Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (angina)
21,142 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty-four cases with myocardial rupture (33 with free wall rupture, 9 with interventricular septal perforation and 2 with papillary muscle rupture), all of which were ascertained by autopsy and/or at surgery, were analyzed. When the following 7 risk factors were actively managed in the acute stage of myocardial infarction, the incidence of myocardial rupture was significantly reduced: a) high blood pressure on admission, b) physical and emotional instability, c) recurrent chest pain, d) aged females, e) no history of angina or myocardial infarction, f) large myocardial infarction on ECG and g) the first 10 days after the attack of myocardial infarction. If cardiogenic shock occurs, surgery should be performed as soon as possible; if not, it should be delayed 3 weeks. The natural history of ischemic heart disease was analyzed in 400 medically-treated patients with significant coronary artery disease. They had been followed up continuously and periodically for more than one year. The prognosis of the patients with 3-vessel disease or left main trunk disease, those with poor left ventricular function (EF less than 30%) and of old age (greater than or equal to 60) and those who had a history of ischemic heart disease was poor. Follow-up study was done in 30 patients with variant angina. They often had life-threatening arrhythmias during attacks (8 ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation, 8 serious bradyarrhythmia). All patients with variant angina should be treated medically at first, and only patients with organic coronary artery disease and chest pain on effort in spite of the medical treatment should be considered as candidates for AC bypass surgery.
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PMID:Natural history and prognosis of ischemic heart disease. 688 95

Patients who suffer from post-infarction depression are a high risk group with an increased mortality risk. The reasons for this are not known although it may be because such patients cannot cope with the chronic condition of cardiac disease. We designed a profile of clinical and behavioural outcome measurements representing recovery after myocardial infarction. 552 male survivors of acute myocardial infarction (29-65 years; mean = 53) were grouped at study entry according to their depression status. 377 patients were reassessed after 6 months and were divided into the following subgroups: 50 (13.3%) patients had severe depression; 85 (22.5%) moderate depression and 242 (64.2%) low degrees of depression in the initial study. There were no substantial differences in baseline characteristics between the index group and the drop-out group. The unadjusted relative risk for follow-up angina pectoris among patients with depression (severe versus low) was 3.12 (95% CI 1.58 to 6.16) and was 5.55 (CI 2.87 to 10.71) for emotional instability. The relative risk for maintenance of smoking habits was 2.63 (CI 1.23 to 5.60) and was for work resumption 0.39 (CI 0.18 to 0.88). There was no association between depression and the occurrence of late potentials. After adjustment for univariate variables (age, social class, recurrent infarction, helplessness) only small and nonsignificant changes in the relative risks were found. However the inverse association of depression and work resumption was lost after adjustment. The investigation revealed that persistent postinfarction depression is an independent and important source of subsequent morbidity and long-acting reduced quality of life. Depression has adverse effects on illness behaviour and pain perception.
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PMID:Post-infarction depression and incomplete recovery 6 months after acute myocardial infarction. 790 49

This review surveys effort training, a validated and recommended therapy, in patients with atheromatous cardiovascular disease. This true therapy reduces mortality by 25-35%, reduces clinical manifestations and complications (rhythm problems, thrombosis) and improves physical capacity, reintegration and quality of life. The effects are essentially linked to improved metabolic performance of muscles and reduced endothelial dysfunction, insulin resistance and neurohormonal abnormalities. Training also has an impact on the evolution of major risk factors, especially diabetes and arterial hypertension. The risks are limited as long as the contraindications are respected and the programmes supervised. The indications (stable angina, chronic heart failure, peripheral arterial disease) should be described more precisely by taking into account functional criteria: physical deconditioning, exclusion, compliance, mood swings, and seriousness of risk factors. The training programme should be tailor made and based on evaluation of the patient's adaptation to effort, in terms of frequency, intensity and duration of the exercises. Various types of exercise include overall or segmental physical training; concentric, eccentric, even isokinetic muscle contraction exercises; and proprioceptive rehabilitation. However, knowledge is lacking about the molecular mechanisms of the effects of training, the most effective intensity of effort, and strategies to develop physical activity in this ever-growing population for both primary and secondary prevention.
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PMID:Exercise training for patients with cardiovascular disease. 1744 31