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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The pattern of
heart disease
in 404 patients seen prospectively from the guinea savanna region of Africa is presented. Over 90% presented with cardiac failure. Hypertension, Peripartal Cardiac Failure (PPCF),
Congestive Cardiomyopathy
and Rheumatic Heart Disease are major problems. The highest incidence of PPCF in the world probably occurs in this area but the prognosis is good. The reasons for this and the possible interrelationship of hypertension with cardiomyopathy and PPCF are discussed. In contrast to the tropical rainforests, no case of endomyocardial fibrosis was seen. During the period of study, vascular thrombosis is uncommon and coronary heart disease is non-existent in Zaria.
...
PMID:Pattern of heart disease in adults of the Nigerian Savanna: a prospective clinical study. 9 46
Cardiology was diagnosed by means of clinical, radiographic, electrocardiographic phonocardiographic, angiocardiographic, and pathological findings in 271 or 3,745 cats necropsied from January 1962 to April 1974. The affected cats can be divided into three groups on the basis of the gross and microscopic pathological lesions: 1)endocarditis and myocarditis in 20 young cats; 2)endomyocardial fibrosis and left ventricular hypertrophy in 182 cats; and 3)myocardial degeneration and biventricular dilatation in 69 cats. Of 271 affected cats, thromboembolus was observed in the aorta, and in the carotid, femoral, iliac, renal, pulmonary, and hepatic arteries in 104 instances. The important aspects of cardiomyopathy in cats appears to be the reduced diastolic compliance of the thick left ventricle, resulting in poor fillin. Resistance to ventricular inflow raises the diastolic pressure and causes compensatory left atrial enlargement. A pathogenesis for the onset of clinical signs at any stages as the cause of the
heart disease
is postulated on the basis of stress causing tachycardia and poor left ventricular filling. Acute left-sided failure with pulmonary edema may be precipitated. Approximately one-fourth of the cats have enlargement of all cardiac chambers, typical of
congestive cardiomyopathy
. On the basis of the close similarily to cardiomyopathy in man, the cat could serve as a suitable animal model for a conservation of time and effort in the attack against this disorder. There is a need for coordinated research programs for utilizing the multiple avenues of approach such as: epidemiological, clinical, biochemical, pathological, ultrastructural, virological, and immunological.
...
PMID:Feline cardiomyopathy. 12 93
Echocardiography was used to compare the left ventricular function in 35 cases of
congestive cardiomyopathy
(COCM), 16 cases of obstructive and 28 cases of non-obstructive asymmetric septal hypertrophy, 43 cases of scleroderma
heart disease
, 21 cases of ischaemic cardiomyopathy (ICM), 2 cases of restrictive cardiomyopathy, and one case of cardiac amyloidosis. COCM was characterized by left ventricular dilatation, decreased contractility and signs of elevated end-diastolic pressure. In asymmetric septal hypertrophy there was a decreased distensibility of the obstructed left ventricle, both in early and end-diastole, but the pump function remained normal. In scleroderma and amyloid
heart disease
both the contractility and distensibility of the small, stiff heart were reduced. In restrictive cardiomyopathy the only abnormality was the impaired end-diastolic distensibility. Reduced contractility confined primarily to the interventricular septum and impaired early diastolic distensibility are the characteristic features distinguishing ischaemic cardiomyopathy from COCM. However, echocardiography is not suitable for individual differentiation of ICM and COCM. The COCM can be differentiated from left ventricular aneurysm by M-mode sector scanning technique.
...
PMID:Functional differentiation of various types of cardiomyopathies by echocardiography. 15 92
Four Black South African patients, representative of a larger group, are described in detail. The common features were long periods of observation, multiple hospital admissions in both normotensive and hypertensive cardiac failure, hypertensive retinopathy and good renal function. All had been diagnosed as having cardiomyopathy. Two of the patients in a normotensive phase became hypertensive after responding to therapy for heart failure. One patient with malignant hypertension showed the features of idiopathic cardiomyopathy at necropsy. These cases are regarded as evidence in favour of the hypothesis that many cases of cryptogenic
heart disease
(cardiomyopathy,
congestive cardiomyopathy
, idiopathic cardiomegaly) are in fact cases of hypertension presenting with normotensive cardiac failure.
...
PMID:Hypertensive heart disease and cardiomyopathy in blacks. Diagnostic confusion. 45 82
A number of enzyme activities concerned with various catabolic pathways have been measured in biopsy specimens of the left ventricle in patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
and compared with those in patients undergoing surgery for valvar or congenital
heart disease
. The myopathic patients showed a diminution in glycolytic capacity, in hexokinase activity and in the capacity to transfer reducing equivalents across the mitochondrial membrane.
...
