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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The prevailing concept of etiologic heterogeneity for the diabetes mellitus syndrome is one of multiple genetic factors interacting with a variety of environmental influences. Variation in expression of the disorder, particularly the need for insulin, does not correlate with known etiologic distinctions. There is much evidence for genetic heterogeneity, as well as phenotypic variation when etiology can be presumed to be identical. The vascular manifestations of diabetes include microangiopathy unique to diabetes and larger vessel disease that differs from that of normal aging only by its prematurity. There is as much evidence for heterogeneity of the vascular expression as there is for
glucose intolerance
. Approximately 25% of persons with insulin-dependent diabetes may never develop the microvascular disease. The pathogenesis of
vascular disease
in diabetes may involve a number of abnormalities of plasma, circulating cells, and vascular tissue. Were absolute control of glycemia possible, some of the contributing factors involved in vasculopathy would possibly be alleviated. In the absence of automated physiologic insulin replacement the potential deleterious effect of our current methods of treatment might be reduced by specific inhibition of excess catecholamine, growth hormone and/or glucagon responses.
...
PMID:Nature and nurture in the expression of diabetes mellitus and its vascular manifestations. 33 1
A study was directed at determining the possible relationship between contraceptive steroid-induced
glucose intolerance
and microangiopathy. Data on the individual subjects are summarized. The study examined the capillary basement membrane thickness in quadriceps muscle biopsies, which has been proven to be a reliable and sensitive indicator of diabetic microangiopathy. The numbers in the study were too small for a statistically significant conclusion to be reached. All data did, however, conform to normal distribution expectations. Results suggest that individuals on an oral contraceptive regimen have little, if any, increased risk of developing diabetic
vascular disease
.
...
PMID:Absence of capillary microangiopathy in oral contraceptive users with glucose intolerance. 61 42
Thirty-one growth-hormone-deficient dwarfs were re-examined after a period of 10 to 12 years. These subjects had initially shown
glucose intolerance
, insulinopenia and hyperlipidemia comparable to those of diabetic patients matched for age and sex, but vascular complications were not present in dwarfs. After 10 years glucose tolerance became progessively more abnormal in dwarfs than could be accounted for by expected deterioration with age, and hyperglycemia after mixed meals remained greater than in control subjects. Serum lipid and serum lipoprotein concentrations were abnormal in over one third of the dwarfs. Despite the metabolic similarity to the diabetic patients, clinical complications of diabetes were absent in dwarfs: retinopathy did not occur, and the prevalence of hypertension and arteriosclerosis was considerably lower in dwarfs than in the diabetic subjects in both study periods. The follow-up data support the hypothesis that growth hormone has at least a supportive role in the pathogenesis of
vascular disease
in the diabetic state.
...
PMID:A follow-up study of vascular disease in growth-hormone-deficient dwarfs with diabetes. 65 62
In an attempt to assess cardiac risk in non-cardiac surgery, 1001 patients over 40 years of age who underwent major operative procedures were examined preoperatively, observed through surgery, studied with at least one postoperative electrocardiogram, and followed until hospital discharge or death. Documented postoperative myocardial infarction occurred in only 18 patients; though most of these patients had some pre-existing heart disease, there were few preoperative factors which were statistically correlated with postoperative infarction. Postoperative pulmonary edema was strongly correlated with preoperative heart failure, but 21 of the 36 patients who developed pulmonary edema did not have any prior history of heart failure. Nearly all of these 21 patients were elderly, had abnormal preoperative electrocardiograms, and had intraabdominal or intrathoracic surgery. In the absence of an acute infarction, bifascicular conduction defects, with or without PR interval prolongation, never progressed to complete heart block. Spinal anesthesia protected against postoperative heart failure but not against other cardiac complication. By multivariate regression analysis, postoperative cardiac death was significantly correlated with (a) myocardial infarction in the previous 6 months; (b) third heart sound or jugular venous distention immediately preoperatively; (c) more than five premature ventricular contractions per minute documented at any time preoperatively; (d) rhythm other than sinus, or premature atrial contractions on preoperative electrocardiogram; (e) age over 70 years; (f) significant valvular aortic stenosis; (g) emergency operation; (h) a 33% or greater fall in systolic blood pressure for more than 10 minutes intraoperatively. Notably unimportant factors included smoking,
glucose intolerance
, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, peripheral atherosclerotic
vascular disease
, angina, and distant myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Cardiac risk factors and complications in non-cardiac surgery. 66 58
Adults with hypopituitarism die prematurely, and the excess mortality is from
vascular disease
. On echocardiography we have demonstrated abnormalities of myocardial diastolic function in hypopituitary adults, indicating possible early ischaemic change. Peripheral arterial disease is evident on ultrasonography. Vascular risk factors have also been examined.
