Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (myocardial ischemia)
31,282 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this prospective study, we monitored two laboratory parameters, C-reactive protein (CRP) and fibronectin (FIN) levels, in 30 patients undergoing elective surgery for ischemic heart disease. These patients were divided into three groups according to the surgical procedure used: group A, approach through a median sternotomy with the use of extracorporeal circulation; group B, approach through a median sternotomy without the use of extracorporeal circulation; and group C, approach through a left anterior small thoracotomy (LAST) without the use of extracorporeal circulation. Peak CRP levels were found in all three groups on the second postoperative day, with the mean levels being statistically significantly higher in group C. This group also showed the highest mean CRP levels on the third and fourth postoperative days, with the difference being statistically nonsignificant. These findings can be explained by an enhanced production of cytokines, which in turn trigger CRP synthesis, induced by postoperative pain due to the LAST procedure. No statistically significant correlation between preoperative CRP levels and their postoperative development was found. None of the groups studied showed any statistically significant decrease in FIN plasma levels, either prior to adjustment for hemodilution or after adjustment for hematocrit and serum albumin.
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PMID:Development of C-reactive protein and fibronectin levels in coronary surgery patients: a comparison of on-pump, off-pump sternotomy and off-pump left anterior small thoracotomy groups. 1222 96

The annual statistical survey conducted at the end of 2000 by the Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy collected responses from 3358 (99.94%) of 3360 institutions. Japan's total dialysis patient population at the end of the year 2000, as identified by this survey, was 206,134, an increase of 8921 (4.5%) over 1999. This translates to 1624.1 patients per million population. The annual crude mortality rate was 9.4% for the period starting at the end of the year 1999 and ending at the end of the year 2000. The mean patient age at the initiation of dialysis treatment was 63.8 (+/- 13.9; +/- SD) years; the mean age of the overall dialysis patient population was 61.2 years (+/- 13.3). Both these mean ages, which had been increasing since 1983, again continued to increase. Among the primary diagnosis, the prevalence of diabetic nephropathy had continued to increase again since 1999, to 36.6%, whereas that of chronic glomerulonephritis had continued to decline, down to 32.5%, during the same one-year period since the 1999 survey. The 2000 years-end survey incorporated the following additional variables for the first time: usage of oral antihypertensives, pre- and post-dialysis systolic and diastolic blood pressures, serum HDL cholesterol level, types and dosage of oral Vitamin D analogs administered, dosage of oral calcium carbonate administered, history of intervention for peripheral vascular disease (bypass surgery, synthetic graft replacement, stenting), history of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), history of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), whether stenting had been previously performed for the treatment of ischemic heart disease, number of cigarettes smoked, the type of vascular access used at the initiation of dialysis, and the year and month the vascular access was created. The survey results indicate that 60.9% of the total dialysis patient population was using oral antihypertensives. The patients' mean serum HDL cholesterol level was 47.65 +/- 18.47 mg/dL, showing positive correlation with serum albumin level and reverse correlation with body mass index. 1.6% of all dialysis patients had previously undergone amputation, and 0.7% had a history of bypass surgery for peripheral vascular disorder. 4.5% of hemodialysis patients had a history of cardiac infarction, 1.6% had previously undergone CABG, and 2.8%, PTCA. At the time the survey was conducted, 2.0% of all dialysis patients were undergoing oral Vitamin D analog pulse therapy, and 6% were undergoing intravenous Vitamin D analog pulse therapy. A history of amputation, myocardial infarction, cerebral infarction, and cerebral bleeding were identified as high-risk factors of vital prognosis. Additionally, high mortality risk was associated with the following: glutamic-pyruvic transaminase levels exceeding 20 IU/L; positive HCV antibody status; comorbid conditions such as hepatic cell carcinoma and liver cirrhosis; platelet counts below 100,000/mL or equal to or greater than 200,000/mL; C-reactive protein levels of 0.2 mg/dL and higher, leukocyte counts of less than 3000/mL or equal to or greater than 8000/mL; and body mass index of below 22 kg/m2, as well as total serum cholesterol levels of below 160 mg/dL or equal to or greater than 260 mg/dL.
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PMID:The current state of chronic dialysis treatment in Japan (as of December 31, 2000). 1292 Nov 11

