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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To define the prevalence of large vessel disease in Ethiopian diabetic patients, the protocol of the World Health Organisation Multinational Study of
Vascular disease
in Diabetics was used in the Diabetic Clinic of Yekatit 12 Hospital, Addis Ababa: 221 of the possible 261 patients aged 35 to 54 years were examined during 6 months. One hundred seven were diagnosed diabetic 1 to 6 years before study, 74, 7 to 13 years and 40, 14 years or more before the study. Forty-two percent were taking insulin; 18% had retinopathy, 7% heavy albuminuria. Body mass index (BMI) of less than 18 kg/m2 was found in 13.6%; 6.4% of men had BMI more than 27 and 50% of women more than 25. Only 30 patients had ever smoked cigarettes. The plasma cholesterol was less than 6.72 mmol/l in 90% of the 221 patients.
Vascular disease
led to the diagnosis of diabetes in 3 patients. At study, 19.9% were hypertensive but only 5% at the time of diagnosis. Only 1 patient had had ischaemic gangrene, 1 a stroke, 4 intermittent claudication, 4
angina pectoris
and 1 a myocardial infarction. Electrocardiograms, centrally Minnesota-coded in London, were interpreted as Coronary Disease Probable in only 6 patients, and Coronary Disease Possible in 25; the other 190 tracings were normal. It is concluded that macrovascular disease is uncommon in middle-aged Ethiopian diabetic patients in Addis Ababa.
...
PMID:Macrovascular disease in middle-aged diabetic patients in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 341 58
We reviewed the recommendations and outcomes for all patients with diabetes mellitus and end-stage renal disease referred to the Medical Center Hospital of Vermont from 1971 through December 1983. During this period, we recommended transplantation in 53 of 73 patients evaluated. Thirty-two transplants were performed in 30 patients. Of the 30 patients, 10 had clinical
vascular disease
prior to transplantation, i.e., claudication, amputation, active
angina
, myocardial infarction, or stroke. Seven of the 10 had only claudication or amputation. These 10 patients showed a clear excess in graft failure and mortality. One- and 2-year graft survival was 37 and 13%; patient survival was 48 and 24%. By comparison, the 20 patients without evident
vascular disease
had 1- and 2-year graft survival rates of 83 and 75% and patient survival rates of 85% at both 1 and 2 years. The incidence of cardiovascular death in the group with
vascular disease
was 45% at 1 year and 63% at 2 years, as compared with none in the group without
vascular disease
. The high graft loss and mortality in this group after transplantation should be a major consideration when therapeutic alternatives are considered in diabetics with end-stage renal disease.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in diabetes mellitus. Influence of preexisting vascular disease on outcome. 351 20
This study was designed to compare the prevalence of obesity, high blood pressure, diabetic
vascular disease
, and risk factors in Black West Indians who had emigrated to Britain (WIB) with those in Whites in England and among diabetic Jamaicans in Jamaica. Seventy-seven consecutive WIB patients were matched for age, sex, known duration of diabetes, and type of treatment of diabetes with 74 Whites from the same diabetes clinic in England. In Jamaica, a systematic random sample (95 women, 36 men) was studied. There was no difference in age at diagnosis between WIBs and Jamaicans. Effort chest pain (possible
angina
) was less frequent in WIBs (9%) or Jamaicans (3%) than in Whites (25%). Cigarette smoking was more common in WIBs than in Whites but still low in Jamaicans. Body mass index was greatest in WIB women (85%), significantly more than in matched White (52%) or Jamaican women (45%); 40% of White men and WIB men were obese, significantly more than Jamaicans (15% obese). Systolic blood pressure was similar, but diastolic blood pressure was significantly greater in WIBs than in matched White subjects. The prevalence of casual hypertension was high (greater than 40%) in all groups, often despite treatment. Cataracts were significantly more frequent in WIB and Jamaican groups than in Whites. Total background retinopathy after correcting for duration of diabetes did not differ between groups, and there were no significant differences in other complication rates. Levels of HbA1 were lower in Whites than in the other groups. Regression analysis showed that systolic blood pressure was most consistently related to complications, particularly retinopathy, independent of ethnic group and duration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Black West Indian and matched white diabetics in Britain compared with diabetics in Jamaica: body mass, blood pressure, and vascular disease. 358 77
A retrospective study of 25 patients with left coronaroventricular microfistulae, investigated in the same vascular radiologic exploration unit, and data in the international literature were used to analyze these lesions in greater detail. Their frequency appears to have been underestimated since they represented 1.33% of coronarographies performed in adults in this series. Distribution into two groups as a function of presence or absence of significant coronary lesions,
vascular disease
or myocardial insufficiency showed that the group with isolated microfistulae was composed solely of women of about 50 years of age (16 cases). These patients presented typical
angina
with a simple course (absence of infarction), but a sometimes severe disability due to the symptomatology. The myocardial ischemia could result from a "coronary steal" phenomenon but other hypotheses have been evoked. Their congenital origin is widely accepted but their relation to atherosclerosis has not been established (cause, consequence or fortuitous association). They present specific images on routine coronarography. Treatment is symptomatic but surgical in exceptional cases with refractory, very disabling
angina
. Finally, detection of left coronaroventricular microfistulae should, when combined with metabolic studies, allow classification of the difficult problem of "angina with angiographically normal coronary arteries".
