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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (myocardial ischemia)
31,282 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cardiovascular disease, and in particular ischemic heart disease, is the principal cause of morbidity, functional disability, and mortality in patients with non-insulin-dependent (type II) diabetes. The main risk factors for the macrovascular complications of diabetes are dyslipidemia, hypertension, and cigarette smoking. Although degree of hyperglycemia is a risk factor for microvascular complications, it is not a prominent risk factor for macrovascular complications. Nevertheless, there are theoretical reasons for believing that glycemic control could lower cardiovascular risk. For example, glycemic control may both improve clearance and suppress hepatic overproduction of very-low-density lipoprotein. Moreover, there is direct empirical evidence that improved glycemic control can favorably alter lipid profiles in type II diabetic patients. Despite this, the only clinical trial that has assessed cardiovascular mortality as an end point in diabetic subjects (i.e., the University Group Diabetes Program) failed to demonstrate a benefit of glycemic control. In this study, the insulin-variable group, which achieved sustained glycemic control relative to the placebo group, had essentially the same cardiovascular mortality as the latter group. All of the conventional lipid-lowering agents have been shown to produce favorable changes in lipid profiles in diabetic subjects. However, the optimum regimen remains to be defined. Metabolic differences between diabetic and nondiabetic subjects mean that the optimum lipid-lowering regimens for the two categories of patients may differ. For example, nicotinic acid, which is a powerful lipid-altering drug, may worsen glucose intolerance. The characteristic lipid abnormalities in type II diabetic subjects are hypertriglyceridemia and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, not hypercholesterolemia. Although the role of hypertriglyceridemia as a cardiovascular risk factor in the general population has been questioned, there is evidence that this lipid abnormality may play a stronger role in diabetic subjects. For all of the above reasons, there is an urgent need for large-scale clinical trials assessing cardiovascular end points and testing various strategies of improving lipid profiles in diabetic subjects, particularly given the fact that all of the current generation of lipid-lowering trials have systematically excluded diabetic patients.
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PMID:Dyslipidemia in type II diabetes. Implications for therapeutic intervention. 177 1

A standardized cardiovascular risk factor examination was given to executives in the headquarters of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and the Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Public Corporation. As expected from the national mortality data, evidence of ischaemic heart disease was more common among American than Japanese executives. The frequency of some but not all risk factors was consistent with the observed differences in ischaemic heart disease. Americans were fatter than their Japanese counterparts, obtained a higher proportion of their caloric intake from animal fats, had higher serum cholesterol levels, and more of them felt that their lives were highly stressful. On the other hand, Japanese executives were much more likely to be cigarette smokers and showed a greater increase in blood pressure with age. Serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and the ratio of saturated to unsaturated fatty acids in the serum were similar in the two groups.
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PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors in American and Japanese executives. Telecom Health Research Group. 400 66

Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) exist as discrete subfractions that vary in size and density. A predominance of small, dense LDLs is seen in patients with ischaemic heart disease and non-insulin-dependent diabetes, and is more common in men than in women. Because small, dense LDLs are associated with increased levels of triglycerides and low levels of high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, their exact role as an independent cardiovascular risk factor is unknown. These lipoproteins exhibit abnormal characteristics, however, such as increased susceptibility to oxidation and decreased LDL receptor binding, which may result in increased atherogenicity.
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PMID:Biological importance of low-density-lipoprotein subfractions. 762 Dec 99

The aim of our study is to evaluate whether hyperuricemia may be considered a cardiovascular risk factor also in the elderly. 370 subjects over 60-years-old of both sexes were examined of which 148 presented an ischemic heart disease and 222, age and sex homogeneous, were considered as control group. Serum uric acid was determined. A strong difference among the two groups (p < 0.001) was statistically demonstrated. Such modifications were sex independent. A strict correlation of hyperuricemia and hyper trygliceridemia was present; in fact high uric acid levels were mostly found in the group with triglycerides > 200 mg/dl (p < 0.02). In the whole group and in males a stability of uric acid was noted. In females a significant increase among the first (60-69 years) and the second (70-79 years) age class was present. In conclusion, a positive role of hyperuricemia in the ischemic heart disease pathogenesis is possible.
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PMID:[Hyperuricemia and cardiac risK factors: epidemiologic study in the aged]. 779 16

Obesity and overweight have great clinical and social significance and are associated with a number of medical and surgical complications. We attempt here to summarize current knowledge on the subject and describe the research we are presently carrying out in this field. After a brief introduction, definition, and discussion of etiopathogenesis, the indexes of ponderal excess and epidemiology are illustrated. The cardiovascular adjustments and the relationships between obesity and hypertension, ischemic heart disease and congestive heart failure are then treated. One aim of our investigation was to study the modifications of an entire set of biological and clinical parameters which could concretely formulate and/or identify some pathophysiological links between obesity and heart disease. We thus studied obese subjects with hypertension, diabetes and multiple cardiovascular risk factors. We also studied a group of asymptomatic obese subjects, whom we define as "the healthy obese". Our results, supported by the medical literature, led to the conclusion that obesity is an important and/or independent cardiovascular risk factor. We think, however, that it would be prudent to await for the results of interventional trials and follow-up studies involving a large number of young, healthy obese subjects in order to monitor the most important biological variables over the long term.
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PMID:Obesity and cardiovascular diseases. 800 89

