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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The validity of the end-systolic pressure/volume ratio (ESP/ESVI) was evaluated in 88 patients with aortic valve disease (31 with
aortic stenosis
, 28 with aortic insufficiency and 29 with combined valve disease) by comparing the ESP/ESVI ratio with left ventricular systolic function parameters. The results demonstrate that in practice a normal EST/ESVI ratio excludes
depression
of myocardial contractility. A reduced ESP/ESVI ratio found in 57 patients did, however, correspond to other systolic function parameters indicating depressed or possibly depressed contractility in only 38 patients (66%), whereas biplane left ventricular ejection fraction and the isovolumic velocity indices were normal in 19 patients (33%) - 10 of whom had aortic insufficiency, 8 combined valve disease and only 1
aortic stenosis
. It is therefore concluded that the ESP/ESVI ratio is of possible value for the diagnosis of depressed contractility only in patients with
aortic stenosis
.
...
PMID:[How dependable is the end systolic pressure/volume relationship for the determination of left ventricular contractility in aortic valve diseases?]. 731 42
Echocardiographic and hemodynamic studies were obtained in 42 consecutive patients undergoing aortic valve replacement for isolated
aortic stenosis
. Concentric left ventricular (LV) wall thickening, the most common preoperative abnormality, occurred in 95% of patients. LV dilation with reduced fractional shortening was noted in approximately 25% of patients but was severe in only one patient. Six months after operation, LV wall thickness had decreased on average but had not returned to normal and fractional shortening was unchanged. Repeat measurements in 13 patients an average of 37 months after operation were unchanged compared with measurements made 6 months after operation. When patients were subdivided into those with LV dilatation and those without, we found that patients with dilated ventricles preoperatively had a greater decrease in LV internal dimension and mass than those without preoperative dilatation. The patient data also were examined for possible association with mortality. One operative (2%) and five late cardiac (13%) deaths occurred. No preoperative or 6-month postoperative echocardiographic or hemodynamic measurement was strongly associated with these deaths, nor were any late deaths due to congestive heart failure. Compared with preoperative measurements in symptomatic patients who were operated for isolated aortic regurgitation, patients with
aortic stenosis
had smaller left ventricles with less
depression
of systolic function, as well as less aortic root and left atrial dilatation. Our data do not support the concept that the aortic valve should be replaced before the onset of symptoms to prevent irreversible LV damage in patients with isolated
aortic stenosis
.
...
PMID:Evaluation of aortic valve replacement in patients with valvular aortic stenosis. 735 24
Twenty-three children with valvar or discrete subvalvar
aortic stenosis
underwent a controlled, progressive bicycle exercise test within 6 months before and 3-30 months after surgery for left ventricular outflow tract obstruction. The patients were divided into three groups according to the preoperative resting gradient of left ventricular to aortic peak systolic pressure: 30-69 mm Hg (group A), 70-99 mm Hg (group B), and greater than or equal to 100 mm Hg (group C). Preoperatively, 19 of 23 patients (83%) developed significant ST
depression
(greater than or equal to 1.0 mm) during exercise, whereas only seven (30%) had abnormal ST
depression
at rest. Postoperatively, mean exercise-induced ST
depression
regressed to less than 1 mm in all three groups. In the total population the frequency of ST
depression
greater than 1 mm was significantly reduced after surgical treatment and mean total work and peak exercise systolic blood pressure were significantly increased within 12 months after surgery. Total work increased significantly in group B within 12 months and in group C within 13-24 months after surgery, but remained unchanged on group A. Peak exercise heart rates were similar before and after surgery in each group. Peak exercise systolic pressures increased after surgery in all three groups, but the mean differences were statistically significant only in group C patients tested 13-24 months after surgery. The results of this study show that exercise testing is useful for quantifying the severity of
aortic stenosis
and documenting the clinical improvement (or lack thereof) after surgical treatment, and that properly supervised exercise testing can be performed at minimal risk to children with significant
aortic stenosis
.
...
PMID:Exercise testing in children before and after surgical treatment of aortic stenosis. 744 50
A theoretical model that specifies relationships among
depression
, ADL impairment, and social support components was tested using 147 patients age 55 and older undergoing open heart surgery for angina pectoris or
aortic stenosis
. Patients completed interviews and self-reports before surgery and one and 6 months after surgery. The longitudinal data were analyzed using covariance structure modeling techniques. Consistent with an initially theorized structural model, the number of close network members seen regularly before surgery was associated with perceived adequacy of support one month after surgery. In turn, perceived adequacy of support one month after surgery predicted less
depression
and less ADL impairment at 6 months. The number of close network members seen regularly was also directly associated with less ADL at one month and less
depression
at 6 months after surgery.
...
PMID:Social support, depression, and activities of daily living in older heart surgery patients. 900 71
The case records of 151 dogs diagnosed with congenital heart disease were reviewed retrospectively. The most common defect was
aortic stenosis
, accounting for 35 per cent of all cases, followed by pulmonic stenosis (20 per cent), ventricular septal defect (12 per cent), patent ductus arteriosus (11 per cent), mitral valve dysplasia (8 per cent), tricuspid valve dysplasia (7 per cent), endocardial fibroelastosis (1.9 per cent) and tetralogy of Fallot (0.6 per cent). Fifty-one breeds were represented, with golden retrievers, German shepherd dogs and boxers predominating. No overall sex predilection was obvious. Seventy-five per cent of the dogs were asymptomatic at presentation. The defects most often associated with presenting symptoms, such as dyspnoea, syncope, ascites, failure to grow and
depression
, were mitral valve dysplasia, atrial septal defect, tricuspid valve dysplasia and endocardial fibroelastosis. The latter presented with the most severe signs of heart failure. In some cases of
aortic stenosis
and pulmonic stenosis, where the defect could not be accurately visualised with two-dimensional echocardiography, Doppler echocardiographic examination was needed for definitive diagnosis.
