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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In patients with aortic regurgitation (AR), the left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) may not adequately reflect depressions of myocardial contractility due to decreased aortic impedance. The sensitivity of end-systolic pressure-volume relations and stress-volume relations in detecting myocardial
depression
in patients with AR was studied. In 12 patients with normal valvular function but with varying LV function (due to coronary heart disease in 9 patients and
dilated cardiomyopathy
in 3 patients) (group 1), and in 8 patients with AR (group 2), LV angiography was performed before and after sublingual application of isosorbide dinitrate. Heart rate was kept constant by right atrial pacing. In group 1, the slope k of the end-systolic pressure-volume relation was to EF at rest: k = 0.091.e0.051 EF; r = 0.88. In AR, this relation was shifted significantly to the right: k = 0.019.e0.066 EF; r = 0.92. This shift persisted when the end-systolic stress-volume relation instead of the end-systolic pressure-volume relation was calculated. Thus, in patients with AR the end-systolic pressure-volume relation is flatter than that in patients with intact valvular function at a given EF. The same is true for the end-systolic stress-volume relation. The data indicate that EF overestimates myocardial contractility in AR compared with end-systolic pressure-volume or stress-volume relations. This overestimation is probably a result of decreased aortic impedance in AR.
...
PMID:Estimation of left ventricular myocardial function by the ejection fraction in isolated, chronic, pure aortic regurgitation. 647 82
In 52 patients with exercise angiography (12 normals, 31 with coronary heart disease, 9 with
congestive cardiomyopathy
) exercise ECGs were examined for R-wave changes. An increasing R-wave amplitude was found an insensitive sign of ischemia in patients with coronary heart disease (sensitivity 29%, specificity 81%). Sensitivity and specificity of the observed ST
depression
in this study were 83% and 71%, respectively, as reported by others. There was no positive correlation between the changes in the R-wave amplitude and left ventricular end-diastolic volume during exercise, thus there was no proof of the existence of the so-called Brody effect in humans.
...
PMID:Correlation between R-wave amplitude and left ventricular volume at rest and with exercise. 683 83
A clinical syndrome of severe cardiomyopathy often accompanies administration of high doses of anthracycline agents. We studied 36 patients serially with radionuclide angiography. At three weeks following drug administration, 8 of 36 patients showed
depression
of ejection fraction (EF). All had received at least 280 mg/m2 of the drug and 7 had received more than 380 mg/M2. Definite clinical syndromes of
congestive cardiomyopathy
developed only in patients showing EF
depression
and in some patients, EF
depression
developed without signs of congestive heart failure. Ejection fraction studies at 5 minutes, 1 hour, 4 hours, 24 hours, 72 hours, and one week following drug administration showed no changes when compared to immediate preg-drug EF. Seven patients who died during the study underwent histologic examination. Only the single patient with a depressed EF showed histologic evidence of athracycline cardiotoxicity, although all but 1 of these patients had received at least 400 mg/M2. We conclude that serial radionuclide EF just prior to anthracycline administration is a potentially useful predictor of cardiac toxicity, and that EF
depression
and/or preservation of a normal EF should be weighed in the decision for administering a drug of this type at high dosage levels.
...
PMID:Anthracycline cardiotoxicity: clinical and pathologic outcomes assessed by radionuclide ejection fraction. 693 1
The toxic effects of chronic ethanol abuse on cerebral and hepatic function have long been recognized. The role of ethanol abuse as an etiologic factor in heart disease is less clear and is often attributed to coexistent malnutrition. However, malnutrition has been dissociated from ethanol use in many patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
. Studies in various animals provide major support for the role of ethanol as a toxic agent when used in large amounts for a prolonged period. Abnormalities that result from ethanol in test animals include
depression
of left ventricular performance and metabolic and morphologic changes that parallel the changes in human alcoholics with subclinical mechanical dysfunction of the heart, such as symptomatic cardiac arrhythmias, particularly during intensive alcohol ingestion. What causes the progression to heart failure or arrhythmias is not known, but several factors may be involved. These include, particularly in males, the cumulative effects of ethanol alone or after intensified drinking episodes, excessive exposure to trace metals or superimposed infection. The low prevalence of clinical nutritional deficiency in patients with alcoholic cardiomyopathy and the apparent infrequency of heart failure in patients with cirrhosis or neuropathy supports the view that the cardiac abnormality is often not dependent on malnutrition. Clinical data indicate that the cessation of alcohol intake may reverse the disease or interrupt its progression in many patients. However, the pathogenetic process may continued unabated in some who become abstinent.
