journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22005188/obstructive-sleep-apnea-in-adults-epidemiology-clinical-presentation-and-treatment-options
#21
REVIEW
(no author information available yet)
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is characterized by repetitive episodes of complete and partial obstructions of the upper airway during sleep. The diagnosis of OSA requires the objective demonstration of abnormal breathing during sleep by measuring the respiratory disturbance index (RDI, events per hour of sleep), i.e. the frequency of apnea (complete upper airway obstruction), hypopnea (partial upper airway obstruction) and arousals from sleep related to respiratory efforts. OSA is defined by combining symptoms and an RDI ≥5 or by an RDI ≥15 without symptoms...
2011: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18409234/cardiovascular-diabetology-clinical-metabolic-and-inflammatory-facets-preface
#22
Enrique Z Fisman, Alexander Tenenbaum
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230961/non-insulin-antidiabetic-therapy-in-cardiac-patients-current-problems-and-future-prospects
#23
REVIEW
Enrique Z Fisman, Michael Motro, Alexander Tenenbaum
Five types of oral antihyperglycemic drugs are currently approved for the treatment of diabetes: biguanides, sulfonylureas, meglitinides, glitazones and alpha-glucosidase inhibitors. We briefly review the cardiovascular effects of the most commonly used antidiabetic drugs in these groups in an attempt to improve knowledge and awareness regarding their influences and potential risks when treating patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Regarding biguanides, gastrointestinal disturbances such as diarrhea are frequent, and the intestinal absorption of group B vitamins and folate is impaired during chronic therapy...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230960/optimal-management-of-combined-dyslipidemia-what-have-we-behind-statins-monotherapy
#24
REVIEW
Alexander Tenenbaum, Enrique Z Fisman, Michael Motro, Yehuda Adler
Evidence of the effectiveness of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors (statins) within continuum of atherothrombotic conditions and particularly in the treatment and prevention of coronary heart disease (CHD) is well established. Large-scale, randomized, prospective trials involving patients with CHD have shown that statins reduce the clinical consequences of atherosclerosis, including cardiovascular deaths, nonfatal myocardial infarction and stroke, hospitalization for acute coronary syndrome and heart failure, as well as the need for coronary revascularization...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230959/impact-of-metabolic-syndrome-in-patients-with-acute-coronary-syndrome
#25
REVIEW
Micha S Feinberg, Roseline Schwartz, Solomon Behar
The reported incidence of metabolic syndrome among patients with an acute coronary syndrome varies between 29 and 46%. The standard fasting cut-off levels for glucose and blood pressure cannot be applied on admission in patients with acute coronary syndrome and therefore modified criteria were used to define the metabolic syndrome. Patients with metabolic syndrome and acute coronary syndrome had increased incidence of heart failure, and worse long-term mortality compared to those without metabolic syndrome...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230958/impaired-glucose-metabolism-and-cerebrovascular-diseases
#26
REVIEW
David Tanne
Ischemic stroke and vascular cognitive impairment are leading causes of long-term disability and constitute a major public health burden and a significant economic burden to health systems. An increasing body of evidence demonstrates that disorders of glucose metabolism including diabetes, and the intermediate states of impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose tolerance, as well as the cluster of risk factors known as the metabolic syndrome, are important risk factors for ischemic stroke. The associations with accelerated cognitive decline and dementia are also discussed...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230957/hypertension-and-diabetes
#27
REVIEW
Ehud Grossman, Franz H Messerli
Both essential hypertension and diabetes mellitus affect the same major target organs. The common denominator of hypertensive/diabetic target organ-disease is the vascular tree. Left ventricular hypertrophy and coronary artery disease are much more common in diabetic hypertensive patients than in patients suffering from hypertension or diabetes alone. The combined presence of hypertension and diabetes concomitantly accelerates the decrease in renal function, the development of diabetic retinopathy and the development of cerebral diseases...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230956/arterial-elasticity-in-cardiovascular-disease-focus-on-hypertension-metabolic-syndrome-and-diabetes
#28
REVIEW
Relu Cernes, Reuven Zimlichman, Marina Shargorodsky
