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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (
angina
)
21,142
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Between February 1986 and June 1987, 306 consecutive patients were included in a programme of non-invasive preoperative assessment of valvular heart disease using M-mode and cross-sectional echocardiography and Doppler ultrasound. In 285 cases (93%), echocardiography provided all the necessary preoperative information. Coronary angiography was performed in 74 patients because of
angina
and in 55 because of their age. Invasive investigation was needed in 21 cases because of discrepancies between clinical data and echo-Doppler results. The results were definitely misleading in six patients, mainly due to erroneous assessment of valvular
regurgitation
. One hundred and ninety one patients underwent valve surgery (179 evaluated exclusively by echocardiography, 79 with coronary angiography as the sole invasive procedure). No discrepancies were observed between echo-Doppler diagnosis and macroscopic evaluation of valvular heart disease at surgery. Operative mortality (3.6%) was not significantly different from that observed during the preceeding period when preoperative catheterisation was performed (3.3%). It is concluded that echo-Doppler techniques are perfectly satisfactory for the preoperative assessment of patients with valvular heart disease. Cardiac catheterisation is only infrequently required, although coronary angiography remains mandatory in a selected group of these patients.
...
PMID:Non-invasive preoperative assessment of chronic valvular heart disease by Doppler ultrasound. 318 Nov 73
Clinical and non-invasive findings were compared with catheterisation data in 91 elderly patients (mean 65 years, range 52-78) with suspected severe aortic stenosis requiring operation. Heart catheterisation showed that forty nine patients had a valve area of less than or equal to 0.6 cm2, 36 had a valve area of 0.7 - 1.0 cm2, and six an area of greater than or equal to 1.1 cm2. Coexistent aortic regurgitation was found in 85% of the cases, but severe
regurgitation
was found in only one patient (1%). Seventy seven per cent of patients had chest pain, 74% had dyspnoea, and 46% had exertional vertigo or syncope. Coronary angiography, which was performed in 77 patients, showed coronary artery disease in 24% of those with a history of
angina pectoris
and in none of those without. All patients had echodense valves; aortic valve calcification was shown by x ray in 76% and in all but one by cineradiography. The peak of the systolic murmur was delayed in 98% of the patients. Although a prolonged left ventricular ejection time was characteristic of severe aortic stenosis, a normal value did not exclude this diagnosis. Most patients (84%) had increased QRS amplitude on the electrocardiogram. Echocardiography showed an increased left ventricular wall thickness in 90% of the patients in whom it was possible to define the myocardial borders. There was an inadequate blood pressure increase in response to exercise in 82%. In about 25% of the patients the exercise test was at variance with the New York Heart Association classification. Findings suggesting severe aortic stenosis resembled those reported for younger age groups. When most findings point to severe aortic stenosis, the absence of a single symptom or non-invasive sign does not exclude severe aortic stenosis.
...
PMID:Severe aortic stenosis in elderly patients. 370 89
A 73 year old man presented with
angina
and nonsustained ventricular tachycardia. Cardiac catheterization revealed the dynamic systolic intracavitary gradient of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. Abnormal isovolumetric relaxation resulted in the development of a diastolic gradient from the left ventricular outflow tract to the left ventricular apex accompanied by intracavitary
regurgitation
of contrast material from the outflow tract to the left ventricular body during left ventriculography. This case provides hemodynamic and angiographic confirmation of abnormal isovolumetric relaxation in this syndrome and insight into its mechanism.
...
