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Query: UMLS:C0948265 (metabolic syndrome)
24,271 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Our objectives were to determine the prevalence and factors related to left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) among older women for commonly used electrocardiographic criteria. LVH is a potent risk factor for cardiovascular disease, especially among women. However, its value has been limited, in part, by the use of different electrocardiographic criteria and the lack of a clearly defined standard for the general population. A total of 3,613 eligible women, aged 50 to 79 years, underwent medical history, physical measurements, and biochemical determinations and had behavioral factors recorded at baseline. Three LVH indexes were derived from computer measurement of the electrocardiogram: hypertrophied left ventricular mass > or =171.04 g (HLVM); Cornell voltage > or =2,200 microV; and Minnesota Code items. The prevalence of LVH ranged from <1% to 13% when stratified by age, ethnicity, and scoring technique. Baseline traits differed significantly for those meeting the LVH criteria. Predictors (p <0.01) of HLVM were age (odds ratio 0.66), height (odds ratio 1.47), waist/hip ratio (odds ratio 1.30), systolic blood pressure (odds ratio 1.18); low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (odds ratio 0.97), log insulin (odds ratio 2.10), dietary kilocalories (odds ratio 1.16), weekly energy expenditure (odds ratio 0.53), hypertension (odds ratio 1.61), current estrogen use (odds ratio 0.60), and current smoker (odds ratio 0.47). The presence of the metabolic syndrome was related to all LVH indexes, with odds ratios of 4.95, 2.24, and 2.35, respectively, for HLVM, Cornell voltage, and Minnesota Code. In conclusion, the prevalence of LVH varied by ethnicity and the electrocardiographic index used. However, the baseline traits, especially the factors associated with the metabolic syndrome, were consistently and strongly related to all LVH indexes, particularly HLVM. Intervention on these factors may provide strategies for reducing LVH, a strong independent risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality among women.
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PMID:Prevalence and determinants of electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy among a multiethnic population of postmenopausal women (The Women's Health Initiative). 1646 Oct 48

High blood pressure is often associated with various metabolic abnormalities, including abdominal obesity, dyslipidemia, elevated plasma glucose, and insulin resistance, which are the main features of the metabolic syndrome. The metabolic syndrome is extremely common worldwide. This high prevalence is of considerable concern because several studies suggest that the metabolic syndrome carries an increased risk for cardiovascular events. Several lines of evidence seem to indicate that the metabolic syndrome is associated with an increased prevalence of preclinical cardiovascular and renal changes, such as left ventricular hypertrophy, microalbuminuria, impaired aortic elasticity, and early carotid atherosclerosis, most of which are recognized as significant independent predictors of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. It is conceivable that these data may partly explain the high rates of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality that are observed in patients with the metabolic syndrome.
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PMID:The metabolic syndrome and its relationship to hypertensive target organ damage. 1652 97

It has long been recognized that arterial hypertension is often a part of a larger constellation of anthropometric and metabolic abnormalities that includes abdominal (or visceral) obesity, a characteristic dyslipidemia (low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and high triglycerides), glucose intolerance, insulin-resistance and hyperuricemia. These traits occur simultaneously to a greater degree than would be expected by chance alone, supporting the existence of a discrete disorder that, over the years, has been defined by a variety of terms, including plurimetabolic syndrome, the deadly quartet, dysmetabolic syndrome, insulin resistance syndrome, cardiometabolic syndrome and more recently metabolic syndrome (MS). In last years some scientific organizations proposed working definitions for MS. Among these definitions, the one suggested by the National Cholesterol Education Program Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults (NCEP-ATPIII) is the simplest and the most commonly applied. The MS is extremely common worldwide. This high prevalence is of considerable concern because accumulating evidences suggest that the MS, even without type 2 diabetes, carries an increased risk for cardiovascular and renal events. Recently it has been demonstrated that the adverse prognostic impact of MS may also be extended to hypertensive patients. Some recent studies reported an increased prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, early carotid atherosclerosis, impaired aortic distensibility, hypertensive retinopathy and microalbuminuria in hypertensive patients with MS when compared to those without it. The increased occurrence of these early signs of subclinical target organ damage, most of which are recognized as significant independent predictors of adverse cardiovascular and renal outcomes, may partially explain the association of the MS with a higher cardiovascular and renal risk.
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PMID:Metabolic syndrome in subjects with essential hypertension: relationships with subclinical cardiovascular and renal damage. 1677 51

