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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The files of 222 patients (112 men) admitted to a Medical Department (Medicina 1) of the Hospital de Santa Maria (Lisbon) between 1/1/87 and 21/6/88 with the diagnosis of congestive heart failure (CHF) were studied retrospectively. The next parameters were considered: sex, age, cause of cardiac disease, duration of CHF, presence of diabetes, predispondent factors of CHF episodes, cardiac rhythm and blood pressure on admission, presence of rales, ascitis and edema, echocardiographic findings and evolution.
Ischemic heart disease
(
IHD
) (50%) and hypertensive heart disease (HHD) (31%) were the most frequent causes of CHF in this study. The mean age was 70 years, being higher in women (74 versus 66 years).
Men
were predominant in the younger groups. The rheumatic heart disease (RHD) group had the lowest mean age (54) while the cardiac diseases of unknown origin had the highest mean age (79). Patients with RHD were those with longer CHF (16 years) while patients with
IHD
, idiopathic cardiomyopathy and cor pulmonale had a shorter duration of CHF (less than 5 years). The respiratory infection was the most frequent predisponent factor (40%). In a high number of cases (31%) it was not possible to find the presumable cause of the CHF episode. Atrial fibrillation was the predominant disarrhythmia (44%) on admission, specially in patients with RHD. Patients with HHD isolated or associated to other causes were those with higher initial blood pressure. Echocardiographic studies were suggestive that HHD can be associated with CHF without a significant increase in left atrium and ventricle dimensions nor impairment of left ventricle systolic function. Echocardiographic analysis of larger numbers of patients and the study of left ventricular diastolic function and Doppler flow patterns will eventually contribute to a better understanding of CHF physiopathology.
...
PMID:[Heart failure at an internal medicine department: a retrospective study]. 204 21
Several studies have reported high levels of oestrogens--especially oestradiol--in plasma in men surviving an acute myocardial infarction (AMI). We have measured plasma levels of the two major oestrogens, oestrone and oestradiol, for three days during the acute AMI and at three months after discharge. Patients admitted to a coronary care unit with
ischaemic heart disease
without proof of an infarction and patients without evidence of heart disease served as controls. We found significantly higher oestrone levels during the acute infarction than at three months afterwards and also higher than in men without AMI.
Men
who died shortly after admission had grossly elevated plasma oestrone concentrations. As oestrone levels were correlated to excretion of catecholamines and cardiac enzyme levels in plasma and as circulating levels of oestrone are influenced by ACTH, the hyperoestronaemia may reflect stress-induced increased adrenocortical activity. Plasma oestradiol concentrations in men with AMI decreased significantly during the first three days after admission. In men given no medication oestradiol concentrations did not differ significantly from those in the control groups. Three months after the infarction, the median plasma oestradiol (but not oestrone) concentrations were significantly elevated, but not if only data from men given no medication were considered.
...
PMID:Variability in plasma oestrogen concentrations in men with a myocardial infarction. 207 57
In the paper presented, the relationship was analysed between the educational level and the level of risk of
ischaemic heart disease
(
IHD
) in a random sample of the Warsaw population aged 35-64 years.
Men
with a lower educational level (elementary or basic vocational) were found to have a significantly higher means for systolic blood pressure level, for plasma high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol concentration, for the numbers of cigarettes smoked daily, and for the probability of
IHD
development according to the multivariate logistic function of Farchi and Menotti, and also significantly greater prevalences of cigarette smoking, hypertension and overweight. And for men, a negative relationship was noted between educational level and plasma low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentration. Women with a lower educational level had a higher mean plasma triglyceride concentration, higher values of systolic and systolic blood pressures, a greater probability of
IHD
development, and higher prevalences of hypertension, obesity and
ischaemic heart disease
symptoms. And for women, a negative relationship with educational level was noted for plasma LDL-cholesterol concentration and for the mean value of the overall risk score according to Rose.
...