...
PMID:Retrospective study of congenital heart defects in 151 dogs. 909 39
The majority of cases of central diabetes insipidus are still pathogenetically unclear (idiopathic). Atherosclerotic cholesterol emboli might be partly responsible for some of these idiopathic cases. A 54-year-old woman with known
aortic valve stenosis
and a history of a transitory ischemic attack presented with sudden-onset polyuria and polydipsia of up to eight l/d, which had started acutely with headaches. She had been treated with lithium for 3 years because of cyclothymic
depression
. Plasma sodium was in the upper normal range (142-148 mmol/l). Hypertonic saline infusion during lithium therapy revealed a normal threshold of thirst and resetting of vasopressin secretion (osmotic threshold > 300 mosmol/l), whereas vasopressin reserve was normal. Lithium withdrawal led to an even greater delay of vasopressin release upon hypertonic saline infusion (> 310 mosmol/l). Pituitary function tests revealed a normal anterior pituitary function. MR imaging of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal region showed a normal hypothalamic region and a highly intensive neurohypophyseal signal in the T1-weighted image. The patient responded well to desmopressin. We suggest that in this rare case clinical symptoms as well as biochemical findings like impairment of AVP release might be related to a minor structural hypothalamic damage by a vascular lesion, caused, for example, by an atheromatous (cholesterol) embolism in the hypothalamic region responsible for integration of osmoreceptor function and AVP-secretion. The patient's atherosclerosis and
aortic stenosis
might be responsible for this event.
...
PMID:Atherosclerosis, aortic stenosis and sudden onset central diabetes insipidus. 928 11
In a 36-year-old man with severe
aortic stenosis
and refractory cardiogenic shock, an emergency percutaneous balloon aortic valvuloplasty was performed, followed by clinical improvement, allowing elective aortic valve replacement at the 48th day post-valvuloplasty. Clinical follow-up for eight months after surgery showed significant functional improvement. Aortic balloon valvuloplasty is a life-saving approach to patients with severe
aortic stenosis
and high surgical risk and should be considered as a bridge to planned valve replacement or cardiac transplantation. Aortic valve replacement should be considered even in patients with severe ventricular dysfunction, while the cardiac transplantation should be indicated for patients with a very marked and irreversible
depression
of myocardial contractility.
...
PMID:[Aortic balloon valvuloplasty as a bridge to definitive therapy of severe aortic stenosis]. 958 Mar 47
A 39-year-old woman had exercise-induced ST segment
depression
associated with chest pain. Cardiac evaluation revealed moderate
aortic stenosis
(AS), related to the bicuspid valves, with an aortic mean pressure gradient of 22 mmHg, a calculated aortic valve area of 1.3 cm2 and normal left ventricular (LV) peak systolic and end-diastolic pressures, but no LV hypertrophy, resulting in normal LV wall stress. Although the coronary arteries were angiographically normal, rapid atrial pacing and an intracoronary papaverine injection revealed a significantly decreased coronary flow reserve (CFR), which may have played an important role in the pathogenesis of angina pectoris in this patient. Though the CFR is usually decreased in patients with AS, as well as in microvascular angina, in this particular case, it appeared to have decreased as a consequence of microvascular dysfunction rather than of AS-related mechanisms.
...
PMID:Microvascular angina in a patient with aortic stenosis. 1154 87
Optimal time for choosing Aortic Valve Replacement in
Aortic Stenosis
patients is based on understanding the natural history of the disease and prognostic variables, such as age, symptom status and co-morbid factors. In patients with advanced congestive heart failure, the valvular area and transvalvular gradients, determined by echocardiography and cardiac catheterization studies, have limitations for preoperative evaluation; before surgery the reversibility of this myocardial
depression
must be identified. At present, there is widespread agreement that valve replacement is indicated for symptomatic severe
aortic stenosis
regardless of age; however, cardiac surgery remains controversial in asymptomatic patients but with abnormal response to exercise, ventricular tachycardia, valve area lesser than 0.6 cm2, and marked or excessive left ventricular hypertrophy. The presence of moderate or severe valvular calcification, together with a rapid increase in aortic-jet velocity, identifies patients with a very poor prognosis and these patients should be considered for surgery. Finally, the decision to operate a patient must be considered on individual factors and whether quality of life is improved, and not just on operative mortality and morbidity.
...
PMID:[When should patients with aortic valve stenosis be surgically treated?]. 1156 44
Electrocardiograms (ECG) from 35 dogs with subvalvular
aortic stenosis
(SAS) with a left ventricular outflow tract pressure gradient (PG) of > or =50 mm Hg were retrospectively evaluated for S-T segment
depression
(STD, > or =0.2 mV in lead II). Pressure gradient, age, heart rate (HR), and number of ventricular premature complexes (VPCs) on a 24-hour ambulatory ECG for dogs with STD were not significantly different from those for dogs without STD. The S-T segment deviation did not correlate significantly with PG, age, HR, or VPCs. The significance of STD in the dog with SAS remains uncertain. Long-term prospective studies are needed to fully understand this observation.
...
PMID:The relationship of resting S-T segment depression to the severity of subvalvular aortic stenosis and the presence of ventricular premature complexes in the dog. 1473 1
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