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)

It is not known if the favorable changes in preload and afterload that augment ejection performance in acute experimental aortic and mitral regurgitation are also present in patients with chronic regurgitation. Additionally, observations that patients with mitral versus aortic regurgitation respond differently to valve replacement suggest that differences exist preoperatively between these two types of volume overload. Therefore, ventricular mechanics were compared in nine patients with severe aortic regurgitation, eight patients with severe mitral regurgitation and seven normal subjects. The amount of volume overload was similar in both groups with regurgitation. In both aortic and mitral regurgitation, ejection performance was reduced compared with findings in normal subjects. Preload estimated as enddiastolic stress was comparably elevated above normal in both groups with regurgitation: 69 +/- 24 dynes X 10(3)/cm2 in mitral regurgitation compared with 81 +/- 34 dynes X 10(3)/cm2 in aortic regurgitation and 36 +/- 11 dynes X 10(3)/cm2 in normal subjects. However, afterload estimated as mean systolic stress was normal in mitral regurgitation (186 +/- 34 dynes X 10(3)/cm2) but markedly elevated in aortic regurgitation (260 +/- 41 dynes X 10(3)/cm2) (p less than 0.01). Contractile depression tended to be more severe in mitral regurgitation despite similar ejection performance in mitral and aortic regurgitation. Thus, in mitral regurgitation favorable loading conditions may mask contractile dysfunction, and in aortic regurgitation excessive afterload contributes to poor pump performance, possibly accounting for previously observed differences in the response to valve replacement.
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PMID:Differences in myocardial performance and load between patients with similar amounts of chronic aortic versus chronic mitral regurgitation. 670 57

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.
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PMID:[Study of left ventricular function in chronic volume overload (author's transl)]. 723 3

Patients with aortic regurgitation and severe left ventricular dysfunction remain candidates for aortic valve replacement, as long as the risks of late left ventricular dysfunction and congestive heart failure have been fully discussed with the patient, the patient's family, and the referring physician. In contrast, patients with mitral regurgitation and severe systolic dysfunction are at considerable risk of more severe left ventricular dysfunction after operation, especially if mitral valve repair or chordal-sparing procedure cannot be performed. In patients who are candidates for such procedures that preserve the integrity of the subvalvular mitral apparatus, operation may be successful in selected patients despite moderate-to-severe depression of systolic function. Prognosis is guarded to poor in patients with regurgitant valvular lesions and advanced left ventricular dysfunction, and the emerging alternative treatments discussed in other articles in this Cardiology Clinics deserve consideration in these patients.
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PMID:Valve replacement for regurgitant lesions of the aortic or mitral valve in advanced left ventricular dysfunction. 779 34

Nine children in the age group of new born to 10 years were seen during the period October 1989 to January 1993 with varying manifestations of Myocarditis. This ranged from cardiogenic shock due to fulminant cardiac failure, recurrent wheezy episodes (mistakenly treated as bronchial asthma) bronchiolitis and rhythm disturbances. Clinical picture was collaborated by radiological evidence of cardiomegaly, ECG changes of low voltage QRS complexes with ST depression, T wave inversion or signs of left ventricular dilatation. SGOT, SGPT, CPK, LDH were elevated significantly in 7 cases. Echocardiographic changes ranged from left ventricular dilatation to global hypokinesia and mild mitral incompetence. Viral studies suggested infection with Coxsackie B1 in 4 cases, B4 in 2, B5 in 2 and Dengue 3 in 1 case. All the children recovered well with routine anti failure measures and treatment of arrhythmias and 2 children needed steroid therapy. At the end of follow up of 6 months to 1 year there has been complete reversal of ECHO changes to normal. Viral Myocarditis can manifest in varied ways in children and if treated adequately may lead to complete recovery.
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PMID:Varied manifestations of viral myocarditis. 792 2

Three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography is a new and evolving cardiac imaging technique. We reported our experiences of its clinical applications in 59 patients. A series of special temporal longitudinal views were selected by the frame grabber. Then the computer connected each digitized endocardial surface of the longitudinal views according to their spatial position and reconstructed the three-dimensional, cardiac shaded picture with gray scale. The three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiographic images were divided into three areas. The right area was right anterior to the esophagus and included such structures as the superior vena cava, right atrium, interatrial septum, and left atrium; the size, shape, and location of an atrial septal defect could be clearly shown. In the middle area the origin and the course of the two great arteries could be visualized, thus facilitating the diagnosis of transposition of the great arteries; in patients with obstruction of the right ventricular outflow tract, the circular ridgelike narrowing in the right ventricle was clearly visualized. In the left area the contour and size of the left ventricle and left atrium and the shape and point of coaptation of the mitral valve could be demonstrated; in patients with mitral valve prolapse, part of either leaflet protruded into the left atrium and appeared as a spoonlike depression in the mitral valve. Other entities subjected to three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiographic reconstruction included cor triatriatum, left atrial myxoma, aneurysm of sinus of Valsalva, dissecting aortic aneurysm, mitral stenosis, mitral regurgitation, and mitral valve prolapse.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical application of three-dimensional transesophageal echocardiography. 803 6

