Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0264733 (
ventricular dilatation
)
2,163
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In an attempt to identify possible adverse effects of CNS prophylaxis (cranial radiation and intrathecal chemotherapy), we examined hypothalamic-pituitary function in 23 patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). Of 18 patients who had received both cranial radiation and intrathecal chemotherapy, nine had abnormally low growth hormone responses to
insulin
-induced hypoglycemia (less than 7.0 ng/ml). Seven of the nine patients with abnormally low growth hormone responses also manifested
ventricular dilatation
on computed tomography (CT) brain scans, whereas only one of the nine patients with normal growth hormone responses demonstrated this CT scan finding (P = 0.015). The remaining patients, who had not received cranial radiation, had normal growth hormone responses and normal CT scans. There is significant correlation between
ventricular dilatation
on CT and abnormally low peak growth hormone responses following CNS prophylaxis in ALL.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction following CNS prophylaxis in acute lymphocytic leukemia: correlation with CT scan abnormalities. 29 72
Since elevation of plasma concentrations of free fatty acids (FFA) increases myocardial oxygen consumption without influencing mechanical performance in normal hearts, it was the purpose of this study to determine whether FFA would modify mechanical performance at limited oxygen supply. Left coronary blood flow was reduced by gradual clamping of a shunt from the left carotid artery until moderate
ventricular dilatation
supervened. Left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP), its maximal rate of rise (dP/dt) and stroke volume (SV) were unchanged or slightly reduced. The ischemia resulted in a decrease in myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO(2)) from 9.7+/-1.1 ml/min to 7.9+/-0.8 ml/min, and myocardial lactate uptake was reduced or reversed to excretion. Increasing the plasma concentrations of FFA from 359+/-47 muEq/1 to 3688+/-520 muEq/1 by intravenous infusion of a triglyceride emulsion and heparin resulted in further
ventricular dilatation
, accompanied by increased excretion of lactate. The ventricular decompensation and enhancement of anaerobic myocardial metabolism associated with increased uptake of FFA was not related to changes in coronary flow, MVO(2), or LVSP. dP/dt and SV were virtually unchanged. Intravenous infusion of glucose/
insulin
, which lowered plasma concentrations of FFA, reversed
ventricular dilatation
and lactate excretion. The data support the hypothesis that high concentrations of FFA play a significant role in increasing myocardial oxygen requirement and thereby promote depression of contractility of the hypoxic heart in experimental animals.
...
PMID:Effect of free fatty acids on myocardial function and metabolism in the ischemic dog heart. 503 25
Aim of this study was to investigate a) if through Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) it was possible to reveal cerebral alterations in patients with
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM); b) if there was any correlation with hypoglycemic episodes, glycometabolic control, microvascular alterations and diabetic peripheral neuropathy. For this purpose ten ID-DM patients under treatment with human
insulin
, aged 19-30 yr with the disease, the duration being from 1 to 19 yr, were investigated by MRI using a Philips Gyroscan. Spin Echo sequences were used with images in T1 T2 in sagittal and axial planes. To measure the
ventricular dilatation
the cerebroventricular index (CVI) was evaluated. The MRI has put in evidence in 7/10 patients a dilatation in the lateral ventricles and subarachnoidal spaces of the cerebral vault and the cerebellum clearly due to cerebral atrophy. The CVI mean values (34.78 +/- 2.92) were statistically (p < 0.001) higher in diabetic patients respect to control subjects (CVI mean values 27.5 +/- 1.58). These alterations did not present clear correlations with the degree of glycometabolic control, duration of disease, number of symptomatic hypoglycemic episodes and threshold for hypoglycemic symptoms, retinal microvascular alterations, microalbuminuria, diabetic peripheral neuropathy. The clinical or functional relevance of CVI changes and the exact pathogenic mechanism remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Evidence by magnetic resonance imaging of cerebral alterations of atrophy type in young insulin-dependent diabetic patients. 793 Mar 74
Obesity can result in alterations in cardiac structure and function even in the absence of systemic hypertension and underlying organic heart disease. Increased total blood volume creates a high cardiac output state that may cause
ventricular dilatation
and ultimately eccentric hypertrophy of the left (and possibly the right) ventricle. Eccentric left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy produces diastolic dysfunction. Systolic dysfunction may ensue due to excessive wall stress if wall thickening fails to keep pace with dilatation. This disorder is referred to as obesity cardiomyopathy. The presence of systemic hypertension in obese individuals facilitates development of LV dilatation and hypertrophy. Congestive heart failure may occur in such individuals, and may be attributable to LV diastolic dysfunction or to combined LV diastolic and systolic dysfunction. The sleep apnea/obesity hypoventilation syndrome occurs in 5% of morbidly obese individuals and is potentially life-threatening. Treatment of obesity cardiomyopathy consists of weight loss, salt restriction, and diuretics. Digitalis and vasodilators may be useful in selected cases. Central obesity is probably a risk factor for the development of coronary heart disease. Alterations in lipid and
insulin
metabolism may facilitate development of coronary heart disease in obese patients.
