Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

PH is an uncommon manifestation of SLE. The symptoms of PH develop within a few years after the onset of the multisystem disease. The most common presenting complaints of SLE patients with PH are dyspnea on exertion, chest pain, nonproductive cough, edema, and fatigue or weakness. The important physical findings are a loud second pulmonic heart sound and a right ventricular lift. The chest roentgenogram shows a cardiomegaly, a prominent pulmonary segment, and usually clear lung fields. Pulmonary function tests may show evidence of restrictive lung disease; however, the physiologic abnormalities are mild and out of proportion to the severity of the PH. The diagnosis of PH is established by cardiac catheterization showing elevated pulmonary artery pressure, normal capillary wedge pressure, and no evidence of intracardiac or extracardiac shunts. Pathologic examination of the lung demonstrates angiomatoid lesions involving muscular pulmonary arteries. There is a thickening of the media and subintima of the arterioles. Immunoglobulin and complement deposits are found in the walls of pulmonary arteries. Immunoglobulin eluted from the lung contains rheumatoid factor and antinuclear antibody including antibody to DNA activity. DNA antigen is also present in walls of blood vessels. These results suggest an immune complex deposition process as a mechanism in the pathogenesis of PH in SLE. The clinical course of PH in SLE is variable. Symptoms may be mild and the disease follows a stable and protracted course for several years. It can, however, develop a progressive course ending in death in a few years. The clinical response of SLE patients with PH to treatment with high doses of systemic corticosteroids is not consistent or predictable.
...
PMID:Immunopathologic and clinical studies in pulmonary hypertension associated with systemic lupus erythematosus. 637

The characteristic hemodynamic features of restrictive cardiomyopathy (normal or reduced cardiac index, normal ventricular systolic function, and "dip and plateau" early in diastole) are traditionally associated with pathologic evidence of inflammation, infiltration and fibrosis. Prognosis is usually poor. Nine patients with restrictive hemodynamic features were recently identified in our laboratory; six were males, three were females, and ages ranged from 23-57 years (mean 47 years). Only one was asymptomatic. Chest pain, dyspnea on exertion and fatigue were the most common symptoms. Echocardiography revealed various degrees of left ventricular wall thickening, but no significant pericardial effusion, pericardial thickening or calcification. Mean left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was 25 mm Hg, cardiac index 2.8 l/min/m2 and ejection fraction 0.63. Endomyocardial and pericardial biopsies, obtained in two patients, were normal. Follow-up (mean 22 months, range 16-42 months) revealed no cardiac deaths. These findings support the hypothesis that the restrictive hemodynamic profile does not necessarily indicate the presence of a specific pathologic process in the subendocardium or myocardium and that the prognosis is not necessarily ominous. The common pathophysiologic feature for this syndrome appears to be reduced ventricular diastolic compliance, but the etiology in many cases is unclear.
...
PMID:Clinical profile of restrictive cardiomyopathy. 644 42

In order to investigate left ventricular performance during exercise in patients with myocardial infarction and evaluate the effects of sublingual isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN) on left ventricular performance, we performed a symptom-limited multigraded exercise test using a bicycle ergometer in supine position. Thirty-seven patients with myocardial infarction were evaluated in order to clarify the hemodynamic responses to exercise with and without sublingual ISDN. Patients were subdivided into 3 groups according to the level of pulmonary capillary pressure (PCP) and cardiac index (CI) at peak exercise as follows: Group I (14 patients); PCP less than 18 mmHg, CI greater than or equal to 5.0 or CI less than 5.0 L/min/m2, Group II (11 patients); PCP greater than or equal to 18 mmHg, CI greater than or equal to 5.0 L/min/m2, Group III (12 patients); PCP greater than or equal to 18 mmHg, CI less than 5.0 L/min/m2. Exercise capacity without ISDN (control study) was correlated with left ventricular performance during exercise. Although left ventricular performance in patients who complained of dyspnea or chest pain at peak exercise was worse than those who complained of leg fatigue, we could not predict hemodynamics during exercise from the level of hemodynamic parameters at rest in each patient. Determinant factors of left ventricular performance during exercise were age, previous history of myocardial infarction, the severity of coronary artery lesion and the extent of left ventricular wall motion abnormality which was estimated by left ventriculogram as an index of infarct size. After sublingual ISDN (ISDN study), exercise capacity was improved. No patient terminated exercise because of chest pain and only one did because of dyspnea.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of sublingual isosorbide dinitrate on left ventricular performance during exercise in patients with myocardial infarction. 649 71