PMID:Reversal of left ventricular intracavitary gradient with intracavitary diastolic regurgitation in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. 374 19
The influence of 35 preoperative and intraoperative characteristics on operative mortality risk after 1,479 isolated aortic valve replacement procedures (1967 to 1981) was investigated utilizing univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses. Mean age at operation was 58 +/- 13 years; 72% of patients were men. Physiology was classified as aortic stenosis (58%),
regurgitation
(30%), or both (9%). The overall operative mortality rate was 7% +/- 1%, but there were substantial differences in operative mortality rates among physiological subgroups (aortic regurgitation, 10% +/- 2%; aortic stenosis, 6% +/- 1%; stenosis/
regurgitation
, 5% +/- 2%). Independent determinants of operative mortality rate in the entire group were advanced New York Heart Association functional class, renal dysfunction, physiological subgroup, atrial fibrillation, and older age. In the aortic regurgitation subgroup, functional class, atrial fibrillation, and operative year were independent predictors. In the aortic stenosis subgroup, the significant determinants were functional class, renal dysfunction, age, prosthetic valve dysfunction, and absence of
angina
. Concomitant coronary bypass grafting, previous operation, endocarditis, and ascending aortic replacement had no independent predictive effect on operative mortality rate. Thus, the early results of aortic valve replacement can be related to several specific variables describing the functional and physiological status of the patient. Operative mortality rate is not independently related to previous operation or concomitant operative procedures. Specific differences in risk factors exist among the various physiological subgroups, probably reflecting the pathophysiology of the different hemodynamic lesions. This information should provide for a more rational approach to aortic valve replacement, at least in terms of early risk/benefit deliberations.
...
PMID:Determinants of operative mortality for patients undergoing aortic valve replacement. Discriminant analysis of 1,479 operations. 397 75
The influence of 34 variables on the operative mortality rate for isolated mitral valve replacement (MVR) was assessed by univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis. The physiologic lesions were classified as stenosis (20%, operative mortality rate 8 +/- 1%),
regurgitation
(44%, operative mortality rate 13 +/- 2%), and mixed (34%, operative mortality rate 8 +/- 1%). Functional class (NYHA), previous myocardial infarction, and hepatic dysfunction were powerful independent clinical determinants of operative mortality (p less than .001), along with age at operation and emergency operation (p = .001, p = .04). Concomitant coronary artery bypass grafting or tricuspid annuloplasty,
angina
, ischemic etiology, and physiologic lesion were not significant independent determinants of operative risk. Interestingly, year of operation, prosthetic valve dysfunction, and previous cardiac surgery had no important effect on operative mortality. Early operative risk for MVR was related to preoperative cardiac and hepatic function. Prior myocardial infarction substantially increased the risk even if the mitral valve disease was not ischemic in origin. Increased operative mortality rate in the subgroup with mitral regurgitation was related to advanced left ventricular failure and myocardial infarction rather than the etiology of the mitral regurgitation. These clinical factors coupled with more refined measurements of left ventricular systolic pump function (independent of loading conditions) should permit more intelligent decision making regarding the optimal timing of MVR, at least in terms of early operative risk.
...
PMID:Operative risk of mitral valve replacement: discriminant analysis of 1329 procedures. 402 53
Regurgitation
of the gastric contents into the esophagus is common and often unnoticed. When symptoms such as heartburn, a sour or bitter taste in the mouth, or even chest pain mimicking
angina pectoris
or myocardial ischemia prompt a patient to seek help, the factor or factors responsible for reflux must be sought. The possible underlying causes are numerous, as Dr Bachman points out in this discussion of the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux. The desired end point of management was well stated by Seneca over 2,000 years ago as "a good-humored stomach."
...
PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux. Simple measures often suffice. 663 18
Lobstein's disease, a hereditary disorder of connective tissue, may rarely be accompanied by aortic or mitral regurgitation due to valvular dystrophy. The case reported is that of a patient with severe aortic incompetence with dilatation of the ascending aorta, complicated by
angina pectoris
and left ventricular failure; the patient also had Lobstein's disease with numerous spontaneous fractures, transverse lines of ossification, blue sclera skeletal deformities, and a positive family history of blue sclera. At surgery, valvular dystrophy was confirmed and corrected by aortic valve replacement. The patient's brother died recently with the same pathological association of Lobstein's disease and aortic incompetence. 28 cases of valvular disease and Lobstein's disease have been reported 12 with pathological evidence (at operation) on the purely dystrophic origin of the valvular
regurgitation
, and 2 with histological diagnoses alone in two newly born children. Aortic incompetence with dilatation of the ascending aorta is commoner than mitral incompetence. The macroscopical and histological appearances are similar to Marfan's syndrome and account for the operative risk of valvular replacement and for the incidence of postoperative haemorrhage. The rarity of valvular dysfunction in Lobstein disease contrasts with its relatively common occurrence in Marfan's syndrome.
