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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Electrocardiograms of 90 patients with arteriographically documented acute submassive or massive pulmonary embolism and no associated cardiac or pulmonary disease were studied. Patients were derived from the Urokinase-Pulmonary Embolism Trial National Cooperative Study. In massive embolism, the electrocardiogram was normal in 6 per cent (3 of 50) of patients. With submassive embolism, 23 per cent of patients (9 of 40) had a normal electrocardiogram. Since one or more of the traditional manifestations of acute cor pulmonale (S1Q3T3, right bundle branch block, P pulmonale, or right axis deviation) occurred in only 26 per cent of patients, one could not rely exclusively upon these electrocardiographic abnormalities for the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. The most common electrocardiographic abnormalities were nonspecific T wave changes which occurred in 42 per cent of patients and nonspecific abnormalities (elevation or
depression
) of the RST segment which occurred in 41 per cent of patients. Left axis deviation occurring in 7 per cent of the patients was as frequent as right axis deviation. Low voltage QRS complexes, previously undescribed in pulmonary embolism, occurred in 6 per cent of patients. None of the patients had atrial
flutter
or atrial fibrillation, which appears to occur more typically in patients with pulmonary embolism who have preexistent cardiac disease. All of the varieties of electrocardiographic abnormalities disappeared in some of the patients by 2 wk. Inversion of the T wave was the most persistent abnormality. Larger defects on the lung scan or pulmonary arteriogram occurred in patients with various abnormalities on the electrocardiogram than in patients with normal electrocardiograms. The pulmonary arterial mean pressure and/or right ventricular end-diastolic pressure was significantly higher in patients with several varieties of abnormal electrocardiograms, although the partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood, in general, did not differ from that in patients with normal electrocardiograms. These hemodynamic correlations, made for the first time in patients, suggest that acute ventricular dilatation, possibly in combination with hypoxemia, is a causative factor of the electrocardiographic changes in acute massive or submassive pulmonary embolism.
...
PMID:The electrocardiogram in acute pulmonary embolism. 12 74
Thirty-four cases of ventricular tachyarrhythmia characterized by polymorphy of the QRS complexes with changing R-R intervals and a heart rate of 150 to 300 beats/min, termed polymorphous ventricular tachycardia, are described. The factors involved in the appearance of this arrhythmia were the administration of antiarrhythmic drugs (quinidine 22 patients, procainamide 5 patients, ajmaline 1 patient), antianginal drugs (prenylamine [Synadrin] 4 patients) and antidepressant drugs (thioridazine 1 patient). Twenty-one patients were treated for premature ventricular complexes, three for chronic recurrent ventricular tachycardia, six for atrial
flutter
and fibrillation, three for anginal pain and one patient for mental
depression
. All patients except one had a drug-induced prolonged corrected Q-T interval before the appearance of polymorphous ventricular tachycardia. Most of the patients with this arrhythmia were considered to have severe myocardial disease. Lidocaine and electric cardioversion were administered to all patients, but were effective only in seven patients whose tachycardia occurred in short, single episodes. The most effective treatment (17 patients) was temporary ventricular pacing at rates ranging from 100 to 140 beats/min. Intravenous isoproterenol proved to be successful in another 10 cases. It is concluded that patients with severe myocardial involvement receiving antiarrhythmic drugs for premature ventricular complexes, especially the multiform variety, are at high risk for the development of polymorphous ventricular tachycardia.
...
PMID:Polymorphous ventricular tachycardia: clinical features and treatment. 46 73
A 13-yr-old boy presented with atrial
flutter
8 yr after surgical correction of tetralogy of Fallot; antiarrhythmic therapy caused
depression
of the sinoatrial node, with syncope. Disordered sinoatrial function and intraventricular conduction were demonstrated by intracardiac electrography, and appear to have resulted from the operation. Sinoatrial disease may be responsible for supraventricular arrhythmias or syncope long after operative correction of Fallot's tetralogy and may be one of the explanations for the tendency of such patients to die suddenly.
...
