Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

25 cases of cerebral infarcts in vertebrobasilar arterial system are reported. Those were divided into 4 groups: 1. Embolism (10), the causes were NBTE, pulmonary infarct, rheumatic or congenital heart disease, coronary artery disease, respectively, and 2 unknown. 2. Thrombosis (5), the causes were arteriosclerosis, vascular malformations in the basal part of cerebrum. 3. Inflammatory infarcts (3), those were verified from tuberculosis, syphilis and aspergillosis respectively. 4. Lacunar infarcts (7), the causes were considered from hypertension. Pathologically, it was noticed that the location of embolism often situated at the terminal of basilar artery, and that if the embolism was completely obliterated, often a hemorrhagic infarction would follow. But the thrombosis in basilar artery, even the lumen was completely obliterated, any infarct would not follow, if the related collateral circulation was satisfactory. Clinically, the embolism in basilar artery often showed sudden onset, and that the symptoms of brain stem would aggravate quickly, but the thrombosis in basilar artery, if the collateral circulation was satisfactory, and symptom of brain stem might not follow.
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PMID:[Pathological and etiological studies on cerebral infarction in the vertebrobasilar arterial system]. 188 23

Twenty patients with massive or recurrent hemoptysis underwent percutaneous transcatheter embolotherapy between 1979 and 1986 for the following diseases: cavitary aspergillosis (n = 4); cystic fibrosis (n = 4); tuberculosis (n = 3); bronchogenic carcinoma (n = 3); bronchiectasis (n = 3); small cell lung carcinoma 6 years after irradiation (n = 1); congenital heart disease, after Glenn and Blalock anastomoses (n = 1); and unknown interstitial disease (n = 1). Bronchial arteries were embolized in all but one patient. In nine patients (45%) nonbronchial systemic collateral arteries contributed significantly to areas of pathologic pulmonary tissue and frequently were the major arterial supply. These nonbronchial systemic collaterals included branches of the subclavian and axillary arteries (n = 7), intercostal arteries (n = 5), and phrenic arteries (n = 3) and accounted for 59.5% of the total number of arteries embolized. Recognition and occlusion of nonbronchial systemic collaterals providing blood to hypervascular pulmonary lesions is essential for successful percutaneous embolotherapy of hemoptysis.
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PMID:Nonbronchial systemic collateral arteries: significance in percutaneous embolotherapy for hemoptysis. 361 66

A girl with resistant acute myeloid leukemia (AML) had a stem cell transplantation. Preceding transplantation, she had recurrent pneumonitis. No causative agent was identified. Despite several antibiotics including high-dose liposomal amphotericin-B, pulmonary infection progressed. Aspergillosis, always considered, could not be documented. She died from cardiac arrest on the second day after transplantation, with no forewarning of previous heart disease. Pericardial and myocardial aspergillosis was an autopsy finding. Pericardial and myocardial aspergillosis, rare manifestations of systemic aspergillosis, should be considered in any immunocompromised patient with long-lasting pulmonary infection, even in the absence of specific cardiac findings.
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PMID:Fatal myocardial aspergillosis in an immunosuppressed child. 1187 82