Arterial stiffness is an independent risk factor for premature cardiovascular morbidity and mortality that can be evaluated by noninvasive methods and can be reduced by good clinical management. The present chapter examines the association between arterial stiffness and cardiovascular risk factors including hypertension, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, advanced renal failure, hypercholesterolemia and obesity. The mechanisms responsible for the structural and functional modifications of the arterial wall are also described...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230955/biomarkers-in-cardiovascular-diabetology-interleukins-and-matrixins
#29
REVIEW
Enrique Z Fisman, Yehuda Adler, Alexander Tenenbaum
The impressive correlation between cardiovascular disease and alterations in glucose metabolism has raised the likelihood that atherosclerosis and type 2 diabetes may share common antecedents. Inflammation is emerging as a conceivable etiologic mechanism for both. Interleukins are regulatory proteins with ability to accelerate or inhibit inflammatory processes, and matrixins are prepro enzymes responsible for the timely breakdown of extracellular matrix. Interleukins (ILs) are classified based on their role in diabetes and atherosclerosis, hypothesizing that each interleukin acts on both diseases in the same direction - regardless if harmful, favorable or neutral...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230954/endothelial-dysfunction-in-normal-and-abnormal-glucose-metabolism
#30
REVIEW
Ricardo J Esper, Jorge O Vilariño, Rogelio A Machado, Antonio Paragano
The endothelium is the common target of all cardiovascular risk factors, and functional impairment of the vascular endothelium in response to injury occurs long before the development of visible atherosclerosis. The endothelial cell behaves as a receptor-effector structure which senses different physical or chemical stimuli that occur inside the vessel and, therefore, modifies the vessel shape or releases the necessary products to counteract the effect of the stimulus and maintain homeostasis. The endothelium is capable of producing a large variety of different molecules which act as agonists and antagonists, therefore balancing their effects in opposite directions...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18230953/hyperglycemia-and-the-pathobiology-of-diabetic-complications
#31
REVIEW
Doron Aronson
Both type I and type II diabetes are powerful and independent risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD), stroke, and peripheral arterial disease. Atherosclerosis accounts for virtually 80% of all deaths among diabetic patients. Prolonged exposure to hyperglycemia is now recognized as a major factor in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications, including atherosclerosis. Hyperglycemia induces a large number of alterations at the cellular level of vascular tissue that potentially accelerates the atherosclerotic process...
2008: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075219/atherosclerosis-arterial-stiffness-and-antihypertensive-drug-therapy
#32
REVIEW
Michel E Safar, Harold Smulyan
Increased aortic stiffness is a consequence of cardiovascular (CV) aging and may be observed in the elderly with or without hypertension. Hypertension and arterial stiffness are independent risk factors for CV events, but such events may also be complicated by atherosclerosis, especially in the older population. The purpose of this chapter is to determine whether, in the presence of atherosclerosis, systolic hypertension in the elderly requires specific drug therapy. It will be shown that, in addition to the targeted drug treatment of associated hypercholesterolemia and/or hyperglycemia, the major problem nowadays is to find specific antihypertensive drugs causing a selective reduction of systolic blood pressure (SBP)...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075218/modulation-of-atherosclerosis-blood-pressure-and-arterial-elasticity-by-statins
#33
REVIEW
Anjan K Sinha, Jawahar L Mehta
It is well known that dyslipidemia and hypertension frequently coexist. There is increasing recognition of a mutually facilitative interaction between dyslipidemia and renin- angiotensin system (RAS) activation in the development of atherosclerosis. Both of these systems share many of the same properties in terms of activation of pro-inflammatory, pro-oxidant and pro-atherosclerosis pathways. Statins in particular have been shown to influence the biology of endothelial cells, vascular smooth muscle cells and constituents of the interstitial matrix, particularly fibroblasts...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075217/nitrates-arterial-function-wave-reflections-and-coronary-heart-disease
#34
REVIEW
Harold Smulyan
