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Query: UMLS:C0242339 (
dyslipidemia
)
13,927
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebrovascular disease is the most important cause of mortality and morbility in some European Countries, but the prevalence of carotid occlusive disease has not been adequately assessed. From 1985 to 1987, 1,143 patients were consecutively evaluated in the Vascular Laboratory in order to determine the presence of extracranial carotid occlusive disease. 638 (55.8%) were males and 505 (44.2%) females and mean age was 58 years (16-87). 509 had previously focal brain
ischemia
, ocular and/or hemispheric (Group I), 78 had assymptomatic cervical bruit (Group II), 55 non-hemispheric neurologic dysfunction (Group III) and 501 had atypical symptoms for cerebrovascular disease (Group IV). Diagnostic criteria for carotid disease: were peak frequency greater than 4.0 KHz; spectral broadening greater than 40% and late sysstolic turbulence. Global prevalence of carotid disease was 31.8% and the results in each group were: Gr. I-37.2%; Gr. II-57.7%; Gr. III-43.6%; Gr. IV-21.2%. 49% of the patients had hypertension, 22.8%
dyslipidemia
, 22.4% evidence of coronary disease and 13.6% had diabetes. Hypertension, diabetes, coronary disease and the coexistence of two risk factors were significantly more prevalent in the group of patients with carotid disease. These results confirm a high prevalence of carotid disease in this population, which is comparable to the one is northern european populations.
...
PMID:[Prevalence of extracranial carotid occlusive disease. Non-invasive study]. 157 Jul 56
Asymptomatic or silent myocardial ischemia (SI) is frequent in coronary heart disease and its prognostic value is controversial. The aim of our study is to compare coronary atherosclerosis, left ventricular function and clinical out come of 110 patients with S.I. (A group) and 210 patients with stable angina (B group). The 320 patients were submitted: to symptom limited exercise stress-test with permanent electrocardiographic control by a Case 12-15 digitalized system with ST segment depression interpretation. A test was considered positive for
ischemia
if there was ST depression of > 1 mv in magnitude from baseline, persisting for 0.08 sec or exercise angina and
ischemia
: to selective coronarography by Seldinger technic, with left ventricular cineangiography in 2 incidences. A significant coronary stenosis was defined as > 50% reduction of luminal diameter; to medical treatment with betablockers (87.5% of patients), calcium inhibitors (12.5%), aspirin (90%) and nitrates; to regular medical surveillance. During the follow-up (42.4 +/- 5 months in mean) the number of deaths, myocardial infarctions, heart failure, unstable angina and revascularizations were analyzed. Patients of A group with S.I. had a high percentage of risks factors (diabetes mellitus 55%, nicotinism 85%,
dyslipidemia
22.5%) and history of previous myocardial infarction in 33% of cases. There are not significant differences between severity and extension of coronary disease, or ventricular dysfunction in patients of A group or B. The percentages of deaths (2.10 versus 3%), acute myocardial infarctions (9.5 versus 8.5%), heart failures (2.72 versus 3%), surgical indications (14.7 versus 15.7%) are not significantly different between the 2 groups. In A group, 34% of patients were treated by angioplasty versus 40% of patients in group B (p < 0.02). S.I. has a bad prognostic and the clinical out come of coronary heart disease is not dependent of presence of angina during exercise testing and daily activities.
...
PMID:[Prognosis of silent myocardial ischemia]. 803 89
Carotid duplex ultrasonography is the noninvasive procedure of choice for evaluating ECAD. However, carotid angiography should be performed before doing carotid endarterectomy. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that significant prognostic variables for ECAD in an elderly population are (1) cigarette smoking, (2) serum total cholesterol, (3) serum HDL cholesterol (inverse association), (4) diabetes mellitus, and (5) prior CAD. Patients with 80-100% ECAD develop a higher incidence of ABI and TIA than patients with 40-80% ECAD. Patients with 40-80% ECAD develop a higher incidence of ABI and TIA than patients with 0-40% ECAD. Patients with ECAD have a higher prevalence of prior CAD and develop a higher incidence of new coronary events than patients without ECAD. In patients with ECAD, significant prognostic variables for new coronary events are (1) silent
ischemia
, (2) prior CAD, (3) serum HDL cholesterol (inverse association), and (4) cigarette smoking. Risk factors for ECAD and CAD should be treated in patients with ECAD. Cigarette smoking must be stopped. Hypertension,
dyslipidemia
, and diabetes mellitus should be treated. Aspirin, 325 mg/d, should be administered to patients with ECAD. Ticlopidine hydrochloride, 250 mg two times per day should be considered in patients with ECAD who are unable to tolerate aspirin or who develop cerebrovascular events on aspirin. Carotid endarterectomy should be considered in symptomatic patients with 70-99% ECAD.
