Objective: Lower extremity peripheral artery disease occurs mostly in the elderly and is associated with high mortality. Limited data are available regarding long-term mortality in patients with premature lower extremity atherosclerosis (PLEA). Our objective was to determine the all-cause mortality and its predictors in younger PLEA patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe noninvasive measurement of hemodynamic variables associated with hypertension and cardiovascular disease processes needs to be recognized as a viable adjunct to clinical practice. This review traces the history of the inception and development of noninvasive measurement of hemodynamic variable. It then identifies well established, useful, and available devices, and then notes clinical studies verifying the clinical relevance of these measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbnormal hemodynamics play a central role in the development and perpetuation of high blood pressure. We hypothesized that hypertension therapy guided by noninvasive hemodynamics with impedance cardiography could aid primary care physicians in reducing blood pressure more effectively. Uncontrolled hypertensive patients on 1 to 3 medications were randomized by 3:2 ratio to either a standard arm or hemodynamic arm that used impedance cardiography (BioZ, CardioDynamics).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo our knowledge there are no studies evaluating the prevalence and characteristics of itch, pain, and burning sensation among patients with mild to moderate chronic venous insufficiency or assessing the impact of these symptoms on quality of life. In this report 100 patients met the inclusion criteria. Patients who suffered from itch were also assessed with the use of a validated questionnaire and a modified Skindex-16 questionnaire.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hypertension is a disease state characterized by increased blood pressure (BP) associated with hemodynamic abnormalities, including elevated systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI); and altered cardiac index (CI). The objective of this study was to use noninvasive impedance cardiography (ICG) to evaluate hemodynamic characteristics of subjects with and without hypertension.
Methods: A total of 19 healthy nonhypertensive and 136 hypertensive subjects were retrospectively evaluated.
Atherosclerotic renovascular disease (RVD) is a suspected contributor to the morbidity and mortality of cardiovascular disease (CVD) through its potential effects on blood pressure and excretory renal function as well as through its associations with other forms of CVD. However, population-based data regarding the associations between the presence of RVD and prevalent CVD are lacking. The Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) is a prospective, multicenter cohort study of CVD among elderly Americans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical and experimental evidence suggests that the pathways by which hypertension and dyslipidemia lead to vascular disease may overlap and that angiotensin II (Ang II) is involved in restructuring of the arterial wall in both atherosclerosis and hypertension. Ang II represents a potent proinflammatory agent promoting recruitment of monocytes into the vascular intima. Ang II also indirectly facilitates transformation of macrophages and smooth muscle cells into foam cells by promoting superoxide radical formation (via NADP/NADPH oxidase stimulation).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)
April 2003
Sexual dysfunction associated with hypertension or antihypertensive therapies may impact the ability of patients to stay on therapy and lead to deterioration in patients' quality of life. Therefore, it is important for practitioners to become familiar with the wide variation in sexual side effects produced by antihypertensive agents and to discuss the potential occurrence of these side effects with their patients. In many cases, a change in the patient's drug regimen may help patients overcome specific sexual side effects experienced with certain treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvidence that both asymptomatic and symptomatic peripheral arterial disease (PAD) represent an independent risk for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality has triggered a resurgence in epidemiologic and clinical interest in PAD. Between 8 and 12 million people in the United States are presumed to have PAD, and as the US population ages the incidence of PAD is expected to increase. Epidemiologic studies have shown that the prevalence of PAD among men and women is similar, and autopsy studies of young adults have shown a high frequency of advanced atherosclerotic lesions in distal abdominal aorta by the second decade of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: This review describes the clinical outcome of surgical intervention for atherosclerotic renovascular disease in 500 consecutive patients with hypertension.
Methods: From January 1987 to December 1999, 626 patients underwent operative renal artery (RA) repair at our center. A subgroup of 500 patients (254 women and 246 men; mean age, 65 plus minus 9 years) with hypertension (mean blood pressure, 200 plus minus 35/104 plus minus 21 mm Hg) and atherosclerotic RA disease forms the basis of this report.
Clinical data and experimental studies have established the important role of abnormal lipid metabolism in the causation of atherosclerosis and enthroned the hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme reductase inhibitors (statins) as a mainstay in management of patients with coronary heart disease. However, emerging experimental data underline the role of vascular renin-angiotensin systems in mediating the early stages of vascular endothelial dysfunction and inflammation as prerequisites for unleashing the cascade of cellular and molecular events that lead to the deposition of foam cells and their eventual progression to the atherosclerotic plaque. We discuss here the biological effects of statins and angiotensin II in the evolution of atherogenesis, underscoring possible links between statins and angiotensin receptor blockers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeripheral arterial disease (PAD) involving the lower extremities is presumably a disease of the elderly. The awareness of PAD in the general population, and in younger adults in particular, is low. Atherosclerosis is the major cause of lower limb ischemia in the young.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: This study assessed the cardiovascular disease, perioperative results, and survival after surgical abdominal aortic aneurysm repair in young patients (< or = 50 years) compared with randomly selected older patients who also underwent abdominal aortic aneurysm repair.
Methods: We reviewed hospital records to identify young and randomly selected control patients (3 for each young patient, > or = 65 years, matched for year of operation) with degenerative (atherosclerotic) abdominal aortic aneurysms undergoing repair between Jan 1, 1988, and Mar 31, 2000. Patients with congenital aneurysms, pseudoaneurysms, aortic dissections, post-coarctation dilations, aortic infection, arteritis, or aneurysms isolated to the thoracic aorta were excluded.