PMID:'Bradycardia-tachycardia' syndrome 8 yr after correction of Fallot's tetralogy. 47
Changes in electrocardiograms, blood pressure, pH, and partial pressure of gases (Po2 and Pco2) in arterial blood were studied in goats poisoned by urea or ammonium compounds under spontaneous and artificial respiration and in nonconvulsive state. Abnormal electrocardiogram patterns, such as ventricular
flutter
, ventricular premature beat, atrioventricular dissociation,
depression
of ST-segment and sinus tachycardia, were all observed after the occurrence of tetanic convulsion. The electrocardiogram pattern seen at the respiratory arrest showed sinus or supraventricular tachycardia; respiratory arrest preceded cardiac arrest in all the goats, but one. Blood pressure was markedly elevated, accompanied with tetanic convulsion. Po2 decreased gradually and the level was below 30 mm Hg (37.0 degrees C) at respiratory arrest and the final opisthotonus. Artificial respiration starting at the final opisthotonus could delay the cardiac arrest. Under nonconvulsive urea-poisoning with gallamine triethiodide and with artificial respiration of air or a mixture of air and oxygen to elevate the Po2 level, changes of electrocardiogram, blood pressure, and Po2 were similar to those seen under convulsive urea-poisoning. The main cause of death was discussed and presumed to be respiratory and cardiovascular failure.
...
PMID:Electrocardiographic observation on goats with urea-ammonia poisoning and a consideration on the main cause of death. 60 86
60 patients with chronic atrial fibrillation and
flutter
were randomly allotted to two groups and treated alternately with two different therapy regimes. 30 patients (group I) received lidoflazine in increasing dosage up to 480 mg/24 h and in cases where there was no conversion to sinus rhythm propafenon in a maximal daily dosage of 1800 mg orally. The duration of treatment was limited to 4 days for each substance. 30 patients (group II) were treated in the reverse order, i.e. propafenon and in cases of ineffectiveness with lidoflazine. Atrial fibrillation could be overcome in 21 patients in group I and in 23 patients in group II. The combined success rate in both groups was 73%. The conversion rates for the individual substances were 41% for propafenon (17 out of 41 patients) and 59% for lidoflazine (27 out of 46 patients). The difference was not statistically significant. Successive use of both substances leads to an increased conversion rate. Dangers arising from therapy are a conduction inhibitory action and
depression
of sinus node function as far as propafenol is concerned and the risk of ventricular ectopy and tachyarrhythmia in lidoflazine.
...
PMID:[Propafenon and lidoflazine in chronic atrial fibrillation and flutter (author's transl)]. 66 24
Case records of 21 horses with acute illness following ingestion of hay containing dead striped blister beetles (Epicauta spp) were selected for review. Abdominal pain, fever,
depression
, frequent urination, shock, and, occasionally, synchronous diaphragmatic
flutter
characterized clinical illness. Hematologic findings included hemoconcentration, neutrophilic leukocytosis, and hypocalcemia. Hematuria and low urine specific gravity were abnormal urinalysis results. Sloughing of the epithelium of the esophageal part of the stomach, hemorrhagic and ulcerative cystitis, enterocolitis, and myocardial necrosis were important post-mortem findings. Signs and lesions in 5 horses experimentally poisoned were similar to those of the natural disease. The findings were regarded as sufficiently characteristic of blister beetle poisoning to be useful in differential diagnosis but were not constant in all cases. Therefore, when blister beetle poisoning is suspected, access of affected horses to hay containing striped blister beetles should be demonstrated.
...
PMID:Blister beetle poisoning in horses. 67 55
The effect of verapamil were studied on 50 episodes of supraventricular and ventricular tachycardia in 44 patients. An i.v. dose of 0.10 to 0.15 mg/kg. was used. In 5 cases His bundle electrograms were obtained while maximal dp/dt was determined in 7 others. Sinus rhythm was obtained in 21 (81%) of 26 cases of PSVT. In all cases of rapid atrial fibrillation (n-11), an important decrease in the ventricular response was elicited. Of 7 cases of atrial
flutter
, verapamil induced sinus rhythm in 3 and a significant decrease in the ventricular rate in 3 others. In 2 out of 6 cases ventricular tachycardia reverted to sinus rhythm. The latency time between the injection and the manifestation of the effect ranged from 2 to 4 minutes. A slight and short-lasting
depression
of dp/dt was observed in all cases studied. Verapamil produced an increase in the A-H interval in 4 of the 5 cases studied with His bundle recordings. Verapamil was found to be a useful drug to suppress PSVT, to decrease the ventricular response in
flutter
or atrial fibrillation and to convert some ventricular tachycardias to sinus rhythm. Verapamil should be used with caution in previously digitalized patients and is contraindicated when there is S-A node dysfunction as in the tachycardia-bradycardia syndrome.
