, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and other risk factors); pathophysiology and presenting symptoms; laboratory procedures and findings (radiography, electrocardiography, lung scanning, and evaluation of lower extremity veins); treatment modalities (heparin therapy, thrombolysis, and surgery); and prevention. Pulmonary embolism may be the primary cause or a major contributory cause in as many as 200,000 deaths per year in the US. Most of these deaths occur in patients in whom the diagnosis is not suspected and, thus, not treated. The mortality rate for untreated pulmonary embolism is approximately 30%. 90% of patients survive the initial embolic event, but the correct diagnosis is made in no more than 2/3 of cases. Risk factors for the development of deep venous thrombosis are based upon the Virchow-Aschoff postulates, which include: trauma or disruption of the vein wall; stasis of blood flow in the veins; and increased coagulability of the blood. More than 85-90% of all pulmonary emboli originate from deep venous thromboses in the popliteal and femoral deep veins. Other important, although less frequent, sites of origin of venous thromboembolism include the pelvic veins, the renal and hepatic veins, the axillary veins in the upper extremities, and the right atrium. Accurate diagnosis and effective prevention and treatment depend on the clinician's awareness of risk factors for development of deep vein thrombosis. Estrogen may accelerate intimal proliferation in arteries and veins, and it may also increase permeability of venous vascular endothelium. The risk of thromboembolism increases as the dose of estrogen increases. Both pregnancy and oral contraceptive use significantly decrease venous tone and the velocity of blood flow in the calf of the leg. Appropriate treatment includes thrombolytic therapy for patients with massive pulmonary embolism, which results in hypotension or shock. Anticoagulant therapy with herapin followed by an oral anticoagulant is the primary treatment for most patients with submassive emboli in which there is less cardiovascular compromise. When thrombolytic therapy is used, it should always be followed by anticoagulant therapy. Prevention of primary or recurrent deep vein thrombosis is directed toward improving venous blood flow and reducing hypercoagulability.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism: incidence, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. 398 Feb 63

Primary deep vein thrombosis was confirmed by phlebography in 59 cases between Jan. 1981 and Jan. 1984 in the department of Cardiovascular Surgery of the Academic Hospital of the V.U.B. Brussels. Investigations conducted in all patients included blood and urine analyses, chest radiography, electrocardiogram, gynecologic or urologic examinations and abdominal and pelvic ultrasound imaging. Findings demonstrated one or more risk factors in 92% of cases, the principal ones being obesity, a history of thromboemboli and, in women, the use of oral contraceptives. Nine patients had cancer and 4 of these received combined surgery-chemotherapy. All cases of so-called primary deep vein thrombosis should be investigated routinely for risk factors, because of the need and possibilities for treatment in some of them, particularly since procedures are non-invasive, of low cost, and easily performed during initial heparin therapy.
...
PMID:[Systematic research on an etiology in apparently primary deep venous thrombosis. Apropos of 59 cases]. 404 7

A consecutive, randomly allocated, controlled clinical trial of the prophylactic effect of intermittent pneumatic compression of the calf on the incidence of postoperative deep vein thrombosis showed that in patients without malignant disease there was a highly significant reduction in the incidence of thrombosis. In patients with malignant disease the incidence of thrombosis was higher than in those without, and there was no reduction in incidence by the application of intermittent compression. In the absence of malignant disease, severity of operation and the age of the patient were the most significant aetiological factors. We found no relation between the incidence of deep venous thrombosis and obesity, length of preoperative stay, location of hospital, or duration of anaesthesia. We suggest that intermittent pneumatic compression as used in this trial is a safe, effective, and extremely practical method of preventing postoperative deep vein thrombosis in patients not suffering from malignant disease.
...
PMID:Prevention of deep vein thrombosis by intermittent pneumatic compression of calf. 500 37

An analysis was made of 111 consecutive cases of puerperal thromboembolism by the age, parity, mode of delivery, and lactation habit of the women concerned, and the findings were compared with those from control groups.The statistics show that inhibition of lactation by means of ethinyloestradiol is associated with a threefold increase in thromboembolism, although the effect is seen mainly in women who have an operative delivery and who are aged more than 25 years. Among women aged more than 35 years who have an assisted delivery, inhibition of lactation is accompanied by a tenfold increase in the incidence of puerperal thromboembolism.Advancing age and operative intervention (especially caesarean section) are in themselves predisposing causes of deep venous thrombosis and embolism. They can also constitute indications for inhibiting lactation. This makes it difficult to assess whether the relation of thromboembolism to inhibition of lactation or to the administration of oestrogen is real or apparent. Doubts on the interpretation of the findings are raised by the fact that the number of fatal cases of puerperal thromboembolism in England and Wales, and of non-fatal cases in the hospitals under review, has not increased in recent years despite a progressive decrease in breast-feeding. Nevertheless, the evidence suggests that although the administration of ethinyloestradiol is not by itself enough to cause puerperal thromboembolism, it may be a factor which can tip the scales in women who are already predisposed to suffer this condition.Any thromboembolic hazard associated with administration of oestrogens for inhibiting lactation is probably acceptable except in women known to be at special risk by reason of age, operative delivery, obesity, and a past history of thromboembolic episodes.
...
PMID:Puerperal thromboembolism in relation to the inhibition of lactation by oestrogen therapy. 567 8