...
PMID:Obesity and the heart. 836 92
1. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of fractional meal stimulation on postprandial haemodynamic changes, the possible correlation between these changes and the potential mediating role of circulating catecholamines and
insulin
. 2. Healthy young subjects were studied before and after ingestion of isocaloric, isovolumetric high-protein, carbohydrate or fat meals (80-85% of total energy), 60 kJ per kg of body weight. Multigated radionuclide cardiography with autologous 99mTc-labelled erythrocytes was performed for assessment of cardiac output, venous occlusion plethysmography to obtain forearm blood flow and Doppler-ultrasonography for portal vein flow. Plasma levels of catecholamines and
insulin
were determined by radioimmunoassay. 3. Cardiac output increased considerably after each meal, including the control meal (water) with only minor differences in extent and timing. Left ventricular volumes increased after food intake, most pronounced after carbohydrate and protein. Forearm blood flow increased only after carbohydrate and protein. Portal vein flow increased after all meals, especially after fat, but also after the control meal. There was a significant correlation between the increment in cardiac output and changes in forearm and portal vein flow, but no correlation between either haemodynamic response and plasma catecholamines or
insulin
. 4. Postprandial cardiovascular changes are not substantially different after various isocaloric and isovolumic meal compositions. Gastric distension seems to play a role in the increase in cardiac output, accomplished by
ventricular dilatation
. These changes seem to some extent to be linked to changes in muscle and splanchnic flow.
...
PMID:Haemodynamic effects of eating: the role of meal composition. 877 33
To provide histological diagnoses of brain diseases, CT-guided stereotactic brain biopsy (CT-SBB) has been widely used because of its less invasive technique compared with open brain biopsy (OBB). However, CT-SBB is not always diagnostic. We report a case of multiple intracranial tuberculoma whose diagnosis was not made by CT-SBB but by OBB. The patient is a 46-year-old man with
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus who had been receiving immunosuppressive agents (azathioprine, cyclosporin, and prednisolone) after renal transplantation for diabetic renal failure for 9 years. He gradually developed febrile, headache and unsteady gait. Brain MRI demonstrated multiple intracranial lesions involving left fronto-temporal and right parietal lobes, left cerebellar hemisphere, and the fourth ventricle. Although the MRI findings were consistent with those of previously reported cases of intracranial tuberculoma, other conditions, such as malignant lymphoma and toxoplasmosis, were not ruled out. Therefore, CT-SBB targeting the left temporal lobe lesion was done for definitive diagnosis, but it revealed only mild perivascular infiltration of mononuclear cells and hemorrhage. He was transferred to our clinic for further evaluation. On examination, mild truncal and limb ataxia on the left were noted in addition to the neurological findings corresponding to diabetic retinopathy and neuropathy. Despite vigorous laboratory examinations, including repeated bacterial cultures and PCR of cerebrospinal fluid, no evidence of tuberculous infection was obtained. A tentative diagnosis of multiple intracranial tuberculoma was made, and anti-tuberculous drugs (isoniazid 400 mg, ethambutol 750 mg, and pyrazinamide 1.5 g) were administered. Since his symptoms deteriorated because of
ventricular dilatation
resulting from the enlarged lesion in the fourth ventricle after a temporary clinical improvement, VP-shunting and OBB from the left temporal lobe lesion were done. The excised lesion was firmly encapsulated and the histological examination revealed typical pathology of tuberculoma. Ziehl-Neelsen staining and PCR for Mycobacterium tuberculosis of the biopsied specimen were also positive. Further administration of increased doses of anti-tuberculous drugs (isoniazid 600 mg, ethambutol 500 mg, pyrazinamide 2.0 g and intramuscular injection of streptomycin 0.3 g twice a week) eventually ameliorated the symptoms and shrank the lesions. In case of intracranial tuberculoma, the needle of CT-SBB may not penetrate the firm capsule of tuberculoma and only the surrounding brain tissue may be obtained as in the present case. Therefore, it is recommended to consider OBB from the beginning for definitive diagnosis of intracranial tuberculoma. Paradoxical worsening of the clinical and laboratory findings of tuberculosis in spite of appropriate anti-tuberculous therapy as seen in the present case has been described in both pulmonary and extra-pulmonary tuberculosis. The phenomenon, called transient worsening, could happen and we have to keep it in mind during the treatment of intracerebral tuberculoma.
