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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cardiovascular disease has become the major cause of death in the Western countries. There is strong evidence that elevations of serum lipids contribute to the pathogenesis of premature atherosclerosis. The classification of the hyperlipoproteinemias has been most beneficial as a guide to development of dietary and pharmacological regimens for lowering serum lipid concentrations. The results of dietary and drug prevention trials are discussed. Insight into the mechanisms involved in lipoprotein metabolism as well as the mode of action and of side-effects of hypolipidemic drugs is reviewed. Using present knowledge of heart disease research, it is reasonable to suggest dietary and drug treatments for the high risk patient.
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PMID:[Drug treatment of primary hyperlipoproteinemia (author's transl)]. 62 99

Careful histologic studies were performed on the coronary arteries, myocardium and conduction system of the hearts of six men aged 32 to 44 years who died suddenly with no history of heart disease. All six hearts demonstrated coronary atherosclerosis without evidence of complete obstruction or myocardial infarction. A nonobstructing mural coronary thrombus was found in all six hearts; in four, the thrombus was located in the left anterior descending coronary artery. Distal microthrombi were found in four hearts. In these six men, the terminal event, often a ventricular arrhythmia, may have been related to the mural coronary thrombus. Small fragments originating from such lesions can obstruct the microcirculation producing sudden lethal arrhythmias. Nonobstructing mural coronary thrombosis may be more prevalent and more significant than previously suspected and should be considered in cases of sudden cardiac death.
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PMID:Nonobstructive coronary thrombosis in sudden cardiac death. 67 36

Apexcardiograms were performed in 68 consecutive patients who had either normal findings or coronary artery disease on cardiac catheterization. The height of the a wave in relation to the total apexcardiographic deflection (a/H) and the duration of both the rapid (RFW) and the slow (SFW) filling periods were determined in each case. The patients were classified into three gorups: I, no evidence of heart disease on catheterization; II, significant coronary artery disease with elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressure; and III, coronary artery disease with normal filling pressure. There was a significant difference (P less than 0.001) between the SFW/RFW values (mean +/- 1 standard deviation) in control subject (group I, 2.3 +/- 0.5) and in subjects with coronary artery disease (group II, 4.7 +/- 1.6 and group III, 4 +/- 1.7). Setting the upper limit of normal for SFW/RFW at 2.8 (mean + 1 standard deviation) identified 94 percent of patients, in group II, 71 percent of patients in group III and 86 percent of all patients with coronary disease (group II plus group III). This sensitivity appeared greater than that of the a/H ratio. Only 2 of 17 patients (12 percent) without coronary atherosclerosis had an SFW/RFW ratio greater than 2.8. It is concluded that (1) the slow/rapid filling period ratio is a useful noninvasive measurement for identifying subjects with ischemic heart disease; (2) the increased values for slow/rapid filling period ratio associated with obstructive coronary lesions may be caused by impairment of early left ventricular distensibility; and (3) this ratio should be determined in patients with other forms of heart disease to determine its specificity.
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PMID:Slow filling period/rapid filling period ratio in the apexcardiogram: relation to the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. 68 50

In order to find out if there is an association between alcoholic heart disease and alcoholic liver disease, and to discover the prevalence and characteristics of anatomical findings in the heart at alcoholic subjects, a prospective study was realized during the autopsies of patients younger than 60 years old, who had died with alcoholic liver disease not associated with an obvious heart disease. A second group of subjects containing similar characteristics of the first group, only without a past history of alcoholism nor liver disease, were used as controls. The comparison between the two groups in respect to: age, nutritional status, macroscopic and microscopic findings of the heart, frequency and degree of atherosclerosis revealed no statistical difference. In conclusion, we submit that the subjects who had died from liver disease also presented myocardial alterations, but that these did not differe from those observed in the control subjects.
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PMID:[Primary alcoholic cardiac disease and alcoholic liver disease. Anatomopathological study]. 75 15

Study of four personal cases and of twelve cases reported in the literature makes it possible to describe the characteristics of coronary embolism in mitral stenosis, a rare complication but indicating the presence of a left intra-atrial thrombosis: -- variable clinical picture, dominated by a syndrome combining simultaneously a picture of myocardial infarction and of peripheral arterial emboli of other localizations; -- diagnosis to be discussed within the framework of coronary syndromes in mitral heart disease: embolism requiring to be distinguished from coronary atherosclerosis combined with mitral stenosis, more rarely a functional coronary insufficiency; -- severe course and prognosis: besides the possibility of rapidly lethal cases, coronary embolism seems liable to result in weakening and diminishing of the adaptation possibilities of the left ventricle, responsible for attacks of heart failure after mitral valvulotomy.
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PMID:[Coronary emboli in mitral stenosis]. 81 66

