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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (dizziness)
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This multicenter trial compared the efficacy and safety of isradipine and enalapril in 160 patients with essential hypertension. Patients received isradipine or enalapril for 10 weeks after a placebo wash-out period of three to five weeks. Dosage was titrated for six weeks on the basis of blood pressure (BP) response and was then maintained for the remainder of the study. Isradipine reduced systolic and diastolic BP by 12 and 9 mm Hg, respectively, and enalapril by 10 and 7 mm Hg, respectively (between-treatment difference P less than .05 for diastolic BP). Overall, isradipine resulted in a higher responder rate, particularly among patients who had higher entry BPs. Fifteen enalapril-treated patients and four isradipine-treated patients discontinued treatment (four taking enalapril and none taking isradipine withdrew because of lack of efficacy). The most frequently reported adverse reactions were headache, dizziness, and edema in the isradipine group, and cough, headache, and chest pain in the enalapril group. Both drugs produced significant reductions in BP, but, in this study isradipine was more effective. The drugs were similarly well tolerated.
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PMID:A multicenter comparison of the safety and efficacy of isradipine and enalapril in the treatment of hypertension. 182 8

Mitral Valve Prolapse (MVP) is a common cardiac disorder in our community. It is estimated that 4% to 15% of the general population have the anatomical defect of prolapsed mitral valve leaflets during ventricular systole. Patients with MVP that suffer from chest pain, dyspnea, fatigue, dizziness, syncope, palpitations, cardiac arrhythmias, anxiety, and panic attacks are diagnosed as having Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome. There is much controversy in the medical literature as to the causes of MVPS symptomatology. Some scientists believe that autonomic dysfunction, adrenergic, and vagal responsiveness are factors which appropriately explain the symptoms of MVPS. Pharmacological therapy, depending on the severity of the symptoms, is one option for treatment. Education on the etiology of their symptoms, instruction on lifestyle modifications, and reassurance from their physician are appropriate methods for the management of MVPS patients.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse. 186 Oct 97

A 66 year-old woman with chronic Chagas's heart disease, presented palpitations, dizziness and chest pain. The His bundle electrograms revealed sick sinus syndrome. The left cineventriculography showed apical and inferior aneurysms of mammillary morphological aspect.
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PMID:[Apical and inferior mammillary aneurysm in chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy]. 187 27

Clinical symptoms were studied in 69 consecutive patients below the age of 40 years who were attending the emergency unit because of unexplained chest pain. In a structured interview a few weeks after the emergency visit, only one-third of the patients reported that they believed in the doctor's diagnosis; they believed in a psychological or cardiac origin of the pain more often than the doctors. The chest pain was most often described as oppressive and/or stabbing. In 95% of cases it was central or left-sided. Associated symptoms were commonly reported, breathlessness being most commonly reported by two-thirds of the patients, followed by dizziness, palpitation and numbness/tingling. Mental symptoms such as tiredness, anxiety and tension were frequently reported. On the basis of the background literature the aetiology is discussed. We conclude that immediate symptom analysis, including psychosomatic symptoms, particularly breathing problems, is of central importance.
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PMID:Clinical symptoms in young adults with atypical chest pain attending the emergency department. 189 50

This study retrospectively assesses the underlying causes of sudden unexpected death and the occurrence of prodromal symptoms in 162 subjects (aged 9 to 39 years) over a 10-year period (1976 to 1985). Underlying cardiac diseases accounted for sudden death in 73% and noncardiac causes in 15% of subjects. In 12% of subjects, the causes were unidentifiable. Myocarditis (22%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (22%) and conduction system abnormalities (13%) were the major causes in 32 subjects aged less than 20 years. Major causes of 46 deaths in subjects 20 to 29 years were atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (24%), myocarditis (22%) and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (13%). The largest number of deaths in 84 subjects aged greater than or equal to 30 years was attributed to coronary artery disease (58%), followed by myocarditis (11%). Among noncardiac causes of sudden death, intracranial hemorrhage was the most frequent (5%), followed by infectious disease (4%). Prodromal symptoms were reported by 54% of subjects; most frequent were chest pain (25%) in subjects aged greater than or equal to 20 years, and dizziness (16%) in those aged less than 20. Sudden death, which occurred during routine daily activity in 49% and during sleep in 23% of subjects, was related to physical exercise in 23% and emotional upset in 6%. Sudden unexpected death in the young is still an unresolved medical problem. The early recognition of prodromal symptoms could be crucial in the prevention of sudden death, specifically when exercise-related.
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PMID:Sudden unexpected death in persons less than 40 years of age. 195 Nov 30

