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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two series of consecutive patients with disabling effort
angina
were studied prospectively. From the first series, 94 survivors were followed up 9 months after coronary artery bypass grafting. Thirty-five patients (37%) reported that they still suffered from effort
angina
. Another 26 patients (28%) also used to stop when walking uphill/upstairs but because of dyspnea and 2 (2%) because of leg
fatigue
. A symptom-limited exercise test performed in 24 of the 26 with dyspnea revealed effort
angina
in 2 patients and high-degree dyspnea (mean grade 6.6 of 10) in 22. The exercise capacity was less than normal in 16 of these 22 patients. The number of peripheral anastomoses did not differ between the 26 dyspnea patients and the 31 free from effort restriction, nor did the incidence of perioperative infarctions or treatment with diuretics and beta-blocking drugs at follow-up. The second series of 95 survivors confirmed the high prevalence of disabling dyspnea after coronary artery bypass grafting (24%) and showed that it was not predictable. We conclude that physical fitness is restored in less than half the patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting.
...
PMID:Effort dyspnea after coronary artery bypass grafting. 348 10
Thiazide diuretics are the preferred initial therapy in the majority of elderly hypertensive patients--based upon efficacy and long-term safety data. Alternative therapies may be used in subjects with persistent gout, impotence,
fatigue
, or electrolyte disturbances. In patients with ischemic heart disease and/or
angina
, beta adrenergic inhibitors or calcium entry blockers are acceptable initial therapy. Converting enzyme inhibitors may be especially useful in hypertensives with congestive heart failure. The combination of small dose diuretic therapy and one of the above alternative drugs has an important place in the treatment of the elderly hypertensive.
...
PMID:Diuretics and alternative drugs in geriatric hypertension. 354 24
Oxygen utilization, arterial and venous blood gas levels, hemodynamic values and exercise tolerance were compared before and after administration of propranolol and verapamil in 10 patients with stable
angina pectoris
. During exercise, propranolol decreased cardiac output (CO) by 22%; O2 extraction was increased and O2 consumption (VO2) did not change. With verapamil treatment, CO modestly increased (7%), O2 extraction decreased and VO2 did not change. In contrast to O2 utilization, the drugs produced opposite changes in mixed venous and arterial blood gas levels. Propranolol decreased mixed venous pH, increased CO2 tension and decreased the pH of arterial blood. Verapamil increased venous pH and decreased CO2 tension; pH of arterial blood did not change. The drugs yielded similar levels of antianginal efficacy, but patients exercised longer during verapamil therapy and were less fatigued. The hemodynamic and metabolic differences suggest that muscle perfusion during exercise influences the onset of
fatigue
and may help determine the choice of therapy.
...
PMID:Effect of propranolol and verapamil on oxygen utilization, acidosis and fatigue during exercise in stable angina pectoris. 361 85
Verapamil, a papaverine calcium channel blocker, has been used effectively and safely in the treatment of
angina pectoris
and auricular arrhythmias, and more recently in the treatment of mania. Many antipsychotic drugs show calcium channel blocking effects similar to verapamil's. A 41 year old male schizophrenic, only partially responsive to haloperidol decanoate and oral haloperidol, was given increasing doses of verapamil concomitantly, and monitored clinically and by the BPRS, electrocardiogramme, and other laboratory measures. The patient's total BPRS score dropped from 79 to 41 and remained stable, after initial worsening at lower doses, at verapamil 80 mg po qid. Mild
fatigue
was the only side effect. Further investigation of verapamil in the treatment of schizophrenia is warranted.
...
PMID:Verapamil in refractory schizophrenia: a case report. 362 27
The effect of vitamin E use on selected medical disorders and laboratory parameters was studied in a large ambulatory elderly population. Information obtained from a standardized questionnaire concerning reports of numerous clinical disorders, such as hypertension,
fatigue
, and vaginal bleeding, was used to determine whether the use of vitamin E predisposed to those conditions. During a 2-year period, information was available on 369 vitamin E users and 1,861 non-users. No differences were noted in the prevalence of reported clinical disorders between the two groups, except that men using vitamin E complained more often of shortness of breath (p less than .04) and
angina
(p less than .03). There were no significant differences between vitamin E users and controls in any hematologic parameters studied. After the groups had been adjusted for age and sex differences, only one biochemical parameter, serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) in men, was found to be significantly different in vitamin E users as compared with controls. Use of vitamin E by the participants in this study appeared to have little influence on clinical disorders or hematologic or biochemical parameters.
