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

Serum gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGTP) and alpha-amylase clearance were determined in a total group of 90 patients of whom 60 with renal diseases and 30 with extrarenal diseases. The renal patients were distributed, according to diagnosis in the following groups: acute glomerulonephritis, chronic glomerulonephritis, acute pyelonephritis, chronic pyelonephritis, nephrotic syndrome and manifest chronic renal failure. The 30 controls were hospitalized for different extrarenal diseases such as: pneumonia, gastroduodenal ulcer, arterial hypertension stage I and angina pectoris. Serum GGTP assay was performed in 60 patients (40 renal patients and 20 controls) using Boehringer monotest kits and in 30 patients (20 renal patients and 10 controls) using Romanian kits (I.C.C.F.). No changes suggesting a particular type of nephropathy were observed. The results obtained by using the two types of kits for the serum GGTP assay have proved to be very close. Alpha-amylase clearance was determined in all the patients with Spofa (R.S.C.) tablets concomitantly with the urea and creatinine clearance. Important decreases of alpha-amylase clearance in concordance with decreases of urea and creatinine clearances were observed in all the patients with severe renal failure. More moderate decreases of alpha-amylase clearance were observed in the patients with acute and chronic glomerulonephritis. The utility of this clearance as a test of glomerular filtration and sometimes as a prognostic test, is discussed.
...
PMID:Preliminary clinical and methodologic observations on the determination of serum gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and of the alpha-amylase clearance in nephropathies. 286 37

To study the clinical picture of coronary heart disease with concomitant arterial hypertension of various genesis, 172 patients were examined, out of them the cause of arterial hypertension was hypertensive disease in 54, chronic pyelonephritis in 40, chronic glomerulonephritis in 37, and stenotic atherosclerosis of renal arteries in 29, endocrine disease in 12 patients. The patients were divided into 2 groups: (1) 148 with stenotic atherosclerosis of coronary arteries and (2) 24 patients with intact coronary arteries. Comparison of these patient groups revealed no clear-cut correlation between the age and the detection of exercise-induced angina, as well as the duration of arterial hypertension. There was no correlation between the detection of the anginal syndrome and ECG changes. The incidence of the anginal syndrome was 62.2% in Group 1 and 47.7% in Group 2. It was established that the detection of the anginal syndrome correlated well with the severity of left ventricular hypertrophy and values of blood pressure, despite nosological entities.
...
PMID:[The clinical characteristics of ischemic heart disease in patients with arterial hypertension of different origins]. 837 62

Clinical data and outcomes of 18 patients, aged 80 or older, on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) during the last five years were reviewed. There were 12 males and 6 females, with a mean age of 85 (range 82-91 years) and median duration on CAPD of 31.5 months (range 2-58 months). End-stage renal disease was caused by nephrosclerosis in 9, diabetes mellitus and light chain disease in 2 each, and chronic glomerulonephritis, membranous nephropathy, and IgA nephropathy in 1 each, with the cause unknown in yet another 2 patients. Hypertension and angina were the commonest comorbid conditions observed. Peritonitis episodes occurred one per 10.8 patient-months, and necessitated catheter removal in 7 patients and reinsertion in 6 of them. Fourteen episodes of exit-site infections were seen in 8 patients, 2 developed pericatheter leak, and 1 had tunnel infection. Nine patients are continuing CAPD successfully, with a median duration of 29 months (range 11-57 months). One patient was transferred to hemodialysis, and 8 died. The causes of death were peritonitis (3/8), cerebrovascular accident (2/8), pneumonia (1/8), and septicemia (1/8), with the cause not known in 1 patient. Our survival rate of 80% at three years is encouraging, and we advocate CAPD as a successful alternative treatment modality in octogenarians.
...
PMID:Successful use of continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis in octogenarians. 886 86