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

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

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 autopsy reports of the Pathological Institute Erfurt of the period from 1.1. 1951 untile 31.12. 1969 were scored for cases of coronary sclerosis and coronary thrombosis and analysed concerning frequency and distribution of age and sex, resp. In 3.97 per cent of all autopsies (4.93 per cent of men, 2.62 per cent of women) a coronary sclerosis was present in combination with a coronary thrombosis. Coronary thrombi appeared more frequent in severe coronary sclerosis (8.96%) than in weak or moderately severe coronary sclerosis (1.39%). Males suffered significantly more frequent from these forms of icaemic heart disease. Coronary thrombi were found more frequently in the left coronary artery (2.46%) than in the right coronary (1.51%). This difference was significant. Non obturating thromboses were more frequent than obturating ones and those being in organization were rarer than fresh thromboses. In all cases a decrease of the relative frequency of the coronary thrombosis with increasing age in men and women is detected.
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PMID:[Coronary artherosclerosis, coronary thrombosis and myocardial infarction in autopsy cases (author's transl)]. 101 72

A 37 year old man without coronary risk factors or known heart disease showed progression of Hodgkin's disease after radiation and multiple chemotherapy. One day after the first cycle of chemotherapy with methotrexate, Ifosfamide and etoposide, he had an acute myocardial ischemia. The creatinin-kinase was elevated up to 325 U/l. Coronary angiography showed a thrombus in the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), while the other coronary arteries were normal. Ventriculography showed an apical akinesia. After 7 days of treatment with heparin coronary angiogram was normalized, without any stenosis in the LAD. To our knowledge this is the first documented case of a coronary artery thrombosis and myocardial ischemia after chemotherapy in a patient without coronary heart disease. We conclude that chemotherapy can cause myocardial ischemia by coronary artery thrombosis in patients without prior heart disease.
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PMID:[Acute coronary thrombosis and myocardial ischemia following chemotherapy of Hodgkin's disease]. 220 11

Young men dying suddenly and autopsied by the coroner sometimes have coronary thrombosis at a relatively early stage of arteriosclerosis. The plaques under such thrombi often have a complex of features, a) rupture, b) hemorrhage, c) medial destruction, d) nodular collections of foam cells, e) calcification, f) cellular infiltrates of the fibrous cap, fibrous base and adventitia, and g) a newly described kind of phagocytic activity at the boundary between the necrotic core and the fibrous base of the plaque. Commonplace innocuous plaques in most middle and old aged subjects without heart disease also often have some of these features. What structural characteristics might distinguish rare thrombogenic from commonplace innocuous plaques? Twenty-one thrombotic plaques from 18 cases of sudden coronary heart disease (CHD) death were histologically compared with 129 nonthrombotic plaques from these same 18 cases, 85 plaques from 23 cases of CHD death due to arteriosclerotic occlusion, and 94 plaques from 22 cases having no CHD. Plaques with thrombosis all had necrotic cores; plaques for comparison with these were therefore chosen all to have necrotic cores. Rupture and hemorrhage were found in 90% of thrombotic plaques, with mixing of plaque gruel and blood in the thrombus. Medial destruction, foam cells and calcification (features c, d, and e) were commonplace in all types of plaques. Small-cell infiltrates and atherophagocytosis (features f or g) were found in 72-94% of the 21 thrombotic plaques, but only in 18-24% of the 94 not CHD plaques. The necrotic core, characterized by crystalline cholesterol, appears to incite cellular responses in some plaques but not others; those responses distinguish thrombogenesis. The findings imply that thrombogenicity and its accompanying plaque cellularity are incited not by cholesterol, but by some trace or minor component of the plaque gruel of the necrotic core. The possibility of testing these hypotheses by practical methods has been shown to be feasible.
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PMID:Characteristics of the plaque under a coronary thrombus. 392 Aug 15

A case of coronary thrombosis resulting from secondary polycythaemia due to severe cyanotic congenital heart disease in a young girl of 19 years of age is described. This resulted in a fatal myocardial infarction. There was no evidence of coronary atheroma.
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PMID:Acute myocardial infarction secondary to polycythaemia in a case of cyanotic congenital heart disease. 404 62