Impaired glucose tolerance
and unrecognized diabetes are common in hypopituitary adults. Total cholesterol levels are elevated, particularly in hypopituitary women. The role of growth hormone (GH) deficiency in the
vascular disease
and in the vascular-risk-factor abnormalities is unknown at present. Prolonged GH therapy causes a decrease in the levels of fasting total cholesterol, without any adverse effects on glucose homeostasis. GH therapy trials in adults will clarify the role of GH in the excess vascular risk of hypopituitarism. Prolonged GH therapy will be necessary for the vascular effects to be defined.
...
PMID:Metabolic changes and vascular risk factors in hypopituitarism. 129 16
Lipase activities were measured at pH 4 and pH 8 in the placentas of rats made diabetic by streptozotocin treatment and also in the placentas of women classified as having 1)
impaired glucose tolerance
or type 2 diabetes, 2) type 1 diabetes with no associated vascular complication, and 3) type 1 diabetes with associated
vascular disease
. In both sets of experiments, the placentas were compared with normal control groups. The placental lipase activity measured at pH 8 was not significantly different in either streptozotocin-treated rats or
impaired glucose tolerance
/diabetic women as compared with controls, whereas the lipase activity measured at pH 4 increased significantly as compared with controls in both species. Furthermore, in the women there was a significant correlation between placental lipase activity at pH 4 and birth weight in
impaired glucose tolerance
/type 2 diabetes. It is suggested that the increased placental lipase activity may contribute to the increased fetal weight in human diabetic pregnancy, by contributing to the increased fat transfer across the placenta from mother to fetus.
...
PMID:The effects of diabetes on placental lipase activity in the rat and human. 180 50
Three prospective population studies on non-diabetic subjects--the Helsinki Policemen Study, the Busselton Study, and the Paris Prospective Study--have shown that high plasma insulin levels, fasting or after oral glucose load, are associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). The excess of CHD events accumulating in the highest quintiles or deciles for plasma insulin and multivariate analyses suggests that the predictive value of plasma insulin with regard to CHD risk would be independent of blood glucose levels and other major CHD risk factors. Interpretation of the results of multivariate analyses including plasma insulin is, however, complex owing to relatively strong correlations between plasma insulin and several other risk factors. Interaction of the predictive value of plasma insulin with other risk factors, such as obesity, plasma lipids and lipoproteins, and blood pressure also deserves consideration. Analyses of the follow-up data from the Paris Prospective Study have in fact shown that such interaction exists with regard to obesity, high plasma insulin levels being predictive of increased risk of CHD in obese subjects but not in lean subjects. No information is available about the possible relationship between plasma free-insulin levels and atherosclerotic
vascular disease
(ASVD) in patients with insulin-dependent type diabetes receiving insulin treatment. Information concerning the relationship of plasma insulin to ASVD in subjects with
impaired glucose tolerance
(IGT) or non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDD) is so far fragmentary but suggests that elevated plasma insulin levels would be predictive of increased risk of ASVD in NIDD and its precursor stage, IGT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hyperinsulinaemia as predictor of atherosclerotic vascular disease: epidemiological evidence. 183 87
The Paris Prospective Study is a long term investigation of the incidence of coronary heart disease in a large population of working men. The first follow-up examination involved 7,038 men, aged 43-54 years, and free from cardiovascular disease. A 0-2 h 75 g oral glucose tolerance test with measurement of plasma insulin and glucose levels was performed, and the major coronary heart disease risk factors were determined. Subjects with
impaired glucose tolerance
or diabetes at baseline (n = 943) were selected from the total population for a separate analysis of coronary heart disease mortality risk factors. After a mean follow-up of 11 years, 26 of these 943 subjects with abnormal glucose tolerance had died from coronary heart disease. In multivariate regression analysis using the Cox model, triglyceride plasma level was the only factor positively and significantly associated with death from coronary heart disease (p less than 0.006). After a mean follow-up of 15 years, 37 of the 943 had died from coronary heart disease. Significant multivariate predictors of coronary heart disease death with the Cox model were triglyceride plasma level (p less than 0.03), systolic blood pressure (p less than 0.03), and number of cigarettes per day (p less than 0.05). This epidemiological evidence of the consistency of hypertriglyceridaemia as an important predictor of CHD mortality in subjects with
impaired glucose tolerance
or diabetes suggests a possible role of dyslipidaemia in the excessive occurrence of atherosclerotic
vascular disease
in this category of subjects. It remains speculative how this dyslipidaemia can be related to arterial damage, whether by itself or as part of the insulin resistance syndrome.