PMID:Relationship between IHD risk factors and educational level in the Warsaw Pol-MONICA population. 208 58
The relationship of coronary artery disease to plasma lipoproteins was examined in 43 men admitted to our unit with suspected
ischemic heart disease
. Coronary arteriography was performed, and a score reflecting the severity of disease was assigned to the angiogram. Plasma, obtained after a 12-h overnight fast, was assayed for triglycerides, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, and HDL-3 cholesterol. HDL-2 cholesterol was found by subtraction. The cholesterol contents of very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) were quantitated by the Freidwald equation.
Men
with high coronary scores tended to be older, and subjects with moderate coronary disease had significantly higher total and LDL cholesterol values than those with minimal disease. Age was the only factor to be significantly associated with coronary score and there was no significant association between coronary score and total LDL and HDL cholesterol or its subfractions when the age factor was taken into account.
...
PMID:Relation of angiographically defined coronary artery disease to serum lipoprotein levels. 228 27
The low-energy protein diet providing 1559 kJ is the first accurately defined diet for the treatment of obesity in the CSSR. The daily amount contains 4.0 g fat, 33.0 g protein, 50.0 g carbohydrate, 5.6 g fibre and daily recommended allowances of vitamins. The diet is enriched with potassium, magnesium and iron. The low-energy protein diet was used for a period of 28 days in the treatment of 49 obese patients aged 40.49 +/- 1.39 years whose initial weight was 110.14 +/- 3.41 kg and the BMI 39.44 +/- 1.13. The therapeutic regime comprised in addition to the diet adequate physical exercise of aerobic character and training of correct eating behaviour. Four weeks treatment led to a significant decline of body weight (by 10.60 +/- 0.46 kg) and a significant drop of the BMI (by 3.65 +/- 0.16).
Men
lost more weight than women. In women a substantial drop of the body weight (90.5%) was due to reduction of body fat, while in men adipose tissue participated by 60.0% in the loss. During the fourth week of treatment a positive nitrogen balance was achieved, obviously due to adequate physical exercise. The waist/hip ratio was not affected by treatment in either group. The therapeutic regime influenced favourably some risk factors of
ischaemic heart disease
. In addition to a significant drop of the systolic and diastolic blood pressure a significant decline of total cholesterol, triacylglycerols and serum insulin occurred. There was a concurrent decline of the urinary C-peptide excretion. The therapeutic regime involving the low-energy protein diet was well tolerated by the patients. The incidence of side effects during treatment was less frequent than in treatment by intermittent fasts. No disorders of the cardiac rhythm were recorded during treatment.
...
PMID:[A Czechoslovak low-energy protein diet in the treatment of obesity]. 235 13
The distribution of serum cholesterol in the population depends on sex and age. By analyzing data for men and women aged 20-69 from the Copenhagen City Heart Study 1981-1983, it is shown that this dependence is of major importance for the sex and age distribution of subjects classified as hypercholesterolaemic, when single threshold values are used to define the condition (7 mmol/l; 6 mmol/l for subjects less than 30 years): 56% are women, and 38% of these are women aged 50-59.
Men
between 30 and 59 years of age, for whom the association between hypercholesterolemia and
ischaemic heart disease
is most pronounced, only constitute 28%. As an alternative to single threshold values, one can use sex- and age-specific percentiles for cholesterol. The advantage appears from the explained cumulative percentage distribution curves in Figures 1 and 2. With the 90-percentiles, it is possible to identify the "cholesterol top-10" of the entire population, and although the use may seem more complicated, it has several advantages, notably the possibility of identifying younger hypercholesterolaemic subjects and making more appropriate use of the available resources for treatment.
...
PMID:[Threshold values for hypercholesterolemia: single values or percentiles?]. 236 Feb 91
Environmental influences that impair growth and development in early life may be risk factors for
ischaemic heart disease
. To test this hypothesis, 5654 men born during 1911-30 were traced. They were born in six districts of Hertfordshire, England, and their weights in infancy were recorded. 92.4% were breast fed.