Five methods for preventing deep venous thrombosis in postoperative patients were evaluated and compared with a control group. Five hundred patients from five surgical specialties were studied. The incidence of deep venous thrombosis was 37.3 percent in the control group but significantly less within all treatment groups. The minidose heparin group had the highest incidence (26.9 percent) because there were a large number of bilateral thromboses. The antistasis modalities did slightly better than the drugs; the intermittent pneumatic compression group had the fewest thromboses (11.9 percent). The significant risk factors for postoperative deep venous thrombosis are (1) obesity, (2) malignancy, (3) a history of venous disease, major surgery or major fracture, (4) length of surgery greater than 1 hour, and (5) increasing age. Four nonfatal pulmonary emboli occurred in 500 patients. Two were in women with hysterectomies in whom thrombosis had never been detected in an extremity; it is presumed that these clots arose from pelvic veins. It is thus recommended that patients in these high risk groups be treated prophylactically with one of the aforementioned modalities to decrease the risk of postoperative deep venous thrombosis. Of the different methods used to detect deep venous thrombosis, iodine-125 fibrinogen scanning was superior to both impedance plethysmography and venous Doppler ultrasound. One hundred percent of the thrombi were identified with scanning, whereas far fewer were detected with the latter methods. It is recommended that fibrinogen scanning be used clinically in patients in high risk categories who are undergoing major operative procedures.
...
PMID:Postoperative venous thrombosis. Evaluation of five methods of treatment. 616 50

This review examines the incidence, natural history, diagnosis, prophylaxis, and management of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) in neurosurgical patients. Recent studies estimate the incidence of postoperative DVT detected by fibrinogen scanning in neurosurgical patients to be 29% to 43%. Specific factors that enhance the risk of venous thromboembolism include previous DVT, surgery, immobilization, advanced age, obesity, limb weakness, heart failure, and lower extremity trauma. Clinical diagnosis of venous thromboembolism is unreliable but can be augmented by noninvasive screening tests such as iodine-125-fibrinogen scanning, Doppler ultrasonography, and impedance plethysmography. As prophylactic measures, mini-dose heparin and external pneumatic compression of the legs have decreased the incidence of DVT in clinical studies of neurosurgical patients. However, no prophylactic measure has been convincingly shown to prevent PE in neurosurgical patients. Thrombi involving the popliteal, deep femoral, and iliac veins appear most likely to cause significant PE. Anticoagulation therapy constitutes standard management of DVT and PE; however, in neurosurgical patients the potential for precipitating intracranial or intraspinal hemorrhage may necessitate vena caval interruption. This appears to be an effective alternative to anticoagulation.
...
PMID:Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary emboli in neurosurgical patients: a review. 638 85

Thromboembolic events are thought to occur with increased frequency in Cushing's syndrome due to the predisposing factors, obesity, hypertension, a raised haematocrit and major surgery plus a 'hypercoagulable state'. To examine this postulate further we have studied 43 patients with Cushing's syndrome retrospectively and 10 patients prospectively to determine the incidence of arterial and venous thrombosis, both spontaneous and post-operative. Arterial events were noted in four cases (9%) and deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) occurred in six cases (11%). Post-operative PTE occurred in 2.7% of all operations. These vascular complications tended to occur in the older patients with Cushing's syndrome. In our series, clinically significant thromboembolic episodes appear no more common than expected and the indications for prophylactic anticoagulation (the older and more obese patients) may not be different from other patients undergoing major surgery. An incidental finding was of a greater frequency of hypertension in Cushing's patients due to an adrenal adenoma.
...
PMID:Thromboembolic complications in Cushing's syndrome. 662 1

In a prospective study comparing Doppler ultrasound and contrast venography in 112 patients, we identified all false-negative and false-positive results obtained by Doppler and are reporting those errors that we believe are commonly occurring pitfalls of this technique. There were 21 false-negative and nine false-positive examinations. False-negative examinations were caused by the following factors: thrombi isolated to the veins of the calf (13 patients); nonocclusive clot involving or proximal to the popliteal vein (3); incorrect interpretation of examinations done by inexperienced personnel (2); acute thrombosis masked by changes of severe chronic disease (1); misinterpretation of increased saphenous flow in the presence of an occluded superficial femoral vein (1); and bilateral clot with one leg having significantly more evidence of venous obstruction than the other (1). Factors in the nine false-positive examinations were chronic disease interpreted as acute thrombosis (3), interpretation of weak signals in the calf as thrombosis (3), weak signals due to obesity (2), and excess Doppler probe pressure distorting venous flow (1). We conclude that results of the Doppler examination should be questioned when there is a suspicion of thrombus in the deep veins of the calf, the question of a nonocclusive thrombus, or the presence of chronic venous changes related to previous deep venous thrombosis.
...
PMID:Pitfalls of the Doppler examination for venous thrombosis. 685 72

The development of postoperative deep vein thrombosis (DVT) was determined in 50 South Indian patients aged 50 years or more using the 125I-fibrinogen uptake technique. The overall incidence was 28 per cent. In patients with malignancy the incidence was 47.6 per cent. Predisposing factors such as varicose veins, oral contraceptives and obesity did not appear important. A retrospective analysis of post-mortem examinations performed on 432 patients dying after operation showed major pulmonary embolism to have occurred in only 1.9 per cent. The disproportion between the frequent occurrence of postoperative DVT and the infrequence of fatal pulmonary embolism warrants further study.
...
PMID:Incidence of postoperative venous thromboembolism in South India. 742 43


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