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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have retrospectively studied 814 diabetic outpatients, 407 hypertensives and 407 normotensives. The aim of the study was to investigate on possible associations between macroangiopathic complications (coronary heart disease, peripheral and cerebral arteriopathy) and well recognized risk factors for atherosclerosis. Macroangiopathy was present in 27% of males and 24% of females (p = NS), and in 32% of hypertensives and 18% of normotensives (p < 0.0001). Macroangiopathy associated, in both sexes, with age and duration of diabetes, but did not correlate, instead, with metabolic control, obesity, serum cholesterol and triglycerides. High triglyceride levels were associated strictly with arterial hypertension, in both sexes, but are more elevated in men. Risk factors for atherosclerosis seem not to be simply considered in the same way in diabetic and non diabetic populations.
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PMID:[Arterial hypertension and macroangiopathic complications in a group of diabetic out-patients]. 130 Apr 64

Risk factors for atherosclerosis are often associated with haemorheological changes. On this point, obesity (recently advocated as an independent risk factor) was not much studied and with not univocal results. We have studied 70 obese patients (BMI greater than 30) and 50 healthy subjects (BMI less than 25). Among obese 26 had no more pathologies, 29 had hypertension, 3 suffered from ischemic heart disease, 3 suffered from occlusive arteriopathy, 9 were hyperlipidemic, 10 were smokers. We determined plasma viscosity and whole blood viscosity (at haematocrit corrected to 45% too). Washed erythrocytes, poor in leucocytes and platelets and resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline, were used for study of erythrocyte viscosity and deformability. Obese patients showed raised mean blood viscosity values when compared to healthy controls (p less than 0.01); an even more significant increase (p less than 0.001) was found concerning plasma viscosity and fibrinogen. Erythrocyte viscosity and red blood cell filterability index did not show any significant difference. We found no significant correlation between viscosity values and presence of hypertension, hyperlipidemia and smoking habit among obese. In conclusion, the higher vasculopathy incidence might be caused by an increase in blood viscosity, mostly due to plasmatic component. This fact appears to be independent from the presence of atherosclerosis complications or other risk factors.
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PMID:[Hemorrheologic disorders in obese patients. Study of the viscosity of the blood, erythrocytes, plasma, fibrinogen and the erythrocyte filtration index]. 360 Nov 35

Diabetes mellitus is associated with severe and premature cardiovascular disease. The reasons for this have not been identified. It is now apparent that diabetics often have elevated circulating insulin levels compared to non-diabetics. In non-insulin dependent diabetes this is due to the associated obesity while in insulin treated diabetics exogenous insulin is responsible for hyperinsulinaemia between meals and at night. Two reports of high insulin levels in non-insulin dependent diabetics with cardiovascular disease are consistent with clinical and epidemiological studies linking hyperinsulinaemia with coronary, cerebral and peripheral arterial disease in non-diabetics. The arterial wall is an insulin sensitive tissue. Insulin promotes proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells and enhances lipid synthesis and low density lipoprotein receptor activity. Insulin also promotes experimental atherosclerosis in a number of species. The evidence linking hyperinsulinaemia to the cardiovascular complications and diabetes is suggestive but incomplete and much more information on predictive factors for arterial disease in diabetes is urgently required. Diabetes mellitus is associated with severe and premature cardiovascular disease (reviewed by Stout 1982). Ischaemic heart disease, stroke and peripheral vascular disease are all more common in diabetics, particularly diabetic women. Although there is evidence for the existance of a specific diabetic cardiomyopathy, much of the cardiovascular disease in diabetics is due to atherosclerosis and its complications. Arterial disease in diabetics in distinct from microvascular disease affecting capillaries, and does not differ morphologically or biochemically from atherosclerosis in non-diabetics. The reason for the increased incidence of atherosclerosis in diabetes has not been established. Both non-insulin dependent and insulin dependent diabetes appear to be associated with cardiovascular disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hyperinsulinaemia--a possible risk factor for cardiovascular disease in diabetes mellitus. 390 79

