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Query: UMLS:C0242339 (
dyslipidemia
)
13,927
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypertension is associated with insulin resistance and
dyslipidemia
in a syndrome named X. Epidemiologic evidence also supports a link between hyperinsulinemia and blood pressure (BP), independent of obesity and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. To assess the possible role of insulin receptors in this syndrome, we studied insulin binding by erythrocyte ghosts in patients with moderate essential hypertension with or without fasting or postglucose hyperinsulinemia. We measured plasma glucose and insulin before and at 30, 60, and 120 min after administration of 75 g glucose in 62 hypertensive patients and 20 matched normotensive controls. Both groups had comparable age (mean 45 years) and waist/hip ratios (mean 0.88). Patients undergoing antihypertensive treatment did not receive antihypertensive medication for 3 weeks. Patients with fasting or postglucose hyperglycemia were excluded from the study. Insulin binding to erythrocyte ghosts was significantly decreased (p < 0.001) to almost half the values of controls (6.5% specific binding) in both patients with hyperinsulinemic (3.2% specific binding) and those with normoinsulinemic (3.9% specific binding) hypertension. Scatchard analysis demonstrated that this was due to a lesser number of insulin receptors. These data indicate that patients with essential hypertension can show decreased erythrocyte insulin receptors without detectable hyperinsulinemia.
J
Cardiovasc
Pharmacol 1994 Jul
PMID:Diminished insulin receptors on erythrocyte ghosts in nonobese patients with essential hypertension independent of hyperinsulinemia. 752 93
Arterial hypertension is a chronic condition regarded as one of the main risk factors for development of coronary atherosclerosis. As
dyslipidemia
and reduced glucose tolerance are also risk factors for coronary disease, it is considered important to use antihypertensive drugs having no negative effects on lipid and glucose metabolism when diabetic patients are treated for hypertension. Lacidipine, a new dihydropyridine-like calcium antagonist, has been shown in in vivo and in vitro preclinical studies to possess potent, long-lasting antihypertensive activity. The present study compared the efficacy and safety of once-daily treatment with lacidipine versus nifedipine SR given twice-daily in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients. Results have shown a similar efficacy of the two treatments: 6 months later, both drugs had reduced blood pressure values [lacidipine from 184.8/105.2 mm Hg to 144.4/87.1 mm Hg; nifedipine slow-release (SR) from 182.3/106.8 mm Hg to 143.6/89.4 mmHg]. However, lacidipine exhibited a lower incidence of adverse events (particularly ankle edema and tachycardia) than nifedipine SR. Finally, both treatments showed no negative effect on metabolic parameters (total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood glucose).
J
Cardiovasc
Pharmacol 1994
PMID:Calcium antagonist antihypertensive treatment of non-insulin-dependent diabetics: efficacy and safety of lacidipine versus nifedipine SR. 760 94
The study was undertaken to evaluate the development and association of parameters related to the metabolic syndrome during celiprolol treatment. Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp and independent oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) were performed on 25 nondiabetic patients with controlled hypertension and
dyslipidemia
. The tests were carried out during the patients' previous antihypertensive monotherapy (beta- or Ca-blocker, or an ACE inhibitor), and after 6 and 12 months of celiprolol treatment. About one third of patients were randomized to a control group in which treatment was kept unchanged. Insulin sensitivity index (ISI), measured by the euglycemic clamp test, increased 35% in the celiprolol group at 6 months and remained at that level at 12 months, independent of the previous treatment (p = 0.03, compared to the change in the control group). During a 2 hour OGTT, incremental glucose area under the curve (AUC) decreased from 4.5 to 1.9 hr x mmol/l during 6 months of celiprolol treatment, and decreased further to 1.5 hr x mmol/l at 12 months (p < 0.001). Insulin AUC decreased from 113 to 72 hr x mU/l, and decreased further to 68 hr x mU/l (p < 0.01). All insulin parameters in OGTT were highly significant (p < 0.0001) and inversely associated with ISI. Insulin AUC had the best linear correlation with ISI (r = -0.682, p < 0.0001). Glucose parameters in OGTT correlated only weakly and inversely with insulin sensitivity. From the fasting serum lipids, triglycerides showed an inverse (p < 0.001) and HDL a weak (p < 0.05) positive association with ISI. Four out of 20 metabolic, clinical, and demographic parameters proved to be independently significant predictors for ISI in multiple regression analysis. These were insulin AUC, fasting insulin levels, triglyceride values, and age. The coefficient of determination in this four-parameter linear model was 69%. In this preliminary, observer-masked trial with a limited control group, celiprolol improved the impaired insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance of dyslipidemic hypertensive patients. A fairly predictive model can be formulated to evaluate the peripheral insulin sensitivity of hypertensive patients with suspected metabolic syndrome using OGTT with serum insulin determinations.
