Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty-two autopsied hearts, with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) caused by mitral regurgitation (MR), aortic failure (AR), combined valvular disease (CVD), hypertension (HHD), or ischemia (IHD), and 23 control hearts with normal left ventricles were studied morphologically for analysis of modes of hypertrophy and for ECG-pathology correlation. Basic disorders modify the mode of hypertrophy; that is, elongated AR-type LV makes muscle fiber orientation in the outer layer more vertical, and globular MR-type LV makes it more horizontal than normal. High-voltage QRS correlates with hypertrophy of the outer layer which is often associated with that of the inner layer. ST depression and T changes correspond to relative deterioration of the inner and median layers, respectively.
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PMID:Histopathological study of hypertrophied myocardium of known etiologies with special reference to correlation of ECG changes. 14 36

1) In "left-sided" cardiac diseases, the effects of nitroglycerin on arterial pressure and heart rate were noted to be modest and disappeared within 15 minutes whereas the effect upon venous pressure, measured on the median cubital vein, lasted for approximately 30 minutes. 2) At 30 minutes after a dose of nitroglycerin there occured a significant depression of venous pressure elevation on exertion in patients with such "left-sided" cardiac diseases as ischemic heart disease, arteriosclerotic heart disease and hypertensive cardiovascular disorder. In patients with mitral insufficiency and aortic stenosis, on the other hand, the exertional venous pressure elevation was significantly suppressed 7 minutes after nitroglycerin although the suppression did not longer exist 30 minutes after administration. 3) The arterial pressure, heart rate, resting venous pressure and venous pressure elevation on exertion were virtually not affected by the administration of nitroglycerin in "right- or both-sided" cardiac disorders. 4) There was no significant change in cardiac output 30 minutes after a sublingual dose of nitroglycerin. The data obtained seem to stress importance of the effect of dilating capacitance vessels in the mechanism of antianginal action of nitroglycerin.
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PMID:[Effect of nitroglycerin on peripheral venous pressure at rest and during exercise in patients with heart diseases (author's transl)]. 40 92

Chronic left ventricular-atrial regurgitation (LVAR) was created in 8 dogs by means of an external conduit so that the effects of acute correction of regurgitation on the mechanics of left ventricular performance could be studied in detail. LVAR of 46 to 77 per cent of the total left ventricular (LV) output was associated with a depression of the LV inotropic state (downward displacement of the stress-velocity relationship, reduction in V max), reduced forward flow, and signs of cardiac failure. Acute occlusion of the shunt (analogous to return of mitral valvular competence) in the anesthetized, open-chest animal resulted in a statistically significant increase in the integrated LV systolic wall stress (afterload), which averaged 18 per cent. In the dog with greatest depression of the LV inotropic state, the increase in afterload was associated with a decrease in forward flow. Occlusion of the shunt had no significant effect on the inotropic state. This model of mitral regurgitation appears to be useful in assessing the effect of chronic LVAR on cardiac performance and may explain the hemodynamic deterioration observed in some patients with severe mitral regurgitation following valve replacement.
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PMID:Experimental mitral regurgitation: effects on left ventricular function before and after elimination of chronic regurgitation in the dog. 116 39

A case of mitral regurgitation apparently caused by extrinsic pressure of the large intrapericardial cyst distorting the mitral valve is reported. The initial radiographic appearance of the cyst suggested an atypically enlarged left atrium. The mitral regurgitation subsided after surgical drainage of the cyst. The angiogram showed elevation of the right pulmonary artery and depression of the left atrium.
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PMID:A large intrapericardial cyst presenting as a cardiac abnormality. 125 54

