Publications by authors named "Barboriak J"

Although each of the major lipoprotein fractions is composed of various subclasses that may differ in atherogenicity, the importance of this heterogeneity has been difficult to ascertain owing to the labor-intensive nature of subclass measurement methods. We have recently developed a procedure, using proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, to simultaneously quantify levels of subclasses of very low density (VLDL), low density (LDL), and high density (HDL) lipoproteins; subclass distributions determined with this method agree well with those derived by gradient gel electrophoresis. The objective of the current study of 158 men was to examine whether NMR-derived lipoprotein subclass levels improve the prediction of arteriographically documented coronary artery disease (CAD) when levels of lipids and lipoproteins are known.

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Background: Although counts of leukocytes differ substantially between blacks and whites, and are predictive of ischaemic heart disease (IHD), racial differences in counts of leukocyte subpopulations have received less attention.

Methods: We examined black/white differences in leukocyte subpopulations among 3467 white and 493 black 31-45 year-old-men who had previously served in the US Army. Laboratory determinations were performed at a central location during 1985-1986.

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Because of previously reported associations among the total leukocyte count, cigarette smoking, and risk of cardiovascular disease, we examined the relation of cigarette smoking to various leukocyte subpopulations among 3467 men aged 31 to 45 years. The median total leukocyte count was 36% higher (7840 vs. 5760 cells/mL) among current cigarette smokers than among men who had never smoked, and both stratification and regression analyses were used to examine independent associations with leukocyte subpopulations.

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Background: International travel with concurrent medical problems is commonplace. This study was undertaken to determine travel morbidity rates in coronary artery bypass surgery (CABS) patients. Methods: A survey of 10,096 CABS patients indicated that 40% (n=4286) of them reported travel during the study year of 1988.

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Because of previously reported associations between a high leukocyte count and risk of ischemic heart disease (IHD), we examined the relation of leukocyte counts to various characteristics among 3591 white and 506 black 31- to 45-year-old men. The mean leukocyte count was approximately 1000 cells/microL higher among whites than among blacks, and approximately 1900 cells/microL higher among current smokers than among nonsmokers. The leukocyte count was also higher among men who had recently stopped smoking and among men who reported their general health as poor or fair.

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Recommendations for identifying persons at high risk for coronary heart disease are based primarily on levels of total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. We examined whether, given knowledge of these levels, information on the high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level would improve the prediction of arteriographically documented coronary artery disease among 591 men. We found that even at levels of total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol considered desirable, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol was inversely related to disease severity.

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Objective: To determine the prevalence, geographic variation, and charges to Medicare of alcohol-related hospitalizations among elderly people in the United States.

Design: A cross-sectional prevalence study using 1989 hospital claims data from the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA). Rates were determined using (1) hospital claims records from the HCFA's Medicare Provider Analysis and Review Record (MEDPAR) database for all Medicare Part A beneficiaries aged 65 years and older; (2) county population estimates for 1985 from the Bureau of the Census; and (3) per capita consumption of alcohol by state in 1989 as estimated by the US Department of Health and Human Services.

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An elevation of serum cholesterol has been one of the more frequently cited risk factors for coronary heart disease, found in both case-control and cohort studies. As a result, this country has undertaken massive screening of adults older than 20 years of age in an attempt to identify those persons with cholesterol levels greater than 200 mg/dl, and follow up with an active approach for intervention. The suggested cutpoints for borderline (200-240 mg/dl), and definite (> or = 240 mg/dl) hypercholesterolemia have been applied to all age groups despite suggestions of a diminution of risk conferred by cholesterol in the elderly.

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Although levels of coagulation factor VII and fibrinogen are predictive of cardiovascular disease, relatively little data describe hemostatic characteristics in healthy populations. The cross-sectional associations between the prothrombin time, a measure of the activity of the extrinsic and common pathways of coagulation, and traits associated with the risk of cardiovascular disease were therefore examined among 3,604 white and 514 black, male, US Army veterans aged 31-45 years. The prothrombin time measurements, performed in 1985 and 1986, were precise, with an intraclass correlation of 0.

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A comprehensive assessment of lipoprotein compositional/metabolic response to incremental caloric ethanol (EtOH) doses ranging from low to moderate to high was undertaken using male squirrel monkeys. Control monkeys were maintained on a chemically defined, isocaloric liquid diet, while experimental primates wee fed increasing doses of alcohol (6, 12, 18, 24, 30, and 36% of energy) substituted isocalorically for carbohydrate at 3-month intervals. Liver function tests and plasma triglyceride were normal for all animals.

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The present study was designed to investigate the effect of ethanol (EtOH) dose on low density lipoprotein (LDL) and platelet composition. Male squirrel monkeys were divided into three groups designated Control, Low, and High EtOH, and fed isocaloric liquid diets containing 0%, 12%, and 24% of calories as EtOH, respectively. After four months of treatment, monkeys fed the 12% alcohol dose had LDL and platelet cholesterol concentrations similar to Controls.

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The effect of drinking pattern on plasma lipoproteins and body weight was examined in three groups of squirrel monkeys: (1) controls fed isocaloric liquid diet; (2) regular drinkers given liquid diet containing ethanol (EtOH) substituted isocalorically for carbohydrate at 12% of calories daily; and (3) binge drinkers fed 6% EtOH calories daily for a four-day period followed by three days of 20% EtOH to mimic a weekend bout drinking cycle. The number of calories offered per day was the same for all groups, and the average weekly EtOH consumption (12% calories) was identical for the two alcohol treatments. The entire study lasted six months.