...
PMID:[Valvular insufficiency in Lobstein's disease. A review of the literature apropos of a patient operated on for aortic insufficiency]. 676 9
To test the hypothesis that coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is not routinely required in patients undergoing aortic valve replacement (AVR) who have coexistent coronary artery disease (CAD), we compared the results of operation in 55 consecutive symptomatic patients who had CAD and underwent AVR without CABG with results in another 142 patients without CAD who underwent AVR during the same period, and with published results from other centers in which CABG was used in patients with CAD who underwent AVR. Operative mortality was 4% in patients with CAD and 5% in patients without CAD. Late survival was not significantly different between the two groups when analyzed for the entire population (80% survival at 3 years in CAD patients, 82% for non-CAD patients), or for the subgroup of patients with aortic stenosis, aortic regurgitation or aortic stenosis plus
regurgitation
. Eight patients with CAD (15%) developed recurrent
angina
after AVR (mean follow-up 43 months); only three patients (6%) required CABG because of medically refractory
angina
(12-43 months). Operative mortality, operative infarction (9%), recurrent
angina
and long-term survival in patients with CAD after AVR were similar to those at other centers after AVR plus CABG. These data suggest that preoperative detection of CAD does not necessitate CABG in all patients at the time of AVR.
...
PMID:Aortic valve replacement without myocardial revascularization in patients with combined aortic valvular and coronary artery disease. 677 24
In order to evaluate the left ventricular response to isometric exercise in different types of aortic valve disease, isometric exercise tests were performed during cardiac catheterization in 14 patients with pure aortic stenosis, 20 with combined aortic stenosis and
regurgitation
, and 18 with pure aortic regurgitation. Patients with
angina pectoris
in whom coronary angiography had not been performed were excluded. Thirty-seven patients were recatheterized 12 months after aortic valve replacement, and the ventricular response to exercise was re-evaluated. Preoperatively, the ejection fraction did not change significantly during exercise in patients with aortic stenosis, tended to decrease in patients with combined valve lesion, and decreased significantly in patients with aortic regurgitation (p less than 0.001). In the three patients whose ejection fraction during preoperative exercise decreased to below 0.40, it remained below 0.50 after successful aortic valve replacement. It appears possible to reveal left ventricular dysfunction in many patients with aortic regurgitation and in some with combined aortic valve disease by means of isometric exercise. The severely depressed ventricular dysfunction during exercise does not appear to correct totally after surgery.
...
PMID:Left ventricular response to isometric exercise in aortic valve diseases and its value in the optimal timing of aortic valve replacement. 688 Aug 62
Thirty-three patients with aortic valve disease, fifteen with
regurgitation
, eleven with stenosis and seven with mixed disease, undergoing assessment for valve replacement which included adequate coronary angiography, were studied. A symptom limited graded treadmill exercise test was undertaken with administration of 40-70 MBq of 201Tl. Myocardial imaging was started within 15 minutes and repeated after four hours using a 37 PM tube Searle gamma camera. Myocardial images were read independently by three observed. Of the 33 sets of images, 21 were -ve, 5 +ve, 2 I (Indeterminate) and 5 D (Difference of opinion). Eight of the 33 patients had significant coronary artery disease (CAD) and of these three were scored +ve (all triple vessel). Two patients without CAD were scored +ve. Eight subjects developed
angina
during exercise testing, of whom four had CAD, and four with CAD did no develop
angina
. Historically, 13 of the 33 subjects had typical
angina
, six having CAD; an additional eight had other significant chest pain, two having CAD. In these subjects with severe aortic valve disease, exercise testing and myocardial imaging with 201 TI was of little value in detecting CAD. All patients with CAD gave a history of significant chest pain.
...
PMID:Exercise testing and thallium-201 myocardial imaging in relation to coronary artery disease in patients with severe aortic valve disease. 693 84
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