When enoximone is acutely administered to patients with stable angina and angiographically proven relevant coronary stenosis i.v. application of 0.75 mg/kg exhibits pronounced antiischemic effects. This could be observed in patients during exercise and in those in whom the ischemia was provoked by rapid cardiac stimulation. The antiischemic effects were documented by relief of symptoms, reduction of ST-depression, improvement of impaired myocardial wall motion, decrease to normalization of pathologically elevated filling pressure, amelioration of coronary blood flow as evidenced by myocard scintigraphy and washout time of an intracoronarily injected echo-contrast medium. There was also a definite improvement of ischemia-caused mitral regurgitation. Similar observations were found when the drug was injected in the diseased coronary arteries in a small dose (0.075 mg/kg) so that peripheral effects were not present. In comparison to the Ca(++)-blocker Gallopamil the antiischemic effects of Enoximone were more pronounced, a synergistic action was, however, observed. Negative dromotropic effects of Gallopamil could be abolished by Enoximone. With oral administration of the drug over a period of one week antiischemic effects could also be documented with Holter monitoring as well as during exercise. There was a reduction of ST-depression both at spontaneously occurring ischemic episodes and during exercise, in the number and duration of episodes of silent ischemia, particularly, however, a decrease in symptomatic episodes. In none of the patients under study proarrhythmic effects were observed.
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PMID:[The anti-ischemic effect of phosphodiesterase III inhibitors]. 809 22

A case of ventricular fibrillation occurring in the recovery phase of treadmill exercise test is described. A 64-year-old man was admitted to the hospital because of chest pain. The resting electrocardiogram was normal, but during a stress test (Bruce protocol) ventricular ectopic beats and ischemic S-T depression were observed. The echocardiogram showed septal hypertrophy and septal and apical hypokinesia. Ten days later he, during antianginal therapy, underwent treadmill exercise testing. In contrast with the previous stress test, ventricular ectopic beats decreased during the effort, but the S-T segment depressed, at the third step, with mild chest pain and hypotension. While angina and electrocardiogram improved, suddenly ventricular fibrillation developed. The patient was successfully resuscitated with electrical defibrillation, with a 350 joules shock. Echocardiogram was unchanged; serum enzymes were slightly modified (secondary to DC-shock). The ischemic changes observed at the electrocardiogram in the anterior wall within seven days returned in the normal range. Ten days later the patient underwent cardiac catheterization. At ventriculography the posterior and diaphragmatic wall was diskinetic, ejection fraction was 70%; a complete occlusion of the right coronary artery at the origin, a critical stenosis of left descending artery, with occlusion in the middle tract were found. Circumflex artery was occluded at the origin with omo-etero-coronary collateral channels. Twenty days later, he had a successful bypass surgery. Postsurgical echocardiogram revealed a moderate depression of ejection fraction (41%), inferior diskinesia, apical hypokinesia, mild mitral regurgitation. The patient was discharged with digitalis, nitrates, aspirin and amiodarone for prophylactic treatment of paroxystic atrial fibrillation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Ventricular fibrillation during stress test on a treadmill. Apropos of a case]. 836 13

We investigated the effects of chronic volume overload in the absence or presence of vitamin E supplements on the cardiac function and contractility, cardiac malondialdehyde (MDA)--a lipid peroxidation product--cardiac antioxidant enzyme activity and antioxidant reserve in canine model. The dogs were divided into three groups of seven dogs each: group I, control; group II, mitral regurgitation (MR) of 4 months duration; and group III, MR of 4 months duration receiving vitamin E (40 U/kg/daily) orally. MR was created by detaching two or more chordae tendinae to raise left atrial pressure to 2.5 to three times normal. MR produced a decrease in the index of myocardial contractility with little change in myocardial function. Decrease in myocardial (left and right ventricles) contractility was associated with an increase in cardiac MDA, and a decrease in cardiac antioxidant reserve and antioxidant enzyme activity. Prevention of volume overload-induced decrease in myocardial contractility by vitamin E was associated with a decrease in cardiac MDA and an increase in cardiac antioxidant reserve and glutathione peroxidase activity towards control levels. Superoxide dismutase and catalase activity remained depressed in vitamin E-treated group. The results indicate that chronic volume overload decreases the contractility of both right and left ventricles and is associated with oxidative stress in both ventricles. These results support the hypothesis that oxygen free radicals are involved in the chronic volume overload-induced cardiac depression.
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PMID:Oxidative stress as a mechanism of cardiac failure in chronic volume overload in canine model. 872 69

Myofibrillar but not actomyosin ATPase is depressed in failing myocardium from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. Since there is a similar depression of myofibrillar ATPase in mitral regurgitation myocardium, we investigated whether or not the hydrolytic and mechanical performances of myosin are altered by comparing the maximal actomyosin ATPase activity and the in vitro myosin motility of myocardial myosin from patients with mitral regurgitation heart failure with that of patients with normal ventricular function. The results show that there is no significant difference (P > .05) between nonfailing and failing values for either the maximal actomyosin ATPase activity (0.3 s-1.head-1) or the myosin motility (1 micron/s). These observations suggest that changes, other than in the myosin heavy chain, contribute to the altered myocardial performance in mitral regurgitation myocardium.
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PMID:Maximal actomyosin ATPase activity and in vitro myosin motility are unaltered in human mitral regurgitation heart failure. 875 98

A 70-year-old man presented with repeated syncope induced by left ventricular outflow tract obstruction. He was referred to us because of repeated syncope with convulsion at rest. During syncope, electrocardiography showed marked ST segment depression with negative T waves in leads I, II, aVL, aVF and V2-V5 but no arrhythmias. Echocardiography revealed asymmetric septal hypertrophy and complete obstruction of the left ventricular outflow tract due to systolic anterior movement of anterior mitral leaflet and concomitant severe mitral regurgitation. During the catheterization study, syncope with convulsion developed repeatedly without antecedent cause, and was associated with a decrease in systemic blood pressure. Simultaneous pressure monitoring of the left ventricle and femoral artery showed a significant pressure gradient (maximum 110 mmHg). During each episode, systemic blood pressure rose spontaneously with the recovery of consciousness over several minutes. He received temporary atrioventricular sequential pacing and underwent successful mitral valve replacement. Four years later, he was doing well.
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PMID:Recurrent syncope induced by left ventricular outflow tract obstruction: demonstration in a patient with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. 930 11


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