We studied 16 patients with chronic mitral regurgitation by echocardiography before, and at 3 weeks, at 6-8 months and at 1-9 years after mitral valve replacement (MVR) to investigate serial changes in left ventricular (LV) function and reversal of ventricular dilatation. All patients at an average of 2.6 years after, and 8 patients before MVR were also studied by echocardiography and, except for 3 patients by measuring plasma catecholamines from the right atrium during bicycle exercise. Before operation, all patients were divided into group A (n = 12) with end-systolic dimension (ESD) < 4 cm and systolic blood pressure (SBP)/ESD > 3, and group B (n = 4) with ESD > 4 cm and SBP/ESD < 3. Maximum reduction in end-diastolic dimension (EDD) occurred at 3 weeks in all patients after MVR (from 60.5 +/- 3.7 to 49.0 +/- 4.5 mm, p < 0.05). ESD was reduced significantly (p < 0.5) only in group A. LV function was normal in group A, but it was depressed in group B at early and late periods after MVR. The slopes of the relationship between the mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (Vcf) and plasma norepinephrine (NE) during exercise in all patients in group B decreased along with the depression in LV function. After operation, all patients in group A reached New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class I, while patients in group B were in NYHA class II. It is concluded that the surgical outcome after MVR for chronic MR will be better if preoperative ESD < 4 cm and SBP/ESD > 3. The relationship between mean Vcf and plasma NE during exercise seemed to be a useful index to evaluate the inotropic reserve of the LV.
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PMID:Determinants of subsequent late postoperative left ventricular function and reversal of ventricular dilatation after mitral valve replacement for chronic mitral regurgitation. 128 93

Between 1978 and 1987, 1270 patients who survived single aortic or mitral valve replacement at the Rehabilitation Center in Bad Krozingen, Germany, underwent a comprehensive rehabilitation program. The preoperative diagnosis was isolated aortic stenosis in 425, isolated aortic regurgitation in 159, mixed aortic lesion in 211, isolated mitral stenosis in 208, isolated mitral insufficiency in 137 and mixed mitral lesion in 130 cases. Follow up examinations were carried out one and six months after surgery, and at yearly intervals thereafter. Exercise testing was performed with an electrically braked bicycle ergometer in the supine position, and the load was increased by 25 or 50 watts every two minutes until fatigue, severe angina, more than 0.3 mV ST-segment depression, or 80% of the age predicted maximum heart rate was achieved. Patients after aortic valve replacement had a better exercise performance one month after operation than did those after mitral valve replacement. Those with mitral stenosis showed more severe impairment of exercise tolerance than did the mitral insufficiency group. There was a steady increase in exercise tolerance between one and six months postoperatively, both in patients with aortic and those with mitral valve replacement, but the difference in performance between the two groups was still present (72% versus 57% of normal). The results of univariate and multivariate analyses showed that the preoperative employment status was the most important factor for postoperative return to work, followed by gender (male > female), exercise tolerance and valualar lesion (aortic > mitral).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Exercise tolerance and working capacity after valve replacement. 134 26

2D-echocardiography, together with simultaneous measurement of systolic blood pressure and pulsed doppler examination of the transmitral flow were used to assess the left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic function during sequential pacing at 4 different atrioventricular (AV) intervals (50, 100, 150, 200 msec), and VVI pacing under the same rate of 90 beats/min in 13 patients (pts), mean age 61.25 +/- 8.26 years with DDD pacemakers implanted for complete AV block. The pts were divided into 2 groups: group I was comprised of 7 subjects showing no clinical abnormalities and normal echocardiograms, and group II of 6 hypertensive subjects with LV hypertrophy and normal systolic function on echocardiography. There was no change in LV diastolic dimension, but a depression in LV systolic function and contractility were shown by the conversion from DDD to VVI pacing in all pts, particularly in group II VVI pacing caused mitral regurgitation with LV filling pattern changing from beat to beat. By changing the AV interval during DDD pacing, the LV filling pattern was modified in all pts. Systolic performance showed little change in group I, whereas in group II more evident modifications were seen. An optimal AV delay, defined as the delay with maximal stroke volume, was identified in all subjects as being 100 and 150 ms in group I and group II respectively. Echo-doppler can thus provide useful information in choosing the mode of pacing and in programming optimal AV delay. In contrast to normal ventricles the systolic performance in hypertrophic ventricles is highly influenced by variation in the AV delay.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Role of echo-doppler in programming of sequential pacemakers. Evaluation of optimal atrioventricular delay in patients with normal or hypertrophic left ventricle]. 183 27