In general, the results to date in humans and experimental animals seem to indicate that substantial regression of advanced atherosclerosis is possible. The results also indicate that the advanced atherosclerotic lesions are much more likely to respond favorably if the serum cholesterol concentrations are reduced to the minimum that prevails in animals or people who consume a low-fat low-cholesterol diet. In human subjects and in rhesus monkeys, this value appears to be about 150 mg%. Under these circumstances, much of the lipid disappears from the plaques, and the remaining fibrous tissue and cells appear to condense and undergo remodeling, as they do in fracture or wound healing. Additional effort will be required to ascertain how rapidly and how much of the fiber proteins and calcium can be removed from the advanced plaques and to work out methods that will consistently produce regression of advanced atherosclerotic lesions in human subjects. This goal would appear to be worth working toward. Interruption of progression of atherosclerosis appears to be more easily achieved, and it also would appear to be a worthwhile goal. The diagram that is reproduced as FIGURE 2 presents the multiple methods of intervention in atherosclerosis that are now available to the physician and to the patient. To those of us who look on atherosclerosis as an almost completely preventable disease and one that is largely reversible, the following quotation from the perceptive essay by Lewis Thomas seems to be prophetic and most appropriate. An extremely complex and costly technology for the management of coronary heart disease has evolved, involving specialized ambulances and hospital units, all kinds of electronic gadgetry and whole platoons of new professional personnel to deal with the end results of coronary thrombosis. Almost everything offered today for the treatment of heat disease is at this level of technology, with the transplatned and artificial hearts as ultimate examples. When enough has been learned for us to know what really goes wrong in heart disease, we ought to be in a position to figure out ways to prevent or reverse the process; and when this happens, the current elaborate technology will be set to one side.
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PMID:Studies of regression of advanced atherosclerosis in experimental animals and man. 82 28

The authors analysed clinically 108 patients (61 males and 47 females), aged below 50 years treated at the department of neurology, because of acute cerebral ischaemia. Attention is called to risk factors such as arterial hypertension, heart disease, atherosclerosis, obesity and diabetes which may be the cause of earlier development of ischaemic changes in the central nervous system. In the analysed group in 18 cases cerebral thrombosis, in 23 cases embolism, in 31 cerebral circulatory failure were diagnosed. In 36 cases the cause could not have been established.
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PMID:[Acute cerebral ischemic disease in patients under the age of 50]. 88 1

Results are presented on a study of the blood coagulation system and some indices of serum lipids and proteins in 133 normal individuals and probands with ischaemic heart disease and their 681 relatives. The examination of the relatives of probands with different types of biochemical disorders revealed a similar biochemical background in the probands and the members of their families. The disorders in blood biochemistry in the probands were most similar in the parents, the children of the probands' siblings, and less distinct in more distant relatives (cousins, nephews and nieces, etc.), biochemical disorders similar to those of the probands being found in young persons (14-16 years old) and reappearing in several generations. The author concludes on the genetic heterogeneity of ischaemic (coronary) heart disease and underlying coronary atherosclerosis.
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PMID:[Genetic heterogeneity of ischemic (coronary) heart disease]. 89 7

Systemic disorders (eg, cardiac, hematologic) are commonly recognized as predisposing and sometimes actual precipitating events in cerebral ischemia. From available studies, the incidence of precipitation is not clear. To determine this, we undertook a comprehensive investigation of all patients with ischemic brain disease for a one-year period. Results reveal that brain ischemia is more commonly precipitated by systemic illness than usually supposed, particularly transient ischemic attacks of the vertebrobasilar circulation and completed infarcts in the carotid distribution. Cardiac disorders outnumber all other precipitating events. As they are more amenable to therapy than atherosclerosis, a diligent search for such precipitating events is warranted in patients with ischemic symptoms.
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PMID:Associated systemic factors in cerebrovascular ischemia. 93 99

A series of 102 surgical operations for arterial emboli in 85 patients during a fifteen-year period is presented. Seventeen patients were operated upon before the institution of the Fogarty balloon embolectomy catheter. 82 embolectomies using the Fogarty embolectomy catheter were carried out in 68 patients with a mortality of 32%. The amputation rate in the surviving patients was 39%. The most common cause of death was severe underlying heart disease, while the most important reason for amputation after an unsuccessful embolectomy was concomitant occlusive atherosclerosis, and to a lesser degree, a delay in the performance of the embolectomy.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of arterial embolism. Fifteen years experience. 96 85


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