Cardiovasc
Drugs Ther 1995 Apr
PMID:Association between serum lipids, glucose tolerance, and insulin sensitivity during 12 months of celiprolol treatment. 766 96
The management of essential hypertension can no longer be directed toward an isolated reduction in arterial pressure. Optimal reduction in the risk factors associated with hypertension and cardiovascular disease hopefully will reduce coronary heart disease, angina, fatal and nonfatal myocardial infarction, left ventricular hypertrophy, congestive heart failure, and sudden death. Hypertension is a genetic and acquired syndrome that consists of
dyslipidemia
, insulin resistance and carbohydrate intolerance, central obesity, renal abnormalities, structural abnormalities of smooth muscle, and ion transport abnormalities (membranopathy). The selection of pharmacologic agents should improve the components of the hypertensive syndrome by utilizing the "subsets of hypertension approach" to treatment.
J
Cardiovasc
Pharmacol 1993
PMID:The management of hypertension and associated risk factors for the prevention of long-term cardiac complications. 769 47
The pathophysiology of various stages of hypertension is different. In early hyperkinetic borderline hypertension, the sympathetic drive to the heart and blood vessels is increased while the parasympathetic cardiac inhibition is decreased. The elevated cardiac output, vascular resistance, and blood pressure at that stage can be fully normalized by autonomic blockade. As hypertension advances, a hyperkinetic circulation is less evident, since beta-adrenergic responsiveness and cardiac compliance tend to decrease. Simultaneously hypertrophy of the resistance vessels increases the baseline vascular resistance and the vessels' responsiveness to constrictive stimuli. Eventually a picture of a normal cardiac output/high vascular resistance typical for established essential hypertension emerges. As the blood vessels become hyperreactive, the same degree of vasoconstriction/blood pressure elevation can be achieved with less sympathetic tone. In that phase the sympathetic overactivity is less evident, as the brain resets itself to maintain the same blood pressure elevation with a small amount of sympathetic discharge. While sympathetic overactivity may be less evident in established hypertension, it remains an important pathophysiologic factor, not only for the maintenance of blood pressure, but also for a number of other abnormalities in hypertension. Hypertension is intimately associated with higher levels of pressure-unrelated risk for development of atherosclerosis:
dyslipidemia
, overweight, and hyperinsulinemia. Furthermore, a number of factors in hypertension favor a poorer outcome from coronary heart disease. These pressure-independent factors increase the risk of coronary thrombosis, arrhythmic deaths, and coronary spasms. Sympathetic overreactivity appears to be crucially implicated in the evolution of this added coronary risk in hypertension. Understanding the pathophysiology of coronary risk and its relationship to sympathetic overreactivity in hypertension is helpful in seeking further improvements in clinical practice. At present antihypertensive treatment is less efficacious in reducing coronary events in hypertension than would be expected. Judicious use of appropriate drugs promises to further improve the efficacy of antihypertensive treatment in those patients who, in addition to high blood pressure, also have other associated risk factors.