Endorphins and endorphin receptors are believed to modulate pain perception. To investigate whether naloxone, a specific antagonist, could initiate anginal pain during exercise-induced myocardial ischemia in asymptomatic patients with angiographically defined coronary artery disease, a single-blind trial was conducted in 10 men with prior positive exercise electrocardiograms. Multistage treadmill exercise tests were performed twice within a week. On the second test, patients received naloxone, 2 mg intravenously, by a syringe infusion pump. Exercise was terminated because of fatigue in 6 patients and completion of the protocol in 4. No patient reported chest pain during exercise. Naloxone did not significantly alter exercise duration, heart rate, blood pressure and ST-segment changes compared with control testing. It is concluded that endorphins do not play a significant role in the recognition of anginal pain in patients who have asymptomatic exercise-induced ischemia.
...
PMID:Naloxone and asymptomatic ischemia: failure to induce angina during exercise testing. 649 61

In patients with aortic stenosis, delineation of the optimal timing of surgery is of particular importance since inappropriately early surgery subjects the patient to the risk of prosthetic heart valve disease for a longer time than is necessary (Figure 1) and inappropriately late surgery can result in prolonged untreated symptoms and irreversible myocardial changes or systemic complications. A valve orifice area less than 1.0 cm2 or less than 0.7 cm2/m2, respectively, is indicative of critical stenosis. The indication for surgery should be established mainly on the basis of compromise of the valve orifice area equal to or in excess of the latter. In young patients surgical intervention should be carried out as soon as a critical stenosis is documented. Aortic stenosis can lead to symptoms such as fatigue, dyspnea, chest pain or syncope which surgery can eliminate and the incidence of sudden death may exceed 10% per year in symptomatic patients and can approach 2% per year in asymptomatic patients. In the younger age group, since the surgery required is almost exclusively commissurotomy rather than valve replacement, the operative mortality is less than 2% and the patient is not subjected to prosthetic heart valve disease. In adult patients with symptomatic, documented critical aortic stenosis, surgery should not be delayed. The symptoms can be ameliorated through surgery. The prognosis without surgery is poor with a five-year survival rate less than 50%, while after aortic valve replacement survival at five years is approximately 75 to 80%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Timing of surgical therapy for aortic valve stenosis. Goals of therapy. 651 Aug 75

Since 1979 we have carried out symptom limited exercise stress tests for the diagnosis of chest pain in 104 patients, 61 male, 43 female, over 65 years of age; mean age 68 +/- 3 years. An upright bicycle ergometer was used for 64 tests, a treadmill for 38 tests and a supervised walk for 2 patients unable to undergo formal exercise testing. A positive result of greater than or equal to 1 mm of ST depression was recorded in 45% of patients; males 57%, females 28% (P less than 0.01). Bicycle and treadmill tests were equally likely to produce a positive result; bicycle 43%, treadmill 50% (NS). The limiting symptom was chest pain in 43%, dyspnoea in 26% and fatigue in 30% of patients. No serious arrhythmias or collapses occurred. During a mean follow up to 24 +/- 18 months 13 patients died. A positive exercise test was associated with a significantly increased risk of cardiac death; 8 of 47 patients with positive tests died compared with 1 of 57 patients with negative or equivocal tests (P less than 0.02). The remaining 4 deaths were due to malignancy. Exercise testing can thus be safely performed in elderly subjects with the expectation of a high diagnostic yield. A positive result confers a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Diagnostic exercise testing in 104 patients over 65 years of age. 652 41

Charts of 28 hyperthyroid patients over 60 years old were retrospectively analyzed and compared with charts of 14 patients under 30 years old. The mean duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis was 16 months in the elderly and five months in the younger group. Heart rate was substantially lower in the older (107 beats/min) vs younger (117 beats/min) study group. The symptom of weakness or fatigue was more prevalent in the elderly group (94 percent) than in the younger group (57 percent). Cardiac palpitation was more prevalent in the elderly patients whereas insomnia, irritability, dysphagia, hyperphagia, and heat intolerance were more prevalent in the younger patients. Fifty percent of the elderly patients complained of chest pain. Cachexia (62 percent), thin, fine hair (50 percent), and weakness (58 percent) were prominent physical findings in the elderly group. Twenty-six percent of the elderly patients had atrial fibrillation. These findings confirm previous studies that show some differences in presentation of hyperthyroidism in elderly patients when compared with younger patients. The authors recommend that thyroid function tests be obtained for broad indications in the elderly.
...
PMID:Thyrotoxicosis in the elderly. 664 37

