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)

The electrocardiographic changes accompanying pericarditis consist of ST elevation in most of the leads of the 12-lead electrocardiogram. The source of this ST elevation is thought to be local inflammatory changes in the epicardium underlying the inflamed pericardium. The current from this area of ST elevation must return to some unaffected region of the heart and this should be associated with a region of ST depression. This current path from the external epicardial surface has been postulated to flow back into the endocardium through the great vessels and atria. To test this hypothesis, 18 patients with pericarditis were studied by body surface potential mapping and inverse epicardial potential distributions were computed. The resultant maps were compared to those of normal people and patients with acute anterior infraction. Epicardial maps from patients with pericarditis showed a region of current flow into the heart over the great vessels and atria in all 18 patients. This pattern was not seen in normal patients or infarction patients and was consistent with the mechanism resulting in ST elevation in pericarditis being one of current flowing from the epicardium out into the thorax and back into the heart through the great vessels and atria.
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PMID:Electrical current paths in acute pericarditis. 822 18

The results of 100 consecutive autopsy studies performed since the introduction and use of cyclosporine (1984 to 1991) in patients who died less than 2.5 months after cardiac transplantation were analysed to try to prevent this type of lethal damage. The lesions were complex but the causes of death may be classified as follows: 44 infections (20 aspergillosis, with 13 septicaemias and 7 predominantly pulmonary complications, 15 severe lung infections, 9 other infections including 7 pyogenic mediastino-pericarditis), 12 acute myocardial rejects, 14 pulmonary arteriolitis reflecting the fact that pulmonary resistances affect the results of cardiac transplantation, 13 non-infectious pericarditis, 17 immediate postoperative deaths (incompetent graft, DIVC). In the discussion, the authors underline the importance of pericardial damage, the direct cause of death in 13 cases but also present in most cases of infection when sometimes clinically confused with the diagnosis of "acute reject". Acute pancreatitis (over 10% of cases) were often labelled "septicaemic shock". Pulmonary involvement is one of the commonest complications related to infection and changes due to passive pulmonary hypertension related to the causal preoperative disease, by silent pulmonary embolism during the 3 months of cardiac failure before surgery and DIVC. Infection was the cause of death in nearly half of the early fatalities, and aspergillosis was particularly common whereas systematic prevention with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine has eliminated pneumocystosis for example. The management of immuno-depression varies from centre to centre and this is also a factor in the incidence of anatomical complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Early fatal lesions after cardiac transplantation. Results of 100 autopsies]. 833 96

The routine diagnosis of tuberculosis and other mycobacterial diseases based on organism identification was completed during a period of one year in 730 patients, with serological IgG, IgM and IgA determination of antibodies against antigen 60 from M. bovis , strain BCG. The analysis was performed on 10 groups of patients consisting of 1) inflammatory diseases of the respiratory tract, 2) pericarditis, myocarditis, lymphadenitis and CNS diseases, 3) chronic non-inflammatory diseases of kidneys, liver and pancreas, 4) non-inflammatory diseases of the heart, sarcoidosis and pneumoconiosis, 5) tumor, 6) healthy people with TB contact, 7) inactive TB, 8) culture-positive pulmonary and extra-pulmonary TB, 9) culture-negative TB and extra-pulmonary TB, and 10) potentially pathogenic mycobacteria. The specificity of the test (100% negative cases in Group 6, composed of healthy people) is estimated at about 90%, in accordance with determinations made in other laboratories. In non-tuberculous patients, the specificity varied according to the analysed groups. Group 1 was largely unspecific for IgM (76% positives) but the specificity was acceptable for IgG (6.2% positives ) and IgA (7.4% positives). Group 2 was similar to Group 1. Group 3 was associated with positive IgA titers. Group 4 was only exceptiony seropositive and Group 5 was positive mainly for IgA (11. 4%) associated with lower respiratory tract ailments. This unspecific seropositivity was attributed to inapparent infections by PPM whose colonisation was favored by the particular disease of the patients. The sensitivity of serological measurements applied to the diagnosis of TB patients and PPM patients was similar, regardless if the disease was pulmonary or non-pulmonary, regardless if cultures were positive or not and, in our hands, was low (positivity for IgA about 30 %, for IgM about 10% and for IgG about 30%). This poor sensitivity observed with people presenting for treatment is attributed to an immune depression occuring mainly in elderly patients. The remarkable sensitivity of the serological instrument applied to culture-negative pulmonary and non-pulmonary TB cases as well as PPM cases makes the test a good adjuvant in cases of suspicion of TB. The assessment of the serological status of people under chemotherapy is worth the analysis, a high IgG level being associated with immunocompetence while the absence of IgG antibodies and/or the presence of IgA antibodies denotes an immunologically misdirected response potentially opening the way to chronic infections.
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PMID:Serological IgG, IgM and IgA diagnosis and prognosis of mycobacterial diseases in routine practice. 936 Sep 40

