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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Right-sided aortic arch with a retro-oesophageal segment is much rarer than right-sided aortic arch without a retro-oesophageal segment. As opposed to the latter situation which is always associated with congenital
heart disease
, it is usually an isolated finding. The left subclavian artery arises from a posterior diverticulum and may be stenosed at its origin, giving rise to a systolic murmur as in one of the reported cases, or to a subclavian steal syndrome. The ligamentum arteriosum completes the aortic ring and may give rise to respiratory problems at varying ages and of variable severity, sometimes attributed to
asthma
. In one of the cases followed up over 15 years chronic respiratory problems and late tracheal lesions were observed. Although the possibility of a double aortic arch may be raised, early surgical treatment is desirable.
...
PMID:[Right aortic arch with retro-esophageal component. 2 cases]. 11 10
In 75 patients with various pulmonary disorders, ventilation and perfusion scans were obtained in multiple views with the 81mKr/99mTc technique and compared with an evaluation of regional ventilation and perfusion derived from the standard chest radiograph. In emphysema, the chest film correlated poorly with ventilation-perfusion scans, showing a trend to underestimate the functional impairment. In chronic bronchitis and
asthma
, large segmental defects observed on both ventilation and perfusion scans were associated with a normal chest radiograph. Typical findings in pulmonary embolism were segmental defects on perfusion scan with normal ventilation scan and clear lung fields on the chest film. In chronic left
heart disease
, plain films were inaccurate in predicting alteration of the base-to-apex perfusion gradient observed on the scan.
...
PMID:81mKr ventilation and 99mTc perfusion scans in chest disease: comparison with standard radiographs. 41 42
Complete or partial trisomy 14 is compatible with life. However, in the former case, mosaicism is probably always present. A case of trisomy 14 mosaicism is reported. Comparisons are made with other trisomy 14, trisomy 14 mosaicism, and duplication 14q cases previously reported. As a group, they share some clinical manifestations. The phenotype consists of multiple congenital anomalies, including microcephaly, broad nose, wide mouth, high or cleft palate, micrognathia, congenital
heart disease
, intrauterine growth retardation, and mental retardation. The present patient also has
asthma
, eczema, and developmental asymmetry.
...
PMID:Trisomy 14 mosaicism: case report and review. 47 33
Dyspnea is the medical term for the patient's or subject's complaint of shortness of breath. It encompasses the respiratory discomfort experienced in many different diease states as well as the shortness of breath felt by a normal subject during or after strenuous exercise. Several parameters which have been shown to correlate with the onset or severity of dyspnea are described, including reduced vital capacity, the ratio of minute ventilation to vital capacity, reduced breathing reserve, the work of breathing, and the oxygen cost of breathing. Attempts at quantitation of dyspnea have usually consisted of measuring physiological parameters associated with the sensation, such as the "dyspneic index". The direct measurement of respiratory sensations using modern psycho-physical methods is at an early stage of development. Since the observation that the existence of dyspnea is often unrelated to any disturbance of arterial blood gas composition, it has been generally held that the mechanism of dyspnea is primarily neurophysiological. The neural pathways may conceptually be divided into those which transmit the "dyspnea message" from the respiratory apparatus to integrating centers in the brain, and those concerned with subsequently bringing the sensation to the level of consciousness. It seems likely that there is no single sensing mechanism and neural pathway which will be able to explain dyspnea in the diverse populations of patients and subjects who experience unpleasant respiratory sensations. Three theories concerning mechanisms of dyspnea are briefly described: "length-tension inappropriateness", vagal afferent activity especially from the J-receptors, and the recent concept of diaphragmatic fatigue. Some specific characteristics of the shortness of breath experienced in certain disease states are described, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema, bronchial
asthma
, pulmonary fibrosis and congestive
heart disease
.
...
