Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (emphysema)
11,506 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In May of 1990, Secretary of Health and Human Services, Louis Sullivan, MD introduced model state legislation to restrict tobacco sales to minors. Without definitive actions, such as those suggested here and by Dr. Sullivan, tobacco use among Colorado's youth will continue to have almost unrestricted access to cigarettes and other tobacco products and our population will continue to suffer the harmful effects of tobacco well into the next century. If we act now to curb sales to minors, we will soon reap the benefits of our actions through reduced morbidity and mortality rates from cardiovascular disease, lung and other cancers, emphysema, other obstructive airways diseases and fires. Imagine an entire generation free of tobacco disease injury and death.
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PMID:Cigarette sales to minors in Colorado. 239 78

Abundant evidence suggests that activation of B lymphocytes and formation of immune complexes play important roles in the pathogenesis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. We investigated the level of B lymphocyte activation in patients with idiopathic UIP (n = 10, all were biopsy proven cases), for the purpose of evaluating its role. In order to determine the level of B lymphocyte activation, the number of spontaneous immunoglobulin secreting cells in blood was counted by using reverse hemolytic plaque assay. The number of IgA and IgG secreting cells significantly increased in patients with idiopathic UIP when compared with those in healthy controls (n = 8). The number of IgG secreting cells also significantly increased in patients with IP-CVD, but no significant increase in the number of Ig secreting cells could be detected in patients with pulmonary emphysema, diffuse panbronchiolitis or sarcoidosis. The study of cell surface markers revealed significant increase of CD21 (B2 and OKB7) positive cells in patients with idiopathic UIP. CD21 positive cells were immature B lymphocytes. These results suggest that increase of resting B lymphocytes and immunoglobulin secreting cells occurred and that the differentiation of B lymphocytes may be accelerated in idiopathic UIP. Furthermore, there is the possibility that soluble factors produced by T lymphocytes influenced the function of B lymphocytes in our experiment.
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PMID:[Spontaneous immunoglobulin secreting cells in idiopathic usual interstitial pneumonia]. 261 70

2 of the 5 health warnings that must now appear on American cigarette packs and cigarette advertising refer to some of the increased hazards smoking entails for the woman and her unborn child. Yet, the myriad reproductive risks associated with smoking are little known or considered by the general public--or even by physicians--when compared with the dangers of lung cancer, heart attacks and emphysema. In an attempt to remedy that deficit, 8 government agencies sponsored the 1st International Conference on Smoking and Reproductive Health, held October 15-17, 1985 in San Francisco. Speaker after expert speaker connected smoking during pregnancy with increased risks of low birth weight, miscarriage, infant mortality and morbidity--including poorer health of surviving children up to at least age 3--ectopic pregnancy, infertility, menstrual disorders, early menopause, osteoporosis, cervical cancer and dysplasia, cardiovascular disease and placental abnormalities. Similarly, the conference participants documented the association of smoking among men with lower sperm count and increased prevalence of abnormal sperm. The following measures were urged at the closing statements of the conference: 1) an increased effort to inform doctors and health professionals of these findings; 2) increasing the tax on cigarettes, so that smokers would pay for their own health costs; 3) decreasing or eliminating government subsidies for growing tobacco, while helping growers make the transition to nontobacco crops; 4) making smoking cessation programs more widely available; 5) prohibiting the sale of cigarettes through vending machines; and 6) banning all smoking in the workplace.
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PMID:Smoking and reproduction. 353 34

Epidemiologic evidence suggests that cigarette smoking is a major risk factor for chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases such as chronic bronchitis and emphysema, for carcinogenesis, and for cardiovascular disease. However, the precise mechanisms of these effects are incompletely understood. The gas phase of cigarette smoke contains abundant free radicals including nitric oxide. Hence, cigarette smoke may induce some of its damaging effects by free radical mechanisms. We report that exposure of plasma, a model for respiratory tract lining fluids, to gas-phase cigarette smoke causes depletion of antioxidants, including ascorbate, urate, ubiquinol-10, and alpha-tocopherol, and a variety of carotenoids, including beta-carotene. Gas-phase cigarette smoke induced some lipid peroxidation, as measured by cholesteryl linoleate hydroperoxide (18:2OOH) formation. Ascorbate was effective in preventing 18:2OOH formation. In contrast to the low concentrations of lipid hydroperoxides measured (< 1 mumol/L), protein carbonyl formation, a measure of protein modification, increased by approximately 400 mumol/L after nine puffs of cigarette smoke. Reduced glutathione inhibited protein carbonyl formation, whereas other plasma antioxidants, including ascorbate, were ineffective. alpha, beta-Unsaturated aldehydes (acrolein and crotonaldehyde) in cigarette smoke may react with protein -SH and -NH2 groups by a Michael addition reaction that results in a protein-bound aldehyde functional group. Gas-phase cigarette smoke is capable of converting tyrosine to 3-nitrotyrosine and dityrosine, indicating free radical mechanisms of protein damage by nitrogen oxides. Aldehydes and nitrogen oxides in cigarette smoke may be significant contributors to biomolecular damage, and endogenous antioxidants can attenuate some of these adverse effects.
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PMID:Dietary antioxidants and cigarette smoke-induced biomolecular damage: a complex interaction. 749 50

