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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nitroglycerin reduces elevated left ventricular filling and pulmonary arterial pressures in resting patients with rheumatic valve disease and reduces symptoms when given over long periods to patients with primary myocardial disease. To determine whether nitroglycerin may prove effective therapeutically in ambulatory patients with heart valve disease, its effects on hemodynamics and exercise capacity were studied in 11 severely symptomatic adults who were already receiving optimal treatment with digitalis and diuretic agents. Seven had predominant mitral valve disease, one had predominant
aortic insufficiency
and three had equally severe mitral and aortic valve disease. Maximal exercise capacity was assessed with graded treadmill exercise after placebo and after nitroglycerin (0.5 mg sublingually) administered in random sequence to each patient. Exercise capacity (exercise time to limiting
fatigue
or dyspnea) increased from a mean of 8.3 minutes after placebo to 9.8 minutes after nitroglycerin (P less than 0.005). Eight patients were studied hemodynamically during further intense treadmill exercise. Pulmonary arterial pressure was significantly lower (P less than 0.05) after nitroglycerin than after placebo (mean 44 versus 56 mm Hg), but cardiac output was greater after nitroglycerin (5.0 versus 4.6 liters/min, P less than 0.005). Thus, nitroglycerin appears to increase exericse tolerance and improve the hemodynamic response to exercise in patients with heart valve disease and may be valuable in the long-term pharmacologic therapy of such patients.
...
PMID:Nitroglycerin-induced improvement in exercise tolerance and hemodynamics in patients with chronic rheumatic heart valve disease. 41 13
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)
...
PMID:Exercise tolerance and working capacity after valve replacement. 134 26
Since it is very rare that cardiac tamponade due to myocardial rupture caused by infective endocarditis, occurs we are reporting this case. A 62 year old man, who had underlying diseases of pneumoconiosis and hypertensive heart disease, visited Chikuho Rosai Hospital complaining of chest oppression and general
fatigue
on Feb. 7, 1987. He was diagnosed as having ischemic heart disease by electrocardiogram. Two days later, he suddenly had chills and a fever, and the laboratory data showed leukocytosis and a positive C-reactive protein (CRP). The echo cardiogram showed mitral regurgitation (MR) and
aortic regurgitation
(AR), but neither vegetation nor pericardial effusion was observed. On Feb. 16, he was admitted with shock, and he died the next day. The blood cultures grew gram-positive cocci, respectively. From the clinical symptoms, chest roentgenogram and electrocardiogram, we suspected a cardiac tamponade. On autopsy findings, though coronary arteries were intact, the aortic valves had severe valvular adhesions, calcifications and hypertrophies. The rupture hole was observed in the left ventricles, which was just under the aortic valve through the pericardiac space. It seemed that he died of a cardiac tamponade due to the outflow of blood from this hole. On histopathologic findings of the cardiac wall, gram-positive cocci and many of neutrophils were observed.
...
PMID:[An autopsied case of infective endocarditis with cardiac tamponade due to myocardial rupture]. 207 73
A 72-year-old woman of definite type of malignant rheumatoid arthritis (MRA) with severe peripheral neuropathy. She has often noted pain of both shoulders or knee joints since some years ago. At the age of 71, she noticed numbness of the feet with pain and swelling of knee joints. She was diagnosed as definite type of rheumatoid arthritis by one podiatrist. Although she took some medications, she subsequently developed general
fatigue
, appetite loss, exacerbation of arthritis, drop feet and hands with prominent coldness. She was admitted to our hospital on March 22, 1985. On examination, she revealed purpura, decubitis, heart murmur, arthritis of knee joints, and fingers necrosis with skin ulcer. She had severe muscle weakness, and wasting of four limbs. Moderate impairment of all-modality sensations were noted in all extremities. Distal involvement was greater than proximal. Laboratory data during administration of prednisolone (60 mg/day) were as follows: glucose in urine, 2+; occult blood in urine, 1+; white blood cells count, 18600 with 92% polymorphonuclear leukocytes; erythrocyte sedimentation rate, 60 mm in an hour; CRP, 14.62 mg/dl (normal 0.5 greater than); RA test, 2+; RAHA, 10240; CH50, 10 U/ml (normal 32-42); C3, 37 mg/dl (normal 55-75); C4, 9 mg/dl (normal 15-28); immune complex, 4.4 micrograms/ml (normal 3.0): Chest X-ray film showed cardiomegaly (CTR, 57%). ECG disclosed atrial premature contraction, and echo cardiography suggested epicarditis with
aortic valve insufficiency
. 99mTc RI angiogram revealed impairment of peripheral circulation. SCV on sural nerve was not elicited. Sural nerve biopsy showed obliterans type of endoarteritis and axonal degeneration with loss of myelinated fiber.