The aim of the present study is to clarify relevant factors concerning the short-term outcome of elderly patients beginning dialysis. One hundred nineteen patients aged 60 years and over who had newly started dialysis at our hospital were studied. The male/female ratio was 70:49. The age was 74 +/- 7 years (mean +/- standard deviation). In all patients, the timing of referral to a nephrologist (early/late), the urgency of the initiation of dialysis (non-urgent/urgent), the cause of renal failure (nondiabetes/diabetes), serum albumin concentration, comorbid conditions (cerebrovascular disease, ischemic heart disease, etc.), ambulation, cognitive function, and the outcome (relief/death) were surveyed. Twelve patients did not obtain relief and finally died. The influence of the timing of referral on the urgency of the initiation of dialysis was studied. Furthermore the influence of the urgency of the initiation of dialysis on the outcome was studied. The chi 2 test was used for statistical comparisons. The need for urgent dialysis was less among early referral cases as compared with late referral cases (p < 0.0001). The incidence of death was more frequent in urgent dialysis than in non-urgent dialysis (p = 0.016). Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed using background factors as explanatory variables and the outcome as a dependent variable. Statistically significant factors were the urgency of the initiation (p = 0.040), serum albumin concentration (p = 0.022), and cerebrovascular disease (p = 0.002). The most common cause of death was severe infectious diseases (pneumonia, sepsis). It was speculated that background factors associated with the outcome could contribute to the onset and the progression of infectious diseases.
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PMID:[Analyses of factors concerning the short-term outcome of elderly patients beginning dialysis]. 1293 68

Nitric oxide (NO) supplementation may modify myocardial oxygen consumption and vascular function after ischemia. We investigated the effects of the NO donor, S-nitroso human serum albumin (S-NO-HSA), on cardiac oxygen metabolism during controlled reperfusion on normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass after severe myocardial ischemia. Pigs randomly received either S-NO-HSA or human serum albumin prior to and throughout global myocardial ischemia. Myocardial oxygen utilization is impaired at the onset of reperfusion, which is not amenable to S-NO-HSA. However, NO supplementation during ongoing supply dependency of oxygen consumption eventually leads to greater myocardial oxygen delivery and consumption. In conjunction with a better washout of lactate, this indicates an improved capillary perfusion in the S-NO-HSA group during reperfusion, which results in a better contractile function post bypass.
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PMID:S-nitroso human serum albumin improves oxygen metabolism during reperfusion after severe myocardial ischemia. 1533 16

Carotenoids are a naturally occurring group of compounds that possess antioxidant properties. Most natural carotenoids display poor aqueous solubility and tend to form aggregates in solution. Disodium disuccinate astaxanthin (DDA; Cardax) is a water-dispersible synthetic carotenoid that rapidly and preferentially associates with serum albumin, thereby preventing the formation of supramolecular complexes and facilitating its efficacy after parenteral administration. This study investigated the ability of DDA to reduce inflammation and myocardial injury in a rabbit model of ischemia/reperfusion. DDA (50 mg/kg/day) or saline was administered i.v. for 4 consecutive days before the initiation of the protocol for induction of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion. On the 5th day, rabbits underwent 30 min of coronary artery occlusion, followed by a 3-h reperfusion period. Myocardial infarct size, as a percentage of the area at risk, was calculated for both groups. Infarct size was 52.5 +/- 7.5% in the vehicle-treated (n = 9) and 25.8 +/- 4.7% in the DDA-treated (n = 9) animals (p < 0.01 versus vehicle; mean myocardial salvage = 51%). To evaluate the anti-inflammatory effects of DDA, complement activity was assessed at the end of reperfusion using a red blood cell lysis assay. DDA administration significantly reduced (p < 0.01) the activation of the complement system in the serum. The current results, coupled with the well established antioxidant ability of carotenoids, suggest that the mechanism(s) of action by which DDA reduces the tissue damage associated with reperfusion injury may include both antioxidant and anticomplement components.
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PMID:Disodium Disuccinate Astaxanthin (Cardax) attenuates complement activation and reduces myocardial injury following ischemia/reperfusion. 1587 41

