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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (
chest pain
)
17,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Insulin-dependent diabetic patients found to have substantial coronary artery disease at the time of assessment for renal transplantation have 2-year survival of less than 50%. Because most of these patients have no angina symptoms their management is controversial. We tried to find out whether coronary artery revascularisation in such patients might decrease the combined incidence of unstable angina, myocardial infarction, and cardiac death. 151 consecutive insulin-dependent diabetic candidates for renal transplantation underwent coronary angiography. 31 had stenoses greater than 75% in one or more coronary arteries, atypical chest pain or no
chest pain
, and a left ventricular ejection fraction greater than 0.35. Of these, 26 agreed to be randomly assigned medical treatment (a calcium-channel-blocking drug plus aspirin) or revascularisation (angioplasty or coronary bypass surgery). 10 of 13 medically managed and 2 of 13 revascularised patients had a cardiovascular endpoint within a median of 8.4 months of coronary angiography (p < 0.01). 4 medically managed patients died of myocardial infarction during follow-up. Thus, revascularisation decreased the frequency of cardiac events in insulin-dependent diabetic patients with
chronic renal failure
and symptomless coronary artery stenoses. These findings suggest that diabetic renal transplant candidates should be screened for silent coronary artery disease, because revascularisation may decrease cardiac morbidity and mortality in this population.
...
PMID:Coronary revascularisation in insulin-dependent diabetic patients with chronic renal failure. 135 50
In general, severe hyperkalaemia produces classic electrocardiographic manifestations including tenting of T waves, widening of the QRS complex, loss of P waves, and eventually, sine waves and asystole. This report concerns a patient with
chronic renal failure
on maintenance haemodialysis who developed a severe hyperkalaemia associated with
chest pain
, manifested electrocardiographically by elevation of the S-T segment resembling acute myocardial infarction. After haemodialysis, serum potassium decreased and the electrocardiogram returned to normal. We review the literature and discuss the possible physiology of this electrocardiographic alteration.
...
PMID:Electrographic alterations induced by hyperkalaemia simulating acute myocardial infarction. 211 56
Aorto-coronary bypass surgery was performed successfully for an anuric patient who had been on hemodialysis three times a week for ten years because of
chronic renal failure
. Hemodialysis was performed up to twenty-four hours prior to the operation. Cardiopulmonary bypass was done using a bubble oxygenator primed with 2000 ml of homologous blood and 500 ml of osmotic diuretic and electrolytes. Peritoneal dialysis started immediately after the surgery followed by routine chronic hemodialysis from the 5th postoperative day. This patient recovered uneventfully and is now relieved from severe
chest pain
.
...
PMID:[Aortocoronary bypass in patient with chronic renal failure]. 350 Oct 66
To determine the impact of indomethacin on the course of uremic pericarditis we performed a prospective, double blind study in which 24 patients with endstage
chronic renal failure
and pericarditis randomly received indomethacin, 25 mg four times daily, (11 patients) or a placebo (13 patients) for a 3-week period. All patients received peritoneal or hemodialysis treatment concurrently with the study drug. In contrast to the placebo, indomethacin produced an immediate and sustained reduction of fever in all but one patient. On the other hand, indomethacin had no effect on the duration of
chest pain
(mean days +/- SE: placebo 1.4 +/- 0.6, indomethacin 5.5 +/- 3.3), duration of pericardial friction rub (placebo 10.3 +/- 1.7, indomethacin 16.0 +/- 3.8), or on the amount of pericardial effusion. Further, indomethacin did not diminish the need for invasive surgical procedures for relief of tamponade (three of 13 placebo patients, two of 11 indomethacin patients) or result in decreased mortality rate. Death (not due to pericarditis) occurred in two patients treated with indomethacin and one patient who received the placebo. In our patients pericarditis encompassed a wide spectrum ranging from a mild illness of several days duration to a painful and debilitating disease lasting weeks and requiring surgical intervention. Although the size of our population prohibits definitive conclusions, it would appear that, except for fever, the manifestations and natural history of this illness are unaffected by indomethacin.
...
PMID:A controlled study of the effect of indomethacin in uremic pericarditis. 636 98
Metastatic pulmonary calcification is a frequent complication of
chronic renal failure
, especially in patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. We report a patient with
chronic renal failure
, who developed
chest pain
and hypoxia suggestive of pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) and subsequently died. The ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) scan was also interpreted as consistent with PTE. At autopsy the areas of reduced perfusion on the scan corresponded to the areas of pulmonary calcification with no evidence of PTE. Physicians should be aware that this condition may mimic PTE, and that pulmonary angiography may be necessary to confirm the diagnosis prior to the initiation of anticoagulation.
...