...
PMID:Extracranial carotid arterial disease. 818 62
The long-term clinical benefits of lowering serum lipid levels have been demonstrated in multiple clinical trials in recent years. These include coronary artery disease regression and decreases in the incidence of adverse clinical events, such as myocardial infarction or refractory
ischemia
. Reductions in overall mortality have also been demonstrated. The health risk of
dyslipidemia
led the National Cholesterol Education Program expert panel to recommend intervention to bring low-density lipoprotein cholesterol values to within certain goal levels through a variety of interventions. This article reviews the available pharmacologic agents and compares their efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness.
...
PMID:Clinical pharmacologic concepts for the rational selection and use of drugs for the management of dyslipidemia. 882 16
The burden of ischemic heart disease is high in dialysis patients.
Ischemia
may result from atherosclerotic and nonatherosclerotic disease and may cause myocardial infarction and angina. The impact of diminished perfusion is intricately associated with the underlying cardiomyopathy, both of which predispose to heart failure. The etiology of
ischemia
is complex and associated with the underlying cardiomyopathy, whether it be concentric left ventricular hypertrophy, left ventricular dilatation, or systolic dysfunction. Hypertension, diabetes,
dyslipidemia
, abnormalities of divalent ion metabolism, hypoalbuminemia, and left ventricular hypertrophy are probably adverse risk factors for
ischemia
, but the relative importance of each is unknown.
...
PMID:Ischemic heart disease in chronic uremia. 887 58
The epidemiologic approach to investigation of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease has provided many insights into the preclinical and clinical spectrum of the disease. The hazard of developing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is substantial with coronary heart disease (CHD), the most common and most lethal feature. The outlook in those who manage to survive the initial episode is also serious, with a 10-year mortality rate of 37% for persons with angina and a 55% rate for those sustaining a myocardial infarction. Fifteen percent of persons developing CHD present with a fatal event, and 38% of infarctions go unrecognized. The presence of atherosclerosis in one vascular territory imposes an increased risk of its appearing in another area at two to six times the general population rate. The major cardiovascular risk factors adversely affect all arterial vascular territories so that correction of risk factors targeted at one particular atherosclerotic outcome may also favorably influence the other risk factors. Coronary disease is the most prevalent lethal hazard of hypertension,
dyslipidemia
, glucose intolerance, and cigarette smoking. These risk factors cluster and optimal therapy must improve the whole risk profile. Women share the same risk factors for CHD as men. Although women have a lower absolute risk for most risk factors, a high total/HDL cholesterol ratio, left ventricular hypertrophy, and diabetes each tend to eliminate the female advantage. Menopause also promptly escalates risk threefold. Although women tend to have a lower incidence than men, the initial attack is just as highly lethal in women, and their subsequent outlook as survivors is at least as serious as for men. Sudden death is a pre-eminent feature of coronary disease and cardiac failure. Coronary disease increases sudden death risk 3.3-fold and cardiac failure 4.8-fold. Sudden death incidence varies in relation to the same cardiovascular risk factors as coronary heart disease, with no unique risk factors identified. However, multivariate combinations of these in a profile can identify high-risk candidates for sudden death as well as coronary attacks in general. The key to prevention of sudden death is to prevent coronary attacks and cardiac failure. Despite aggressive cardiac revascularization and treatment of hypertension, congestive heart failure (CHF) has not decreased in prevalence, and innovations in the treatments of overt failure have not substantially improved survival. Median survival is only 1.7 years for men and 3.2 years for women. The conditional probability of developing CHF can be estimated using a logistic function comprised of age, systolic pressure, vital capacity, heart rate, ECG-left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), glucose intolerance, x-ray enlargement, and presence of CHD and heart murmurs. Eighty percent of CHF events occur in persons in the upper quintile of multivariate risk. Continued clinical, metabolic, and epidemiologic research have expanded and refined atherosclerosis risk factors. The lipid connection is now concerned with the apoprotein makeup of the lipids, subfractions of lipids, and Lp(a). The diabetic influence is now focused on insulin resistance. Ambulatory monitoring is being used to evaluate blood pressure and silent
ischemia
. Fibrinogen and leukocyte counts have emerged as possible indicators of unstable lesions. Prospects for primary and secondary prevention are good if public health measures, health education, and preventive medicine are implemented based on existing knowledge of correctable or avoidable risk factors. The potential for more effective prevention continues to expand, and great advances have already been made in countries where aggressive preventive measures have been implemented to correct the major established risk factors.
...
