%0 Journal Article %T Women with overweight, mixed hyperlipidemia, intolerance to glucose and diastolic hypertension %A Ruth-Maria Korth %J Health %P 454-467 %@ 1949-5005 %D 2014 %I Scientific Research Publishing %R 10.4236/health.2014.65064 %X Primarily healthy women who attended a practice of General Medicine were examined and coded data were evaluated using two statistical methods (n = 248, aged 36 ¡À 14 years). It was found that participants with LDL-related (mixed) hyperlipidemia showed higher blood pressure, a higher proportion of alcohol problems and/or smoking compared to normolipidemic women (p ¡Ü 0.05). These hyperlipidemic women who reported alcohol problems and/or smoking more often showed proteinuria and/or hematuria, rise of LDL/HDL, critical fasting blood glucose and lower HDL-cholesterol compared to hyperlipidemic women reporting healthy lifestyle (p ¡Ü 0.05). Likewise, high triglycerides were associated with rise of blood pressure and intolerance to glucose (p ¡Ü 0.05) and also with elevated total cholesterol. Alcohol-related hypertriglyceridemia overlapped with diastolic hypertension, rise of body weight and urine pathology, lowering of HDL-cholesterol and critical fasting blood glucose. The motivating message was that women with mixed hyperlipidemia and healthy lifestyle had functionally renal endothelium and healthy HDL-related baseline measures. Altogether, LDL-related hyperlipidemia and/or high triglycerides were correlated with diastolic hypertension whereby critical alcohol consumption declined renal endothelium and lowered HDL-cholesterol implicating baseline strategies to neutralize early risk factors.
%K Combined Telemedical Care %K Overweight %K Mixed Hyperlipidemia %K Intolerance to Glucose %K Hypertension %K Renal Endothelium %K Dyslipidemia %K Women¡¯s Health %U http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=43287