...
PMID:[A case of malignant rheumatoid arthritis with severe peripheral neuropathy]. 258 90
Urapidil has been approved as sustained-release capsules containing 30, 60 and 90 mg, respectively, and as ampules containing 25 and 50 mg for treatment of all grades of hypertension, in several countries in Europe, South America, as well as in Japan and other Asian regions. In general, the treatment should start with 60 mg twice daily, 1 capsule in the morning and 1 in the evening. This schedule may be adapted according to the therapeutic needs. During the last few years, urapidil has been investigated extensively in comparison with several types of established antihypertensive drugs. Urapidil given orally has been tested in comparative trials against placebo, acebutolol, metoprolol, captopril, nifedipine and nitrendipine with responder rates of 40 to 70%. These responder rates are to be expected for a variety of antihypertensive drugs in monotherapy. Further studies with clonidine, prazosin and alpha-methyldopa showed similar responder rates as established for the other antihypertensive drugs studied. Adverse reactions include dizziness, headache and nausea and occasionally
tiredness
, orthostatic dysregulation and gastric disorders. These symptoms were transient, mostly occurring during the early phases of therapy and disappearing as treatment continued. Adverse effects are considered to be mainly due to blood pressure reduction. Intravenous comparative trials have been performed with urapidil against placebo, diazoxide and sodium nitroprusside. Adverse effects of parenterally applied urapidil are similar to those observed during oral treatment. Specific contraindications for urapidil are unknown. However, as for other vasodilating drugs, intravenous urapidil should not be administered to patients with stenosis of the aortic isthmus or with
aortic valve insufficiency
.
...
PMID:Overview of clinical trials with urapidil. 266 12
Acute, severe
aortic regurgitation
due to dilatation of the aortic root was studied in a 16-year-old Japanese female with Takayasu's arteritis. The patient was admitted because of acute pulmonary edema followed by systemic illness characterized by fever, anorexia, and general
fatigue
. The echocardiogram and aortogram demonstrated acute, severe
aortic regurgitation
due to dilation of the aortic root. She was successfully treated with aortic valve replacement and steroid. Microscopic examination of the aortic wall demonstrated granulomatous lesions with multinucleated giant cells. Now, three years later, she remains asymptomatic and hemodynamically stable.
...
PMID:Successful treatment of acute, severe aortic regurgitation caused by Takayasu's arteritis: a case report. 287 65
Between January 1975 and December 1985 214 patients underwent prosthetic aortic valve replacement for isolated
aortic regurgitation
. Patient follow-up averaged 5.4 years after the operation (range 0.7-10.7 years). Preoperative staging showed 9 patients to be in NYHA stage II, 111 patients in stage III, and 94 patients in stage IV. At follow-up 3 patients complained of increased
fatigue
, 9 patients remained stable and 167 patients had improved. 103 of these patients were free of symptoms under stress, i.e. NYHA stage I. The hospital mortality was 3.7% (8/214 patients). An additional 26 patients died within an average of 2.8 years. The cumulative 5-year survival rate was 85%; the 10-year survival rate was 81.5%. 10 patients underwent a second operation within an average of 3.4 years. The correlation between the end-diastolic volume and the regurgitated blood volume has prognostic significance. 25 patients with appropriate enlargement of the left ventricle showed a significant decrease of the end-diastolic volume and the roentgenographic heart volume combined with an increase of ejection fraction. None of these 25 patients died from cardiac complications. A control group of 9 patients with myocardial damage showed no significant change in the above parameters. 4 patients in the control group died. We conclude that the relationship of regurgitated blood volume and the left ventricular end-diastolic volume is of prognostic significance for patients with chronic
aortic regurgitation
presenting with minimal symptoms.