Men
with the lowest weights at birth and at one year had the highest death rates from
ischaemic heart disease
. The standardised mortality ratios fell from 111 in men who weighed 18 pounds (8.2 kg) or less at one year to 42 in those who weighed 27 pounds (12.3 kg) or more. Measures that promote prenatal and postnatal growth may reduce deaths from
ischaemic heart disease
. Promotion of postnatal growth may be especially important in boys who weigh below 7.5 pounds (3.4 kg) at birth.
...
PMID:Weight in infancy and death from ischaemic heart disease. 2691 72
Cardiac extraction, oxidation and release of plasma free fatty acids (FFA) was measured by coronary sinus catheterization, utilizing infusions of 3H palmitate and 14C oleate, in patients with
ischaemic heart disease
(
IHD
) at rest and during pacing induced angina pectoris and, for comparison, in healthy men of similar and younger age and men with hypertriglyceridaemia (HTG). At rest
IHD
patients differed from healthy men only by greater cardiac fatty acid release, which correlated with a significant glycerol release. In
IHD
patients, unlike in healthy men, myocardial extraction of both palmitate and oleate decreased while fractional oxidation of oleate increased during pacing. Fatty acid release was unaltered.
Men
with HTG had at rest higher myocardial FFA extraction than
IHD
patients, which did not decrease during pacing, but like in the patients oleate fractional oxidation increased on pacing. It is concluded that, in the moderately ischaemic human heart, the restricted blood flow may contribute to limit the fatty acid flux into the myocardium. The augmented cardiac fatty acid release in
IHD
patients is not related to ischaemia per se but may derive from an increased amount of cardiac interstitial fat.
...
PMID:Fatty acid turnover in the ischaemic compared to the non-ischaemic human heart. 277 38
The DHCCP is a multicentre observational study of patients being treated for hypertension in the United Kingdom. The influence of the type of anti-hypertensive therapy on survival was examined in 2,697 patients followed from 1971 with 206 deaths up to November 1981. Patients were classified by three types of treatment after one year in the project: betablockers (1,387), methyldopa (452) and others (667), (70% on diuretics only). The data were analysed both for all patients and for a subset excluding patients with previous
ischaemic heart disease
by all cause and
IHD
age-adjusted rates and life table analysis.
Men
on beta blockers had lower rates for total mortality, when compared with men on methyldopa (64% of the methyldopa rate, P less than 0.05) and when compared with men on other treatments (76% of the other treatment rate, P less than 0.1). The results for
IHD
mortality were similar. This improved survival of men in the beta blocker group was also found in the subset with no prior history of
IHD
. The benefit of beta blockers was not apparent in women: the lowest rates were observed for women on methyldopa, but the confidence limits for the ratios of relative rates were wide. Adjustment for blood pressure and cigarette smoking using the Cox proportional hazards model did not substantially modify the ratios of the mortality rates for the treatment groups. A sub-group analysis showed the reduction in all cause and
IHD
mortality associated with beta blockers was mainly due to the effect in non-smoking men.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Beta adrenoceptor blockade is associated with increased survival in male but not female hypertensive patients: a report from the DHSS Hypertension Care Computing Project (DHCCP). 290 53
The consequences of
ischaemic heart disease
include adverse personal and social effects as well as morbidity and mortality. This study describes these affects among people registered in a community-based study of all suspected heart attacks. Two groups were compared, those with and those without a previous history of
ischaemic heart disease
, using information about the subjects' lives before the event which caused them to be registered.
Men
with a history were more likely to be retired or permanently unable to work (64% compared with 47%). Despite some modification of risk factors, such as reductions of cigarette smoking, men (but not women) with a history were more likely to die from the registered event especially within one hour from onset of symptoms. These results emphasize the need for prevention of heart disease before it causes the effects and disabilities reported here.
...
PMID:Social effects of a history of ischaemic heart disease. 292 1
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