Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pulsating tinnitus is uncommon in the general population. This clinical manifestation can be associated with severe intracranial pathologies and is particularly characterized by a rhythm and synchronism reflecting the heart beat. This work presents a clinical case of pulsating, subjective tinnitus associated with a high homolateral jugular bulb and marked hypoplasia of the contralateral transverse and sigmoid sinuses and the clinical-radiological examinations that made diagnosis possible (particular reference going to CT, MRI and angio-MRI). The intracranial venous drainage pattern varies and is nearly always asymmetrical. The jugular bulb is defined as "high" when its upper edge extends nearly to the level of the tympanic anulus, a condition found in 6-20% of the general population. In many cases it is found by chance as often this condition is asymptomatic. However, the pathological picture associated with pulsating tinnitus is highly complex and requires a detailed diagnostic process which some Authors have arranged in specific "flow charts". Imaging methods are essential and must be identified according to the clinical-audiological findings. The radiologist can avail himself of CT, MRI (in association with angio-MRI), Doppler ultrasound of the supraortic and transcranial branches, and digital imaging subtraction angiography. The therapeutic approach to the patient manifesting a "high" jugular bulb is surgical and makes use of such procedures as: ligature of the internal jugular vein, extracranial transposition of the bulb and, in cases of dehiscence of the limiting bone, hypotympanum repair using an autologous or homologous graft of cartilage or bone. Whichever the case, an accurate cost-benefit evaluation must be made, particularly in regard to the risks of endocranial hypertension from the reduced venous drainage, a condition which is significantly increased when concomitant abnormalities of the dural sinuses are present. In the present case, this risk was quite high because of the particular venous morphology described and the patient refused surgery. Currently the patient is under clinical-radiological observation.
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PMID:[Pulsating tinnitus associated with high homolateral jugular bulb and aplasia of the contralateral transverse and sigmoid sinuses]. 1177 47

The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of systemic hypertension (SHT) on echocardiographic and radiographic cardiovascular variables in affected cats compared with healthy geriatric cats. Secondary objectives were to determine whether there were any relationships between these findings and age or systolic blood pressure (SBP). Fifteen healthy cats (>8 years of age with normal SBP) and 15 hypertensive cats (SBP > 180 mm Hg) were studied. Each cat was evaluated for standard echocardiographic parameters and 4 different aortic root dimensions. Seventeen variables were measured from right lateral and dorsoventral radiographic views. Left ventricle wall thickness was greater in the SHT group (5.1 +/- 0.9 mm) than in the healthy cats (4.2 +/- 0.5 mm). Left ventricular hypertrophy in the SHT cats often was not severe, and mean measures were considered normal. Some cats had asymmetrical septal hypertrophy (ASH) in the basilar portion of the septum as determined from the 2-dimensional view of the left ventricular outflow tract. ASH was greater in cats with SHT. Comparisons of the proximal ascending aorta indicated the presence of dilatation in the SHT cats, and comparison of the ascending aorta to the aortic annulus was helpful in differentiating between the 2 groups. The distal aortic root measurements and ratios evaluated by echocardiography were significantly different between the 2 groups of cats (P = .0001) and were significantly correlated with SBP (P = .0001) but not age (P > .3).
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PMID:Echocardiographic and radiographic changes associated with systemic hypertension in cats. 1214 3

We report a case of systemic sclerosis complicated by Takayasu's arteritis. A 68-year-old woman had been treated for hypertension since 1984. She also had Raynaud's phenomenon and noticed vertigo and dizziness. In January 1992, she was diagnosed with back bruit. In April 1994, she was complicated by vertigo and diagnosed with asymmetrical blood pressure. In October 1998, she consulted our hospital because of neck bruit, abdominal bruit, back bruit and stenosis of descending aorta bifurcation on chest computed tomography. Her blood pressure was asymmetrical, being recorded as 190/101 on the right and 140/90 on the left. Scleroderma was observed from the finger to forehand, precordia, and face. Telangiectasia was observed on the precordia. Laboratory studies revealed the presence of anti-nuclear antibody (x 1280, discrete speckled.), anti-centromere antibody but anti-topoisomerasel antibody was negative. Skin biopsy from the left forehand detected proliferation of collgen fibers and perivascular inflammatory cell infiltration. A diagnosis of systemic sclerosis was made according to the American Rheumatism Association criteria. We suspected complication by Takayasu's arteritis because of asymmetrical blood pressure and bruit. Chest-abdominal angiography detected stenosis of the right brachiocephalic trunk, celiac artery, and left renal artery. We diagnosed Takayasu's arteritis. This is the second case report of a patient with systemic sclerosis complicated by Takayasu's arteritis.
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PMID:[A case of systemic sclerosis complicated by Takayasu's arteritis]. 1216 15