The Cardiovascular Health Study provided the opportunity to determine the association of subclinical and clinical cardiovascular disease with pulmonary function in a population sample of elderly adults. Included were 2,955 women and 2,246 men over age 64 years who were recruited for this observational study from four communities and completed extensive examinations that included spirometry, echocardiograms, and blood pressure. Current smokers, past smokers with >20 pack-years of smoking, and persons with a history of asthma, chronic bronchitis, or emphysema were excluded from this analysis, leaving 2,784 (55%) of the cohort. Systolic hypertension or coronary artery disease was associated with 40- to 100-mL decrements in FEV1, and 50- to 150-mL decrements in FVC, while a history of congestive heart failure was associated with 200 to 300 mL lower FEV1 and FVC values (p < 0.0001), after correcting for age, height, and waist size. Higher left ventricular (LV) mass was also significantly associated with a decrease in FEV1 and FVC in multivariate models. This relationship was strongest with the end-diastolic LV posterior wall thickness component of LV mass. In summary, FEV1 and FVC are reduced in elderly persons with hypertension, ischemic heart disease, higher disease, higher LV mass, and congestive heart failure, though the magnitude of these associations is relatively small unless heart failure supervenes. Substantial decrements in percent predicted FEV1 and FVC should not be attributed to the presence of uncomplicated ischemic heart disease or hypertension alone.
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PMID:Reduced vital capacity in elderly persons with hypertension, coronary heart disease, or left ventricular hypertrophy. The Cardiovascular Health Study. 781 13

One hundred and twenty-five patients with cardiovascular disease were examined by biplanar transesophageal echocardiography (BTEE), including 67 with rheumatic heart disease (7 monitored during operation), 22 with aortic diseases, 20 with congenital heart diseases, and 16 with other kinds of heart disease. The results showed that BTEE was not influenced by corpulent and pulmonary emphysema and was better than transthoracic echocardiography at imaging the interatrial septum, left atrium and left atrial appendage, thoracic aorta, and mitral artificial valve and at intraoperative monitoring. BTEE was also better than single-plane transesophageal echocardiography, because BTEE could be used to observe the heart and thoracic aorta in transverse and longitudinal planes, thus enlarging the transmission "window" as well as allowing the entire lesion to be imaged. This study suggests that BTEE will have good prospects in clinical application.
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PMID:Clinical assessment of biplanar transesophageal echocardiography--a report of 125 cases. 786 43

Spirometry was performed by 5,201 elderly participants of the Cardiovascular Health Study during their baseline examination and a subset of the ATS/DLD-78 respiratory questionnaire was administered by trained interviewers. In never smokers (46 percent of the cohort), the overall prevalence of chronic cough was 9 percent, chronic phlegm was 13 percent, attacks of wheezing with dyspnea were 8 percent, and grade 3 dyspnea on exertion was 10 percent. The prevalence of lung disease in current smokers (12 percent of the cohort) was 8/7 percent (men/women) with chronic bronchitis and 14/5 percent with emphysema. Overall, 6 percent reported asthma (a physician-confirmed history) and 12 percent reported hay fever. Using a logistic regression model, attacks of wheezing with dyspnea were strongly associated with a lower FEV1, coronary heart disease, heart failure, and a large waist size (in participants without a diagnosis of asthma, chronic bronchitis, or emphysema). Undiagnosed airways obstruction was twice as likely in women and those with lower income, and was associated with current and former smoking, pack-years of smoking, and chronic cough. Dyspnea on exertion (DOE) was three times or more likely if a participant reported heart failure, coronary heart disease, or emphysema; and much more likely if their FEV1 or FVC was substantially reduced. Dyspnea on exertion was also positively associated with older age, chronic bronchitis or asthma, a larger waist or hip size, pack-years of smoking, and less education. We conclude that DOE and attacks of wheezing with dyspnea are commonly associated with cardiovascular disease and a low FEV1 in those over 65 years and that airways obstruction frequently remains undiagnosed in the elderly.
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PMID:Prevalence and correlates of respiratory symptoms and disease in the elderly. Cardiovascular Health Study. 808 66