1. A novel formulation of nicardipine (25% standard, 75% sustained release--SR) was evaluated in mild hypertension in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled comparison with standard nicardipine (STD), using clinic measurements (Hawksley) augmented by home recorded blood pressures (Copal UA 251). 2. At 2 h after dosing (peak effect) both STD nicardipine (30 mg three times daily) and SR nicardipine (60 mg twice daily) for 28 days produced a highly significant reduction in sitting and standing blood pressure. The mean sitting blood pressure was reduced by 20/16 mm Hg (STD) and by 25/18 mm Hg (SR) compared with placebo. 3. Predose (8-11 h after last dose of STD, 12-15 h after last dose of SR) the reductions in sitting blood pressure relative to placebo were 11/6 mm Hg (STD) and 14/7 mm Hg (SR). 4. Home recordings confirmed the hypotensive effect of both formulations. Both exhibited a distinct 'peak dose' effect between 1-3 h after dosing. The effect of the SR formulation was sustained throughout the 12 h dosing interval. 5. Of the 60 patients entering the study, one died of unexplained staphylococcal septicaema, two were withdrawn for non drug-related reasons and 14 (32%) were withdrawn because of adverse effects on active therapy (headaches, facial flushing, leg oedema, chest pain, dizziness). 6. In the 43 patients who completed the study adverse symptoms were reported more frequently while they were on the two active formulations of nicardipine compared with placebo. Most of these reactions were again of vasodilator origin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Nicardipine sustained release in hypertension. 195 36

The effects of a 12-week aerobic exercise training protocol on 32 symptomatic women with mitral valve prolapse were studied. Subjects were randomly assigned to control or exercise groups. Exercise subjects completed a 12-week (3 times per week) exercise training program based on guidelines established by the American Heart Association for phase II cardiac rehabilitation programs; control group subjects maintained normal activities. Before and after training, subjects underwent maximal multistage treadmill testing, and measurements were obtained for plasma catecholamine levels at rest and during peak exercise; they completed the State Trait Anxiety Inventory and General Well-Being Schedule. Weekly symptom frequency of chest pain, arm pain, palpitations, shortness of breath, fatigue, headache, mood swings, dizziness and syncope were monitored for the 12-week period. Data were analyzed using multivariate analysis of variance, multivariate analysis of covariance, and analysis of covariance with repeated measures. Compared with control subjects, the exercise group showed a significant (p less than 0.05) decrease in State Trait Anxiety Inventory scores, an increase in General Well-Being scores, an increase in functional capacity and a decline in the frequency of chest pain, fatigue, dizziness and mood swings. No statistically significant differences were noted in catecholamine levels at rest or during peak exercise. These findings support the use of aerobic exercise in the management of symptomatic women with mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:Effects of aerobic exercise training on symptomatic women with mitral valve prolapse. 201 86

A case of metastasis of thyroid cancer into the cardiac cavity is described. A 73-year-old female suffered from sudden chest pain, dyspnea and dizziness and admitted to a local clinic on emergency. A diagnosis of bilateral multiple pulmonary infarction was made by lung perfusion scintigraphy. However, a mass migrating between the right atrium and the right ventricle across the tricuspid valve was demonstrated by echocardiography, and the patient was referred to us under a diagnosis of myxoma complicated with pulmonary infarction. Incision of the right atrium disclosed a gelatinous mass resembling frog eggs, attached to the right ventricle side of the anterior cusp of the tricuspid valve and swinging across the orifice of the valve. The gross lesion was removed completely. Since the histological diagnosis was clear cell carcinoma, no surgery was performed on the pulmonary artery. Postoperative re-examination by ultrasonography and CT revealed thyroid cancer as the primary lesion.
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PMID:[Surgical resection of cardiac metastasis of thyroid cancer--a case report]. 203 39

Chest pain, palpitations, and dizziness are not infrequent complaints in the office of a primary care physician. Historical events and physical findings can lead to a more accurate determination of cardiac causes of these symptoms. Electrocardiogram and chest radiographs are two additional tests most often helpful in determining cardiac causes of symptoms.
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PMID:Common complaints with cardiac implications in children. 204 44

Forty-four cases of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (23 men, 21 women; 55 +/- 15 years) referred for evaluation of chest pain (28 cases), dyspnoea (26 cases), palpitations (25 cases), dizziness (11 cases) and syncope (4 cases), were investigated prospectively between February 1983 and February 1989. The cardiomyopathy was concentric (N = 16), obstructive (N = 24) or apical (N = 4) and the diagnosis confirmed by angiography. Twenty-four hour Holter monitoring showed no ventricular extrasystoles in 43% of patients: the others had Grade I (25%), Grade III (2%), Grade 4A (14%) or 4B (16%) ventricular arrhythmias with diurnal predominance in half the cases. Patients with greater than or equal to Grade III ventricular extrasystoles had greater left axis deviation but did not differ from the others from the hemodynamic point of view. Exercise stress testing induced an isolated ventricular arrhythmia in 23% of patients and repetitive extrasystoles in 23%. The prevalence of surface late ventricular potentials was no greater in these patients than in normal subjects (4% vs 1%; NS). Programmed ventricular stimulation (N = 37) induced a repetitive response in only 25% of patients, with only two cases of sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia. There were no correlations between the results of programmed ventricular stimulation and those of Holter monitoring, exercise stress testing or late ventricular potential recording, but patients with inducible ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation had proportionally more syncopal episodes and greater than or equal to Grade III ventricular extrasystoles on Holter monitoring, but the difference was not statistically significant in this series.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Study of the arrhythmogenicity of cardiomyopathies. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathies]. 204 23


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