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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebral infarction before the age of 45 years accounts for 4-6% of all strokes. The etiology remains unexplained in a significant proportion of patients even after extensive investigations. The reported risk factors of this age group are cardiopathies, hypertension, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, reduction of anticoagulant proteins, hypercoagulable states, antiphospholipid antibodies primary syndrome, antiphospholipid antibodies secondary syndrome, some hemoglobinopathies, hyperviscosity syndromes, vasculitis, collagen vascular diseases, fibromuscular dysplasia, arterial dissections, migraine, myopathy encephalopathy lactic acidosis stroke like episodes, homocystinuria, familial amyloid
angiopathy
, microangiopathy with retinopathy encephalopathy and deafness, systemic lupus erythematosus, use of cocaine, traumas or manipulations of neck, AIDS. From 1/1/94 to 04/30/95 we observed 19 patients with cerebral infarctions and 9 patients with transitory ischemic attacks in young people. The aim of our study was to apply a diagnostic protocol by sequential tests of first level and second level. According to this protocol we found that the more common risk factors were ischemic cardiopathy, hypertension, smoking and hypercholesterolemia. Moreover we observed other independent risk factors, although less frequent, like the antiphospholipid antibodies, neurolupus, AIDS, deficit of
protein S
.
...
PMID:[The application of a new diagnostic protocol for stroke in the young]. 876 46
Diabetic patients have increased morbidity and mortality attributable to myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular disease and peripheral vascular disease, due to a high incidence of premature atherosclerosis. Abnormalities of hemostasis have been reported in many studies on diabetes over almost thirty years, but unfortunately the results have often appeared contradictory. The hemostatic alterations could lead to increased risk of
vascular disease
in diabetic patients. We have studied some coagulation factors (Fibrinogen, Factor II, Factor VII) and coagulation inhibitors (Protein C, Protein S), and plasminogen in fifty-four type 2 diabetic patients. The possible relationship between coagulation factors and coagulation inhibitors and parameters for glyco-metabolic control (glycosylated hemoglobin, fructosamine) and disturbed lipid metabolism (cholesterol, triglycerides) have ben analyzed. Our results show increase of fibrinogen, correlated with the metabolic control of the disease, positive correlation between plasminogen, factor II,
protein S
and hypertriglycerides, decreased levels of protein C correlated neither with metabolic control of disease neither with disturbed lipid metabolism.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the coagulation and fibrinolysis system in 54 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: correlations with lipid metabolism and blood glucose control]. 876 54
We identified a group of 24 young (less than 50 years of age) women with isolated, premature atherosclerotic aortoiliac occlusive disease and attempted to identify distinguishing hemostatic characteristics. Most of these patients (62%) presented with acute thromboembolic events (blue toe syndrome, n = 6; macroemboli, n = 6; or aortoiliac thrombosis, n = 3). Aortoiliac reconstruction (aortoiliac endarterectomy, n = 10, aortobifurcation bypass grafts, n = 6; and percutaneous angioplasty, n = 4) was complicated by early thrombosis in 6 of 20 cases (30%), (1 of 10 endarterectomies, 4 of 6 bypass grafts, and 1 of 4 angioplasties). Fresh thrombus overlying an atherosclerotic plaque was a common finding at surgery. This observation and the relatively high incidence of thromboembolic events led us to hypothesize that a characteristic hemostatic profile might underlie the remarkably similar clinical presentations of these women. Levels of antiphospholipid antibodies (anticardiolipin antibodies and lupus anticoagulant), plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, fibrinogen, antithrombin III, protein C,
protein S
, plasminogen, prothrombin fragment F1 + 2, and D-dimer were determined for these young women and for 21 age-matched white female control subjects without
vascular disease
and nine white male patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease (mean 61 years, range 43 to 74 years). The incidence of anticardiolipin antibodies was 42% (8 of 19) in the female patients, which was significantly elevated (p = 0.028). The female (62.5%) and male (100%) patients had significantly elevated D-dimer levels (p < 0.001). Deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C, and
protein S
were rare. A unique pattern of premature aortoiliac atherosclerosis exists in some young women. Intra-arterial thromboembolic events are common at presentation and complicate surgical management. The role of antiphospholipid antibodies remains uncertain.