Seventy six children with documented Fanconi-type idiopathic infantile hypercalcaemia were studied and compared with 41 with the Williams-Beuren syndrome. Clinical comparison showed, as expected, very close similarities but also considerable differences, particularly in the severity of feeding problems and the degree of failure to thrive. The estimated incidence of idiopathic infantile hypercalcaemia alone has remained constant for the past 20 years, at approximately 18 cases per year in the United Kingdom (1 per 47 000 total live births). Long term morbidity in these children is mainly due to mental handicap and arteriopathy, but hypertension (29%), kyphoscoliosis (19%), hyperacusis (75%), and obesity (50%) may be added complications. In one child, hypercalcaemia recurred during adolescence but this seems to be excessively rare. More detailed investigation before treatment is required to discover the aetiology of hypercalcaemia in this condition.
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PMID:Idiopathic infantile hypercalcaemia--a continuing enigma. 646 28

The authors refer on 24 patients over 65 years of age suffering from obliterating arteriopathy of the lower limbs undergoing reconstructive surgery no matter the high surgical risk. These patients represent 12.3% of all vascular patients treated in five years of activity. The following risk factors are considered: 1) Heart disease; 2) Altered lipid metabolism; 3) Diabetes; 4) Arterial hypertension; 5) Hyperuricaemia; 6) Obesity; 7) Renal or hepatic insufficiency. Immediate results were excellent in 23 cases; one patient suffering from aortic barrage died of acute haemorrhagic pancreatitis. Follow-up results also remained good; only one patient had to be re-operated two years later (disobliteration of branch of prosthesis) with a happy outcome. Two other patients died because of non vascular causes. The authors do not consider age amongst risk factors and prefer the extraperitoneal approach in disobliterating operations and refer using the transperitoneal route without problems in aortobifemoral bypasses. The authors state that risk factors did not alter neither the short nor the long-term follow-up results possibly because of medical correction of associated pathological states.
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PMID:[Reconstructive surgery in high-risk arteriopathic patients]. 721 68

We studied a sample of adult population over 20 years old of Donori (totally 2049 inhabitants), a small town near Cagliari, South Sardinia, to: (1) Evaluate the prevalence of peripheral arterial occlusive disease of lower limbs (PAOD) diagnosed by standard questionnaire and US CW Doppler examination and associated risk factors in South Sardinia. (2) Compare the reliability of these two diagnostic methods. Our study included the answers to a standard anamnestic questionnaire (according to the WHO recommendations), physical examination and CW Doppler study of the lower limb arteries, the determination of the arterial systolic and diastolic pressure, ankle/arm pressure ratio, Body Mass Index, blood glucose, total and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides and fibrinogen (the hematochemical examination only on 50% of the sample). The surveyed sample was of 577 subjects (37.96% of 1520, the eligible subjects over 20 years old), 237 males and 340 females. An arteriopathy was diagnosed by means of CW Doppler in 27 subjects, 20 M and 7 F. The overall prevalence of PAOD was 4.67% of the sample (2.06% of females, 8.43% of males). Prevalence steadily increased with age, and, surprisingly, the disease was not absent in young people (2 cases within males with age < or = 40 years). Conversely only 18.5% of PAOD patients were symptomatic. The overall prevalence of associated risk factors was: diabetes 3.6%, hypercholesterolaemia 59.1%, smoking 21.3%, arterial hypertension 21.6%, obesity 17.9%, hypertriglyceridaemia 9.3%, hyperfibrinogenaemia 4.67%. Among the males a significant correlation has been found, among the values of BMI vs age and total cholesterol, age vs total cholesterol, systolic blood pressure, diastolic pressure, fibrinogenaemia. Among the females, the systolic and diastolic pressure, BMI, total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, triglycerides and fibrinogen are significantly correlated with age; BMI correlates with systolic and diastolic blood pressure, fibrinogen; a nearly significant correlation has been found between BMI and triglycerides.
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PMID:Prevalence of peripheral arterial occlusive disease and associated risk factors in a sample of southern Sardinian population. 782