...
PMID:Insulin-resistance, hypertriglyceridaemia and cardiovascular risk: the Paris Prospective Study. 193 89
The risk factors
vascular disease
, smoking, alcohol, a diet high in saturated fat and cholesterol, sedentary life style, obesity,
glucose intolerance
and diabetes, high salt intake, oral contraceptives, left ventricular disease, hyperlipidemia, hyperfibrinogenemia, and uricemia are discussed in terms of evidence for added risk to hypertensive patients. Most of these risk factors have been extensively studied as contributors to the vascular diseases of the heart, brain and peripheral circulation, but not specifically in hypertensive people. For example, there is definite evidence that women with high blood pressure are at risk for coronary heart disease, and that oral contraceptives may raise blood pressure, but there are not large studies examining the level of risk for
vascular disease
for hypertensive women who take the pill. Similarly, the vascular risks to women who smoke and use orals are known to be multiplied, but one can only assume that hypertensive women smokers who contemplate using the pill would be at even higher risk. An exception is exercise, which has been shown to be as effective as drug therapy in lowering blood pressure and other cardiac risk factors. Generally many of these risk factors interact in a logarithmic, rather than additive manner. Furthermore, these risk factors tend to occur together more frequently in the same patient with high blood pressure more than they do in the normotensive population. High blood pressure is itself an independent risk factor for
vascular disease
, in proportion to its height, for all ages and sexes, whether systolic or diastolic, labile or fixed, and the threat is further aggravated by surges in blood pressure throughout the person's daily activities. In pharmacologic management of hypertension, it is important to ensure that the drug chosen does not aggravate other risk factors, such as hyperglycemia, cardiac arrhythmias or mobilization of uric acid.
...
PMID:Management of vascular risk factors in the hypertensive patient. 214 91
Glucose tolerance and insulin secretion were studied in 56 women 6-12 years following a pregnancy complicated by gestational diabetes, and in 23 matched controls. At recall 14 women were known to have diabetes and five were again pregnant with recurrent gestational diabetes. The early development of diabetes was associated with a fasting plasma glucose greater than 6 mmol/l during pregnancy and with a high plasma glucose response to oral glucose which persisted after delivery. Obesity was predictive of non-insulin-dependent diabetes whereas those that later required insulin were not obese. At recall, seven of the remaining 37 women were found to have unrecognized diabetes, 13 had
impaired glucose tolerance
(IGT) and 17 were normal by WHO criteria using a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test. In these 37 women, fasting plasma glucose and the glucose response to oral glucose in pregnancy were not predictive of subsequent diabetes or
impaired glucose tolerance
. Obesity in pregnancy and subsequent weight gain were associated with non-insulin-dependent diabetes and
impaired glucose tolerance
at recall. Insulin deficiency was observed during the oral glucose tolerance test in the diabetics (the mean +/- SEM ratio insulin area:glucose area 4.1 +/- 1.3 diabetics, 10.7 +/- 1.8 controls, p less than 0.05), whereas in the group with
impaired glucose tolerance
insulin levels were high and in proportion to their hyperglycaemia (insulin area:glucose area 10.9 +/- 1.4 IGT, 9.4 +/- 1.4 controls). Women with normal glucose tolerance and previous gestational diabetes had significantly lower insulin responses than their controls, despite mild hyperglycaemia (insulin area:glucose area 4.0 +/- 0.7 normal glucose tolerance, 7.6 +/- 1.1 controls, p less than 0.02). Abnormalities of glucose tolerance and insulin secretion are present following a gestational diabetic pregnancy. Gestational diabetes identifies women at risk for developing diabetes and
impaired glucose tolerance
, both of which are risk factors for premature
vascular disease
.
...
PMID:Abnormalities of glucose tolerance following gestational diabetes. 229 Sep 18
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