...
PMID:Late results of prosthetic valve replacement for aortic regurgitation and the prognostic significance of the end-diastolic and regurgitated blood volumes. 297 38
Ruptured sinus Valsalva aneurysm was repaired in 13 patients (mean age c. 33 years). Dyspnea, chest pain,
fatigue
and palpitation were the most common symptoms and systodiastolic murmur, cardiomegaly and pulmonary congestion the most pertinent clinical findings. The pulmonary-to-systemic flow ratio averaged c. 2.5. Associated cardiac anomalies were ventricular septal defect, aortic or mitral regurgitation, aortic coarctation or subvalvular stenosis, tetralogy of Fallot (altogether 8 cases). The origin of the fistula was the noncoronary, right coronary or left coronary sinus (5, 4 and 3 cases) or was not identifiable (1 case). Rupture occurred into the right atrium (6 cases), right ventricle (6) or pulmonary artery (1 case). Repair was undertaken through aortotomy (6 cases), right ventriculotomy (2) or right atriotomy (1) or through aortotomy + right ventriculotomy or atriotomy (4). In one case aortic valve replacement was performed. All survived the operation. Follow-up averaged 9.6 years. Recurrent fistulation, though with small shunt, was found in two cases. Combined two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography revealed minor cardiac abnormalities in most patients, particularly
aortic regurgitation
. All the patients were in NYHA function class I or II.
...
PMID:Ruptured aneurysm of sinus of Valsalva. Long-term postoperative follow-up. 343 19
A 53-year-old patient with no past history of rheumatic fever or lues presented with severe
aortic regurgitation
, underwent hemodynamic evaluation, and subsequently, an uneventful aortic valve replacement. The initial pathological interpretation was nonspecific aortitis. Six months following surgery arthralgia, muscular pain, difficulty in mastication, and
fatigue
occurred. There was no fever, however, sedimentation rate was 100/130. Cardiac examination was normal. Review of the pathological specimens revealed granulomatous arteritis with giant cells, typical of giant cell arteritis. Though the association of
aortic regurgitation
and giant cell arteritis is well recognized, only two such cases of severe
aortic regurgitation
requiring valve replacements have yet been described, of them, one probably had Takayasu's arteritis. An accurate diagnosis is of importance since steroid treatment is effective, and if introduced early, the inflammatory process may be arrested.
...
PMID:Severe aortic regurgitation: a rare presentation of giant cell arteritis. 376 38
The aortic root as a functional unit includes the sinuses of valsalva, valve ring, the leaflets and the commissures. This unit is impaired by the insertion of a bioprosthetic three-leaflet valve. Moreover, bioprostheses fail because of
fatigue
and flexion stresses. Consequently a program was started for free-handed orthotopic transplantation of allogeneous aortic valves at the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, University Kiel. A series of 16 consecutive antibiotic, sterilized aortic valve allografts were transplanted in the last 12 months without death. There were 4 females and 12 males between 18 and 63 years old (mean 47.9). The dominant lesion was
aortic regurgitation
(in 9), stenosis (in 3) and mixed (in 4). Out of the 13 patients who maintained their allografts, 10 (77%) were in class III and 3 (23%) in class IV of the NYHA functional classification. Four patients improved from class III to class I, and 9 from class III and IV to class II of the NYHA functional classification after surgery. All patients except one had postoperative recatheterization including videodensitometry to quantitate the regurgitation, expressed as a regurgitant fraction ( RGF ) in percent of the total stroke volume of the left ventricle, and pressure measurements to determine systolic gradients across the aortic valve allograft, 3 to 6 days and 9 months after surgery. Eleven (68.75%) patients had no regurgitation, 2 (12.5%) patients had trivial
aortic regurgitation
with RGF of 7% and 10%, respectively. Three (18.75%) patients had severe aortic valve regurgitation with RGF between 40% and 60% due to technical errors and their allografts had to be replaced.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Orthotopic transplantation of aortic valve allografts. Early hemodynamic results. 620 16
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