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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A female patient who suffered from atrial tachycardia associated with the ingestion of food or drink was examined in our department. No signs of organic
heart disease
were discovered, oesophageal motility was normal, but X-ray revealed a small hiatal hernia. The arrhythmia started with an atrial extrasystole arising well outside the functional refractory period of the AV node, and it could be reproduced by inflation of a balloon. It is suggested that the arrhythmia is induced by a mechanical effect of the passage of food on the left atrial wall. Several drugs were tried in order to stop or relieve the complaints. None of them prevented or stopped the atrial tachycardia but verapamil and edrophonium chloride caused 2:1
AV block
, and follow-up study has shown that sufficient doses of verapamil are able to relieve the patient's complaints.
...
PMID:Ectopic atrial tachycardia on swallowing. Report on favourable effect of verapamil. 8 5
This report describes
heart disease
in a 32-year-old man with the syndrome of chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO). The surface electrocardiogram showed first degree
AV block
and left bundle-branch block and there was HV prolongation on the His bundle electrogram. Endomyocardial biopsy showed the changes of hypertrophy on light microscopy, and on electron microscopy there were increased numbers of mitochondria which appeared structurally normal. A permanent demand pacemaker was inserted because these patients are prone to develop complete heart block.
...
PMID:Cardiac abnormalities in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. 13 70
When an elderly patient has an abnormal electrocardiogram but no other objective evidence of
heart disease
, the physician may question whether the ECG is really a reliable index of
heart disease
in old people or whether aging has some influence on which findings are normal and which are abnormal. The study reported here plus data gathered from an extensive review of the literature indicate the ECG criteria do not have to be changed for geriatric patients. Regardless of age, the prognosis of a specific abnormality remains that of the underlying disease. With age, both
heart disease
and abnormal electrocardiograms increase in incidence--in a parallel fashion. Specific abnormalities that increase in frequency are first-degree
atrioventricular block
, bundle-branch block, ST-T wave changes, premature systoles, left anterior hemiblock, left ventricular hypertrophy, and atrial fibrillation. Those that correlate strongly with
heart disease
are atrial fibrillation, left bundle-branch block, and nonspecific intraventicular condution defect.
...
PMID:Should ECG criteria be modified for geriatric patients? 13 11
This report reviews the clinical features of 80 patients with roentgenographically proved mitral annular calcification. The mean age of the group was 73 years, and there was a 2.5 to 1 female to male ratio. Evaluation for underlying cardiovascular disease revealed six patients with severe calcific valvular aortic stenosis; five patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, 11 with mitral prolapse and 33 with significant arterial hypertension (blood pressure greater or equal to 150/96 mm Hg). Eighty-five per cent of the group (68 of 80 patients) had an underlying
cardiac disorder
associated with either chronically increased left ventricular systolic pressure or abnormal leaflet motion. Other cardiovascular abnormalities occurring as complications secondary to the mitral ring calcification included subacute bacterial endocarditis (three cases), arterial emboli (five episodes) and high grade
atrioventricular block
(16 cases). Twelve patients had severe mitral regurgitation; successful mitral valve replacement was carried out in four patients (all with myxomatous mitral tissue). Evidence of diffuse conduction system disease, not limited to the area of the cardiac fibrous skeleton, was found frequently (44 patients). Nine patients had sinus node dysfunction and 35 patients had electrocardiographic evidence of distal intraventricular (fascicular) block. Twenty-one patients eventually required pacemakers for management of symptomatic bradyarrhythmias. Atrial fibrillation was present in 23 patients. In this review it was found that calcification of the mitral annulus is frequently associated with or induces serious cardiovascular disease. Since some of these disorders may be modified by appropriate therapy, calcification of the mitral annulus should no longer be ignored as a benign marker of the elderly heart.
...
PMID:Calcification of the mitral annulus: etiology, clinical associations, complications and therapy. 15 99
Two patients had cardiac disease and serological evidence for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. The first patient had myocarditis and complete
atrioventricular heart block
with repeated syncopal episodes two weeks following infection. The second patient had alcoholic cardiomyopathy and worsening congestive heart failure associated with RSV infection. The significance of RSV infection in these two patients may bear a significant relationship to sudden infant death syndrome, chronic cardiomyopathy, and alcohol-related
heart disease
. Cardiac disease secondary to RSV infection may be more prevalent than is presently recognized.
...