Coronary bypass surgery was performed prior to hospital discharge in 303 (22%) of 1387 consecutive patients enrolled in the TAMI 1 to 3 and 5 trials of intravenous thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction. Bypass surgery was of emergency nature (less than 24 hours from treatment with intravenous thrombolytic therapy) in 36 (2.6%) and was deferred (greater than 24 hours) in 267 (19.3%) patients. The indications for bypass surgery included failed angioplasty (12%); left main or equivalent coronary disease (9%); complex or multivessel coronary disease (62%); recurrent postinfarction angina (13%); and refractory pump dysfunction, mitral regurgitation, ventricular septal rupture or abnormal predischarge functional test (1% each). Although patients having bypass surgery were older (59.5 +/- 9.8 versus 56.0 +/- 10.2 years, (p less than 0.0001), had more extensive coronary artery disease (46% with three-vessel disease versus 11%, (p less than 0.0001), had more frequent diabetes mellitus (19% versus 15%, (p = 0.048), had more prior infarctions (p less than 0.0001), had more severe initial depression in global left ventricular ejection fraction (48.0 +/- 11.9% versus 51.8 +/- 11.9%, p = 0.0002), and regional infarct zone (-2.7 +/- 0.94 versus -2.5 +/- 1.1 SD/chord, p = 0.02) and noninfarct zone function (-0.36 +/- 1.8 versus 0.43 +/- 1.6 SD/chord, p less than 0.0001) than patients not having coronary bypass surgery, no difference in the incidence of death in hospital (7% surgical versus 6% nonsurgical) or death at long-term follow-up of hospital survivors (7% surgical versus 6% nonsurgical) was noted between groups. Surgical patients demonstrated a greater degree of recovery in left ventricular ejection fraction (3.4 +/- 9.8% versus 0.16 +/- 8.5%, p = 0.036) and infarct zone regional function (0.71 +/- 1.1 versus 0.34 +/- 0.99 SD/chord, p = 0.001) when immediate (90 minutes following initiation of thrombolytic therapy) and predischarge (7 to 14 days after treatment) contrast left ventriculograms were compared than did patients who received only intravenous thrombolytic therapy with or without coronary angioplasty. These data suggest a beneficial influence of coronary bypass surgery on left ventricular function and possibly on the clinical outcome of patients initially treated with intravenous thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Coronary bypass surgery improves global and regional left ventricular function following thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction. TAMI Study Group. 190 87

A 64-year-old woman with a history of hypertension for ten years and of syncope 18 month previously visited our Division of Cardiology on 12 June, 1989. The S4 and mitral regurgitation were audible at the apex, and her electrocardiogram showed ST-depression in leads II, aVF, V5-6 and prominent U-wave (PU) in V1-3 when first seen. Then, she was thought to have a posterior myocardial ischemia. PU in V1-3 diminished whereas T-wave increased after nitrate and Ca++ blocker. Ergometer exercise ECG showed ST-depression in II, III, aVF, V4-6 and PU with decreased T-wave in V2-3 with no apparent symptoms. Simultaneously, Tl-201 myocardial imaging demonstrated a transient posterior defect. A silent posterior myocardial ischemia was, therefore, confirmed. Coronary arteriograms demonstrated subtotal obstruction of the proximal left circumflex artery, and the peripheral site was filled by collaterals from the right coronary artery. Angina-induced PU in the right precordial leads proved to be useful in detection of posterior myocardial ischemia, and this marker may also improve the possibility of detection of silent posterior ischemia.
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PMID:[A case of silent posterior myocardial ischemia/left circumflex artery obstruction detected by prominent U-wave in right precordial leads]. 228 23

Endocardial splitting and left atrial rupture were diagnosed in a dog with mitral regurgitation that experienced the sudden onset of collapsing episodes, weakness, depression, labored breathing, and weak pulses. Thoracic radiographs showed a rounded cardiac silhouette with prominent left atrium consistent with hemopericardium due to left atrial rupture. Two-dimensional echocardiography confirmed the presence of severe mitral valve disease, pericardial fluid, and a laminated blood clot caudal to the left ventricle. A sterile emergency thoracotomy was performed, the hemopericardium and blood clot were removed, and the rupture site in the left atrium was repaired with reinforced sutures. The dog recovered from surgery but died the next day, presumably from a ventricular arrhythmia.
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PMID:Echocardiography and surgery in a dog with left atrial rupture and hemopericardium. 240 68


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