Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We assessed the clinical characteristics of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients presenting to the Mulago Hospital Diabetic Clinic for the first time between 1 January 1993 and 10 August 1994. There were 252 patients: 117 men and 135 women. Mean age at onset of diabetes was 45 years (range 2-87 years) and peak incidence was at 40-49 years. Body mass index (BMI) was available in only 71 patients, of whom 53.5% (33.8% female, 19.7% male) were overweight (BMI > 25 in women, in > 27 men) and 11.3% (8.5% men, 2.8% women) were underweight (BMI < 20). Obesity was more marked in young women. Almost all patients presented with the classical symptoms of diabetes, and the majority were severely hyperglycaemic. A family history of diabetes was identified in 16%. Concurrent illnesses at diagnosis of diabetes were unusual. Sepsis was commonest (11.9%), followed by malaria (7.8%), tuberculosis (1.2%), AIDS (1.2%) and pancreatitis (0.8%). Peripheral neuropathy was present in 46.4% of patients, hypertension (BP > 150/100) in 27.3%,
impotence
in 22.2% of the men, proteinuria in 17.1%,
ischaemic heart disease
in 4.8%, foot ulcers in 4.0% and cataracts in 3.2%. Insulin was the most commonly prescribed treatment (52.8%); 31% of patients received oral hypoglycaemic agents, only 15.1% were managed on diet only, and 1.2% opted for herbal medicine.
...
PMID:The presentation of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients in Uganda. 891 47
The incidence of risk factors atherosclerosis and of vasculogenic importance in a group of patients with erectile failure is presented. As a single risk factor only arterial hypertension is associated significantly with arteriogenic importance.
Myocardial ischemia
and peripheric arteriopathy are also often associated with arteriogenic
impotence
. In a high percentage vasculogenic
impotence
can be the first sign of a generalized arteriopathy. The diagnosis of arteriogenic
impotence
can therefore have implications which are not only related to erectile failure.
...
PMID:[Erectile dysfunction of arterial origin as possible primary manifestation of atherosclerosis]. 892 53
Erectile dysfunction (ED, formerly referred to as
impotence
, is a common (especially in diabetic and older men) and distressing condition. Several risk factors have been identified; among these are smoking, hyperlipidaemia, hypertension and diabetes mellitus. These risk factors are shared with atherosclerotic vascular disease (e.g.
ischaemic heart disease
). This observation underlies a common vascular pathology. Smoking may cause ED by several mechanisms, including adversely affecting intrapenile blood flow. It is important to be aware of the link between smoking and ED since this information may motivate some male smokers to quit. In this context, it is important to be aware of the link between smoking and ED since this information may motivate smokers to quit. In this context, it is relevant that there is evidence that quitting may restore/improve erectile function.
...
PMID:Cigarette smoking and erectile dysfunction. 1007 52
Erectile dysfunction and
impotence
has a high prevalence among male hypertensive patients. Whether this relates mainly to specific drug side effects or to primary pathogenic disorders is unknown. In the present study 101 male patients from our outpatient hypertension clinic answered detailed questionnaires about hypertension and sexual function. Patients with perceived
impotence
were offered a thorough penile evaluation and examination performed by specialists in the urology department. Twenty-seven (27%) men had
impotence
. The main cause of
impotence
was an arterial dysfunction (89%). The prevalence of
impotence
was related to the degree of secondary organ manifestation, reflected by World Health Organization (WHO) classification I-III (P = .01). Intermittent claudication (P = .001) and
ischemic heart disease
(P = .005) were the best determinants in this respect. Twelve
impotent
patients (44%) ascribed onset of
impotence
to drug initiation. A variety of drugs were incriminated in the occurrence of drug-induced
impotence
. In summary our results indicate that
impotence
in hypertensive men is caused mainly by penile arterial vascular changes, probably atherosclerosis. Drug-induced impotence could well be the result of blood pressure reduction itself and not specific drug side effects.
...
PMID:The prevalence and etiology of impotence in 101 male hypertensive outpatients. 1019 29
Diabetes can induce sexual disorders by different mechanisms. These troubles are more frequent in diabetics subjects. Thus, management of sexual
impotence
is an important aspect of diabetes care. However, most diabetologists are not trained to treat sexual disorders. The recent availability of oral drugs, i. e. Sildenafil (Viagra), has partly simplified the treatment of sexual
impotence
, particularly in diabetic patients. However, Viagra is efficient in only 60% cases in diabetic subjects. In the remaining cases, intracavernosal injections or vacuum can be used. Since Viagra has been available, more diabetic patients complained with sexual disorders, and ask for treatment of
impotence
. Cardio-vascular diseases must retain more attention in diabetic patients who are exposed to silencious
myocardial ischemia
. In such subjects, Viagra is not contra-indicated, but must be used after myocardial explorations, especially if the patients have cardio-vascular risk factors. However, patients and their doctors have been threatened by death cases reported with Viagra in United States. The lack of detailed informations has restrained Viagra's prescription. The following explains how to manage sexual disorders as part of diabetes care, and suggests rules for Viagra's prescription in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:[How to prescribing Viagra in practice...]. 1111 23
Half a century after the elucidation of its molecular structure, aldosterone is generating the greatest interest, not in the fields of endocrinology or renal medicine but in cardiology-where aldosterone over-activation is now perceived as detrimental in heart failure (HF) and
ischaemic heart disease
. Clinically, excess aldosterone is associated with higher morbidity and mortality after myocardial infarction (MI) and HF. The Randomised Aldactone Evaluation Study (RALES) study in severe chronic heart failure and the Eplerenone Post-Acute Myocardial Infarction Heart Failure Efficacy and Survival (EPHESUS) study in post-MI heart failure have shown that use of non-selective and selective aldosterone receptor antagonists, respectively, improves prognosis. The pathophysiological mechanisms underpinning these damaging aldosterone-mediated cardiovascular effects are still being elucidated, but prime candidates include cardiomyocyte necrosis and apoptosis, and myocardial fibrosis resulting in adverse cardiac remodelling, coronary vasculopathy, tachyarrhythmia and positive feedback activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Practical points for consideration when instigating therapy include preferential use of aldosterone receptor antagonists to maintain electrolyte balance whenever loop or thiazide diuretics are used (vulnerable HF patients require higher ranges of potassium and magnesium to minimise propensity for tachyarrthythmia), for renoprotection and for counteracting aldosterone breakthrough despite adequate ACE inhibition; use of the minimum doses of loop diuretics required to lessen activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in HF; use of selective aldosterone receptor antagonists to avoid gynaecomastia/mastalgia and
impotence
; and prophylactic use of aldosterone receptor antagonists to improve prognosis.