...
PMID:[Left coronaro-ventricular microfistulas. Apropos of 25 cases]. 376 Dec 36
This study identifies the medical, psychologic and social factors that independently affect employment in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). At coronary angiography, extensive clinical, psychological and social profiles were collected on 814 men younger than 60 years with documented CAD. Clinical factors studied included measures of symptom severity, prior myocardial infarction, coronary anatomy and left ventricular function. Psychosocial factors studied included the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), Zung Depression and Anxiety Scales, a type A structured interview, Jenkins Activity Survey and measures of education and social support. Multiple logistic regression analyses were used to assess the relative strength of the relation between these different factors and the patients' employment status. Many single factors differed between the 204 men (25%) who were disabled and the 610 (75%) who were not. Disabled men were less educated but no different in age, marital status or number of dependents. Disabled men had lower ejection fractions and higher indexes of
angina
, previous myocardial infarction and coexisting
vascular disease
. Disabled men also were more depressed and anxious and had lower ego strength and higher hypochondriasis scores on the MMPI, but were no different in type A behavior. By multivariable analysis, the most significant (p less than 0.01) independent predictors of work disability were, in decreasing order of importance, low education level, history of myocardial infarction, high levels of depression and high levels of hypochondriasis. It is concluded that psychological and social factors are strongly related to work status in patients with CAD, and may be more important than medical factors.
...
PMID:Medical, psychological and social correlates of work disability among men with coronary artery disease. 377 48
The major predictors of left ventricular function after coronary artery occlusion were assessed in 108 consecutive patients who had complete occlusion of the left anterior descending artery as the only important lesion demonstrated at angiography between June 1978 and June 1983. A scoring system was used to identify regional damage on left ventriculograms. Forty two patients were classified as having good left ventricular function and 66 as having varying degrees of impairment. Apart from a history of myocardial infarction, the only variables discriminating between those with good and those with impaired left ventricular function were the area of distribution of the artery beyond the occlusion and cigarette smoking. Hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia, family history of
vascular disease
, diabetes, obesity, duration of
angina
, age, and presence of identifiable collaterals were not discriminators. Smoking was itself significantly associated with a history of infarction; but after controlling for this, smoking exerted a significant additional effect on the amount of left ventricular damage. It is concluded that smoking is not only a risk factor for myocardial infarction in patients with single left anterior descending artery occlusion, but that it is also a major factor in determining the extent of associated left ventricular damage.
...
PMID:Smoking: a major predictor of left ventricular function after occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery. 380 Dec 40
In view of recent interest in the relationship of haematocrit and blood viscosity to hypertension and
vascular disease
, we have analysed retrospectively the relationship of haematocrit to blood pressure, vascular complications and other variables in 2,381 patients referred to the Glasgow Blood Pressure Clinic. Haematocrit correlated negatively with age and systolic pressure in men, and positively with age and systolic pressure in females. Positive correlations were found in both sexes between haematocrit and serum alanine aminotransferase (possibly due to mutual correlation with alcohol); and between haematocrit and overweight (Quetelet Index) but not obesity (Ponderal Index). Increased haematocrit was also associated with cigarette smoking; and with history of
angina
, myocardial infarction and intermittent claudication in females. No correlation was observed between haematocrit and history of stroke. These findings suggest that prospective studies of haematocrit in hypertensives may be of interest.
...
PMID:Haematocrit in patients attending a hypertension clinic. 405 4
This report describes the experimental design, methods, and baseline characteristics of patients enrolled in a Veterans Administration Cooperative Study on the effect of aspirin (325 mg t.i.d.) and dipyridamole (75 mg t.i.d.) (110 patients), or placebo (121 patients) on major vascular outcome variables in noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients with either a recent amputation for gangrene (n = 207) or active gangrene (n = 24). It also describes the baseline characteristics of the patients. A total of 231 patients of 563 screened (41%) were enrolled at 11 participating V.A. Medical Centers during a 39 month period. The median age at entry was 60 years, the median duration of diabetes was 10 years, and weight was 110% of desirable. All patients were men. Sixty-eight percent were treated with insulin and 32% with diet alone. Only 42% were smokers at entry, 40% had retinopathy, 61% sensory neuropathy, 42% hypertension, and 29% had a history of myocardial infarction,
angina
, and/or congestive heart failure. Thirteen percent had a history of cerebrovascular disease. Despite randomization, the treatment group had an increased frequency of a history of cerebrovascular disease (p = 0.01), diagnosed as stroke (p = 0.03), a finding suggesting that the treatment group was at a slightly increased risk for
vascular disease
upon enrollment in the study. Other baseline variables did not differ significantly between the two groups. This study should provide definitive data on the efficacy of these doses of antiplatelet agents in preventing further
vascular disease
in diabetic men with gangrene or recent amputation for gangrene, using death due to
vascular disease
and subsequent amputation of the opposite extremity for gangrene as major outcome variables. It should also give useful information on the effect of antiplatelet therapy on vascular outcome variables such as same side amputations, myocardial infarction, stroke, transient ischemic attack, retinopathy, and renal failure. Finally, the study should provide useful data on the natural history and significance of risk factors in this patient population.