PMID:Dyspnea. 50 81
Exercise testing has a definite role in pediatrics today. Different methods are presented, and the value of maximal exercise with determination of oxygen uptake and blood lactate is stressed. In children with
heart disease
, exercise testing with precordial electrocardiogram can be of both diagnostic and prognostic value. The cardiovascular function at different intensities of exercise is evaluated, serious dysrhythmias may be revealed, hypertension judged and the effect of drug therapy can be checked by exercise testing. It is an important way in assessing the child's functional capacity after heart surgery in the decision whether she or he should take part in physical education and sports activities and in the choice of profession. It is also of great psychological value to the parents and the patient himself. In children with other chronic diseases, e.g., diabetes, obesity,
asthma
, neurocirculatory dysfunctions--physical training together with exercise testing is of importance for therapy and rehabilitation.
...
PMID:Exercise testing in children. 72 65
Air quality correlates of chronic disease mortality in 180 census tracts of Harris County, Texas, were studied using 3 years mortality for 1969--1971. This study was designed to test with a different data base the universality of several study results which have reported significant correlations between
heart disease
and air pollutants. Air quality data (suspended particulates, benzene solubles, sulfur dioxide, and metals associated with particulates: copper, mercury, manganese, lead, nickel, zinc, chromium, and cadmium) were related to both sex and age adjusted crude death rates, and cause-specific death rates for age cohorts for 7 categories of
heart disease
, and pneumonia,
asthma
, cancer, tuberculosis, and accident deaths. The results of the study were in agreement with the findings of the other researchers who used national data. Suspended particulates and cadmium concentrations were found to be correlated (r=.38, .36; P less than .001) with ischemic heart disease (IHD). Many other significant correlations are reported but are not cause-specific. Socio-economic indicators were also correlated with IHD, thus confounding the issue. Further work is planned using more sophisticated statistical techniques to disentangle the relative contribution of each of these highly intercorrelated factors. No causality can be assigned at this stage, although this study, with the other cited, points to possible risk factors for IHD which need further evaluation.
...
PMID:Air quality correlates of chronic disease mortality: Harris County, Texas 1969--1971. 72 89
In the Tri-State Leukemia Survey, the history of diseases in 605 adult male leukemia cases 15 years and older and in 668 adult male population controls was examined. These diseases occurred at least 1 year before leukemia was diagnosed. The data were based on respondents' answers that the disease was diagnosed by a physician; the respondent was either the subject or his spouse. Of 30 diseases studied, 7 showed an excess among the patients with leukemia: infectious hepatitis, eczema, psoriasis, diabetes, arthritis and rheumatism,
heart disease
, and ankylosing spondylitis. Mumps had a lower reported occurrence among the cases, whereas pneumonia was less frequent in acute lymphatic cases than in population controls. Three diseases occurred significantly less in controls than in persons with specific histologic types of leukemia. Our data revealed a more frequent history of herpes zoster (shingles) in chronic lymphatic leukemia, more hives in acute chronic myeloid cases, and meningitis in acute myeloid leukemia. When we only considered the patients' responses, more of them admitted having had acne than did our controls. The remaining diseases--childhood viral diseases, infectious mononucleosis, smallpox, typhoid fever, dysentery, scarlet fever, tuberculosis,
asthma
, hay fever, and goiter did not occur more frequently in cases than in controls. The findings were consistent with evidence from previous laboratory and clinical studies. The increased occurrence of infectious hepatitis in our case series is consistent with the findings of other studies showing an increased frequency of Australia antigen in patients with hepatitis, leukemia, and Down's syndrome.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of diseases in adult males with leukemia. 99 1
Without treatment, about 60% of atrial arrhythmia patients suffer a relapse within 3 months and 70% within one year. Antiarrhythmic treatment intended to reduce this percentage is therefore justified, on condition that it is well tolerated. Several preliminary questions have to be settled before this medical prophylaxis: 1) Justification of antiarrhythmic treatment (sometimes pointless to deal with very occasional episodes); 2) Treatment of the underlying
heart disease
