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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-eight men who suffered acute transmural myocardial infarction before age 40, and after recovery were New York Heart Association functional Class I or II, were studied by noninvasive means and by coronary angiography in order to determine whether these nonivasive studies could predict the presence of significant coronary artery disease remote from that felt to be responsible for the previous myocardial infarction. Patients were divided into two groups on the basis of the absence (Group I) or presence (Group II) of obstructive disease in a major coronary artery supplying myocardium remote from the prior myocardial infarction. There were 21 patients in Group I and 17 patients in Group II. They did not differ with respect to age, abnormalities of lipid or glucose metabolism, family history, history of hypertension or cigarette use, presence of
obesity
, or infarct localization. Ten of 17 patients in Group II had angina pectoris; only 3/21 patients in Group I had angina pectoris (p less than 0.01). All 12 patients tested in Group II had a positive maximal exercise tolerance test; only 1/17 patients tested in Group I was similarly positive (p less than 0.001). The absence of angina pectoris and the presence of a negative maximal exercise tolerance test is strong evidence against the pressure of significant
CAD
remote from that responsible for the prior myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Clinical correlates of coronary cineangiography in young males with myocardial infarction. 126 11
Known risk factors for coronary artery disease are very common in the Hopkins Lupus Cohort, in spite of the fact that the average patients age is only 38.3 years. Three or more known risk factors were found in 53% of patients. Risk factors for
CAD
were common even in patients not on a regimen of prednisone therapy during their cohort follow-up. Hypercholesterolemia increased significantly with greater average prednisone dose. Despite the frequency of risk factors, patients' awareness of the risk of
CAD
was low, with only 16.9% of patients believing they were at high risk for developing
CAD
within 5 years. In general, awareness of individual risk factors was lower in black than in white patients with SLE. Preventive practices were most commonly addressed towards hypertension. Preventive practices directed against
obesity
, hypercholesterolemia, and smoking were underutilized. Whether these known risk factors are sufficient in and of themselves to explain the high frequency of
CAD
in the cohort (8%) or whether they are "enabling" factors acting upon endothelium damaged by immune-complex disease cannot be addressed by this study. However, both further investigation of these risk factors and attention to lifestyle and pharmacologic approaches to risk factor reduction are indicated by this study.
...
PMID:Coronary artery disease risk factors in the Johns Hopkins Lupus Cohort: prevalence, recognition by patients, and preventive practices. 152 5
Despite the limitations of our study, we believe the current data support the beneficial effects of cardiac rehabilitation and exercise training in the elderly, including modest improvements in lipids,
obesity
indexes, behavioral characteristics, and quality-of-life parameters, and marked improvements in exercise capacity. In fact, elderly patients had greater improvements than younger patients in both exercise capacity and mental health after cardiac rehabilitation. These data indicate that elderly patients with
CAD
should be routinely referred to and vigorously encouraged to pursue formal outpatient cardiac rehabilitation and exercise training programs after major
CAD
events.
...
PMID:Effects of cardiac rehabilitation programs on exercise capacity, coronary risk factors, behavioral characteristics, and quality of life in a large elderly cohort. 761 Nov 56
Lipoprotein abnormalities [mainly high levels of very-low-density lipoprotein triglycerides (TG) and low levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol] increase the risk of cardiovascular disease in Type 2 diabetic patients. Moreover, only fasting TG and central
obesity
appear to independently predict mortality from
CAD
in glucose-intolerant and diabetic subjects. It is noteworthy that fasting lipid levels in these patients are often relatively unaffected, and that plasma TG may remain < 2 g/l, the cutoff point currently considered to define moderate hypertriglyceridemia. Our study of postprandial lipaemia shows that lipid intolerance (a greater increase of postprandial TG and a slower return towards basal levels) was almost always present in these patients, enabling us to detect atherogenic changes in plasma lipoproteins. Preliminary results indicate that fenofibrate treatment in Type 2 diabetes under optimised metabolic control improves not only fasting lipid levels but also postprandial lipaemia and associated abnormalities in lipoprotein levels and composition.
...