1. Childhood obesity is increasing worldwide and is associated with an increase in cardiovascular risk factors in childhood. 2. In children, obesity is associated with hypertension, impaired vascular function, dyslipidaemia, atheroma, the metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, systemic inflammation and oxidative stress. Greater risk is associated with clustering of risk factors. 3. Obesity tracks from childhood to adult life and predicts adverse levels of risk and an increase in cardiovascular end-points. 4. Adults who were obese as children have higher rates of obesity and its sequelae: greater intima-media thickness, left ventricular hypertrophy and atherosclerosis. There is greater all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, as well as a greater risk of stroke, in long-term follow-up of obese children. 5. Genetic and environmental factors contribute to familial aggregation of obesity, with parental obesity as a strong predictor of obesity in children. However, clustering of adverse health-related behaviours is seen in such families. 6. Adverse behaviours (smoking, poor dietary choices, less physical activity and greater alcohol intake) also cluster in individuals, suggesting the need for multimodal interventions. 7. Recognition of families at risk offers opportunities for prevention of obesity in children and decreasing risk in parents.
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PMID:Obesity in childhood and cardiovascular risk. 1692 16

A 2-year-old morbidly obese boy presented with early manifestation of vascular disease associated with several obesity-related features of the metabolic syndrome due to massive overfeeding. Ultrasound of the carotid arteries showed significant thickening of the intima media, perfusion magnetic resonance spectroscopy indicated cerebral microcirculation disturbance, and echocardiography revealed left ventricular hypertrophy. Thorough assessment of morbidly obese children seems to be of importance from early childhood on. Studies evaluating the prevalence of obesity-related metabolic and vascular comorbidities in very young morbidly obese children are warranted.
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PMID:Early cerebrovascular disease in a 2-year-old with extreme obesity and complete metabolic syndrome due to feeding of excessively high amounts of energy. 1692 42

The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome (National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III criteria) and its relationships with daily life blood pressures, cardiac damage, and prognosis were determined in 2013 subjects from a Northern Italian population aged 25 to 74 years. Home blood pressure, 24-hour blood pressure, and left ventricular mass index (echocardiography) were also measured. Cardiovascular and noncardiovascular deaths were registered over 148 months. Metabolic syndrome was found in 16.2% of the sample, an office blood pressure elevation being the most frequent (95.4%) and the blood glucose abnormality the least frequent (31.5%) component. There was in metabolic syndrome a frequent elevation in home and/or 24-hour average blood pressure, as well as a greater left ventricular mass index and prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy, which was manifest even when data were adjusted for between-group differences, including blood pressure. The adjusted risk of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality was greater in metabolic syndrome subjects (+71.0% and +37.0%; P<0.05), a further marked increase being observed with left ventricular hypertrophy or "in-office" and "out-of-office" blood pressure elevations. The increased risk was related to the blood pressure and the blood glucose component of metabolic syndrome, with no contribution of the remaining components. Thus, metabolic syndrome is common in a Mediterranean population in which it significantly increases the long-term risk of death. Cardiac abnormalities and increases in home and 24-hour blood pressure are common in metabolic syndrome, and their occurrence further enhances the risk. The contribution of metabolic syndrome components to the risk, however, is unbalanced and mainly related to blood pressure and glucose abnormalities.
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PMID:Metabolic syndrome in the Pressioni Arteriose Monitorate E Loro Associazioni (PAMELA) study: daily life blood pressure, cardiac damage, and prognosis. 1713 Mar 7

Currently, a high carbohydrate/low fat diet is recommended for patients with hypertension; however, the potentially important role that the composition of dietary fat and carbohydrate plays in hypertension and the development of pathological left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) has not been well characterized. Recent studies demonstrate that LVH can also be triggered by activation of insulin signaling pathways, altered adipokine levels, or the activity of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs), suggesting that metabolic alterations play a role in the pathophysiology of LVH. Hypertensive patients with high plasma insulin or metabolic syndrome have a greater occurrence of LVH, which could be due to insulin activation of the serine-threonine kinase Akt and its downstream targets in the heart, resulting in cellular hypertrophy. PPARs also activate cardiac gene expression and growth and are stimulated by fatty acids and consumption of a high fat diet. Dietary intake of fats and carbohydrate and the resultant effects of plasma insulin, adipokine, and lipid concentrations may affect cardiomyocyte size and function, particularly in the setting of chronic hypertension. This review discusses potential mechanisms by which dietary carbohydrates and fats ca affect cardiac growth, metabolism, and function, mainly in the context of pressure overload-induced LVH.
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PMID:Potential impact of carbohydrate and fat intake on pathological left ventricular hypertrophy. 1716 90

