Italian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Romanian Journal of Internal Medicine 2004

Cardiovascular risk factors in Turner syndrome.

Solo gli utenti registrati possono tradurre articoli
Entra registrati
Il collegamento viene salvato negli appunti
Corina Lichiardopol
Maria Mota

Parole chiave

Astratto

Turner syndrome is due to haploinsufficiency of X chromosome genes that escape inactivation and associates female phenotype, short stature, gonadal dysgenesis, somatic stigmata, cardiovascular and renal anomalies and a large spectrum of other disorders (autoimmune thyroiditis, osteoporosis, inflammatory bowel disease, chronic liver diseases). The increased mortality in Turner syndrome is primarily a result of its cardiovascular complications. Congenital cardiac anomalies (coarctation of the aorta, bicuspid aortic valve, anomalous venous drainage) are present in 23-40% of patients; there is an increased risk of aortic dilation (42%) and dissection, ischemic heart disease and the risk of hypertension is increased three fold. In addition, insulin resistance may be present in up to 50% of women with Turner syndrome and an atherogenic lipid profile (increased cholesterol, triglycerides) favors the development of coronary artery disease. Our study was aimed to reveal anomalies in Turner syndrome that may increase cardiovascular risk. We studied a group of 62 Turner patients aged 16-67 years (mean age 26.8 years, SD = 11.1 years) comparatively to 62 age matched controls. Glycemia over 100 mg% was found in 11.3% of Turner patients vs 1.6% of controls and cholesterolemia over 200mg% was found in 51.2% of Turner patients vs 14.5% of controls; 24.2% of Turner patients were overweight vs 17.8% of controls and 6.4% were obese vs 4.8% of controls. In the Turner group we found congenital cardiac anomalies in 17.8%, hypertension in 6.5%, renal anomalies 11.3%, and hypothyroidism 29.2%.

Unisciti alla nostra
pagina facebook

Il database di erbe medicinali più completo supportato dalla scienza

  • Funziona in 55 lingue
  • Cure a base di erbe sostenute dalla scienza
  • Riconoscimento delle erbe per immagine
  • Mappa GPS interattiva - tagga le erbe sul luogo (disponibile a breve)
  • Leggi le pubblicazioni scientifiche relative alla tua ricerca
  • Cerca le erbe medicinali in base ai loro effetti
  • Organizza i tuoi interessi e tieniti aggiornato sulle notizie di ricerca, sperimentazioni cliniche e brevetti

Digita un sintomo o una malattia e leggi le erbe che potrebbero aiutare, digita un'erba e osserva le malattie ei sintomi contro cui è usata.
* Tutte le informazioni si basano su ricerche scientifiche pubblicate

Google Play badgeApp Store badge