...
PMID:Vitamin E effect on symptoms and laboratory values in the elderly. 370 Sep 24
Previous studies show no correlation between resting systolic left ventricular performance assessed as the ejection fraction and exercise tolerance. This study examined the relation between left ventricular diastolic performance and exercise tolerance in 63 patients with left ventricular dysfunction (ejection fraction less than 50%) due to known or suspected coronary artery disease. The 51 men and 12 women, aged 54 +/- 8 years (mean +/- standard deviation), underwent symptom-limited upright exercise testing on a bicycle ergometer. The exercise end-points were
angina
(n:5), dyspnea (n:16), and
fatigue
(n:42). The patients were divided into three groups: group 1 (n:28) with normal exercise tolerance (9.5 +/- 2.4 minutes), group 2 (n:18) with mild exercise intolerance (5.8 +/- 0.5 minutes), and group 3 (n:17) had severe exercise intolerance (3.7 +/- 0.9 minutes). The three groups did not differ in age, ejection fraction, end-diastolic volume, exercise end-point, exercise heart rate, and left ventricular peak filling rate at rest. The exercise peak filling rate was, however, significantly higher in group 1 (p = 0.03). Stepwise multivariate discriminant analysis of important variables identified the exercise peak filling rate as the only predictor of exercise tolerance (F = 6.0). Thus, variation in exercise peak filling rate may in part explain the variability of exercise tolerance in patients with left ventricular dysfunction; patients with preserved exercise capacity have higher exercise peak filling rate than those with exercise intolerance.
...
PMID:Relation between left ventricular diastolic function and exercise tolerance in patients with left ventricular dysfunction. 379 6
Giant-cell or temporal arteritis is a generalized vasculitis that predominantly affects large- and medium-sized arteries in people over 50 years of age. The illness is commonly characterized by the initial symptoms of headache, temporal artery tenderness or pulselessness, musculoskeletal pain, fever, and
fatigue
. The most dreaded consequence of giant-cell arteritis is visual loss, which is usually irreversible on presentation. Giant-cell arteritis may present with unusual clinical manifestations such as lip, scalp, and tongue necrosis, carpal tunnel syndrome, claudication of the limbs, strokes,
angina pectoris
, myocardial infarction, hematuria, cough, or other CNS symptoms. The etiology of the disease is unknown. Emergency physicians are usually familiar with the more common clinical symptoms but one must consider the unusual manifestations of the disease, because early recognition and initiation of therapy (steroids) decrease morbidity and can prevent blindness.
...