To assess the impact of demographic and clinical factors on prognosis in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), we studied a cohort composed of 566 patients in Huashan Hospital between 1959 and 1992 who were followed up to June 30, 1993. The survivorship was examined through life table analysis. The results showed that the survival rate from the time of SLE onset was 93% at 1 year, 73% at 5 years, and 60% at 10 years. On univariate analysis, we found that the following factors worsened the probability of survival: male, neuropsychiatric manifestations, pleurisy-pericarditis, hematological disorders, renal involvement, hypocomplementemia, abnormal electrocardiograph, and high corticosteroid dose of treatment. The time that the C3 depression occurred in the course of SLE affected the survival more significantly than did its decreased levels. The earlier the occurrence of C3 depression, the lower the patient's survival probability. On multivariate analysis, the independent risk factors were male gender, abnormal electrocardiograph, hypocomplementemia, and high corticosteroid dose of treatment. All of these indicated that clinical features of SLE might have value as predictors for its prognosis and that the occurrence of the decreased C3 in the early course of SLE might be the most important factor.
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PMID:Long term follow-up of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 967 43

Early repolarization (ER) is an enigma. The purpose of this review is to reemphasize the overall electrocardiographic (ECG) pattern of this normal ST variant which continues to challenge the clinician because of its similarity to the current of injury potential to myocardium or an acute pericarditis. The data were provided from the studies identified through computerized searches of Medline, Toxline, Oxford, Agricola, and Bios Afterdark, Cumulative index, and a review of bibliographies of relevant articles on the related subjects. Early repolarization has elevated, upward, concave ST segments, located commonly in precordial leads, with reciprocal depression in a VR, tall, peaked and slightly asymmetrical T waves with notch, and slur on the R wave. The other accompanying features in the ECG are vertical axis, shorter and depressed P-R interval, abrupt transition, counterclockwise rotation, presence of U waves, and sinus bradycardia. Males dominate and patients are often younger than 50 years of age. The incidence of 1 to 2% is found equally common in all races. Degree and incidence of ST elevation decrease as age advances. Exercise or isoproterenol administration may normalize the ST segment. Early repolarization is a benign condition. If the ECG conforms to a classical pattern of ER on serial ECGs, it would exclude the unnecessary hazards of present day revascularization therapy for myocardial infarction such as primary angioplasty or thrombolytic therapy, or aggressive management of acute pericarditis, and so forth. This review concludes with a discussion of comparative ECG features of ER, pericarditis, and myocardial infarction, and provides an algorithm for diagnostic management of patients suffering from these conditions.
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PMID:Early repolarization. 1006 41

We report on a case of a 43-year-old man who developed reversible myocardial depression and pericarditis related to severe sepsis secondary to rectosigmoid colonic perforation. The management of this patient was aided by the use of a continuous thermodilution cardiac output catheter and monitor, recently introduced in clinical practice.
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PMID:Pericardial injury following severe sepsis from faecal peritonitis--a case report on the use of continuous cardiac output monitoring. 1010 64