...
PMID:[Antiarrhythmic effects of verapamil]. 108 54
In open chest anaesthetised dogs, dofetilide increased the ventricular effective refractory period over the dose range 1-100 micrograms/kg i.v. and the ventricular fibrillation threshold at doses between 3-100 micrograms/kg and was 80-1000 times more potent than sematilide, racemic sotalol, d-sotalol or quinidine. The maximal increases in ventricular fibrillation threshold induced by sematilide and quinidine were less than that induced by the other drugs. A change in the character of the induced arrhythmia from true ventricular fibrillation to a rapid ventricular
flutter
, with frequent spontaneous conversion, was observed following all drugs. No adverse haemodynamic effects of dofetilide, sematilide or d-sotalol were observed, but quinidine induced marked cardiac
depression
and racemic sotalol also impaired left ventricular contractility. All drugs reduced heart rate, though the effect of racemic sotalol was clearly greater than that of the other agents. Dofetilide is a potent class III antiarrhythmic agent with antifibrillatory properties and a favourable haemodynamic profile.
...
PMID:Electropharmacology of dofetilide, a new class III agent, in anaesthetised dogs. 139 82
A geriatric study was conducted on 213 institutionalized geriatric glaucoma patients (mean age 83.9 years) and 100 control patients (mean age 81.3 years). A 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) analyzed according to the Minnesota code was recorded for 212 glaucoma patients and 95 control patients. The most frequent finding (in 56% of the glaucoma patients and in 38% of the control patients, P less than 0.05) was a negative or isoelectric T-wave, suggestive of ischemic heart disease. ECG findings suggestive of coronary heart disease (Q/QS patterns, ST-segment
depression
, negative or isoelectric T-wave, third or second degree AV block, left bundle branch block or right bundle branch block, intraventricular block or atrial fibrillation or
flutter
) was seen significantly more often in glaucoma patients (164/212; 77%) than in the control patients (59/95; 62%). Seventeen percent of the glaucoma patients had atrial fibrillation (AF), which was significantly more than for the control group (8/95; 8%). There was no difference in the number of ECG changes between patients with bilateral open-angle glaucoma and bilateral angle-closure glaucoma. The mean intraocular pressure of patients having AF (15.9 +/- 8 mmHg) was significantly lower than that of the other patients (18.4 +/- 11 mmHg) (P less than 0.05). Fifty-five glaucoma patients were considered blind (visual acuity less than 0.05 in the better eye). The visual acuity of patients having AF was lower than that of the other patients, and severe visual field defects (arcuate scotoma or a residual field in the temporal periphery) occurred, slightly more frequently in patients with AF (in 70% vs 51% of the other patients). Arrhythmias, especially AF, are connected with impairment of visual acuity and visual field defects in glaucoma patients. The result of this retrospective study indicate that ECG changes occur frequently, suggesting coronary heart disease in elderly glaucoma patients.
...
PMID:Electrocardiographic changes in institutionalized geriatric glaucoma patients. 159 83
We investigated 69 patients (most belonging to NYHA classes II and III) undergoing elective direct current cardioversion of atrial fibrillation (46 patients) and atrial
flutter
(23 patients), respectively. Without premedication anaesthesia was induced with the new soya bean emulsion of propofol ('Diprivan') 1.2 mg.kg-1 over 45 s. Recovery time was measured from the start of the anaesthetic injection to the moment at which the patients regained consciousness. Completeness of recovery was assessed with two methods: opening eyes on command and time orientation. Good amnesia was observed in all patients. Conversion was achieved in all but seven patients (90%). After injection of propofol, the mean arterial pressure decreased slightly (2% below baseline). Induction of anaesthesia and successful DCC effected a statistically significant decrease in both the heart rate and the rate pressure product. Eleven patients required assisted ventilation for 2 min due to respiratory
depression
. Fifteen patients developed arrhythmias. Side-effects, such as myocloni, recall or vomiting, were not observed. In conclusion, propofol may well prove to be the anaesthetic of choice for DCC in cardiac patients because of good amnesia, low incidence of side-effects and short recovery time (mean 5.3 min).
...
PMID:Propofol for direct current cardioversion in cardiac risk patients. 188 46
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