PMID:Pulmonary calcification in long-term hemodialysis: a mimic of pulmonary thromboembolism. 650 69
Previous reports have suggested that creatine kinase isoenzymes are elevated in patients with
chronic renal failure
and thus are less useful in the evaluation of
chest pain
in such patients. Our data in 88 patients with
chronic renal failure
receiving maintenance dialysis confirm this observation for total plasma creatine kinase. However, elevations in MB and BB creatine kinase, although statistically significant, were biologically unimpressive (5.9 +/- 0.05 [SEM] IU/L compared with 4.8 +/- 0.04 IU/L for MB creatine kinase [p less than 0.02], and 5.5 +/- 0.08 ng/ml compared with 3.2 +/- 0.05 ng/ml for BB creatine kinase [p less than 0.0002] ), and were unlikely to cause diagnostic confusion. In 92% of patients with
chronic renal failure
, plasma MB creatine kinase activity was within the normal range (less than 13 IU/L). Eight percent of patients manifested abnormal MB creatine kinase values; the highest was 20 IU/L. The glass bead method for measuring MB creatine kinase was used to avoid the potential confusion induced by non-creatine kinase-mediated fluorescence, which occurs in the region of MB and BB creatine kinase on electrophoresis. The infrequent and modest increases in plasma MB creatine kinase observed in patients with
chronic renal failure
should be appreciated, but it should not cause diagnostic confusion, because acute myocardial infarction usually results in more substantial elevations of MB creatine kinase.
...
PMID:Unmasking artifactual increases in creatine kinase isoenzymes in patients with renal failure. 674 38
A 76-year-old man was admitted to Kisen hospital because of lumbago and
chest pain
. Laboratory examinations revealed a
chronic renal failure
with marked elevation of the serum BUN (48.8 mg/dl) and creatinine levels (8.2 mg/dl). The serum electrophoresis demonstrated a hypergammaglobulinemia with M peaks. An immunoelectrophoresis demonstrated monoclonal IgD-lambda and IgG-kappa proteins in the serum, and lambda-type Bence Jones protein in the urine (0.4 g/day). Bone marrow smears revealed an abnormal proliferation of atypical plasma cells (43%). A systemic X-ray examination of the skeletal system showed systemic osteoporosis without punched out lesion. The patient was diagnosed as having IgD-lambda type multiple myeloma and IgG-kappa type benign monoclonal gammopathy by quantifying concentration of two M proteins (1,160 mg/dl in IgD, 1,179 mg/dl in IgG, respectively). A combination chemotherapy with melphalan and prednisolone was administered monthly for multiple myeloma, and hemodialysis for the renal failure was performed 3 times a week. A marked improvement of his laboratory findings including a diminution of the serum IgD-lambda M-protein was obtained. On the other hand, IgG-kappa M-protein level was unchanged. Two M-protein levels showed a different behavior after the combination chemotherapy. Although the patient died of congestive heart failure, the partial remission of multiple myeloma has been maintained for 16 months with chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[IgD-lambda type multiple myeloma associated with IgG-kappa type benign monoclonal gammopathy]. 755 59
The authors report a case of anterior mediastinal cyst discovered incidentally in a 71-year-old man presenting with prolonged
chest pain
and a history of
chronic renal failure
secondary to polycystic kidney disease. The diagnosis of these cysts, which are benign congenital tumours usually asymptomatic and with a favourable course, was established by thoracic CT. In difficult cases, magnetic resonance imaging allows precise analysis of pericardial masses. Clinicians should think of this possibility in the presence of an opacity of the cardiophrenic angle associated with
chest pain
.
...
PMID:[Anterior mediastinal cyst disclosed by protracted thoracic pain]. 774 84
A 61-year-old woman with hyperlipidemia was treated with gemfibrozil. She also had insulin-treated diabetes mellitus and
chronic renal failure
and was admitted because of severe
chest pain
. The ST segment was depressed and creatine kinase levels were elevated. The original diagnosis was acute myocardial infarction. In the presence of increasing
chest pain
, the onset of limb muscle tenderness, and increasing levels of creatine kinase, the diagnosis of myopathy secondary to gemfibrozil therapy was made and the drug was discontinued. All symptoms then subsided and creatine kinase levels returned to normal. Myopathy is a well-known complication of blood lipid-lowering drugs, especially in patients with renal failure.
...
PMID:[Gemfibrozil-induced myopathy]. 825 19
The common symptoms of constrictive pericarditis, i.e. dyspnea on exertion, shortness of breath and cough, relate to impairment of ventricular filling and to a progressive rise in systemic and pulmonary venous pressures. Myocardial ischemia, angina and myocardial infarction are rarely associated with this disease. We have encountered two patients with constrictive pericarditis, one presenting with angina and the other with acute anterior wall infarction. Possible etiologies of constrictive pericarditis in the first case include cardiac surgery,
chronic renal failure
and myocarditis; in the second case, Crohn's disease. The proposed mechanism of
chest pain
in the first patient was a reduced cardiac output resulting in underperfusion of the coronary arteries, although it is possible that the patient experienced angina due to the presence of severe coronary artery disease. In the second patient an anterior wall infarction and post-infarction angina were attributed to obliteration of the left anterior descending artery by constraint of a thickened pericardium. In both cases non-invasive imaging modalities were not of use in establishing the diagnosis of constrictive pericarditis. Clinical awareness and accurate hemodynamic measurements continue to play a key role in the diagnostic process.
...
PMID:Observations of angina and myocardial infarction in constrictive pericarditis. 831 45
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