PMID:Postprandial lipoprotein clearance in type 2 diabetes: fenofibrate effects. 762 71
The prevalence of coronary artery (
CAD
) disease in the Indian urban population is comparable to British population. Dietary intakes, antioxidant vitamins, prevalence of risk factors and
CAD
, were studied in a random sample of 152 adult urban subjects between 26-65 years of age (80 males, 72 females) from Peerzada street, Moradabad and compared with Indian immigrants to U.K. and a British comparison group. There was no significant relation with vitamin A. Smoking and diabetes were the confounding factors. Plasma antioxidant vitamin C (21.6 +/- 3.3 vs 42.5 +/- 4.5 mumol/L), vitamin E (15.2 +/- 2.8 vs 21.4 +/- 3.2 mumol/L) and beta-carotene (0.33 +/- 0.6 vs 0.55 +/- 0.08 mumol/L) were significantly lowered and lipid peroxides higher (2.82 +/- 0.22 vs 1.3 +/- 0.20 nmol/ml) in patients with
CAD
compared to subjects without any risk factors. The relation between low plasma level of vitamin C and E levels and carotene remained independently and inversely related after adjustment for smoking, diabetes and other risk factors. Regression analysis showed that after adjustment. Odd's ratio for carotene (1.82, 95% C.I. 0.50 to 3.72), vitamin C (2.23, 95% C.I. 1.14 to 5.26) and vitamin E (2.35, 95% C.I. 1.29 to 5.30) were significantly related to
CAD
. Underlying these changes, dietary intake of vitamin A, E, C and beta-carotene was significantly less in patients with
CAD
. Vitamin C and beta-carotene intake were less in smokers and diabetes. Compared with British population, the Indian urbans consumed less total and saturated fat and cholesterol and more polyunsaturated fat and complex carbohydrates. The plasma total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol levels were less in Indian urbans compared to Britons and so were mean body weight, body mass index and waist-hip ratio. Plasma insulin levels were comparable. The fatty acid composition of the diet, blood lipids, central
obesity
and insulin levels do not appear to account for high rates of
CAD
among Indians. The findings suggest that urban population in India may benefit from eating diets rich in antioxidant vitamin C, E and beta-carotene.
...
PMID:Diet, antioxidant vitamins, oxidative stress and risk of coronary artery disease: the Peerzada Prospective Study. 783 64
Post-prandial lipaemia represents the state of absorption during which TG metabolic capacity is under challenge. Low TG metabolic capacity imparts the risk of development of atherosclerosis. TG-intolerance has been shown to be an independent risk factor for
CAD
and impaired TG metabolic capacity could underlie a common high risk lipoprotein constellation of low HDL cholesterol and small sized HDL and LDL. Magnitude and duration of post-prandial lipaemia determine how much cholesterol is diverted from LDL and HDL into TG-rich lipoproteins through which it causes atherosclerosis. Potential means of intervention are improvement of TG metabolic capacity by reducing
obesity
, prescription of aerobic exercise, reduction of oxidizability of post-prandial lipoproteins by antioxidants and TG-lowering drugs.
...
PMID:Post-prandial lipaemia. 859 21
Mutation frequencies in the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene were measured in 83
CAD
patients and 107 controls (all Japanese nationals) and the mutation incidence in the two groups was compared. The relationship between characteristics of lipid and glucose metabolism and presence or absence of the mutation was examined in
CAD
patients. The frequency of this mutant allele in
CAD
patients was significantly higher than that of controls. The presence of this mutation was significantly associated with higher body mass index, but not with other plasma lipid and glucose levels in
CAD
patients. This mutation was associated with coronary heart disease and
obesity
but was not with glucose and lipid metabolism disorders in Japanese nationals.
...
PMID:Association of a genetic variation in the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene with coronary heart disease among Japanese. 912 44
There are contrasting data about the relationship between
obesity
and macrovascular complications in type 2 diabetes mellitus, and it is not known if risk factors for coronary artery disease are different in normal weight and overweight or obese patients. All 2113 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus referring to the Diabetic Clinic of Asti were studied. Patients were divided into tertiles of body mass index, according to their sex (BMI < 26.9; >/= 26.9 and < 31.4; >/= 31.4 kg/m(2) for females and BMI < 25.7; >/= 25.7 and < 28.8; >/= 28.8 kg/m(2) for males). Age, BMI, duration of diabetes, blood pressure, HbA(1c) total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, and prevalence of insulin treatment and hypertension were higher in females, whereas exercise, alcohol intake, smoking habits and prevalence of dyslipidemia were higher in males. An increase in BMI was associated with an increase in HbA(1c), number of cigarettes/day, blood pressure, triglycerides, C-peptide, prevalence of hypertension and dyslipidemia, and with a decrease in age, duration of diabetes and HDL-cholesterol values. In spite of an apparently worse cardiovascular risk profile, females showed a 50% lower prevalence of
CAD
than males and the prevalence of
CAD
was not significantly different in obese compared to other BMI categories. Multiple logistic regression showed that risk factors for
CAD
were different in males and females and similar in the lower tertiles of BMI, while different in the highest. In obese females, risk factors for
CAD
were age, reduced HDL-cholesterol and increased HbA(1c) levels; in males they were years of smoking and duration of diabetes. These data suggest that in type 2 diabetes, risk factors for
CAD
are different in the two sexes and in patients with the highest BMI compared to the normal and overweight subjects; blood glucose control and duration of diabetes seem more important than conventional cardiovascular risk factors in obese patients.
...