PMID:Respiratory syncytial virus and heart disease. A report of two cases. 18 2
Eighty-six of 452 patients (19%) with chronic bifascicular block were found to have no clinically apparent associated organic
heart disease
(OHD) and were defined as having primary conduction disease (PCD). Comparison of patients with PCD and OHD revealed a significantly lower incidence of the following clinical variables in the PCD patients (p less than 0.001): exertional angina, dyspnea, congestive heart failure, cardiomegaly, functional class I (all by study design), left bundle branch block and premature ventricular contractions. Both mean AH and HV intervals were significantly shorter in patients with PCD (p less than 0.01). The incidence of HV prolongation was 21% in PCD and 41% in OHD patients (p less than 0.001). All patients were prospectively followed for 21-2998 days with a mean +/- SEM of 1209 +/- 66 days for PCD and 1172 +/- 36 days for OHD. Atrioventricular (AV) block developed in three patients from the PCD group and 26 from the OHD group (NS), with spontaneous block occurring in one (1%) PCD patient and 19 (5%) OHD patients (p less than 0.05). Annual mortality due to sudden death as well as total cardiovascular mortality (including sudden death) for the 5-year follow-up was significantly lower in patients with PCD. Patients with PCD have significantly lower incidence of electrophysiologic abnormalities and subsequent spontaneous
AV block
as well as cardiovascular and sudden death mortality. The diagnosis of PCD based on clinical criteria probably underestimates the presence of underlying OHD, as suggested by a small but definite risk of cardiovascular mortality.
...
PMID:Significance of chronic bifascicular block without apparent organic heart disease. 44 30
Electrocardiographic monitoring of 52 consecutive patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed that arrhythmias during the procedures were common (38.5%) and tended to occur more frequently in the elderly (75%), in persons with
heart disease
(54.5%), and in persons with chronic lung disease (89%). The incidence of ventricular premature contractions in patient with no evidence of heart or lung disease was 19%. In one patient with advanced chronic lung disease, the procedure had to be terminated because of development of high-degree
atrioventricular block
. A high incidence of arrhythmias during endoscopy has not been previously reported in patients with chronic lung disease.
...
PMID:Arrhythmias during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. 53 13
In twenty patients with advanced
heart disease
with severe cardiac failure and the presence of conduction disturbances before digitalis therapy, but in whom such disturbances were worsened or revealed by the treatment, it was necessary to insert a permanent pacemaker in order to make effective long term digitalisation possible without the risk of excessive bradycardia or pauses due to worsening of
atrioventricular block
. Six patients died within a period of 9 days to 34 months after insertion of the pacemaker, two were lost from sight, and the other 12 were followed-up regularly for an average period of 20 months, their condition remaining stationary and, in general, satisfactory.
...
PMID:[An indication for a permanent pacemaker : digitialis therapy for cardiac failure with disturbed atrioventricular conduction (author's transl)]. 70 14
Cardiac syncopes appeared in four heavily trained male patients without a history of cerebral or
heart disease
. Three were young athletes participating in competitive sport, one had trained intensively for years after poliomyelitis complicated by paraplegia. On admission all patients had sinus bradycardia; one had second degree atrioventricular (AV) block at rest, and one had transient sinoatrial (SA) block. His bundle studies demonstrated prolonged recovery time of the SA node (SAN) in two, prolonged atrio-His interval in three, and appearance of second degree
AV block
at abnormally low pacing rates in two. Refractory periods of the AV node (AVN), determined in three, tended to reach the upper limit of the normal range. The dysfunction of SAN and AVN was temporarily abolished in all patients by 1 mg of atropine i.v., and disappeared during exercise test, which was done by the three young athletes. The patient with paraplegia and one of the young athletes, who had second degree
AV block
at rest, were given atropine, 0.5 mg six times a day, and all three active sportsmen reduced training activity considerably. After 6--12 months all patients were re-examined. None had cerebral symptoms or other complaints. They were in regular sinus rhythm and in excellent physical condition.
...
PMID:Cerebral attacks due to excessive vagal tone in heavily trained persons. A clinical and electrophysiologic study. 71 61
Of 18,000 children with organic
heart disease
evaluated at The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto between 1940 and 1971, 33 died suddenly and unexpectedly between 1 and 21 years of age. Nine had discrete obstruction of the left ventricular outflow tract and five had muscular narrowing of the left ventricular outflow tract and five had muscular narrowing of the left ventricular outflow tract. Pulmonary vascular disease caused seven sudden deaths, and arrhythmias (usually due to
atrioventricular block
) caused seven more. Of the five other children who died suddenly three had transposition of the great arteries, one had a complex cyanotic heart defect and one had an anomalous course of the left coronary artery, which originated from the right sinus of Valsalva. With earlier investigation of aortic stenosis, earlier closure of ventricular septal defect to avoid pulmonary vascular disease, better design of artificial pacemakers and better investigation of patients with angina, many of these deaths will be avoided in the future.
...
PMID:Sudden unexpected death in children with congenital heart disease. 80 25
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