...
PMID:[A case of multiple intracranial tuberculoma diagnosed by open brain biopsy]. 949 Sep
We examined the effect of six doses of dexamethasone (Dex) administered daily (2-7 days of age) to postnatal rats on body weight gain, food and water intake, peripheral hormonal/metabolic milieu, and hypothalamic neuropeptides that regulate food intake. We observed a Dex-induced acute (3 days of age) suppression of endogenous corticosterone and an increase in circulating leptin concentrations that were associated with a decrease in body weight in males and females. Followup during the suckling, postsuckling, and adult stages (7-120 days of age) revealed hypoleptinemia in males and females, and hypoinsulinemia, a relative increase in the glucose-to-
insulin
ratio, and a larger increase in skeletal muscle glucose transporter (GLUT 4) concentrations predominantly in the males, reflective of a catabolic state associated with a persistent decrease in body weight gain. The increase in the glucose-to-
insulin
ratio and hyperglycemia was associated with an increase in water intake. In addition, the changes in the hormonal/metabolic milieu were associated with an increase in hypothalamic neuropeptide Y content in males and females during the suckling phase, which persisted only in the 120-day-old female with a transient postnatal decline in alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone and corticotropin-releasing factor. This increase in neuropeptide Y (NPY) during the suckling phase in males and females was associated with a subsequent increase in adult food intake that outweighed the demands of body weight gain. In contrast to the adult hypothalamic findings, cerebral
ventricular dilatation
was more prominent in adult males. We conclude that postnatal Dex treatment causes permanent sex-specific changes in the adult phenotype, setting the stage for future development of diabetes (increased glucose:
insulin
ratio), obesity (increased NPY and food intake), and neurological impairment (loss of cerebral volume).
...
PMID:Postnatal glucocorticoid exposure alters the adult phenotype. 1500 31
In the normal population, the prevalence of obesity is almost 20%. It is a condition influenced by genetic factors, so that individual behavior cannot be regarded as its sole cause. The amount of food is essentially determined by the hormone leptin, the feedback regulation of which can be disturbed by a modification of the molecule or a mutation of the receptor. A further important determinant is energy consumption, which is subject to large individual variations, which partly result from thermogenesis. With regard to the fat distribution, it is concentrated on the trunk in the android form as compared to the hips in the gynecoid form. The android form is subject to a higher incidence of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The indirect determination of body fat by measuring the body mass index (weight [kg]/body weight [m(2)]) is hence less reliable than measuring the waist (women > 80 cm, men > 94 cm). The effects of generalized obesity on cardiovascular function are chiefly an increase of blood volume and an eccentric left ventricular hypertrophy. This first of all results in diastolic dysfunction, which can give rise to a disturbance of systolic function in left
ventricular dilatation
. Concentric hypertrophy develops in the presence of arterial hypertension. This is twice as frequent in obese patients than in the normal population, which is due to increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system and stimulation of the renin-angiotensin system. A disturbance of lipid metabolism is observed four to six times more frequently. The qualitative change in LDL fraction with a raised concentration of low density LDL particles appears to be of crucial importance. With increasing fat mass, the sensitivity to
insulin
is lowered, so that in obesity the risk of developing diabetes mellitus type 2 is tripled. Since there has been a dramatic increase in the numbers of overweight children and adolescents (from 10.5% to 15.5% within the past five years), prevention programs should be started in good time. A reduction in calorie intake and an altered dietary composition (55% complex carbohydrates, 30% fat and 15% to 20% protein) on the one hand, and increased physical activity on the other hand continue to be the central components. The latter is especially effective when it regularly gives rise to an increased turnover of fatty acids as a result of an increased energy metabolism at moderate intensity. This leads to adaptation, i. e. an increase in the activity of lipoprotein lipase. If prevention programs and/or changes in lifestyle do not give rise to the desired weight reduction, medication is indicated in some adults. Sibutramine (Reductil and orlistate (Xenical) lead to an additional weight loss of up to 10%. However, consistent treatment of any cardiovascular risk factors present is more important. Treatment of arterial hypertension is of greatest prognostic significance, especially in concomitant diabetes mellitus. In individual cases and after thorough discussion of indication surgical options should be considered.