...
PMID:Ethanol abuse and heart disease. 702 Sep 81
Multistage treadmill stress testing was performed in 24 patients with idiopathic cardiomyopathy using Bruce protocol. 5 patients were considered to have hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM), 12 hypertrophic nonobstructive cardiomyopathy (HCM) and 7
congestive cardiomyopathy
(
CCM
). Heart rate, systemic blood pressure, electrocardiographic changes and exercise tolerance were observed. The effect of propranolol on exercise tolerance was investigated in HOCM and HCM. 1) Exercise duration was less in patients with HCM and HOCM than in normal subjects (50 subjects) and greater than in 50 anginal patients. In
CCM
, exercise duration was the least. 2) Electrocardiographic changes observed in HCM and HOCM were increase of T waves and lessening of ST
depression
. In
CCM
, appearance of ventricular arrhythmia was noted in 4 of 7 patients. 3) Maximam exercise tolerance was reached at Bruce state III-IV in HOCM, stage III in HCM and stage II in
CCM
. 4) Propranolol administration resulted in improvement of exercise tolerance in 3 of 7 patients with HOCM and HCM.
...
PMID:[Treadmill exercise testing in patients with idiopathic cardiomyopathy (author's transl)]. 719 Sep 56
To clarify the pathogenesis of chest pain in patients with cardiomyopathies, we compared coronary blood flow and other indicators of ischemia at rest and during pacing-induced tachycardia in nine patients with cardiomyopathy (four hypertrophic and five congestive) and in five control subjects. Coronary blood flow was reduced at rest and during pacing in cardiomyopathy patients compared with controls. In patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, pacing induced chest pain in all, increased ST-segment
depression
in three patients and increased coronary venous lactate concentration. With pacing, two of five patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
had chest discomfort and three had increased ST-segment
depression
, but coronary venous lactate concentration did not change significantly. In both groups of cardiomyopathies, the ratio of the systolic and diastolic pressure-time indexes tended to decrease more than in controls during pacing. Thus, myocardial perfusion is decreased in patients with cardiomyopathy, both at rest and during pacing. The changes detected during pacing point to subendocardial ischemia as the likely mechanism for angina in hypertrophic and possibly also in
congestive cardiomyopathy
.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of chest pain in patients with cardiomyopathies and normal coronary arteries. 719 3
Exercise tests were performed on 50 patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) and 19 patients with hypertrophic nonobstructive cardiomyopathy (HNCM) of NYHA classes I to IV, and on 16 patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
(
CCM
) of NYHA classes III and IV as well as, for detection of latent cardiomyopathy (LCM), i.e. functional impairment during exercise with normal findings at rest, on 102 patients with typical or atypical angina pectoris and ECG abnormalities of unknown etiology (left bundle branch block or ST segment
depression
) but normal coronary arteries and normal left and right ventriculogram. Measurements included heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, pulmonary artery pressure and minimal cardiac transit times of Indium-113m. Furthermore, in a large number of patients with latent cardiomyopathy, thallium-201 myocardial imaging and measurements of myocardial lactate extraction during high-rate atrial pacing were performed. The findings suggest that 1. the functional classification based on the patients' complaints often differs from the grade of hemodynamic impairment detected by exercise testing, 2. therapeutic effects (propranolol or surgery in HOCM, prazosin in
CCM
) are more pronounced under exercise as compared with resting conditions. Latent cardiomyopathy can be diagnosed only by detection of impaired function during exercise (increased pulmonary artery pressure, impaired myocardial lactate extraction during high-rate stimulation), since ventricular function and hemodynamics are normal at rest.