Rapid nongenomic actions of aldosterone independent of mineralocorticoid receptors (MRs) on vascular tone are divergent. Until now, the rapid nongenomic actions of aldosterone on vascular tone of coronary artery and cardiac function in the in vivo ischemic hearts were not still fully estimated. Furthermore, although aldosterone can modulate protein kinase C (PKC) activity, there is no clear consensus whether PKC is involved in the nongenomic actions of aldosterone on the ischemic hearts. In open chest dogs, the selective infusion of aldosterone into the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) reduced coronary blood flow (CBF) in the nonischemic hearts in a dose-dependent manner. Also, in the ischemic state that CBF was decreased to 33% of the baseline, the intracoronary administration of aldosterone (0.1 nmol/L) rapidly decreased CBF (37.4+/-3.8 to 19.3+/-5.2 mL/100 g/min; P<0.05), along with decreases in fractional shortening (FS) (8.4+/-0.7 to 5.4+/-0.4%; P<0.05) and lactate extraction rate (LER) (-31.7+/-2.9 to -41.4+/-3.7%; P<0.05). The decrease in CBF was reproduced by the infusion of bovine serum albumin-conjugated aldosterone. Notably, these aldosterone-induced deteriorations of myocardial contractile and metabolic functions were blunted by the co-administration of GF109203X, an inhibitor of PKC, but not spironolactone. In addition, aldosterone activated vascular PKC. These results indicate that aldosterone nongenomically induces vasoconstriction via PKC-dependent pathways possibly through membrane receptors, which leads to the worsening of the cardiac contractile and metabolic functions in the ischemic hearts. Elevation of plasma or cardiac aldosterone levels may be deleterious to ischemic heart disease through its nongenomic effects.
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PMID:Aldosterone nongenomically worsens ischemia via protein kinase C-dependent pathways in hypoperfused canine hearts. 1595 16

Cardiovascular complications are the main cause of mortality and morbidity among patients on dialyses. The aim of the work was to assess the effect of the type of renal replacement therapy on the risk factors and cardiovascular complication in dialyzed patients. The studies were performed retrospectively on 90 hemodialyzed and 49 peritoneally dialyzed patients. Risk factors of cardiovascular diseases as well as serum lipids, complete blood count, serum albumin, fibrinogen, C-reactive protein, calcium, phosphates, PTH, systolic, diastolic, mean blood pressure, left ventricular hypertrophy. Hemodialyzed patients were more anemic, longer on renal replacement therapy, with higher albumin, phosphates, lower fibrinogen, cholesterol, LDL, triglycerides, calcium, systolic and diastolic blood pressure than peritoneally dialyzed patients. Left ventricular hypertrophy more frequently found in hemodialyzed patients than in peritoneally dialyzed patients. In peritoneally dialyzed patients glucose load into the peritoneum, dyslipidemia and hiperfibrinogenemia may further contribute at the cardiovascular complications. In hemodialyzed patients anemia, left ventricular hypertrophy and ischemic heart disease is more frequent than in peritoneally dialyzed patients.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular risk factors in dialyzed patients]. 1596 7

