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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seven prospective, epidemiological studies indicate plasma fibrinogen levels (over 300-350 mg/dl) as an important, independent cardiovascular risk factor for subsequent myocardial infarction and stroke. Furthermore, several clinical studies revealed an association between fibrinogen and both the angiographic and clinical degree of coronary heart disease. In addition, a significant relation of fibrinogen with the number of occluded coronary vessels was found. The following pathophysiologic mechanism are of particular importance: Fibrinogen is a main determinant of plasma viscosity and red cell aggregation. Both phenomena deteriorate blood fluidity especially in the microcirculation. Fibrinogen plays a central role in platelet aggregation and performs an essential substrate in the coagulation cascade. Thus, high fibrinogen levels may favor a hypercoagulable state resulting in final thrombotic events of cardiovascular disease. Fibrinogen is also involved in atherogenesis by stimulating proliferation and migration of smooth muscle cells. Several determinants of fibrinogen levels are known. Smoking is the strongest one in healthy persons. This clinically important effect is dose related. Consequently, cessation of smoking is a major step to lower fibrinogen and subsequently the individual cardiovascular risk. Reduction of overweight and maintenance of regular physical activity are further nonpharmacologic means. Fibrates decrease fibrinogen about 10-30% on an average. Finally, intermittent low-dose Urokinase for end-stages of coronary artery disease and LDL-apheresis (HELP) represent additional approaches to reduce fibrinogen.
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PMID:[Clinical significance of the cardiovascular risk factor fibrinogen in secondary prevention]. 776 17

A cross-sectional study of 1385 Saudi females attending 15 health centres in urban and rural areas in the Riyadh region was conducted during September and October 1992 to determine the prevalence of obesity and its associated factors. The mean age was 32.2 +/- 11.7 years and body mass index (BMI) 29.2 +/- 7.0 kg m-2. Only 26.1% of subjects were their ideal weight (BMI < 25 kg m-2), while 26.8% were overweight (BMI 25-29.9 kg m-2), 41.9% were moderately obese (BMI 30-40 kg m-2) and 5.1% were morbidly obese (BMI > 40 kg m-2). High-risk groups for obesity were mostly middle aged, multiparous housewives. Patients living in rural areas had greater BMIs than those living in urban areas (P < 0.01). Thirty per cent of overweight participants did not think they were overweight. The study emphasizes the need for community based programmes for preventing and reducing obesity since weight control is effective in ameliorating most of the disorders associated with obesity such as Type 2 non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, heart disease, sleep apnoea syndrome and osteoarthritis of the knees. The focus of efforts should be directed towards young mothers who are at risk of developing obesity and who play a central role in perpetuating it in their offspring.
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PMID:High prevalence of clinical obesity among Saudi females: a prospective, cross-sectional study in the Riyadh region. 800 60

In order to identify previously undiagnosed cases of non-insulin dependent diabetes (NIDDM) in general practice, we measured non-fasting blood-glucose in all risk patients (n = 1,790) between 35-69 years old belonging to 29 general practices in Kolding. Patients at risk for NIDDM were defined as those suffering from one or more of the following: overweight, arterial hypertension, coronary heart disease, hyperlipidaemia, stroke, gout, cataract, Dupuytren's contracture, peripheral atherosclerosis or recurrent urinary- or skin-infections. A positive result, defined as a non-fasting blood-glucose of > or = 8.0 mmol/l using the same stix-lot-nr. on Refloflux S machines, was found in 86 individuals. These were then followed up with two fasting blood-glucose measurements carried out in a central laboratory, whereby 34 patients with NIDDM were identified. The newly-diagnosed NIDDM patients mostly suffered from diseases related to the insulin resistance syndrome, and we thus recommend measurement of non-fasting blood-glucose as a screening procedure in such patients. When carrying out measurements in general practice, it is important to know the precision and accuracy of the apparatus used.
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PMID:[Selective screening for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. A study among 35-69 year-old patients at risk in general practice in Kolding]. 801 51