...
PMID:V.A. Cooperative Study on antiplatelet agents in diabetic patients after amputation for gangrene: I. Design, methods, and baseline characteristics. 637 22
In this overview of the achievements of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the major developments in each major form of heart disease since the birth of the Institute 35 years ago are reviewed. In the case of congenital heart disease, it has become possible to establish an accurate diagnosis, often by noninvasive methods, and to correct by surgical treatment almost all congenital cardiac malformations. The major challenge now is to eliminate these disorders; this will require an understanding of the fundamental molecular basis of these lesions. Acquired valvular heart disease can also now be characterized by hemodynamic, angiographic, as well as noninvasive techniques, principally echocardiography. Surgical treatment is usually successful, but improvement in the durability of valves without thromboembolic potential remains an important challenge. While essential hypertension can now be managed pharmacologically in almost every patient and while such management reduces the excess mortality resulting from this condition, current research focuses on elucidating the underlying basis of this disorder. Atherosclerosis remains the most common cause of cardiac and
vascular disease
. Although its cause has not been defined, several abnormalities in lipid metabolism that play an etiologic role in many patients with atherosclerosis have been identified. The treatment of these disorders with cholesterol-binding resins, which increase the number of cellular receptors for low-density lipoprotein, and with inhibitors of the enzyme required for cholesterol biosynthesis holds considerable promise. Noninvasive techniques will be used increasingly for detection of atherosclerosis in asymptomatic persons and for determining the efficacy of therapy. The mortality resulting from acute myocardial infarction has been reduced in half by the development of coronary care units and the prompt treatment of potentially fatal ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Current research is focused on preventing pump failure by limiting infarct size; lysis of coronary thrombi now appears to be the most promising method of accomplishing this. Chronic
angina pectoris
can be relieved by the judicious use of three classes of drugs--organic nitrates, beta-adrenergic blockers, and calcium antagonists, and two mechanical approaches--percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and coronary artery bypass grafting--are usually successful in relieving
angina
in patients who do not respond adequately to medical management. Whether or not any of these approaches prolong life is not yet settled.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Thirty-five years of progress in cardiovascular research. 638 25
To determine whether coronary thrombi can be detected scintigraphically after acute myocardial infarction, 24 patients were studied with a new method employing indium-111-labeled platelets and technetium-99m-labeled red blood cells. Nine patients with suspected infarction were evaluated initially within 9 hours of the onset of symptoms and again 18 to 24 hours after onset. Eight patients with neurologic symptoms but without overt cardiac disease and seven patients with
angina
but without infarction served as unmatched control subjects. Foci of net indium accumulation were detected after image processing that incorporated subtraction of blood pool activity. Carotid and pulmonary artery reference regions, in which blood pool activity is high and active platelet deposition unlikely, were used to correct digitized cardiac scintigrams for indium-111 platelet activity in the blood pool. In patients with infarction, distinct foci of net indium accumulation were present in regions corresponding to the coronary artery supplying ischemic zones. This occurred in seven of eight patients at the time of the earliest evaluation (5.6 +/- 3.3 hours [mean +/- SD] after the onset of symptoms) and in eight of nine patients at the time of subsequent imaging (23.6 +/- 1.9 hours after onset). Only 1 of the 15 control patients exhibited a cardiac focus of net indium accumulation. The percent of indium excess (100 [total indium-111 activity-blood pool indium-111 activity]/blood pool indium-111 activity) within the cardiac region measured (+/- SD) 16.8 +/- 11.6% in all patients with myocardial infarction (19.1 +/- 11.2% in those with visually identified foci) compared with 0.4 +/- 4.3% in control patients (p less than 0.001). This method permits early detection and sequential assessment of coronary artery thrombi. It should permit improved characterization of the role of platelets in the pathogenesis of acute manifestations of coronary
vascular disease
and improved evaluation of interventions designed to prevent or lyse coronary thrombi.
...
PMID:Scintigraphic detection of coronary artery thrombi in patients with acute myocardial infarction. 638 35
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