...
PMID:[Exercise studies in patients with cardiomyopathy (author's transl)]. 720 Sep 43
Have been studied 51 patients with aortic incompetency (AI), 46 with mitral insufficiency (MI) and 31 with
congestive cardiomyopathy
(CM) as example of a primitive myocardial lesion. The mean parametres calculated were: the left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP), the ventricular volumes, the ejection fraction (EF), the end-sistolic pressure-volume ratio (Emax) and the eccentricity. In the chronic volume overload, the relationship between the pump performance and the contractility (EF-Emax) is parabolic with an initial plateau (myocardial failure without circulatory failure); the EF-Emax relationship, in the CM, is linear without a plateau. The LVEDP is a limiting factor of the pump-contractility relationship in the AI: for the same value of the contractility, the pump function is greater depressed if the LVEDP is 25 mmHg (loss of the preload modulation); in the MI and CM the
depression
of the pump performance is a function only of the depressed contractility. The end-systolic eccentricity is correlated with Emax: the changes in the geometrical shape of the left ventricular chamber is due to the depressed contractility.
...
PMID:[Study of left ventricular function in chronic volume overload (author's transl)]. 723 3
The features of regional wall motion abnormalities of the left ventricle were analysed in 11 patients of
congestive cardiomyopathy
(
CCM
) in comparison with 22 patients of progressive muscular dystrophy (DMD) of Duchenne type who showed an abnormal motion of the left ventricle by echocardiography. Real time two-dimensional echocardiographic study demonstrated the following results: I) In
CCM
, (1) only 2 or less of 11 cases preserved a normal motion in each left ventricular segment, and the
depression
of wall motion of the left ventricle were thought to be generalized; (2) there were 9 cases with segmental wall motion abnormalities and 3 of them demonstrated ventricular aneurysms, and (3) the localizations of the segmental abnormalities varied in each case, and there was no apparent accumulation to any segments. II) In DMD, (1) all the cases showed depressed motions and 8 of them demonstrated a ventricular aneurysm in the posterior wall of the left ventricle (LVPW), (2) while, there was no case showing ventricular aneurysm in the segments other than LVPW, and about one third of all cases showed normal motion in those segments. From these results, we concluded as follows: 1) Although the
depression
of a wall motion of the left ventricle was generalized in
CCM
, this was not always uniform and the segmental abnormalities of a wall motion were frequently observed. The localization of the most severely disturbed segment varied in each case. 2) On the other hand, in DMD, the wall motion was disturbed more frequently and more severely in LVPW than in other ventricular segments.
...
PMID:[Regional wall motion of the left ventricle in congestive cardiomyopathy: in comparison with progressive muscular dystrophy of Duchenne type (author's transl)]. 734 27
The article has summarized the studies and ongoing trials looking at the significance and treatment of ventricular tachyarrhythmias. In most instances, the presence of these arrhythmias is associated with an increased risk of future arrhythmic events. Electrophysiologic studies are helpful in risk stratification in patients with coronary artery disease but can be misleading in the setting of
dilated cardiomyopathy
and often produce nonspecific results in patients with HCM. The need for an invasive electrophysiologic study is crucial in the diagnosis of certain ventricular arrhythmias that are amenable to cure with radiofrequency catheter ablation, such as idiopathic ventricular tachycardia and BBR-VT. The correct approach for patients with SVT not amenable to catheter ablation remains to be determined. In deciding whether to use a device or drug therapy, however, one should take into consideration the degree of left ventricular dysfunction and the overall health status of the patient. For example, device implantation clearly reduces sudden death in patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction but may not change total mortality because these same patients may die of congestive heart failure. Device therapy might be more cost-effective for patients with less severe
depression
of left ventricular function.
...
PMID:Current approaches in patients with ventricular tachyarrhythmias. 754 68
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