PMID:Myocardial enzyme activities in congestive cardiomyopathy. 46 62
The diagnosis of primary
dilated cardiomyopathy
depends on the recognition of a dilated poorly contracting left ventricle with increased end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes in the absence of a detectable cause. The diagnosis is made only after exclusion both of structural
heart disease
and of known causes of secondary heart muscle disorder. The natural history is still largely unknown and is probably as variable as the likely causes. The left ventricular disorder does not cause symptoms until heart failure supervenes except for occasional patients who develop an early atrial or ventricular dysrhythmia, conduction defect, chest pain or murmur of mitral regurgitation. This period of latency may be short, prolonged or even permanent since it is unlikely that all cases progess to the point of failure. A few patients recover normal or near-normal cardiac function. The interplay between high blood pressure, hypertensive heart failure and
dilated cardiomyopathy
is illustrated by patients who recover from heart failure to become hypertensive and vice versa and in current treatment with vasodilators and diuretics for patients at either end of the spectrum.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and natural history of congested (dilated) cardiomyopathies. 70 14
Immunological studies have shown new diagnostically important changes in alcoholic and viral myocarditis, as well as in
congestive cardiomyopathy
. Increased heart size correlated with the degree of congestive heart failure, as well as with negative immunofluorescence and an increased IgA concentration in the serum. These findings may serve as a diagnostic aid in patients with myocardial disease due to alcohol abuse. Viral
heart disease
is characterized by a variety of symptoms and nuclear antibodies (IgM) can be of help in the differential diagnosis. Heart muscle tissue of patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
preferentially binds IgG and IgA. In addition to the other changes these findings are of diagnostic importance. It seems likely that results similar to those obtained for humoral antibodies in
congestive cardiomyopathy
will apply in the correlation of the haemodynamic status of the patients. The pathophysiological implication of these findings is not clear at present, but the evolution of
congestive cardiomyopathy
appears to be associated with binding of immunoglobulin to the myocardium, as well as with humoral antiheart antibodies.
...
PMID:Immunological results in myocardial diseases. 70 17
The contribution of M-mode echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis was evaluated in a series of 1,000 successive patients. Among subjects in whom a presumptive clinical diagnosis had been made, echocardiography demonstrated totally unexpected findings in 10 per cent, supported the clinical diagnosis in 50 per cent and was entirely within normal limits in 19 per cent. Among patients with evidence of
heart disease
but no firm clinical diagnosis, echocardiography established the diagnosis in 23 per cent, including 20 per cent of all patients referred for evaluation of chest pain or arrhythmia of unclear etiology. "Missed" clinical diagnosis frequently involved patients with mitral valve prolapse,
congestive cardiomyopathy
, pericardial disease or asymmetrical septal hypertrophy of the heart. This study quantifies the amount of independent information contributed by echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis and demonstrates that this technic provides data of important clinical relevance in a surprisingly large number of cardiac patients.
...
PMID:Contribuiton of M-mode echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis. An assessment in 1,000 successive patients. 70 38
Coronary artery disease patients frequently have left ventricular wall motion abnormalities. Though nitroglycerin is commonly used in ischemic heart disease, its effects on wall motion abnormalities is unknown. In this study we have evaluated the effects of nitroglycerin on wall motion abnormalities and on ejection fraction in 25 patients. Sixteen had coronary artery disease (greater than 70% luminal narrowing). Six had no evidence of
heart disease
and three had congestive cardiomyopathies with normal coronary arteries. Left ventricular angiography was performed prior to and six minutes after administration of 0.4 mg of sublingual nitroglycerin. Twelve of the 16 coronary artery disease patients had wall motion abnormalities, and in seven of these, segmental wall motion improved after nitroglycerin. In five, all motion did not change. The initial heart rate, left ventricular systolic and end-diastolic pressure, and left ventricular end-diastolic volumes were not different for those whose wall motion improved versus those whose did not. The increase in the former and fall in the latter three hemodynamic parameters were significant (P less than 0.01) and similar for the two groups. In those whose wall motion abnormalities improved after nitroglycerin, ejection fraction (mean plus or minus se) increased significantly (P less than 0.05), from 0.47 plus or minus 0.025 to 0.62 plus or minus 0.046. In those without improvement, the ejection fraction went from 0.55 plus or minus 0.056 to 0.58 plus or minus 0.051 (NS). Three patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
showed no improvement in ventricular wall motion or ejection fraction after nitroglycerin. Left ventricular wall motion abnormalities and ejection fraction improved in some coronary artery disease patients following nitroglycerin. The mechanism for this is unknown; however, ventriculography before and after nitroglycerin may be of potential usefulness for identifying areas of reversible wall motion abnormalities.
...
PMID:Improvement in left ventricular wall motion following nitroglycerin. 80 32
Using a calibrated displacement transducer, the total amplitude of the systolic wave of the left apexcardiogram (S), its first derivative (dS) and the normalized first derivative (nS), were evaluated as noninvasive indices of left ventricular function in human subjects. A strong correlation was present between peak dS and S in normal subjects (r=0.95, P less than 0.001). At an identical S, abnormal hearts had a lower peak dS, and this allowed a separation between groups with normal and abnormal ventricular dynamics. The index peak nS was significantly lower in patients with
congestive cardiomyopathy
(P less than 0.005) and ischemica
heart disease
in the presence of a low ejection fraction (P less than 0.001). It correlated significantly with LVEDP (r=-0.69, P less than 0.001), with ejection fraction (r=0.66, P less than 0.001) and with left ventricular contractility indices derived from isovolumic left ventricular pressure and its first derivative, recorded simultaneously by means of high fidelity micromanometers (peak VCE: r=0.76; Vmax total pressure: r=0.70; peak dP/dt: r = 0.69; P less than 0.001). The index peak nS was superior to S and peak dS, being less variable, independent of thorax circumference and better correlated with hemodynamic parameters. A close relationship was also present between the total amplitude of the atrial wave (A) and its peak first derivative (peak dA) in normal subjects (r = 0.98, P less than 0.001). For an identical A wave amplitude, patients with an increased left ventricular anddiastolic volume had lower values for peak dA (P less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Calibrated apexcardiography and assessment of left ventricular dynamics in man. 127 13
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