Necrotizing cellulitis and fasciitis may be difficult to recognize. When skin necrosis is not obvious, the diagnosis must be suspected if there are signs of severe sepsis (accelerated heart or respiratory rates, oliguria, mental confusion.) and/or some of the following local symptoms or signs: severe spontaneous pain, indurated edema, bullae, cyanosis, skin pallor, absence of lymphangitis, skin hypoesthesia, crepitation, muscle weakness, foul smell of exudates. Many risk factors are suspected. A recent case-control study demonstrated that using ibuprofen increased the risk of cellulitis complicating chickenpox in children. Evidence is lower for other risk factors that are present with a high prevalence in most series: local lesion of skin or mucous membranes (acute or chronic disease, traumatism, surgery.), diabetes, arteriopathy, alcoholism, obesity, immunosuppression, NSAIDs. The risk of streptococcal necrotizing fasciitis is increased when in contact with patients infected by the same streptococcus.
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PMID:[Necrotizing fasciitis. Clinical criteria and risk factors]. 1131 68

One of the traits of type I and II diabetes lies in the presence of extensive rheological disorders. Rheological changes appear during infancy, mainly in type I diabetes: decreased red cell deformability, leukocyte rigidity, monocyte activation, alteration in microvessel flux (sludge) and functions. Such disorders are however sensitive to insulin and metabolic correction for a long period. Macrorheological disorders develop at the time of puberty and when lipid changes and vascular complications appear (hypertension, visceral obesity, atherosclerosis). Such changes have potent effects on diabetic arteriopathy, as shown by altered TcPO(2). Numerous medical teams are taking into account red cell aggregation measurements reflecting post-capillary flux behavior. In addition, a proposed score may be used based on fibrinogen, hematocrit, triglycerides as viscosity acting factors, and endothelial markers, Willebrand factor and VCAM-1. An increased score is an indication of suspected distal functional alteration of microvessels.
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PMID:[Are rheological markers of poor prognosis present in diabetic arteriopathies?]. 1131 17

Erectile dysfunction (ED) is 2-3 times more frequent in men with diabetes mellitus than in men without such a history and might be an early marker of endothelial dysfunction. We studied a group of 310 unselected male patients within the Clinical Center of Diabetes and Metabolic Diseases of Dolj County, with ages ranging between 20-78 years (57.43 + 0.835) and a positive history of diabetes mellitus for 1-47 years (10.09 +/- 8.715). Erectile dysfunction, quantified using SHIM (Sexual Health Inventory for Men), was present in 196 patients (63.2%); severe in 52 patients (16.8%), moderate in 42 patients (13.5%) and mild in 102 patients (32.9%). Erectile dysfunction showed a positive correlation with age after 65 years, history of diabetes of more than 10 years, obesity, stroke, arteriopathy, retinopathy, neuropathy and the smoking habit and was not correlated to the type of diabetes mellitus, history of diabetes less than 10 years, diabetes therapy, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, nephropathy, dyslipidemia and alcohol consumption. Our results plead for a holistic approach of the diabetic patient, irrespective of age, in order to detect and to treat all the risk factors, keeping in mind that the appearance of erectile dysfunction might indicate the presence of occult chronic diabetes complications.
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PMID:Erectile dysfunction in diabetes mellitus. 1552 1

The objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between alterations in the elasticity of the temporal and the renal arteries and the grade of arteriopathy, using the pulsatility index in type II diabetic patients and healthy volunteers. All individuals were divided into groups. Group A consisted of 15 patients without risk factors (hyperlipidemia, hypertension, obesity, and smoking) and had well-controlled diabetes mellitus as demonstrated by normal values of HbA1c. Group B had 20 patients with two risk factors (hyperlipidemia and hypertension) and normal HbA1c. Group C (25 patients) had four risk factors and high values of HbA1c, and group D consisted of 20 healthy individuals. All patients were examined by use of color Doppler ultrasonography. Pulsatility index values were measured in the temporal and renal arteries. Pulsatility indices of temporal arteries were higher in group C than in groups A and B, whereas for the renal arteries, no significant difference was detected between the four groups. In our study there seems to be strong correlation between increased values of pulsatility index, mainly in the temporal arteries, and grade of arteriopathy in type II diabetic patients.
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PMID:Pulsatility index of temporal and renal arteries as an early finding of arteriopathy in diabetic patients. 1571 72


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