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Although levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol in males decrease during adolescence and after treatment with testosterone derivatives, several studies have reported that levels of HDL cholesterol are positively associated with endogenous levels of testosterone in men. This association was further examined using data collected during 1985 and 1986 from 3,562 white and 500 black men who ranged in age from 31 to 45 years. Black men had higher mean levels of both HDL cholesterol (8 mg/dl) and total testosterone (33 ng/dl) than white men, and positive associations were observed between testosterone and HDL cholesterol levels (r = 0.

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Lipids and clinical changes including diabetes and hypertension were monitored in morbidly obese patients after Roux-Y gastric bypass. Total cholesterol (Chol), high-density-lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, and triglycerides at 1 and at 5-7 y postoperatively in 33 patients and at 1 y in 23 patients (including apolipoproteins A-I and B) were compared with preoperative concentrations. Mean concentrations of Chol and both apolipoproteins were unchanged.

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The role of body fat distribution, as assessed by the ratio of waist-to-hip circumferences (WHR), in statistically explaining differences in levels of lipoproteins between men and women was studied using data collected in 1985-1986 from employed adults (mean age, 40 years). As compared with the 415 women, the 709 men had higher mean levels of triglycerides (+38 mg/dl) and apolipoprotein B (+11 mg/dl) as well as lower mean levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (-15 mg/dl) and apolipoprotein A-I (-19 mg/dl). Additionally, men were more overweight, consumed more alcohol, and exercised more frequently than women but were less likely to smoke cigarettes.

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The relation of cigarette smoking to both coronary disease and non-fatal myocardial infarction was examined in a cross sectional study of 1053 women who underwent coronary arteriography. As compared with the 489 women who had never smoked cigarettes, ever-smokers (mean duration of smoking, 25 years) were 1.6 times as likely to have significant stenotic disease and were 1.

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Differences in the importance of risk factors according to the anatomic location of coronary artery disease (CAD) were assessed in 4722 men and 1069 women who underwent arteriography. Examined characteristics included total and high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, triglycerides, obesity, smoking, alcohol consumption, diabetes, and hypertension. Of these risk factors, the ratio of total to HDL-cholesterol showed the highest correlation with the overall severity of CAD (r = 0.

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Using First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I) data, we studied the relationships of dietary sodium, potassium, and alcohol to blood pressure in relation to levels of dietary calcium intake. At low Ca intakes (less than 400 mg/d for men and less than 800 mg/d for women) the ratio of Na to K (Na:K) was significantly related to blood pressure (p less than 0.01) after controlling for age, body mass index (BMI), race, and gender.

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Body composition of 10 control subjects and 37 spinal cord injured (SCI) patients was measured by dilution of 3H2O and Na2 35SO4. SCI patients were classified into four groups by ascending level of lesion, low and high paraplegics and low and high quadriplegics. The studies show diminishing total body water, intracellular water, lean body mass and body cell mass and increasing fat mass with higher spinal lesions.

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Although the leading cause of death among black men in the United States is coronary artery disease (CAD), risk factors have not been well documented in black populations. Therefore, possible racial differences in the relation of several characteristics to the extent of CAD were assessed in 4,722 white and 169 black men who underwent arteriography. Associations between an occlusion score (ranging from 0 to 300), reflecting the severity of CAD, and levels of total and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides, cigarette smoking, alcohol intake, relative weight, systemic hypertension and diabetes mellitus were examined.

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The time course of lipoprotein changes during ethanol (EtOH) consumption followed by abstinence was examined in 3 groups of male squirrel monkeys: 1) controls fed isocaloric liquid diet; 2) low EtOH monkeys given liquid diet with vodka substituted isocalorically for carbohydrate at 12% of calories; and 3) high EtOH animals fed diet plus vodka at 24% of calories. After 2 weeks, high EtOH monkeys showed significant elevations in total plasma cholesterol which continued to increase at 4 weeks and then declined at 8 weeks. These elevations were the result of increases in both low density (LDL)- and high density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol.

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Although levels of triglycerides have consistently shown a strong association with cardiovascular disease in both case-control and cohort studies, it remains controversial whether this relation exists independently of levels of cholesterol and other risk factors. The association of arteriographically documented coronary artery disease with plasma levels of triglycerides, total cholesterol, and high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol was therefore examined in 5,216 white adults (81% were male) referred to two Milwaukee hospitals between 1972 and 1986. Elevated levels of triglycerides were related to the extent of coronary artery disease (estimated using the total number and severity of stenoses) in both sexes; this association existed independently of total cholesterol, age, obesity, hypertension, smoking, and alcohol consumption.

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The degree of coronary artery occlusion was compared between users and nonusers of postmenopausal estrogen among 933 female patients undergoing angiography between the ages 50 and 75 years in the Milwaukee Cardiovascular Data Registry. Users (n = 154) had less occlusion than nonusers (n = 779), and a significant increase in occlusion scores with age was evident for nonusers (p less than 0.001) but not for users (p = 0.

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Male squirrel monkeys were fed increasing caloric percentages (0, 12, 24, and 36%) of ethanol (ETOH) substituted isocalorically for carbohydrate as part of a chemically defined liquid diet to assess how alcohol dose modifies plasma lipoproteins and liver function. A separate group of primates was used to define the dose at which elevations in plasma apolipoprotein B first occurred and to measure plasma alcohol levels. ETOH caused a dose-related, linear increase in high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol which was primarily the result of increments in coronary protective HDL2 cholesterol.

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This report describes an unusual multisaccular vein graft aneurysm that developed in a patient who had undergone aortocoronary bypass with a saphenous vein graft. The aneurysm was a complication of an atherosclerotic lesion. This case supports the belief that aortocoronary vein grafts have an increased susceptibility to aneurysm formation.

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