The relation of metabolic syndrome (MetS) with cardiovascular outcome may be less evident when preclinical cardiovascular disease is present. We explored, in a post hoc analysis, whether MetS predicts cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients with electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (ECG-LVH) in the Losartan Intervention For Endpoint (LIFE) reduction in hypertension study. MetS was defined by >or=2 risk factors plus hypertension: body mass index >or=30 kg/m(2), high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol <1.0/1.3 mmol/l (<40/50 mg/dl) (men/women), glucose >or=6.1 mmol/l (>or=110 mg/dl) fasting or >or=7.8 mmol/l (>or=140 mg/dl) nonfasting or diabetes. Cardiovascular death and the primary composite end point (CEP) of cardiovascular death, stroke and myocardial infarction were examined. In MetS (1,591 (19.3%) of 8,243 eligible patients), low HDL-cholesterol (72%), obesity (77%) and impaired glucose (73%) were similarly prevalent, with higher blood pressure, serum creatinine and Cornell product, but lower Sokolow-Lyon voltage (all P<0.001). After adjusting for baseline covariates, hazard ratios for CEPs and cardiovascular death (4.8+/-1.1 years follow-up) were 1.47 (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.27-1.71)- and 1.73 (95% CI, 1.38-2.17)-fold higher with MetS (both P<0.0001), and were only marginally reduced when further adjusted for diabetes, obesity, low HDL-cholesterol, non-HDL-cholesterol, pulse pressure and in-treatment systolic blood pressure and heart rate. Thus, MetS is associated with increased cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients with ECG-LVH, independently of single cardiovascular risk factors.
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PMID:Clusters of metabolic risk factors predict cardiovascular events in hypertension with target-organ damage: the LIFE study. 1747 91

Aims of this study were to investigate the prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MS), diagnosed according to the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) criteria and its relationship with echocardiographic parameters of cardiac structure and function. The study was performed in 707 subjects, age 45-54 years, of the Gubbio Population Study who underwent a comprehensive examination including measurement of body size, blood pressure (BP) and heart rate, 12-lead electrocardiogram, Doppler echocardiography, standardized blood and urine laboratory tests. One hundred and fifty-three subjects were found to have MS, which was more frequent among hypertensive patients than normotensive controls (36.2 vs 13.7%, P<0.001). Apart from visceral obesity present in all subjects by definition according to the IDF criteria, high levels of BP (>130/85 mm Hg) and triglycerides (>or=150 mg/dl) were the most frequently observed components of the syndrome, since their prevalence averaged 75% of those with the syndrome. Left ventricular mass (95.6+/-22 vs 86.4+/-22 g/m(2); P<0.001) and prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy were increased in the subgroup with MS. Waist circumference, BP and blood glucose were the components of the syndrome with stronger impact on cardiac mass. An early impairment of the diastolic function was detected in this subgroup with a reduction of the early-to-late diastolic filling (0.91+/-0.17 vs 0.99+/-0.23, P<0.001). The results of the present study indicate that MS is frequent in middle-aged general population, particularly in subjects with arterial hypertension. The syndrome is associated to the increase in ventricular mass and the early impairment of diastolic function.
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PMID:Metabolic syndrome and left ventricular hypertrophy in a general population. Results from the Gubbio Study. 1750 12

The prevalence of overweight has increased sharply since the 1980s, with morbid obesity rising at an even higher rate. Comorbidities related to adiposity now consume almost 10% of all US health care dollars. Unfortunately, overweight children already demonstrate elevations in cardiovascular risk factors. These children are extremely likely to remain obese in adulthood and are likely to progress to diabetes and heart and kidney diseases. It is not surprising, therefore, that the diagnosis of the metabolic syndrome is being made with increasing frequency in American adolescents. The authors show that noninvasive methods are now available to measure target organ damage related to obesity and the metabolic syndrome in children. They explore the data linking the cardiovascular risk factors that cluster as the metabolic syndrome to early subclinical atherosclerotic change such as left ventricular hypertrophy, carotid intima-media thickness, vascular function abnormalities, and microalbuminuria. Evidence for the benefits of treatment and guidelines for the assessment for target organ damage in children are provided.
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PMID:Noninvasive assessment of target organ injury in children with the metabolic syndrome. 1767 7


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