...
PMID:Fiftieth anniversary of aldosterone: from discovery to cardiovascular therapy. 1531 May 30
The quest for eternal youth has been prevalent in civilised societies in many cultures for many centuries. Preventing or deferring the disabilities and morbidities associated with aging through judicious pharmacotherapy has become a particularly relevant healthcare target with the rapid and relentless global demographic shift towards an increasingly elderly population in the 21th century. Aging men commonly loose muscle, become frail, have impaired sexual and cognitive functions, low mood, develop osteopenia and/or osteoporosis with increased risk for fractures and gain visceral fat which predisposes to diabetes, dyslipidaemia, and
ischemic heart disease
. These alterations in body function are reminiscent of states of androgen deficiency in younger patients. Indeed, aging is associated with a progressive age-related but variable decline in sex hormones. This condition has been named partial androgen deficiency in aging men (PADAM) and consists in a gradual decline in sex hormone levels over years resulting in physical and psychological changes as depression,
impotence
, decreased sex drive, loss of muscle tone or strength and lethargy. In this review we have tried to give a real identity to PADAM and quantify its entitiy, using the power of the epidemiology.
...
PMID:The epidemiology of partialandrogen deficiency in aging men (PADAM). 1604 54
Hypertension is a risk factor for myocardial infarction (MI), stroke, and heart failure and precedes heart failure in 91% of cases. This becomes even more important considering that the number of Americans with hypertension increased from 65 million in 2005 to 72 million in 2007. If blood pressure is effectively controlled this risk can be minimized-blood pressure reductions as small as 2 mm Hg have been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular events by up to 10%. There is also strong evidence that blood pressure targets for populations at high risk of cardiovascular disease, including those with diabetes, coronary artery disease, and chronic kidney disease, should be lower than 140/90 mm Hg. The number and type of antihypertensive drugs have increased dramatically from 28 diuretics in 1972 to over 125 agents today, including fixed dose combination dosage forms. Beta blockers have been available for the treatment of hypertension since the 1960s. However, there has been resistance to using these agents in patients with diabetes and renal failure because of metabolic side effects, and in other patients because of tolerability concerns such as depression, weight gain, and
impotence
. Two newer beta blockers with vasodilatory effects (carvedilol and nebivolol) have proven efficacy and tolerability in patients with hypertension and appear to lack the adverse effects associated with older beta blockers. Carvedilol causes vasodilation by alpha blockade, and nebivolol via nitric oxide mechanisms. Both of these agents reduce peripheral vascular resistance and maintain cardiac output. Clinical trial evidence to date leads to the conclusion that beta blockers are strongly indicated post-MI and in all patients with left ventricular dysfunction regardless of symptoms. Their beneficial abilities include improvement of oxygen supply and demand (which can reduce
myocardial ischemia
), anti-arrhythmic properties, and beneficial effects on cardiac remodeling.
...
PMID:The foundation role of beta blockers across the cardiovascular disease spectrum: a year 2009 update. 2103 78
Male erectile dysfunction is common and frustrating after the age of forty years. Erectile dysfunction is a cause of misery, relationship difficulties, and significantly reduced quality of life. Sildenafil citrate (Viagra) has shown promising results in recently published clinical trials. Sildenafil is a potent and competitive inhibitor of cGMp specific phosphodiesterase-5, predominant isoenzyme in the human corpus cavernosum. It is effective in erectile dysfunction of diverse origin, however it requires a patent vascular system to be effective. It is not effective in patients with endocrinal
impotence
, loss of libido, premature ejaculation or infertility. Its main adverse effects are headache, flushing, dyspepsia, diarrhoea, nasal congestion, indigestion, visual disturbances, dizziness and rash. Ventricular tachycardia and acute myocardial infraction have been reported in patients of
ischaemic heart disease
after consumption of sildenafil. Six deaths have been reported in patients taking nitrates. In India it is likely to be prescribed by a primary care physician without complete evaluation of patient on complaint of
impotence
. Hence the ethical question of who should prescribe this drug should be addressed by medical fraternity and proper guidelines formulated to avoid misuse of sildenafil. Phosphodiesterase is distributed in nerve, central nervous system, and systemic vasculature, hence long-term effects of drug on these tissues has to be ascertained. It should be made mandatory to report all adverse drug reactions to ADR monitoring centres. It is a wonder for those who require it, but has potentially dangerous adverse effects and drug interactions and hence is and not a wonder pill for all kinds of
impotence
.
...
PMID:VIAGRA : IS IT A WONDER DRUG ? 2736 78
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