...
PMID:[Obesity and cardiovascular diseases-theoretical background and therapeutic consequences]. 1524 61
Mortality peri-myocardial infarction (MI) is increased with
insulin
resistance. As the vasopeptidase inhibitor (VPI) omapatrilat improves
insulin
sensitivity, it may be beneficial peri-MI in Zucker
Insulin
Resistant rats (ZIR). ZIR rats (n = 228) received omapatrilat 10 mg/kg/day, 7 days pre-MI, to 38 days post-MI, or control. Twenty-four protocol (n = 72): a subgroup of rats received the kinin receptor antagonist icatibant. Ambulatory ECG recordings, and MI size were evaluated. Thirty-eight-day protocol (n = 156): left ventricular (LV) remodeling, cardiac hemodynamics, morphology, infarct size, and RT-PCR for GLUT-4 and fetal genes were measured. Omapatrilat improved post-MI survival 24 h (62% vs 38%, P = 0.0007) which was maintained 38 days. There was a kinin-induced reduction of ventricular arrhythmias and there appeared to be a kinin-independent reduction in MI size (23.5 +/- 2.4% vs 17.0 +/- 2.2%, P = 0.053) for 24-h post-MI. Omapatrilat reduced but did not prevent LV dilatation, dysfunction, and fetal gene expression 38 days post-MI. Omapatrilat did not prevent reduced cardiac GLUT-4 expression. In ZIR rats, mortality post-MI is reduced by omapatrilat, due and a kinin-dependent reduction in ventricular arrhythmias and possibly a kinin-independent reduction in MI size.
Ventricular dilatation
, dysfunction, and fetal gene expression are variably attenuated but not prevented.
...
PMID:Vasopeptidase inhibition peri- and post-MI in Zucker insulin resistant rats: effect on MI size, arrhythmias, remodeling, function and fetal gene expression. 1638 94
Insulin
resistance (IR) and diabetes increase the risk of acute myocardial infarction (MI). Angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) have been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with hypertension and diabetes, and to be beneficial after a large MI. Whether pretreatment with ARBs is beneficial in acute MI is unknown. We evaluated whether pre-, peri-, and post-MI treatment with the ARB losartan improved the outcome in the IR Zucker fatty rat (ZFR). ZFR (n=264) received either losartan (3 mg/kg daily) or vehicle for 7 d prior to MI. Early (24 h) protocol (n=31): ventricular arrhythmias were evaluated post-MI using continuous ambulatory ECG monitoring. Late (38 d) protocol (n=233): losartan was increased to 10 mg/kg daily 10 d post-MI and to 30 mg/kg daily 20 d post-MI. Blood glucose, cardiac hemodynamics and remodeling, GLUT-4, fetal gene expression, and survival were evaluated. In large-MI rats, losartan improved early survival (43% vs. 27% in controls, p=0.01) and late survival (23% vs.15% in controls, p=0.02). Improved early survival was associated with a reduction in ventricular arrhythmias. Losartan reduced pulmonary congestion, cardiac hypertrophy, and fetal gene expression in the absence of statistically significant changes in
ventricular dilatation
and hemodynamics. Blood glucose and cardiac GLUT-4 expression did not change with losartan. In IR ZFR, losartan improves post-MI survival, likely as a result of an early reduction in ventricular arrhythmias. There was also an associated reduction in pulmonary congestion, hypertrophy, and fetal gene expression.
...
PMID:Losartan and acute myocardial infarction in insulin-resistant Zucker fatty rats: reduced ventricular arrhythmias and improved survival. 1639 7
1
2
Next >>