Early respiratory disease complex (ERDC) is a term coined to describe an acute disease characterized by depression, respiratory distress, and increased mortality in 2-to-3-wk-old broiler chickens. Postmortem lesions include airsacculitis, fibrinous pericarditis, and perihepatitis. Colisepticemia is the primary cause of death. In order to investigate the association between ERDC and farm management factors, a retrospective case-control study was conducted by collecting data covering a 6-mo period (January-June 1997) from four broiler integrators on the Delmarva peninsula. Univariate and multivariate statistical analyses revealed that flock size was positively associated (P = 0.02) and layout time was negatively associated (P = 0.05) with ERDC.
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PMID:Risk factors associated with early respiratory disease complex in broiler chickens. 1049 10

Although lupus cardiomyopathy is thought to be clinically uncommon, we encountered 6 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) over a 10 year period who had severe left ventricular dysfunction and showed remarkable improvement in their cardiac function after cytotoxic therapy. All patients met the American College of Rheumatology criteria for classification of SLE and presented with signs of severe biventricular failure relatively early in their disease. Concurrent manifestations of SLE at the time of cardiomyopathy included rash, arthritis, myalgias, pleuritis, pericarditis, and nephritis. Four of the 6 patients were taking prednisone 20 mg/day at the time heart failure developed. In all cases the CPK were normal. Evaluation of cardiac function by echocardiogram and/or radionuclide gated blood pool scintigraphy revealed a severe depression of ventricular function with initial left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ranging from 11 to 34% (mean 19%). Within 6 months of initiation of cytotoxic treatment all patients showed a dramatic response: the post-treatment LVEF ranged from 25 to 55%. This series of patients suggests that cardiomyopathy may be a more common complication of SLE than previously reported. Cardiomyopathy occurs relatively early in the course of SLE, may lead to severe cardiac dysfunction despite corticosteroid therapy, and appears to be responsive to cytotoxic therapy.
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PMID:Dramatic improvement of left ventricular function after cytotoxic therapy in lupus patients with acute cardiomyopathy: report of 6 cases. 1052 51

New epidemics of respiratory disease have caused 29.6 morbidity and 6.4% mortality in camels in the Somalia region of Ethiopia. The major clinical signs observed were fever of 40-41.5 degrees C, depression, cough, loss of appetite and a watery nasal discharge that became mucopurulent at a later stage. Finally, the camel became recumbent and extended its neck straight along the ground. Some of the animals died within 8-9 days. The major post-mortem lesions were hydrothorax, adhesion of the lung to the thorax, red and grey hepatization, emphysema, hydropericardium and fibrinous pericarditis. A treatment trial indicated that oxytetracycline was more effective than a combination of penicillin and streptomycin, the results showing a significant difference (p < 0.05) between the treated and control groups. The bacteria isolated from lung, thoracic fluid and whole blood were Pasteurella haemolytica. Further studies on the epidemiology of this disease, the identification of the serotypes involved, and the demonstration of any primary viral initiating agent are recommended to allow the development of preventive methods.
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PMID:Studies on the respiratory disease 'sonbobe' in camels in the eastern lowlands of Ethiopia. 1059 29

The SLE database at the Rheumatology Clinic, St. Luke's Hospital currently includes 62 patients. The presentation, clinical features, ACR criteria and laboratory findings in RNP positive lupus patients [14] were compared to RNP negative subgroup [33]. RNP positivity was significantly associated with Raynaud's phenomenon (p < 0.01), myalgia (p < 0.02), myositis (p < 0.05), neuropsychiatric features (p < 0.05) and Sm positivity (p < 0.01). RNP positive patients had a higher frequency of positive family history, mortality, malar and maculopapular rashes, nail-fold infarcts, telangiectasia, digital vasculitis, photo-sensitivity, arthritis, pleurisy, pericarditis, pericardial effusions, depression, headache, psychosis and TIA.
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PMID:RNP positivity in Maltese SLE patients. 1059 38


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