A total of 4,486 widowers of 55 years of age and older have been followed up for nine years since the death of their wives in 1957. Of these 213 died during the first six months of bereavement, 40% above the expected rate for married men of the same age. Thereafter the mortality rate fell gradually to that of married men and remained at about the same leveLThe greatest increase in mortality during the first six months was found in the widowers dying from coronary thrombosis and other arteriosclerotic and degenerative heart disease. There was also evidence of a true increase in mortality from other diseases, though the numbers in individual categories were too small for statistical analysis.In the first six months 22.5% of the deaths were from the same diagnostic group as the wife's death. Some evidence suggests that this may be a larger proportion than would be expected by chance association, but there is no evidence suggesting that the proportion is any different among widows and widowers who have been bereaved for more than six months.
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PMID:Broken heart: a statistical study of increased mortality among widowers. 576 60

Two patients presenting an unsettled mitral cardiopathy had to receive a valve replacement under cardiopulmonary by-pass in spite of a circulating anticoagulant with antiprothrombinase activity. A higher risk of thromboembolic trouble required an increase of heparin administration, under a strict biological control. Nevertheless both patients died: the first of coronary thrombosis, the second of cataclysmic bleeding, associated to severe and diffused thrombosis. Thus it is essential to insist upon the risk occurred by those patients and the difficulty of adaptation and control of heparin administration.
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PMID:[Circulating anticoagulant and open heart surgery (author's transl)]. 711 28

The risks of cardiovascular disease associated with dyslipidemia differ in women and men, being more strongly associated with triglyceride/high-density lipoprotein in middle-aged women than in men. Although the incidence of heart disease is lower in women because they live longer, over a lifetime, cardiovascular disease in women is equal to that in men, with the greatest incidence after age 65 years. Major coronary events are rare among reproductive-age women who use oral contraceptives and are related to the concomitant effects of age, smoking, diabetes, hypertension, and obesity. Low estrogen-progestin dose oral contraceptives appear not to promote cardiovascular disease and can be used in women with controlled cholesterol elevations. Alternative contraceptive measures should be considered for patients with severe uncontrolled hypercholesterolemia or a lipid disorder that carries a high risk of coronary heart disease. In these conditions, thrombotic propensity associated with supraphysiologic doses of estrogen in oral contraceptives might accelerate coronary thrombosis should an arteriosclerotic plaque rupture. Treatment of hypercholesterolemia should follow the guidelines of the National Cholesterol Education Program and emphasize hygienic measures. Contraceptive selection in hyperlipidemic patients should reflect a balance between the risks--and their management--of developing cardiovascular disease versus the risks of pregnancy.
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PMID:Contraception and dyslipidemia. 851 44

The reports relating emotional stress to sudden death are largely anecdotal. In addition to experimental and electrophysiological studies, an opportunity for a better understanding of possible stress-related sudden death (SSD) may be provided by medicolegal autopsies. The goal of our autopsy study was to analyze cardiovascular pathologic findings in cases of SSD and if possible identify mechanisms by which the stressful event (SE) could be the cause. Forty three cases were studied (29 males and 14 females). In all cases, the SE and the death were witnessed. The age range was 22 to 90 years in males (mean, 52) and 30 to 92 years in females (mean, 64). Death occurred in all cases without premonitory symptoms. In 20 cases, death occurred during the SE and in the other 23 cases occurred within 2 h of the event. SE included fear, 15 cases; altercation, 21 cases; sexual activity, 3 cases; police questioning or arrest, 4 cases. According to police reports, in 40 cases (90%), the victims had no previous clinical history of cardiovascular disease. At autopsy, the heart weight in males ranged from 255 to 1000 g with a mean of 517 g and in females the range was 250-700 g with a mean of 417 g. In only 3 cases, gross and microscopic examination of the heart was normal. In 2 of the remaining 40 cases the subjects died of subarachnoid hemorrhage. In 38 cases, a cardiac cause of death was found as follows: coronary heart disease, 27 cases; cardiomyopathy, 6 cases; aortic valvular stenosis, 2 cases and right ventricular dysplasia, 3 cases. A coronary artery thrombosis was found in 8 cases of sudden coronary death. Post myocardial infarction fibrosis was present in 25 cases (92%) of sudden coronary death. In conclusion, it appears from our autopsy study that SSD occurs primarily in those individuals with severe heart disease, especially coronary heart disease.
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PMID:Stressful events as a trigger of sudden death: a study of 43 medico-legal autopsy cases. 906 8


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