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is more prevalent in elderly than in middle-aged patients. Symptoms such as intermittent wheezing with dyspnea may then be due to either CVD or asthma. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence and correlates of asthma in the elderly and their associations with CVD and CVD risk factors. A community sample of 5201 elderly persons from the Cardiovascular Health Study was asked if they had a physician diagnosis of asthma, and multiple cardiovascular risk and disease variables were measured. Six percent of the participants (309) recalled a history of asthma, and half of these were never smokers. Thirty percent of those with asthma were currently taking a bronchodilator, 14% inhaled steroids, and 10% oral prednisone. Men and women with asthma who were cigarette smokers were more likely to report a concurrent diagnosis of congestive heart failure than smokers without asthma (p = .04). However, when we determined the independent CVD correlates of asthma in this cohort, controlling for smoking status, age, gender, and diagnoses of chronic bronchitis and emphysema, only higher levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) and higher plasma fibrinogen levels were significantly associated with asthma. It was concluded that asthma is as prevalent in the elderly as in middle-aged persons and is associated with higher HDL-C and higher fibrinogen levels, but not with prevalent cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Asthma and its association with cardiovascular disease in the elderly. The Cardiovascular Health Study Research Group. 862 70

The aim of this study was to determine whether latent viral infection is associated with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), an interstitial lung disease whose aetiology remains to be elucidated. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) immunoglobulin G (IgG) and complement fixation (CF), Epstein-Barr (EB) viral capsid antigen (VCA) IgG, herpes simplex virus (HSV) IgG, adenovirus CF, and parainfluenza 3 virus haemagglutinin inhibition (HI) titres were measured in the serum from patients with pulmonary diseases. The study included five subject groups: 35 normal controls (aged (mean +/- SD) 38 +/- 17 yrs); 43 IPF (63 +/- 10 yrs), seven collagen vascular disease-related interstitial pneumonitis (CVD-IP) (62 +/- 12 yrs); 22 sarcoidosis (36 +/- 14 yrs); and 17 emphysema (66 +/- 11 yrs). Levels of CMV IgG in IPF (87.6 +/- 51.7) and CVD-IP (101.2 +/- 69.9) were significantly elevated compared to those in the control (30.9 +/- 24.1), sarcoidosis (34.4 +/- 38.3) and emphysema groups (40.3 +/- 24.6), whereas CMV immunoglobulin M (IgM) was generally below the limit of detection. Similarly, CMV CF titres in IPF and CVD-IP were elevated compared to those in other diseases. EB VCA IgG titres in IPF, CVD-IP and emphysema and HSV IgG in IPF were also elevated. In contrast, adenovirus CF and parainfluenza 3 HI titres demonstrated no significant difference among all of the groups investigated. Increases in cytomegalovirus immunoglobulin G and complement fixation titres with negative cytomegalovirus immunoglobulin M suggest that latent cytomegalovirus infection may be more prominent in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis or collagen vascular disease-related interstitial pneumonitis. Together with the elevation of Epstein-Barr virus viral capsid antigen and herpes simplex virus immunoglobulin G in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and/or collagen vascular disease-related interstitial pneumonitis, it is rational to assume that these viruses may be implicated in the development of pulmonary fibrosis. Further study is necessary to investigate the relationship between latent viral infection and pulmonary fibrosis.
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PMID:Elevation of antibodies to cytomegalovirus and other herpes viruses in pulmonary fibrosis. 931 99

Moderate elevation of serum C-reactive protein (CRP) is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease among apparently healthy individuals, although factors that create this inflammatory response in the absence of systemic illness have not been clarified. This study aimed to: (1) evaluate associations among periodontal disease, established risk factors for elevated CRP, and CRP levels within the US population; and (2) determine whether total tooth loss is associated with reduced CRP. Data were obtained from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. A random sample of the US population was interviewed in their homes and examined at mobile examination centers. CRP was quantified from peripheral blood samples and analyzed as a continuous variable and as the prevalence of elevated CRP (> or = 10 mg/L). Some 12,949 people aged 18+ years who had periodontal examinations and an additional 1,817 edentulous people aged 18+ years were included in the analysis. Dentate people with extensive periodontal disease (> 10% of sites with periodontal pockets 4+ mm) had an increase of approximately one-third in mean CRP and a doubling in prevalence of elevated CRP compared with periodontally healthy people. Raised CRP levels among people with extensive periodontal disease persisted in multivariate analyses (P < 0.01), with established risk factors for elevated CRP (diabetes, arthritis, emphysema, smoking, and anti-inflammatory medications) and sociodemographic factors controlled for. However, CRP levels were similarly raised in edentulous people. Furthermore, the established risk factors for elevated CRP modified relationships between oral status and CRP levels. Periodontal disease and edentulism were associated with systemic inflammatory response in the US population, most notably among people who had no established risk factors for elevated CRP.
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PMID:Acute-phase inflammatory response to periodontal disease in the US population. 1069 Jun 60


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