PMID:Hazards, risks, and threats of heart disease from the early stages to symptomatic coronary heart disease and cardiac failure. 921 Oct 12
The epidemiology of the diabetic foot is still unknown because this heterogeneous pathologic condition is non uniformly classified and described. Lower limb peripheral vascular disease has a preferential distal location strongly associated with the classical factors of cardiovascular risk. Ulcers occur in 15% of diabetics and 6-20% of all hospitalized diabetic patients are affected by ulcers of the foot. There is a predictive feature of the severity of the ulcer in relation to its location. In the USA,
ischemia
-related amputations are about 200 per million per year for non diabetics as against 3900 per million for diabetics; furthermore the incidence of a second amputation rises to 51% 5 years after first amputation. Risk factors for amputation are: smoking, hypertension,
dyslipidemia
, elderly age, glycosylated hemoglobin levels. Although mortality has decreased in the last 50 years, the diabetic foot is still a huge economic problem.
...
PMID:The diabetic foot: epidemiology. 955 Aug 92
Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) achieves high patency rates. Conversely, it has been shown that after thrombolysis, early reocclusion of the infarct-related artery (IRA) is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. The aim of this retrospective study was to study the incidence, prognostic implications, and clinical risk factors for in-hospital reocclusion of the IRA after successful emergency PTCA for AMI. We studied 399 consecutive patients (aged 59+/-14 years, 52% with anterior wall infarction) admitted <6 hours after AMI onset, of whom 374 (94%) were successfully treated with primary (n = 297) or rescue (n = 77) PTCA, with a stenting rate of 8%. Predischarge angiography was performed in 306 (82%). Early reocclusion of the IRA occurred in 28 patients (9%) and was silent in 6 (2%). The reocclusion rate was 10% for primary PTCA and 8% for rescue PTCA (p = NS). Twenty-two of 28 patients (6%) underwent repeat emergency coronary angiography because of early recurrent
ischemia
and most (n = 18) were treated with emergency PTCA. Early recurrent
ischemia
occurred mostly (86%) within 5 days of AMI onset. There was a higher prevalence of on-site hemorrhage (18% vs 5%, p = 0.007), blood transfusion (11% vs 2%, p = 0.01), pulmonary edema (21% vs 4%, p <0.01), and in-hospital death (21% vs 1%, p = 0.0001) in patients with predischarge reocclusion. On multivariate analysis, cardiogenic shock on admission and absence of
dyslipidemia
were strong and independent predictors (p = 0.01) of IRA reocclusion. In conclusion, early reocclusion after emergency PTCA occurred in 9% of the patients and was associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. This warrants attempts to decrease its incidence, e.g., with more frequent use of stents.
...
PMID:Incidence, consequences, and risk factors of early reocclusion after primary and/or rescue percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty for acute myocardial infarction. 973 78
Several trials performed in elderly patients have demonstrated that antihypertensive drugs are effective in both systo-diastolic and isolated systolic hypertension, reducing the incidence of fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular events. However because of technical and design problems, the studies carried out to date have involved highly selected patients, almost always without any target organ damage, independent, cognitively normal and with low comorbidity. Therefore, trial results may be transferred to clinical practice only with some caution. Therapeutic behavior could be different in the presence of diseases associated with hypertension: a) in case of associated specific cardiovascular complications and/or diseases, such as diabetes or
dyslipidemia
, which could increase cardiovascular risk, treatment must be more aggressive; b) in case of associated diseases with fatal prognosis, treatment is aimed at preventing hypertensive emergencies; c) in case of associated diseases, which are not life-threatening but require chronic pharmacological intervention, drug interaction must be carefully considered. Finally, sudden and significant blood pressure drops due both to overdosage of antihypertensive drugs and/or to intercurrent illnesses must be prevented, because the reduction of blood flow may induce severe target organ
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Treatment of hypertension in the elderly. 1038 46
Diabetic patients have a higher prevalence of hypertension,
dyslipidemia
and obesity. However, diabetes is by itself a major independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. About two-thirds of total mortality are due to diabetic macroangiopathy. It is characterised by accelerated atherosclerosis, with more severe, more extensive and more diffuse lesions, as compared with nondiabetic patients. Patients with diabetes present more frequently acute pulmonary oedema despite similar infarct sizes than do nondiabetic patients. They are more frequently at risk for ventricular dysfunction, for ventricular aneurysm and for congestive heart failure. At the time of diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, more than 50% of patients have pre-existing coronary heart disease, probably related to painless
ischemia
, caused by an autonomic denervation of the heart in diabetic patients. International recommendations suggest that all diabetic patients should be evaluated at least annually for the development or progression of risk factors that would prompt cardiac testing. The standard bicycle exercise test should be chosen in an asymptomatic patient with only one other risk factor and with a normal resting ECG. For all other diabetic patients, stress echocardiography or stress myocardial perfusion imaging should be preferably chosen.
...
PMID:[Cardiac complications of type 2 diabetes]. 1092 96
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