This study evaluated the relationship between adiposity, left ventricular mass and geometry, and haemodynamic parameters at rest and during laboratory stressors in a sample of 69 normotensive children with positive family histories of essential hypertension. Children were classified as overweight if they were above the 85th percentile of weight-for-height for their age and gender compared to national normative data. Nineteen children (7 whites, 12 blacks) were classified as overweight and the remaining 50 (26 whites, 24 blacks) were not overweight. Overweight children were found to have higher resting systolic and diastolic blood pressures, heart rates (HR), cardiac output (CO) and stroke volumes (SV), and lower resting total peripheral resistance than the non-overweight children. No differences were noted in haemodynamic reactivity to the stressors. Echocardiographic findings indicated that the overweight children had greater left ventricular mass indexed by height2.7, interventricular septal thickness and left ventricular end diastolic diameter (LVEDD) compared to non-overweight children. These findings are the first to indicate that the higher resting pressures of overweight normotensive children are a reflection of increased normotensive children are a reflection of increased preload (i.e. greater HR, SV, CO, LVEDD). These findings point out the early deleterious effects of obesity on the cardiovascular system in the young and highlight the need for effective obesity prevention and intervention programmes.
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PMID:The effect of adiposity on children's left ventricular mass and geometry and haemodynamic responses to stress. 814 25

During the first year the Austrian Stroke Prevention Study enrolled 599 volunteers without clinical signs or symptoms of cerebrovascular disease aged 50 to 70 years. Study participants were randomly selected from the official register of the city of Graz. The rate of positive response was 26.9 percent. All subjects underwent an extensive risk factor screening with Duplex scanning of the carotid arteries obtained from a subset of 176 individuals. The prevalence of well-documented cerebrovascular risk factors was 40.6% for arterial hypertension, 35.4% for cardiac disease, 8.5% for diabetes mellitus und 3% for elevated haematocrit. The less well-documented cerebrovascular risk factors dyslipidemia, overweight, physical inactivity, hyperfibrinogenemia and smoking were noted in 75%, 33.7%, 27.2%, 14.9% and 12.2% of subjects, respectively. Multiple well-documented risk factors were noted in 23.7% of the examined volunteers. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed body mass index (p < 0.0001) and age (p < 0.0001) as independent predictors of the frequency of well-documented risk factors observed in any individual. Atherosclerotic carotid disease occurred in 61.9% of study participants investigated by Doppler sonography and was significantly associated with age (p < 0.00001), life-time tobacco consumption (p < 0.0001) and the concentration of apolipoprotein B (p < 0.05). This study demonstrates high prevalence rates of vascular risk factors in an elderly Austrian community. Implications for stroke prevention result from the conjunction of overweight and frequency of risk factors noted in any study participant, as well as from the relationship of carotid atherosclerosis to smoking and dyslipidemia.
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PMID:Cerebrovascular risk factors in an elderly Austrian population: first year results of the Austrian Stroke Prevention Study (ASPS). 836 75

It is examined to which extent social inequalities exist in West-Germany (old federal states) regarding myocardial infarction and stroke in the general population. Databases were the regional and national health surveys which were conducted in the framework of the German Cardiovascular Prevention Study (GCP) from 1984 to 1991. 12.445 males and 13,335 females aged 40-69 years were included in this analysis. The assessment of myocardial infarction and stroke was done by a self administered questionnaire. 648 (5.2%) males and 252 (1.9%) females reported a myocardial infarction. 209 (1.7%) males and 143 (1.1%) females reported a stroke. Social class was measured using an additive index comprising the dimensions income, occupational status and education. For both genders it was found that the prevalence of myocardial infarction and stroke increased significantly with decreasing social class. This association remained significant also under control for age and the cardiovascular disease risk factors cigarette smoking, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia and overweight. The results clearly demonstrate that in West-Germany--as was shown already for many other western industrialized nations--social factors independently from the classical risk factors have a significant effect on the incidence of myocardial infarction and stroke.
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PMID:[Social inequality in myocardial infarct and stroke in West Germany]. 837 89