The asymmetrical breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was studied in female rats. Paw preference was assessed by a food reaching test. Adrenaline-induced hypertension was used to destroy the BBB, which was evaluated using triphenyltetrazolium (TTC) staining of the brain slices just after giving adrenaline for 30 s. In normal rats, the whole brain sections exhibited complete staining with TTC. After adrenaline infusion for 30 s, there were large unstained areas in the left brain in right-pawed animals, and vice versa in left-pawed animals. Similar results were obtained in seizure-induced breakdown of BBB. These results were explained by an asymmetric cerebral blood flow depending upon the paw preference in rats. It was suggested that this new method and the results are consistent with contralateral motor control that may be important in determining the dominant cerebral hemisphere in animals.
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PMID:Blood brain barrier in right- and left-pawed female rats assessed by a new staining method. 1248 93

The incidence of erectile dysfunction increases with diabetes, hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia, cardiovascular disease and renal failure. All these conditions are associated with endothelial dysfunction. This review addresses the pathophysiology of erectile dysfunction with a special focus on new insights into nitric oxide (NO)-mediated pathways, oxidative stress and parallels to endothelial dysfunction. NO appears to be the key mediator promoting endothelium-derived vasodilation and penile erection. The possibility is discussed that elevated plasma concentrations of asymmetrical dimethylarginine (ADMA), an endogenous NO synthase inhibitor, may provide an additional pathomechanism for various forms of erectile dysfunction associated with cardiovascular risk factors and disease. Likewise, the role of endothelium-derived factors mediating NO-independent pathways is evaluated.
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PMID:The pathophysiology of erectile dysfunction related to endothelial dysfunction and mediators of vascular function. 1255 45

Despite significant progress in renal replacement therapy, the mortality from cardiovascular disease (CVD) in patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) is many times higher than in the general population. The traditional risk factors are frequently present in CRF patients. However, based upon conventional risk factor analysis, these factors do not fully explain the extraordinary increase in morbidity and mortality in CVD among patients with CRF. Accumulating evidence suggests that CRF is associated with impaired endothelial cell function. In recent years, the role of endothelial dysfunction (ED) and excessive oxidative stress (OS) in the development of CVD has been highlighted. ED is an early feature of vascular disease in different diseases such diabetes, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and coronary heart disease. The precise mechanism which induces ED is not clear. Several factors however, including OS-related accumulation of uremic toxins, hypertension and shear stress, dyslipidemia with cytotoxic lipoprotein species such as small, dense low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles, competitive inhibition of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) by increased production by asymmetrical dimethylarginine (ADMA) are pathogenic. In addition, it is known that excessive OS causes ED. An overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) may injure the endothelial cell membrane, inactivate NO, and cause oxidation of an essential cofactor of nitric oxide synthase (NOS). Recent studies have demonstrated that an impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation and OS are closely related to each other in patients with CRF.
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PMID:Endothelium-dependent vasodilation and oxidative stress in chronic renal failure: impact on cardiovascular disease. 1269 8

Plasma membranes are fluid structures and the maintenance of fluidity is a prerequisite for function, viability, growth and reproduction of cells. Membrane fluidity is the reciprocal of membrane microviscosity, which in turn is inversely proportional to rotational and lateral diffusion rates of membrane components. In the absence of constraints most lipids and unrestrained integral proteins freely diffuse in the plane of the membrane with high diffusion coefficients. The fluid mosaic model of plasma membrane structure is essentially still valid but this model is by its nature a macroscopic one. At present, attention is focused on molecular structural details of protein-lipid interactions and on the static and dynamic structure of membrane proteins. Highly potent new macroscopic and microscopic methods have been developed to measure translational diffusion of membrane lipids and proteins. The microscopic methods can reveal diffusion via encounters between labeled molecules. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements are the most widely used techniques in biological research. The use of different permeant and non-permeant fluorophores have contributed much to a better understanding of the changes in the ordered states and motional freedom of the membrane phospholipids in different cells during development, aging and physiological functions as well as in pathological conditions. The application of fluorophores with non-random distribution have shed light on the asymmetrical changes between the outer and inner domain of the lipid bilayer and on the dynamics of 'flip-flop' in signal transduction. Membrane fluidity was shown to have a decisive role in the efficiency of ligand binding, in the outcome of direct cell to cell contacts and in the modulation of the activity of membrane enzymes. Cell filtrability reflects whole cell viscosity that can not always be correlated with the fine changes in membrane fluidity. Cell viscosity depends inter alia on the size and shape of the cells as well as on membrane rigidity. In contrast to this, membrane fluidity is only dependent on the freedom of mobility of the membrane constituents. Increased release of free radicals and reactive oxygen specie (ROS) affect membrane fluidity, cellular Ca2+ homeostasis, induce lipid peroxidation and finally cell death. Investigation of membrane fluidity proved to be a useful and sensitive additional method to obtain a better insight into the mechanisms by which different compounds, drugs and contact with foreign surfaces are affecting cellular functions. The measurements of membrane fluidity may gain more widespread use for monitoring the safety and efficacy of these actions. During the last few years, changes in membrane fluidity of blood cells have been reported during development and aging and as a result of physiological cell functions. Membrane fluidity changes have been described in thrombocythaemia, hyperlipidaemia, hypercholesterolaemia, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, obesity, septic conditions and in allergic and burnt patients, in alcoholics, in Alzheimer's disease and in schizophrenia. A short summary is given on red cell membrane fluidity changes in a Hungarian triosephosphate isomerase (TPI)-deficient family, reflecting how the very subtle changes in membrane fluidity can help to establish underlying biological differences between the clinical phenotypes of a severe enzyme (TPI) deficiency caused by the defect of a single gene in two brothers one with and one without neurological symptoms.
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PMID:Membrane fluidity of blood cells. 1465 48