...
PMID:Young women with advanced aortoiliac occlusive disease: new insights. 898 71
Several necropsy reports have suggested that cerebral
vascular disease
(CVD) is more frequent in HIV positive patients than in HIV negative individuals of the same age, although clinical signs are rare. We describe three patients for whom CVD was the clinical manifestation that led to diagnoses of HIV infection. The patients were two men and a woman aged 29, 52 and 66, respectively, with differing risk factors for CVD: smoking (3), blood hypertension (2), endocarditis (1) and free
protein S
deficiency (1). The risk factors for HIV infection were also different. The CVD diagnoses were confirmed by computed tomography, which revealed lacunar infarction in two cases with favorable outcomes and embolia-like infarction with subarachnoid hemorrhage in the third patient, who died a few days later. CD4 levels varied (50, 130 and 689/mm3). Our observations lead us to the following conclusions: 1) CVD can be a first clinical manifestation of HIV infection and the disease that allows seropositivity to be diagnosed. Although CVD usually presents in advanced stages of HIV infection, it can also occur in seropositive patients who do not meet the criteria for AIDS. 2) The classical risk factors for
vascular disease
probably play a dominant role in the etiology of CVD in such patients, alongside systemic complications related to the virus; the direct role of HIV remains to be determined. 3) AIDS should be considered and ruled out in patients with CVD who are at risk for HIV infection, even in older patients with vascular risk factors.
...
PMID:[Cerebrovascular disease as a form of presentation of HIV infection]. 900 48
The advent of improved diagnostic tests for primary hypercoagulability has led to increased recognition of this entity as a problem in surgical patients. We treated 20 patients with documented evidence of increased coagulability from 1975 to 1995. Clinical presentations included venous (16) and arterial (4) thrombosis. Symptoms usually occurred early in life (mean age, 38 years) and developed spontaneously without a secondary inciting event or factor. Deficiencies in naturally occurring anticoagulant proteins including antithrombin III (n = 7), protein C (n = 3), and
protein S
(n = 1) were seen, as were problems with lupus anticoagulant (n = 2) and anticardiolipin antibody (n = 4) deficiencies. Treatment of these patients is difficult, and results are often suboptimal. A total of 12 vascular reconstructions were required in 5 of the 20 patients; 11 eventually failed. Patients with primary venous thrombosis were often successfully treated with anticoagulant therapy in the short term but fared less well in the long term. There were three deaths directly related to thrombotic complications. Surgeons may encounter patients with primary hypercoagulable syndromes. The diagnosis should be expected in patients with unusual patterns of
vascular disease
or arterial or venous thrombosis without cause or at an early age, or in patients with recurrent or migratory clotting. Evaluation of this population, although expensive, is indicated. Treatment with chronic anticoagulation is also generally indicated. Arterial reconstruction in this subset of patients usually leads to a poor outcome.
...
