Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0032290 (
aspiration pneumonia
)
2,291
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To elucidate the clinical significance of lipoprotein(a) [
Lp(a)
] in the elderly, 48 patients with
Lp(a)
of 35 mg/dl or more [the high
Lp(a)
group] and 97 patients with
Lp(a)
less than 20 mg/dl [the low
Lp(a)
group] were enrolled to investigate their outcome for five years. At registration, they were all examined by brain computerized tomography (CT) for cerebrovascular diseases, B-mode ultrasonography (US) for carotid lesions, ECG for myocardial ischemia, and Doppler arteriography for the ankle pressure index (API). They were followed up completely to study survival rates, cause of death, and morbidity rates of vascular events, including occurrence of stroke, myocardial infarction, and aortic aneurysm as well as progression of the stage in arteriosclerosis obliterans. The mean age of the high
Lp(a)
group was 78.1, whereas that of the low
Lp(a)
group was 76.8. Baseline clinical findings revealed no difference in age or gender between the two groups, although a previous history of stroke, abnormal CT and US findings, and low API were more frequent in the high
Lp(a)
group than in the low
Lp(a)
group. In the high
Lp(a)
group [vs. the low
Lp(a)
group], 18 patients (vs. 21 patients) died within five years, which resulted in a cumulative mortality rate of 37.5% (vs. 21.6%) and an annual mortality rate of 9.4% (vs. 4.8%). Based on log-rank analysis, the survival rate of the high
Lp(a)
group was significantly lower than that of the low
Lp(a)
group. The most common causes of death were vascular events and pneumonia, more than half of them were
aspiration pneumonia
complicated with stroke. Ten patients in the high
Lp(a)
group had vascular events (vs. 8 patients). The morbidity rate of vascular events, most of which were cerebral infarction, was higher in the high
Lp(a)
group (annual morbidity rate 5.5%) than in the low
Lp(a)
group (1.8%). These findings suggested that serum
Lp(a)
concentration, genetically determined and remaining consistent throughout life, had influenced vascular wall damage over a long time with age, therefore, a high
Lp(a)
level might promote atherothrombosis. In the elderly, therefore, high
Lp(a)
level, resulting in symptomatic vascular lesions with organ dysfunction, is a distinct and independent poor prognostic risk factor.
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of serum lipoprotein(a) concentration in the elderly with regard to vascular complications and long-term prognosis]. 1055 60