Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242339 (dyslipidemia)
13,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bariatric surgery has gained acceptance as the only treatment with long-term efficacy for severe obesity. Recent publications emphasize the usefulness of bariatric surgery in the reduction of long-term cardiometabolic risk, cardiovascular disease incidence and mortality, and the management of uncontrolled type 2 diabetes (T2DM), an important cardiovascular risk factor in individuals with severe obesity. The present review article offers a brief overview of the literature published over the past several months relevant to cardiometabolic outcomes in bariatric surgery patients. A recent report from the Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS) study specifically reported a reduced incidence of cardiovascular events on long-term prospective follow-up after bariatric surgery. In addition, abundant studies have been recently published on gastric bypass surgery showing high T2DM remission rates as well as improved blood lipids and inflammatory markers after surgery. Sleeve gastrectomy is increasingly performed as a stand-alone operation. Recent reports on this surgery pertaining to cardiometabolic risk showed variable T2DM remission rates that may possibly be explained by age of the patients and duration of T2DM. Available data suggest a possible favorable impact of the surgery on CRP levels and improvements in the blood lipid profile. How sleeve gastrectomy compares to other surgical approaches will require further study. Biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch has been reported to offer some of the best long-term weight loss for obese patients. Approximately 9 out of 10 patients treated with this surgical procedure show long-term remission rates of T2DM. Significant improvements in the cardiometabolic risk profile are also observed after BPD-DS; they are especially pronounced regarding dyslipidemia. In conclusion, bariatric procedures improve the cardiometabolic risk profile, a phenomenon that appears to be only partly explained by the magnitude of the weight loss. Significant variations are observed with respect to the type of surgery and patient characteristics. More research is clearly needed on the short and long-term cardiometabolic outcome of obesity surgeries.
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PMID:Impact of gastrointestinal surgery on cardiometabolic risk. 2305 64

In recent years, accumulating more and more evidence demonstrating the programming effects of intrauterine development on the subsequent health of the individual. Intrauterine fetal hypotrophy is a consequence of the wide range of pathological processes in different periods of pregnancy. It is the second leading cause of perinatal death after prematurity. Newborns from similar pathological pregnancies are often leaked premature baby and/or small for gestational age (SGA). Premature baby children have not only complicated and postnatal adaptation problems in the neonatal period, but many diseases occurring in later life: 1. Disorders in postnatal growth. 2. Neurological and intellectual consequences of IUH in term children (hyperactivity disorders attention, impaired fine motor skills, speech problems, risk of cerebral palsy). 3. Neurological and intellectual consequences of prematurity IUH (cognitive impairment in children with low birth weight, short stature at birth, and small head circumference for gestational age). 4. Metabolic syndrome (dyslipidemia, abdominal obesity, hypertension and high blood sugar). 5. Abnormal sexual development (hyperandrogenism, polycystic ovary syndrome in girls, reduced testicular size and lower testosterone levels in boys. 6. Other complications associated with intrauterine hypotrophy cardiovascular renal, pulmonary complications (BPD) disorders in vision, sensory neural hearing loss.
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PMID:[Intrauterine hypotrophy and programming the health status. Late problems in newborns with intrauterine hypotrophy]. 2380 79

There is growing interest in relationships between borderline personality disorder (BPD) pathology and physical health outcomes. Diagnostic BPD and BPD-related traits, for instance, have been shown to associate with self-reported cardiovascular disease and various cardiometabolic risk factors. However, potential confounding of these associations by comorbid depression, which itself contributes to risk for heart disease, remains unresolved, and previous research is limited by nearly uniform reliance on self-reported health status. In the present study, we examine the association of BPD traits and contemporaneously assessed depressive mood with instrumented measures of cardiometabolic risk in a midlife community sample (N = 1,295). BPD pathology was measured using dimensional, multi-informant trait measures; depressive symptomology was self-reported; and cardiometabolic risk was indexed via multiple indicators of insulin resistance, adiposity, dyslipidemia, and blood pressure. Structural equation modeling was used to estimate the effects of BPD traits and depressive symptoms on aggregated cardiometabolic risk, adjusting for their shared variance. Results showed both BPD features and depressive symptomatology related to the extent of cardiometabolic risk; when examined simultaneously, only BPD associated independently with risk indicators. In further supporting a link between BPD pathology and cardiovascular disease risk, these findings warrant future work to elucidate intervening behavioral and biological mechanisms. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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PMID:Borderline personality disorder traits associate with midlife cardiometabolic risk. 3164 68