PMID:Surgical implications of hypercoagulable syndromes. 901 31
The authors analyse the short-term and medium-term effects of iloprost prostanoid derivate on hemostatic status in a group of patients with obliterating
vascular disease
of the lower limbs. The study included 10 patients (6 males, 4 females; aged 52 + 5 years old) suffering from Fontaine's stage 3 obstructive arterial disease. After a 10-hour fast each patient received a 6-hour iv infusion of iloprost at a dose of 2 ng/kg/min (approx 50 gamma) a venous blood sample was collected before and after infusion. The test was repeated using the same method after 4 weeks of treatment with the same dose of the drug. The following parameters were analysed in serum: fibrinogen (F) (IL coagulometric method), Factor VII (F VII) (IL coagulometric method), antithrombin II (AT III) (IL chromogenic method), protein C (PC) II coagulometric method) and
protein S
(PS) (IL coagulometric method). After the first infusion a significant increase was observed in AT III (p > 0.05), whereas other indices showed no significant variations. After treatment for 4 weeks AT III was again enhanced after infusion (p > 0.05); with regard to the basal values of other parameters, a significant reduction (p > 0.05) was found in F VII, whereas no other significant changes were observed. In the light of these results the authors suggest an antithrombotic effect of the drug documented by the short-term increase in AT III probably due to lower consumption, and a medium-term reduction in F VII due to trophic effect of the drug at a vasculoparietal level resulting in the depression of FVII tissue activation factors.
...
PMID:[Modification of some prothrombotic indices after treatment with iloprost in arterial disease patients]. 905 18
Mild hyperhomocysteinemia has been identified as a risk factor for arterial disease and for venous thrombosis. Individuals homozygous for the thermolabile variant of the methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase gene (MTHFR) which results from a common mutation Ala677-->Val and is found in 5-15% of the general population, have significantly elevated plasma homocysteine levels and may account for one of the genetic risk factors in
vascular disease
. We have analyzed the prevalence of MTHFR-T homozygotes in patients with arterial disease or venous thrombosis. We studied 191 patients with arterial disease and 127 individuals with venous thrombosis and compared with 296 unmatched controls. The results showed that there was a high prevalence of homozygotes for the mutated MTHFR-T allele among a group of patients with arterial disease (19%) in the absence of hyperlipoproteinemia, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus when compared to controls (4%), odds ratio of 5.52 (95% C.I., 2.27 to 13.51). The prevalence of homozygotes among patients with venous thrombosis was 11%, odds ratio of 2l93 (95% C.I., 1.23 to 7.01). The risk of venous thrombosis remained high, odds ratio of 2.63, even after we excluded 27 patients with hereditary thrombophilia (e.g. factor V Leiden, dysfibrinogenemia, deficiency of protein C,
protein S
, antithrombin III, or factor XII) from the 127 overall cases with venous thrombosis. These data support the hypothesis that being a homozygote for the MTHFR-T is a risk factor for the development of arterial disease and also for venous thrombosis.
...
PMID:The mutation Ala677-->Val in the methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase gene: a risk factor for arterial disease and venous thrombosis. 918 84
Inherited and acquired thrombophilic disorders predispose patients for thromboembolic and probably other occlusive vascular events that occur when additional risk factors play in concert. Because acute rejections in renal transplant recipients may reflect vascular events, and an impairment of the fibrinolytic system in immunosuppressed patients has been previously described, the implications of genetic or acquired risk factors of thrombophilia for the occurrence of early acute rejections after kidney transplantation were evaluated. The following risk factors of thrombophilia were determined in 97 patients after cadaveric kidney transplantation: factor V Leiden mutation,
protein S
, protein C, and antithrombin deficiency. In a retrospective analysis, the prevalence of acute rejections, the histologic classification when rejection episodes had been confirmed by biopsy, and other vascular complications were evaluated. In 21 of the 97 patients, an inherited or acquired risk factor of thrombophilia was detected. Prevalence of acute rejections was 71% in the first 6 mo after transplantation in patients with a thrombophilic disorder and significantly higher compared with patients without thrombophilia (41%; P = 0.017). The distribution of classic risk factors associated with acute rejections, such as number of human leukocyte antigen mismatches or percentage of panel-reactive antibodies, was similar in patients with and without thrombophilia. In the eight patients with thrombophilia and histologically proven acute rejection, four patients had an acute vascular rejection, and in two patients a vascular involvement was suspected. Furthermore, prevalence of cerebral or coronary
vascular disease
, or venous thromboembolic complications, was significantly higher in patients with a thrombophilic clotting defect (67%) compared with patients with normal hemostasis parameters (28%; P < 0.002). It is concluded that renal allograft recipients with thrombophilia are at risk of developing an acute rejection or other vascular event. Although the determination of thrombotic risk factors was performed at least 3 mo after an acute rejection episode, it can be presumed that acute rejection episodes are associated with subsequent coagulatory abnormalities with further consequences for transplant survival. Thus, pretransplant evaluation of genetic and acquired risk factors of thrombophilia is recommended.