PMID:Sex- and BMI-related differences in risk factors for coronary artery disease in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1066 19
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: The purpose of this study is to describe the prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) and provide a review of the risk factors associated with
CAD
in Asian Indians. SEARCH METHODS USED: The authors extensively reviewed numerous British and international studies and the more limited number of studies in India and the US. SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT FINDINGS: Asian Indians have one of the highest rates of
CAD
. Conventional risk factors such as high blood pressure, high serum total cholesterol level, cigarette smoking, high fat diet, and
obesity
consistently fail to fully explain these high rates. There appears to be a strong role of insulin resistance and abdominal obesity, both of which have a high prevalence in Asian Indians. Various dyslipidemic disorders in Asian Indians such as low levels of HDL cholesterol, elevation of triglyceride, elevation of LDL cholesterol and elevation of lipoprotein (a) may also have a role. CONCLUSIONS: We hypothesize that against a background of higher susceptibility to
CAD
among Asian Indians, as characterized by insulin resistance, abdominal obesity and dyslipidemic disorders, conventional risk factors for
CAD
are also important. A genetic predisposition to
CAD
is suggested by high levels of lipoprotein (a) in Asian Indians. This would suggest that more aggressive identification and modulation of all known risk factors are necessary among Asian Indians along with a compelling need for further epidemiological studies in this population. RELEVANCE TO ASIAN PACIFIC ISLANDER AMERICAN POPULATIONS: The marked differences in the rates of
CAD
among Asian Indians, compared with Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, other Asians and Whites are discussed. KEY WORDS: Asian Indians, coronary artery disease, epidemiology, disease prevalence, risk factors, insulin resistance, dyslipidemic disorders, triglycedide, high density lipoprotein; lipoprotein (a)
...
PMID:Coronary Artery Disease in Asian Indians: Prevalence and Risk Factors. 1156 49
As rates of diabetes mellitus and
obesity
continue to increase, physical activity continues to be a fundamental form of therapy. Exercise influences several aspects of diabetes, including blood glucose concentrations, insulin action and cardiovascular risk factors. Blood glucose concentrations reflect the balance between skeletal muscle uptake and ambient concentrations of both insulin and counterinsulin hormones. Difficulties in predicting the relative impact of these factors can result in either hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia. Despite the variable impact of exercise on blood glucose, exercise consistently improves insulin action and several cardiovascular risk factors. Beyond the acute impact of physical activity, long-term exercise behaviors have been repeatedly associated with decreased rates of type 2 diabetes. While exercise produces many benefits, it is not without risks for patients with diabetes mellitus. In addition to hyperglycemia, from increased hepatic glucose production, insufficient insulin levels can foster ketogenesis from excess concentrations of fatty acids. At the opposite end of the glucose spectrum, hypoglycemia can result from excess glucose uptake due to either increased insulin concentrations, enhanced insulin action or impaired carbohydrate absorption. To decrease the risk for hypoglycemia, insulin doses should be reduced prior to exercise, although some insulin is typically still needed. Although precise risks of exercise on existing diabetic complications have not been well studied, it seems prudent to consider the potential to worsen nephropathy or retinopathy, or to precipitate musculoskeletal injuries. There is more substantive evidence that autonomic neuropathy may predispose patients to arrhythmias. Of clear concern, increased physical activity can precipitate a cardiac event in those with underlying
CAD
. Recognizing these risks can prompt actions to minimize their impact. Positive actions that are part of exercise programs for diabetic patients emphasize SMBG, foot care and cardiovascular functional assessment. SMBG provides critical information on the impact of exercise and is recommended for all patients before, during and after exercise. More frequent monitoring (and for longer periods following exercise) is recommended for those with hypoglycemia unawareness or those performing high-intensity exercise. Preventing the sequelae of an exercise-induced severe hypoglycemic reaction can be as simple as carrying glucose tablets or gel, a diabetic identification bracelet or card, or exercising with an individual who is aware of the circumstances. In addition to blood glucose concentrations, proper foot care is critical to people with diabetes who exercise and includes considering type of shoe, type of exercise, inspection of skin surfaces and appropriate evaluation and treatment of lesions (calluses and others). Those with severe neuropathy can consider alternatives to weight-bearing exercises. Precipitation of clinical
CAD
is of great concern for all diabetic patients participating in exercise activities. Although a sufficiently sensitive and specific screening test for coronary disease has not been identified, those planning an exercise program of moderate intensity or greater should be evaluated. Initial cardiac assessment should include exercise testing as well as identifying risk for autonomic neuropathy. In addition to noting maximal heart rate and blood pressure as well as ischemic changes, exercise tolerance testing can identify anginal thresholds and patients with asymptomatic ischemia. Those without symptoms should be counseled regarding target pulse rates to avoid inducing ischemia. Ischemic changes need to be evaluated for either further diagnostic testing or pharmacological intervention. For patients with diabetes mellitus, the overall benefits of exercise are clearly significant. Clinicians and patients must work together to maximize these benefits while minimizing risks for negative consequences. Identifying and preventing potential problems beforehand can reduce adverse outcomes and promote this important approach to healthy living.
...
PMID:Exercise and diabetes. 1157 Jan 19
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