Chlamydial infection has been suspected in the pathogenesis of ischemic heart disease. However, it remains undetermined if persistent chlamydial infection is related to cardiovascular mortality in regular hemodialysis (HD) patients. We measured Chlamydia pneumoniae (Cp) antibody seropositivity in 154 HD subjects (age 59 +/- 11 years, time on HD 13 +/- 7 years, male/female = 101/53), and prospectively examined an association between Cp antibody status and cardiovascular death for 56 months of follow-up. Seropositivity for Cp IgA and IgG antibodies at the entry of the study was 50.6 and 60.8%, respectively. There was no significant difference in age, time on HD, serum albumin, C-reactive protein (CRP) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) between those positive and negative for IgA antibodies. During follow-up over 56 months, 31 patients (20.1%) expired, 16 (55.2%) of them of cardiovascular causes. Serological IgA and IgG antibody positivity did not influence mortality, while multiple Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed that diabetes, ischemic changes on electrocardiogram, log-transformed CRP and intact parathyroid hormone were independent determinants of cardiovascular death. These observations suggest that serological Cp antibody status does not affect long-term cardiovascular mortality in chronic HD patients.
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PMID:Association between seroprevalence of anti-chlamydial antibodies and long-term cardiovascular mortality in chronic hemodialysis patients. 1628 59

The relationship between immune vasculitis and atherosclerosis was studied. The experimental model of weanling rabbits for immune vasculitis was reproduced by intravenous injection of 10% bovine serum albumin. There were 6 groups: group A, 25 weanling rabbits with immune vasculitis subject to coronary arteriography; group B, 10 normal mature rabbits subject to coronary arteriography; group C, 10 weanling rabbits subject to coronary arteriography; group D, 8 weanling rabbits with vasculitis and cholesterol diet; group E, 8 weanling rabbits receiving single cholesterol diet; group F: 8 weanling rabbits receiving basic diet. Four weeks later, coronary arteriography was performed in groups A, B and C. The rabbits in groups D, E and F were sacrificed for the study of pathological changes in the coronary artery after 12 weeks. The results showed that the dilatation of coronary artery occurred in 6 rabbits of group A, but in groups B and C, no dilatation of coronary artery appeared. In comparison with group E, more severe atherosclerosis occurred in group D, showing the thickened plaque, fibrous sclerosis and atherosclerotic lesion. Percentage of plaques covering aortic intima, incidence of atherosclerosis of small coronary arteries and degree of stenosis of coronary arteries were significantly higher in group D than in group E (P < 0.01). No atherosclerosis changes were found in group F. It was concluded that in the acute phase, the serum immune vasculitis can induce the dilatation of coronary artery of some weanling rabbits, and aggravate the formation of atherosclerosis in rabbits fed with cholesterol diet. Immune vasculitis is a new risk factor of atherosclerosis and ischemic heart disease.
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PMID:Immune vasculitis induced atherosclerosis. 1646 66

The biochemical marker of myocardial ischemia is detected prior to the development of myocardial necrosis, i.e. a novel biochemical evaluation based on human serum albumin binding to cobalt, a transitional metal. The evaluation is known as Albumin Cobalt Binding (ACB) Test. ACB Test is applied to detect the presence of Ischemia Modified Albumin (IMA), an albumin which has altered binding capacity to bind metal ion such as cobalt (Co), copper (Cu) and nickel (Ni) in N-terminus region. It is produced when the serum albumin convenes with ischemic heart tissues. ACB Test detecting the presence of myocardial ischemia that occurs prior to myocardial necrosis has been studied by some researchers and they found an ACB increase prior to troponin increase. The cut off point of ACB evaluation was 85 U/ml. Provided that the value was greater than 85 U/ml then there was positive myocardial ischemia. But it should be noticed that IMA increase in the plasma may be due to other tissues such as gastrointestinal tissues or skeletal muscles tissues. We should also consider other factors which may affect the evaluation result such as severe hypoalbuminemia that will cause a false-high result. ACB Test may be used as an early marker of myocardial ischemia that occurs prior to myocardial necrosis.
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PMID:Albumin cobalt binding (ACB) test: its role as a novel marker of acute coronary syndrome. 1679 11


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