This chapter traces the history of nitroglycerin from the initial nitration of glycerol to its widespread clinical use. The pharmacologic differences between nitroglycerin and nitric oxide are described, as well as their similar mechanisms of action. The vasoactivity of nitroglycerin requires a biochemical transformation, the nature of which remains incompletely understood. This poorly defined mechanism probably also relates to the phenomenon of nitroglycerin tolerance. By increasing the distensibility of muscular arteries, nitroglycerin slows pulse wave velocity, reduces wave reflections and alters the shape of the aortic pulse...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075216/homocysteine-and-large-arteries
#35
REVIEW
Coen van Guldener, Coen D A Stehouwer
High plasma concentrations of the amino acid homocysteine have been associated with atherothrombotic disease, first in individuals with inborn errors of homocysteine metabolism, who have very high plasma homocysteine concentrations, and later also in the general population. In general, the cardiovascular risk associated with hyperhomocysteinemia is significant, but modest and probably differs between populations. High homocysteine concentrations are thought to impair endothelial function, increase oxidative stress, impair methylation reactions, and alter protein structure...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075215/cholesterol-lipids-and-arterial-stiffness
#36
REVIEW
Ian Wilkinson, John R Cockcroft
Arterial stiffness and pulse pressure are important determinants of cardiovascular risk. Patients with hypercholesterolaemia have a higher central pulse pressure and stiffer blood vessels than matched controls, despite similar peripheral blood pressures. These haemodynamic changes may contribute to the increased risk of cardiovascular disease associated with hypercholesterolaemia and their assessment may improve risk stratification. Lipid-lowering therapy, particularly with statins, generally leads to a reduction in arterial stiffness, re-enforcing the concept that stiffness is a modifiable parameter and risk factor...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075214/insulin-resistance-arterial-stiffness-and-wave-reflection
#37
REVIEW
Hannele Yki-Järvinen, Jukka Westerbacka
Insulin resistance is associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality but the underlying mechanism(s) are incompletely understood. Epidemiological data suggest that insulin resistance and arterial stiffness are interrelated. In insulin sensitive-subjects, insulin acutely decreases the augmentation index as measured using pulse wave analysis. In insulin-resistant subjects, this effect of insulin is blunted implying that insulin resistance involves also large arteries. This may provide one mechanism linking insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075213/diabetes-and-arterial-stiffening
#38
REVIEW
Nathaniel Winer, James R Sowers
Type 2 diabetes (DM-2) has become a major global health problem that has been fueled mainly by increasing obesity and aging of the population. Most studies show that arterial stiffening occurs across all age groups in both type 1 diabetes and DM-2, and among those with impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, and the metabolic syndrome. Arterial stiffening in DM-2 results, in part, from the clustering of hyperglycemia, dyslipidemia and hypertension, all of which may promote insulin resistance, oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, and the formation of pro-inflammatory cytokines and advanced glycosylation end-products...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075212/calcifications-arterial-stiffness-and-atherosclerosis
#39
REVIEW
Rachel H Mackey, Lakshmi Venkitachalam, Kim Sutton-Tyrrell
UNLABELLED: Vascular calcification can occur in either the intimal or medial layers of the arterial wall. Intimal calcification is associated with atherosclerosis, which is characterized by lipid accumulation, inflammation, fibrosis and development of focal plaques. Medial calcification is associated with arterio sclerosis, i.e. age- and metabolic disease-related structural changes in the arterial wall which are related to increased arterial stiffness. It has been hypothesized that vascular calcification, either intimal or medial, may directly increase arterial stiffness...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17075211/pulse-pressure-and-inflammatory-process-in-atherosclerosis
#40
REVIEW
Jerome L Abramson, Viola Vaccarino
Recent studies have reported positive associations between pulse pressure (PP) and markers of inflammation. These studies are intriguing because they suggest that elevations in PP could induce an inflammatory state and thereby increase the risk of inflammation- related diseases such as atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. In the present chapter, we review potential mechanisms by which an elevated PP could increase inflammation. We also review human-based studies that have investigated the association between PP and inflammatory biomarkers such as C-reactive protein...
2007: Advances in Cardiology
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