PMID:Giant-cell arteritis. 379 80
The clinical and electrophysiological features and the natural history of median intra-His block with a normal resting electrocardiogram were studied: 11 patients had a fixed split H1-H2 potential with a spontaneous or induced block between H1 and H2. The patients (5 men and 6 women) were aged 17 to 70 years (average 53 years). Associated pathology included 2 cases of aortic stenosis (1 severe), 1 case of ischaemic heart disease (effort
angina
), 1 case of mitral valve prolapse and 2 cases of hypertension. The presenting symptoms were syncope (4 cases), dizziness (2 cases), effort
angina
(1 case) and
tiredness
(3 cases); 1 patient was asymptomatic. Holter monitoring (24 hours) was performed in 8 patients and s-owed paroxysmal conduction defects in 6 cases; 4 Mobitz II 2nd degree AV block, 1 3rd degree AV block with narrow QRS complexes and 1 case of blocked atrial extrasystoles at coupling intervals longer than 480 ms and sinus cycle lengths of over 800 ms. Exercise testing by bicycle ergometry (4 patients) was normal in 1 case and revealed Mobitz II 2nd degree AV block in 3 cases. Baseline electrophysiological studies showed an A-H1 interval ranging from 60 to 100 ms (average 78 ms), a H1-H2 interval of 20 to 40 ms (average 31 ms) and a H2-V interval of 30 to 50 ms (average 32 ms). Block between H1 and H2 was observed: "spontaneously" during electrophysiological investigation in 6 cases, after IV atropine in 1 case, during overdrive atrial pacing at rates slower than 150/min in 7 cases, after atrial extrastimulus with a functional intra-His refractory period of over 420 ms in 7 cases, after ajmaline in 3 of the 4 cases in which this test was performed. A cardiac pacemaker was implanted in 10 patients in whom the initial symptoms have all regressed; the remaining patient considered to be "epileptic" had another syncopal attack under therapy and was finally paced. This series demonstrates that the diagnosis of median intra-His block depends on precise electrophysiological criteria and should be looked for even when the presenting symptoms are atypical; some of our patients complained only of
tiredness
. The value of Holter monitoring and careful endocavitary investigation is emphasised. Median intra-His block should be distinguished from longitudinal and functional His bundle dissociation.
...
PMID:[Clinical and electrophysiological aspects of median intra-His bundle block with normal electrocardiogram at rest]. 392 29
This study was conducted to determine if the limiting symptom in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) influenced the pattern of oxygen consumption (VO2) over the final 90 seconds of a maximal exercise test. The pattern was classified according to the presence or absence of a plateau. Twenty-six normal persons and 55 patients with CAD were studied. They rated the severity of
fatigue
, dyspnea and
angina
at end exercise using the Borg scale and designated which symptom was the limiting factor. A plateau of VO2 over the final 90 seconds of exercise was observed in 77% of normal subjects and patients with CAD. Eighty percent of patients limited by
angina
achieved a plateau. In normal subjects and patients with CAD, peak VO2 was more reproducible than the pattern of VO2 over the final 90 seconds of exercise. There were no differences in the cardiac responses to exercise at maximal effort between patients who achieved a plateau of VO2 and those who did not. These results indicate that the limiting symptom of exercise, even
angina pectoris
, does not influence the ability to exercise maximally. Therefore, the peak value of VO2 during symptom-limited treadmill exercise is a valid measure of maximal cardiovascular capacity irrespective of the limiting symptom or the pattern of VO2 in the final 90 seconds of exercise.
...
PMID:Effects of the limiting symptom on the achievement of maximal oxygen consumption in patients with coronary artery disease. 395 34
Exercise-induced angina (AP) is a common complaint of cardiac patients, particularly when exercising in the cold. To investigate the effects of environmental and inspired air temperature on AP, 9 patients with a history of cold-induced AP underwent progressive cycle ergometry tests in a climatic chamber on 4 separate occasions: (1) room environment (RE) (24 degrees C), and room inspired air (RA) (22.5 degrees C); (2) RE and cold inspired air (CA) (0.7 degrees C); (3) cold environment (CE) (-7.5 degrees C) and RA; and (4) CE and CA. Measurements of oxygen consumption, heart rate, blood pressure, and ventilation were made every minute and at test endpoint, which was either AP (85%) or
fatigue
(15% of all tests). Expired air temperature and skin temperature at 5 sites were also recorded. Results indicated that
angina
occurred sooner, and mean exercise time was significantly reduced in both RA/CE (-24%) and CA/CE (-15%) when compared with the RA/RE. Breathing CA in the RE did not significantly reduce exercise tolerance. Skin temperature was lower in both CE's compared to the RE's at all sites. Submaximal systolic blood pressure and calculated rate-pressure product were significantly higher in the CE's vs RE's. The adverse effects of cold on exercising
angina
patients are due to the earlier onset of
angina
, which appears to be induced more by the effects of exposure to the cold environment (-7.5 degrees C) than by cold air inhalation (0.7 degrees).
...
PMID:Exercise-induced angina in the cold. 406 68
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