(valve disease, cardiothyrotoxicosis, etc.) or promoting factors (potassium depletion etc.); 3) Accurate assessment of any associated conduction abnormalities, which may constitute a contraindication to antiarrhythmic treatment (WPW syndrome in the case of verapamil and the digitalis-like drugs) or require additional treatment (pacemaker); 4) Definition of the mechanism (vagal or sympathotonic) inducing arrhythmia; 5) Evaluation of the hemodynamic parameters of the underlying
heart disease
(size of the atria, ventricular function, coronary or valvular lesions) which may limit the efficacy of the treatment. Once these parameters have been identified, the primary treatment should be type la or lb antiarrhythmics, which have been shown to be effective, despite the fact that they are not without arrhythmic risks (the Ib antiarrhythmics are less effective and have a poor safety profile). The beta-blockers have preferential indications (hypersympatheticotonia, hyperthyroidism, hypertrophic myocardiopathy, mitral prolapse, angina etc.) and can be replaced by verapamil or bepridil if there are non-cardiac contraindications (ulcers,
asthma
, diabetes). Amiodarone is extremely effective, but its poor extracardiac safety restricts its long-term use. Complementary treatments (digitalis-like, anticoagulants or anti-PAF and cardiostimulant drugs) should be added if necessary. Recurrences (to be confirmed by ECG or Holter) should lead to rigorous confirmation of therapeutic compliance and observance of simple hygienic and dietary measures (no excessive exertion, elimination of stimulants etc.). With strict clinical and ECG monitoring, it would then be possible either to increase the dose levels (accompanied by plasma determinations if possible) or to switch to a treatment with more effective, but more aggressive drugs (amiodarone, flecainide) or to use drug associations (la and lb, la and II etc.). Repeated failure of such attempts should lead to a non-medical approach to treatment.
...
PMID:[Preventive drug therapy of recurrence of atrial fibrillation]. 129 92
Severity of illness and clinical characteristics of parainfluenza virus (PIV) infection were evaluated in 81 hospitalized children over a 4 year period. Fifty three patients were previously healthy and 28 had preexisting pulmonary abnormalities associated with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), congenital
heart disease
(CHD),
asthma
, or prematurity. When compared with formerly healthy children, the patients with preexisting pulmonary abnormalities were more likely to develop lower than upper respiratory tract illness (P less than 0.0001). In the lower respiratory tract infection group, patients with preexisting pulmonary abnormalities were sicker (P = 0.047), were hospitalized longer (P = 0.016), required more supplemental oxygen (P = 0.004), and were older (8.8 vs. 5.1 months) than previously healthy patients. Nosocomial infection occurred only in BPD patients. All these patients developed pneumonia. They were sicker (P = 0.0018), requiring more therapy (P = 0.0038) than other patients with preexisting pulmonary abnormalities and lower respiratory tract disease. Patients with BPD should be placed in protective isolation during PIV epidemics.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of parainfluenza virus infection in hospitalized children. 132 98
Chronic cough may be the sole presenting manifestation of bronchial
asthma
(reference 3; Corrao et al, 1979), and "cough variant
asthma
(CVA)" has been used to categorize such patients. In order to clarify the clinical picture of CVA, we evaluated the clinical history, laboratory data, sputum cytology and pulmonary function in 14 subjects (5 males and 9 females, aged 14 to 65 years) compatible with the following diagnostic criteria: (1) chronic cough persistent for more than 8 weeks, (2) no wheeze nor dyspnea, (3) no rales, (4) no past history of
asthma
, (5) bronchial hyperreactivity to methacholine proven by Takishima's method (reference 13), (6) effectiveness of bronchodilators against cough, (7) normal chest X-ray film, (8) afebrile and negative CRP, (9) absence of sinusitis and postnasal drip, or if present, they are proved not to be responsible for the cough, and (10) no other causes of cough such as
heart disease
, prescription of ACE inhibitors, current smoking. The results were as follows. 1) Many of the subjects were atopic, with positive skin tests to one or more common allergens in 10 subjects, elevated serum IgE in 4 subjects, and past history and family history of atopy in 4 and 7 subjects, respectively. 2) Respiratory infection preceded the onset of CVA in 3 subjects. 3) Cough was generally nocturnal, but 2 subjects coughed only in the daytime. 4) FEV1.0% was decreased (less than 70%) in only 2 subjects, whereas V25 was decreased (less than 80% of predicted value) in 11 out of 12 evaluable subjects, which suggested peripheral airway obstruction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical study on cough variant asthma]. 150 83
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