The disputed relation between recent alcohol consumption and stroke was examined in a community case control study. One hundred and twenty five incident first time stroke patients and 198 controls, aged 35 to 74 years, were recruited over two years from a general practice population. The age and sex adjusted relative risks for stroke by recent weekly "drinks" of alcohol were; 0-1.0 (reference), 1 to 14-0.57, 15 to 29-0.63, and > 29-0.99. Among the controls it was noted that non-drinkers were more likely than light/moderate drinkers (1 to 29 drinks per week) to have the following characteristics; history of obesity (p < 0.001), not a recent walker (p < 0.05), and no vigorous exercise in early adulthood (p < 0.01). The apparent association of light and moderate alcohol consumption with decreased stroke risk disappeared when these variables were included in the multiple risk factor adjusted analysis; 0-1.0, 1 to 14-0.88, 15 to 29-1.11, and > 29-1.23. The pattern for proved cerebral infarction (n = 81) was similar. The results of this study do not support the idea that recent heavy alcohol consumption is an important cause of either overall stroke or cerebral infarction. The association of non-drinking with a history of overweight and inactivity may explain the apparent protective effect of lighter alcohol consumption on the risks of both stroke and coronary heart disease.
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PMID:The relation of alcohol consumption to cardiovascular risk factors and stroke. The west Birmingham stroke project. 850 34

At the 1995 status review of the Healthy People 2000 nutrition objectives, progress was reported in several areas. These include dietary fat consumption, calcium intake, use of nutrition label information, incidence of coronary and stroke mortalities and blood pressure and cholesterol levels. However, a lack of progress was reported in the incidence of overweight in both men and women. Physicians can help their older patients achieve better health by providing assessments for under- or over-nutrition and education in age-appropriate dietary practices.
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PMID:Healthy People 2000: what progress toward better nutrition? 862 77

Malnutrition in hospital is often unrecognized. A nutrition team aims to teach simple methods of detecting malnutrition. On a single day all medical in-patients underwent a nutritional assessment. Eighty-four patients (43 men), median age 71 years (range 28-97), were assessed. The most common diagnoses were cardiac disease (26), stroke/dementia (12), non-malignant lung disease (9) and malignancy (6). A weight loss of more than 10% (%WL) was found in 17/65 (26%) and a body mass index (BMI) of less than 19 kg/m2 in 13/69 (19%). A mid-arm muscle circumference (MAMC) less than the fifth percentile occurred in 16/83 (19%) patients. Percentage weight loss alone detected seven patients of whom four were overweight (BMI > 25 kg/m2), BMI alone detected three patients, and MAMC alone eight patients of whom three could not be weighed and three had fluid retention. There was fluid retention in 35/84 (42%) patients of whom nine were malnourished (six detected by BMI and/or %WL, and three by MAMC alone). All three measurements were made in 64 patients, six (9%) of whom were detected as malnourished by all three methods. Combining the three measurements 29/84 (35%) of patients were malnourished and only 28% of these patients had been assessed by a dietitian. BMI and %WL detect most patients but fluid retention may limit their accuracy. MAMC is useful in those who cannot be weighed or who have fluid retention.
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PMID:Three simple methods of detecting malnutrition on medical wards. 868 18

Stroke (cerebrovascular accident, CVA) is the third leading cause of death and an important cause of hospital admission and long-term disability in England and Wales. Atherosclerotic lesions at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery are the most common cause of stroke. On occasion, these lesions are partially calcified and visible on a conventional panoramic dental radiograph. The atheroma may appear either as a nodular radiopaque mass or as two radiopaque vertical lines within the soft tissues of the neck at the level of the lower margin of the third cervical vertebra (C3). These opacities are separate and distinct from the hyoid bone and variably appear above or below it. Dentists should scrupulously review the panoramic radiographs of all individuals over the age 55 with medical histories (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolaemia, coronary artery disease) and behaviours (smoking, alcohol abuse, dietary indiscretion, overweight, sedentary life-style) known to be associated with atherosclerosis and stroke.
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PMID:Panoramic dental radiography: an aid in detecting individuals prone to stroke. 875 17


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