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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute heart failure
syndromes (AHFS) represent the most common discharge diagnosis in patients over age 65 years, with an exceptionally high mortality and readmission rates at 60-90 days. Recent surveys and registries have generated important information concerning the clinical characteristics of patients with AHFS and their prognosis. Most patients with AHFS present either with normal systolic blood pressure or elevated blood pressure. Patients who present with elevated systolic blood pressure usually have pulmonary congestion, a relatively preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), are often elderly women, and their symptoms develop typically and abruptly. Patients with normal systolic blood pressure present with systemic congestion, reduced LVEF, are usually younger with a history of chronic HF, and have symptoms that develop gradually over days or weeks. In addition to the abnormal hemodynamics (increase in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and/or decrease in cardiac output) that characterize patients with AHFS, myocardial injury, which may be related to a decrease in coronary perfusion and/or further activation of neurohormones and renal dysfunction, probably contributes to short-term and post-discharge cardiac events. Patients with AHFS also have significant cardiac and noncardiac underlying conditions that contribute to the pathogenesis of AHFS, including coronary artery disease (ischemia, hibernating myocardium, and endothelial dysfunction), hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and
type 2 diabetes
mellitus. Therefore, the targets of therapy for AHFS should be not only to improve symptoms and hemodynamics but also to preserve or improve renal function, prevent myocardial damage, modulate neurohumoral and inflammatory activation, and to manage other comorbidities that may cause and/or contribute to the progression of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Acute heart failure syndromes: clinical scenarios and pathophysiologic targets for therapy. 1748 81
According to the rules of differential diagnostics an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) often constitutes an initial diagnosis while a subsequent patient's follow-up with troponin determination results in further verification of the diagnosis. A 55 year-old female with congenital hearing loss, poorly controlled hypertension,
type 2 diabetes
treated with oral medications, and hypothyreosis was admitted to the Department of Cardiology with 6 h long severe chest pain radiating over her back with concomitant dyspnea. She underwent urgent coronary angiography which showed no epicardial coronary narrowing.
Acute heart failure
symptoms occurred immediately after coronary angiography in the form of cardiogenic shock. Even though an ACS was diagnosed on the basis of typical biochemical, electrocardiographic and clinical criteria, a further follow-up suggested a possibility of a co-existance of other diseases which occurred to be a Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome.
...
PMID:[Myocardial infarction without coronary arteries stenoses in a patient with Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome--diagnostic dilemmas]. 2221 24