With the aim of identifying areas that may deserve some further thinking the present review deliberately points out controversial issues in cardiovascular research and risk assessment. In the first part of the review general aspects are addressed regarding the evaluation of risk factors. A first point of concern is the frequent practice of combining different vascular events and effects in different vascular beds into a single endpoint. Furthermore, verification of vascular events in clinical reality may be surprisingly inaccurate. Problems in risk assessment also arise from overlapping properties (shared pathophysiological pathways) of traditional risk factors like hypertension, obesity and diabetes. In the second part of the review unresolved issues concerning selected established and emerging risk factors are discussed. The difficulty of establishing causality in cardiovascular disease is addressed, using modification of LDL cholesterol and accumulating evidence for pleiotropic effects of the LDL cholesterol-lowering statins as an example. As an alternative or supplement to the notion of LDL-related cardiovascular risk it is proposed to distinguish between statin-sensitive and statin-insensitive cardiovascular risk. Finally the future prospects of selected new and emerging risk factors like CRP, homocysteine, asymmetrical dimethylarginine (ADMA), oxLDL, and isoprostanes are evaluated. In summary, imprecise terminology and varying definitions of "cardiovascular risk" may lead to a considerable blurring of our current risk estimates, which may also explain some presently controversial issues. With several new risk factors and substantial changes in lifestyle and treatment patterns on the horizon major changes in the hierarchy of risk factors may be inevitable.
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PMID:Old and new cardiovascular risk factors: from unresolved issues to new opportunities. 1466 97

In the recent HEMO study, the most common cause of death in dialyzed patients was ischemic heart disease. In Europe there are regional differences, but the mortality due to cardiovascular disease is also very high. The long-lasting controversy whether the high incidence and prevalence of atherosclerotic manifestations (particularly ischemic heart disease) may be explained by known risk factors, or non-traditional risk factors are also involved seems to be partially solved with the increasing evidence that the latter hypothesis is true. Thus, together with classic risk factors such as hypertension, dyslipidemia and diabetes, other situations such as microinflammation, increased concentration of asymmetrical dimethyl-L-arginine, disturbed phosphate metabolism and anemia may represent important risk factors for accelerated atherosclerosis in dialyzed patients.
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PMID:Atherosclerosis in dialyzed patients. 1473 9

The ECG strain pattern of lateral ST depression and T-wave inversion is a marker for left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and adverse prognosis in population studies. However, whether ECG strain is an independent predictor of cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality in the setting of aggressive antihypertensive therapy is unclear. ECGs were examined at study baseline in 8854 hypertensive patients with ECG LVH who were treated in a blinded manner with atenolol- or losartan-based regimens. Strain was defined by the presence of a downsloping convex ST segment with an inverted asymmetrical T wave opposite to the QRS axis in leads V5 and/or V6 and was present in 971 patients (11.0%). The Losartan Intervention For Endpoint reduction in hypertension (LIFE) study composite end point of CV death or nonfatal myocardial infarction or stroke occurred in 1035 patients (11.7%). In Cox analyses adjusting only for treatment effect, ECG strain was a significant predictor of CV death (hazard ratio [HR] 2.26, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.78 to 2.86), fatal/nonfatal myocardial infarction (HR 2.16, 95% CI 1.67 to 2.80), fatal/nonfatal stroke (HR 1.76, 95% CI 1.39 to 2.21), and the composite CV end point (HR 1.99, 95% CI 1.70 to 2.33). After further adjusting for standard CV risk factors, baseline blood pressure, and severity of ECG LVH, ECG strain remained a significant predictor of CV mortality (HR 1.53, 95% CI 1.18 to 2.00), myocardial infarction (HR 1.55, 95% CI 1.16 to 2.06), and the composite CV end point (HR 1.33, 95% CI 1.11 to 1.59). Thus, ECG strain is a marker of increased CV risk in hypertensive patients in the setting of aggressive blood pressure lowering, independent of baseline severity of ECG LVH.
Hypertension 2004 Jul
PMID:Electrocardiographic strain pattern and prediction of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in hypertensive patients. 1517 25


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