The purpose of this study was to determine whether an exercise-induced decrease in ejection fraction in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction at rest represents ischemia or the nonspecific response of a compromised left ventricle to exercise stress. Accordingly, radionuclide ejection fraction responses of 246 patients with coronary artery disease and an ejection fraction at rest of less than 0.50 were compared with those of a "nonischemic" control group of 48 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy and a similar degree of ventricular dysfunction. The significance of the ejection fraction response in the group with coronary artery disease was further examined by relating it to the angiographic extent of coronary artery disease, severity of angina, incidence of chest pain and electrocardiographic ST segment depression during exercise and long-term prognosis. The ejection fraction decreased by greater than or equal to 0.01 and greater than or equal to 0.05 during exercise in 48 and 28%, respectively, of the patients with coronary artery disease compared with only 8 and 2%, respectively, of the patients with cardiomyopathy. When exercise was limited by fatigue at a submaximal heart rate, the ejection fraction decreased in 25% of the patients with coronary artery disease but in none of the patients with cardiomyopathy. Patients with coronary artery disease whose ejection fraction decreased during exercise had a significantly higher incidence of three vessel disease, exercise-induced chest pain or ST depression and late mortality than did patients whose ejection fraction did not decrease. These relations were confirmed equally in subgroups of patients with moderate (ejection fraction 0.30 to 0.49) and severe (ejection fraction less than 0.30) left ventricular dysfunction. Thus, in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction at rest, a decrease in ejection fraction during exercise is more likely to indicate ischemia than a nonspecific left ventricular response to exercise stress. In the individual patient, a decrease of 0.05 or greater, or a decrease during submaximal exercise, appears to be highly specific for ischemia. A decrease in ejection fraction identifies a subgroup of patients with a high prevalence of multivessel coronary artery disease and a high risk of death during long-term follow-up on medical therapy.
...
PMID:Mechanism and significance of a decrease in ejection fraction during exercise in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction at rest. 669 May 59

Symptoms of DaCosta's syndrome include effort fatigue and breathlessness, chest pain, palpitation, and dizziness. Considered purely functional and anxiety-related by DaCosta, the syndrome has since been related to the mitral valve prolapse (MVP) syndrome and autonomic hyperreactivity. We studied these specific symptoms in similar cohorts of 68 patients with and without documented MVP from a single practice of internal medicine and found only 6% of patients having MVP without symptoms compared to 25% of control subjects (P less than .01). Palpitation was present in 71% of patients with MVP and 33% of controls (P less than .001); dyspnea was noted by 50% of those with MVP and 28% of controls (P less than .02), and chest pain by 44% of patients with MVP and 25% of controls (P less than .01). Our results confirm reports that the symptoms of DaCosta's syndrome are more common in patients with MVP and may call the physician's attention to the proper diagnosis.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse: its symptom complex and its association with DaCosta's syndrome. 669 16

The pulmonary function and symptoms of 125 workers exposed to carbon black in dry cell battery and tire manufacturing plants were investigated. There was no significant difference in the pulmonary function of the subjects in the two plants. There was good agreement in the symptoms reported in the two different factories: cough with phlegm production, tiredness, chest pain, catarrh, headache, and skin irritation. The symptoms also corroborate those reported in the few studies on the pulmonary effects of carbon black. The suspended particulate levels in the dry cell battery plant ranged from 25 to 34 mg/m3 and the subjects with the highest probable exposure level had the most impaired pulmonary function. The pulmonary function of the exposed subjects was significantly lower than that of a control, nonindustrially exposed population. The drop in the lung function from the expected value per year of age was relatively constant for all the study subgroups but the drop per year of duration of employment was more severe in the earlier years of employment. This study has underscored the need for occupational health regulations in the industries of developing countries.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function and symptoms of Nigerian workers exposed to Carbon black in dry cell battery and tire factories. 683 5


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>