...
PMID:High rate of acute rejections in renal allograft recipients with thrombophilic risk factors. 964 43
Measures of fibrinolytic and thrombotic function have been examined in 55 subjects with recently identified coronary heart disease, and age and sex matched control subjects. Measurements were particularly directed at factors and processes which could be affected by changes in endothelial function and included the euglobulin lysis time as well as plasma levels of von Willebrand factor (vWF). Plasma levels of
protein S
and protein C were also measured. Measurements were made before and after a period of 10-min veno-occlusion combined with rhythmic hand exercise. In addition anthropometric, haemodynamic and biochemical measurements (plasma lipids and apolipoproteins, glucose and insulin) were obtained and correlated with the haematological parameters. Protein S and vWF levels were significantly higher, both before and after veno-occlusive exercise, in subjects with CHD than in the asymptomatic controls. Euglobulin lysis times were not significantly different but only shortened on veno-occlusive exercise in those without CHD. Protein S levels were significantly correlated with systolic blood pressure, plasma total cholesterol, plasma triglyceride, plasma phospholipid, plasma fasting glucose and both apolipoprotein A1 and B levels. vWF levels were not significantly related to any of the other variables. Subjects whose pre-exercise euglobulin lysis times exceeded 6 h had significantly higher BMI, plasma total cholesterol, triglyceride, phospholipid, insulin, glucose and apoB concentrations and lower HDL cholesterol than those with lysis in less than 6 h. The findings from this study are consistent with a role for endothelial dysfunction in the production of atherosclerotic
vascular disease
and may indicate additional, non-haemodynamic, mechanisms for such an association. In addition, the relationship between elevated levels of
protein S
and CHD does not appear to depend on the demonstrated associations between
protein S
and a number of other cardiovascular risk factors.
...
PMID:Relationships between protein C, protein S, von Willebrand factor and euglobulin lysis time and cardiovascular risk factors in subjects with and without coronary heart disease. 973 15
The normal aging process alters blood coagulation system in humans; this may be of great concern in the view of the known association of
vascular disease
with advancing age. The plasma concentration of several coagulation factors, namely fibrinogen, factor VII, factor VIII, factor IX, high molecular-weight kininogen, and prekallikrein, increase in healthy humans, paralleling the physiological aging process. Plasma parameters of clotting activation in vivo, such as prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, fibrinopeptide A, thrombin-antithrombin III complex, and D-dimer, are positively correlated with age. Nevertheless, among centenarians, biochemical signs of marked hypercoagulability are associated with a healthy state. Natural anticoagulants, including antithrombin III, heparin cofactor II, protein C,
protein S
, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor, can modulate the reactions of blood coagulation system. The occurrence of menopause is accompanied by a significant increase in antithrombin III plasma level; the mean antithrombin III levels in older women exceed levels in male contemporaries. In healthy elderly subjects heparin cofactor II plasma concentrations are lower than in young subjects, independently of gender. Protein C levels raise with age in both sexes, as well as free
protein S
levels. In women, statistically significant increases in the plasma concentration of the tissue factor pathway inhibitor have been observed, whereas no significant age-related change has been found in men. The fact that many subjects with congenital defects of natural anticoagulants do not undergo thromboembolic events in young age suggests that in healthy individuals a raise in natural anticoagulants can balance the age-related increase of procoagulant factors.
...
PMID:Natural anticoagulants, aging, and thromboembolism. 995 32
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