Cardiovasc
Drugs Ther 1994 Mar
PMID:Abnormalities of autonomic nervous control in human hypertension. 806 76
In an open, multicenter study, the calcium antagonist lacidipine was tested for efficacy and safety, particularly with respect to any influence on lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. The study was performed in 2,127 patients with essential hypertension. The patients were treated orally, with lacidipine in a dosage of 2-6 mg once daily for 48 weeks. Lacidipine significantly reduced both systolic and diastolic blood pressure by 20 +/- 17 mm Hg and 14 +/- 10 mm Hg, respectively, from baseline values (both p < 0.0001). Decreases in blood pressure were achieved without any adverse effects on lipid and carbohydrate metabolism, either in the total group or in subsets of diabetic or hyperlipidemic patients. It is concluded that lacidipine is a safe and effective drug in the long-term antihypertensive treatment of patients with essential hypertension and with concomitant metabolic disorders such as diabetes mellitus or
dyslipidemia
.
J
Cardiovasc
Pharmacol 1995
PMID:The impact of lacidipine, a novel dihydropyridine calcium antagonist, on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. 885 41
Allelic frequencies of polymorphic variants at the lipoprotein lipase gene locus on chromosome 8 have been measured in subjects with premature coronary heart disease and/or
dyslipidemia
. One of the polymorphic variants involves a termination codon in exon 9 at the position of serine 447, which produces a truncated protein. Michaelis constants and Vmax for triolein and chylomicrons appear identical for the variant and native enzymes. Another informative polymorphism is a Hind 111 restriction site in intron 8 that shows marked asymmetric allelic distribution in subjects with hypertriglyceridemia/low-high-density lipoprotein and in subjects with premature coronary heart disease. It is hoped that this marker may lead to the identification of an etiological mutation in its vicinity to account for these disease associations.
J
Cardiovasc
Pharmacol 1995
PMID:Common genetic determinants of dyslipidemia: the hypertriglyceridemia/low-high-density lipoprotein syndrome. 890 13
In recent years, calcium channel blockers (CCBs) have been used extensively in the United States and elsewhere as antihypertensive agents, and their availability has been an important advance in the management of hypertension. As antihypertensive agents, the CCBs thus appear considerably more versatile than most previous vasodilators. The available studies indicate that CCBs are metabolically neutral and do not exacerbate
dyslipidemia
or impair glucose tolerance. In contrast to diuretics and beta-blockers, CCBs do not appear to alter insulin sensitivity. The CCBs also differ from previous vasodilators because of their favorable accompanying effects on the heart and kidney. Despite the attributes of CCBs enumerated earlier, a number of recent retrospective analyses by Psaty et al. (JAMA 1995;274:620-625) have suggested that CCBs may be detrimental and may promote adverse cardiovascular events. I have recently reviewed the results of Psaty's meta-analysis and report (Arch Intern Med 1995;155: 2150-2156). I have emphasized that it is the rate of drug delivery into the systemic circulation that produces profound effects on the hemodynamic and neurohumoral responses to a dihydropyridine CCB drug. During chronic treatment with dihydropyridines, major fluctuations in blood pressure (rapid onset and offset of antihypertensive effects) during the dosing interval may persist for drugs and formulations that are short acting. In contrast, slow-release formulations of otherwise rapidly absorbed dihydropyridines achieve a more gradual and sustained antihypertensive effect. It is probable that newer CCB formulations that do not provoke intermittent sympathetic activation and do not evoke a cardioacceleratory response would not be expected to promote adverse cardiovascular events.
Cardiovasc
Drugs Ther 1997 Jan
PMID:Calcium channel blockers and hypertension: evolving perspective--1996. 912 78
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.
Cardiovasc
Drugs Ther 1997 May
PMID:Hazards, risks, and threats of heart disease from the early stages to symptomatic coronary heart disease and cardiac failure. 921 Oct 12
Carnitine and its derivative propionyl-L-carnitine are endogenous cofactors which enhance carbohydrate metabolism and reduce the intracellular buildup of toxic metabolites in ischemic conditions. The carnitines have been, and are being used in a spectrum of diseases including multiple cardiovascular conditions. These include angina, acute myocardial infarction, postmyocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, peripheral vascular disease,
dyslipidemia
, and diabetes. Most published data on carnitine, propionyl-L-carnitine, and other carnitine congeners are favorable but the clinical trials have been relatively small. In currently used doses, these substances are virtually devoid of significant side effects.
Prog
Cardiovasc
Dis
PMID:Carnitine and its derivatives in cardiovascular disease. 940 79
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