Increased plasma fibrinogen concentration is a major cardiovascular risk factor. Conflicting results on genetic variations in plasma fibrinogen levels have been reported. Furthermore, whether fibrinogen genotype is associated with the risk of ischemic heart disease has not been studied so far. An HaeIII restriction fragment length polymorphism of the beta-fibrinogen gene was used in a case-control study to investigate the genetic variation at this locus in relation to plasma fibrinogen concentrations and the risk of myocardial infarction (MI). Five hundred thirty-three male patients aged 27-66 years and 648 control subjects were recruited from four World Health Organization MONICA centers in Northern Ireland and in France. The absence of the HaeIII cutting site (H2 allele) was associated with a significant rise in fibrinogen concentrations in both patients and control subjects. The effect of the HaeIII polymorphism on plasma fibrinogen levels did not significantly differ between centers. Fibrinogen levels were higher in smokers than in nonsmokers. The difference between the two groups was larger in subjects with the genotype H2H2 than in those with either genotype H1H1 or H1H2, regardless of the case-control status. However, there was no significant interaction between smoking status and genotype in their effects on variance in fibrinogen levels, whereas fibrinogen levels. HaeIII genotype accounted for approximately 1% of the total variance in fibrinogen levels, whereas smoking and age together explained 7% and 5% in control subjects and patients, respectively. The frequency of the H2 allele was 0.21 in control subjects and 0.19 in patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Genetic variation at the beta-fibrinogen locus in relation to plasma fibrinogen concentrations and risk of myocardial infarction. The ECTIM Study. 849 9

The longitudinal and exhaustive data accumulated in morbidity registers make them high performance tools to develop specific surveys for clinical assessment. Coronary heart disease morbidity registers provide examples of structure able to collect and analyse useful information for decision making in the field of public health and medicine. There are three registers in France. Because of their geographic distribution in areas with contrasting levels of health status (Lille, Strasbourg, Toulouse), comparative data generally is applicable to France in general with regional variety. Data on medical care are already available. The measurement of cardiovascular risk factor levels, a full part of the longitudinal survey, offers the opportunity to develop a competence in the field of population-based study organisation. Several specific clinical assessment studies on medical care distribution, or on the short- or middle-term effect of screening and prevention atherosclerosis centres, should be proposed. Contacts between persons in charge of decision and register co-ordinators are necessary to fit questions to answers. These registers are able to provide high quality information whose conclusions can be generalised. For the last ten years, ischaemic heart disease registers have developed a high quality level in epidemiology and consistent national and international networks that can be considered as convenient structure providing helpful information for decision.
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PMID:[Use of registries for specific evaluation studies: example of ischemic cardiopathies]. 893 66

There is a direct relationship between obstructive sleep apnea and high blood pressure, ischemic heart disease and cerebrovascular disorders. Obstructive sleep apnea, defined as an intermittent complete or partial upper airway obstruction during sleep, occurs in approximately 4% of adults, although some authors suggest a 9% prevalence in women and 24% in men. Due to its high frequency, this condition must be considered as another cardiovascular risk factor that should be prevented and adequately treated.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular manifestations of obstructive sleep apnea. Effects of the treatment]. 992 17

Long-term moderate or strenuous physical activity is associated with a considerable reduction in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. This article reviews the evidence to suggest that part of the effect is mediated through the effects on thrombogenic factors. Fibrinogen has been convincingly shown to be an independent cardiovascular risk factor. Other hemostatic and fibrinolytic parameters that are predictive of coronary events include factor VII, platelet hyperreactivity, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, and tissue-plasminogen activator. The effects of exercise on fibrinogen have been studied intensively. One randomized, controlled trial, two other intervention studies and a large number of population-based cross-sectional studies have consistently found an inverse relationship between various measures of sport activity or leisure activity and plasma levels of fibrinogen. The magnitude of the effect might be associated with a sizeable reduction in major coronary events. Relatively few data are available on endurance exercise and markers of the fibrinolytic system. Acute exercise leads to a transient activation of the coagulation system, which is accompanied by an increase in the fibrinolytic capacity in healthy subjects. However, patients with ischemic heart disease, who cannot increase their fibrinolytic potential, may be at considerable risk for acute ischemic events if they are exposed to unaccustomed strenuous physical exertion. It is concluded that physical activity has profound effects on thrombogenic factors and that these mechanisms could contribute to its beneficial cardiovascular effects.
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PMID:Exercise and thrombosis. 1075 13

In this study, plasma concentrations of hemostatic molecular markers were investigated in 118 elderly persons with normal renal function (aged 65 to 97 years) who could manage their activities of daily living (ADL) by themselves, to find a strategy for conservation or elevation of ADL and quality of life (QOL). In all subjects, the frequency by which hemostatic markers exceeded their upper limit of normal range was 35.9% for thrombin-antithrombin HI complex (> or = 3.7 ng/ml), 38.3% for soluble fibrin monomer (> or = 4.0 microg/ml), 41.8% for D-dimer (> or = 1.0 microg/ml), 49.0% for plasmin-alpha2 plasmin inhibitor complex (> or = 1.0 microg/ml), and 53.7% for thrombomodulin (> or = 20 ng/ml). The mean plasma levels of these markers were slightly higher than the upper limit of their normal range. These markers were also investigated in samples of patients with and without cardiovascular risk factors and with and without cardiovascular diseases (ischemic heart disease and/or cerebral infarction). Furthermore, the results were analyzed in relationships between cardiovascular disease and cardiovascular risk factor or aging. The findings suggest that aging exerts a stronger influence on plasma levels of these hemostatic molecular markers than the presence of cardiovascular risk factors and cardiovascular diseases. From the viewpoint for conservation or elevation of ADL and QOL in elderly persons, also other factor, such as drug intake, lifestyle, aging, and so on, must be considered to clarify the relationship between the plasma levels of the hemostatic molecular markers and cardiovascular risk factors or cardiovascular diseases.
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PMID:Study of cardiovascular risk factors and hemostatic molecular markers in elderly persons. 1080 77


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