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

Patients in the coronary care unit with acute pulmonary edema, heart failure, and other organic heart disease were studied. Blood and urine samples were taken on admission prior to any treatment and later at prescribed intervals. All the patients with APE were found to have elevated plasma osmolalities and hyperglycemia on admission which decreased with treatment. This was in contrast to the other two groups excluding those factors such as ethyl alcohol and diabetes which can raise plasma osmolality or blood glucose. A discussion of this mild hyperosmolal state in APE follows including possible causes as well as cellular effects of hyperosmolality on humans.
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PMID:Acute pulmonary edema and hyperosmolality: a clinical study. 106 77

The series reported includes 85 patients who underwent arterial embolectomy for 101 embolic events. The over-all hospital mortality rate following embolectomy was 41 percent. The etiological factors for this high mortality rate are analyzed. The group includes 58 patients who had arteriosclerotic heart disease and 27 patients with rheumatic valvular disease. The mortality rate encountered in the arteriosclerotic group of patients was 52.9 percent, whereas that in the rheumatic group of patients was 18 percent. The major cause of death was cardiorespiratory failure (51 percent). Factors which weighed heavily on the final outcome were previous myocardial infarction, hypertension, diabetes, cardiac decompensation, and rhythm disturbances. Limb salvage was accomplished in 51 patients (60 percent). Amputation was performed in 17 patients (20 percent).
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PMID:Mortality rate following lower limb arterial embolectomy: causative factors. 112 92

The known risk factors for atherosclerosis do not possess the same significance in young people as in the elderly. Hypercholesterolemia, diabetes and cigarette smoking appear to have a greater bearing below the age of 50 than later, particularly in myocardial infarction but also in apoplexy. On the other hand, hypertension is an important factor in the young and, especially in the case of apoplexy, even more so in advanced age. There is marked difference with regard to preexisting heart disease, which scarcely plays a role in myocardial infarction of the younger patient but is a factor in some 50% of hemiplegia cases. Only one fifth of elderly patients with this disease have no preexisting carcdiopathy. The similarity of the risk factors in elderly patients either with or without apoplexy is due to the fact that arteriosclerosis is already established in both groups and the risk factors which give rise to ischemia, thrombosis or embolism assume prominence. The therapeutic implications are briefly discussed.
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PMID:[Risk factors and age]. 113 58

Twenty-six patients under 20 years of age having cerebrovascular disease were studied from 1968 to 1972. Common risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia and heart disease were not present. Angiographical study showed a variety of abnormalities. No consistent defect was present. There was a high incidence of pyrexia and convulsions in the early stages of stroke and it appears possible that some form of arteritis might have been important in the production of the cerebral infarction.
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PMID:Stoke in the young: a four-year study, 1968 to 1972. 115 68

Analysis of death certification in North Carolina for a three-year period, 1969 through 1971, showed regional differences in mortality rates from stroke in white men, with the highest rates in the Plains (tobacco growing and farming) area and the lowest rates in the Mountain region. These geographic differences in death rates were observed in all but the youngest age decade and also in the various types of stroke, i.e., hemorrhagic and occlusive cerebrovascular diseases. This regional variation in mortality, however, was not present in white women or blacks. The prevalence at death of heart disease, hypertension and diabetes also was higher in the Plains than in the Mountain region, suggesting that the observed geographic variation of stroke mortality is related to one or more of these major risk factors. It is concluded that the geographic differences in stroke mortality, which had been reported during previous decades, are real and are not due to variations in death certification, errors in diagnosis, or other explanations that might artificially produce inaccuracies in vital statistics.
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PMID:Geographic differences in mortality from stroke in North Caroline. 1. Analysis of death certificates. 125 3

This study was made to determine whether zinc deficiency is one of the factors involved in growth retardation of infants of high-risk pregnancies. The high risk factors were hypertension of pregnancy, diabetes mellitus, congenital heart disease, chronic nephritis, rheumatic heart disease and hyperthyroidism. 102 neonatal infants were divided into 3 groups: breast fed group, 37 cases; test group, 32 cases formula-fed with supplementary zinc 1.14-2.28 mg/kg/d; and control group, 33 cases formula-fed and supplemented with Vitamin B complex as placebo. The groups were divided by double-blind and randomized method. There were no differences in the 3 groups in sex ratio, growth status and serum zinc concentration at the beginning of the study. Anthropometric data were obtained at 0, 3 and 6 months.
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PMID:Growth promoting effect of zinc supplementation in infants of high-risk pregnancies. 129 Dec 3

In order to investigate the health and care of the urban elderly, self-administered anonymous questionnaires were sent to a sample randomly selected from the elderly 70 to 89 years of age, in 3 different areas (central, residential and suburban) in Wakabayashi-Ward in Sendai. Responses from 1,248 were returned by mail (response rate = 76.4%) and results were compared to the expected values estimated from the results of investigations conducted by the Ministry of Health and Welfare. 1) As for present addresses of the elderly, 94.2% were at home, 3.8% in hospitals, 0.7% in nursing homes, and 1.3% in other facilities. 2) Responses showed that 28.4% were suffering from hypertension, 5.6% from diabetes mellitus, 2.2% from strokes and liver diseases, with all of these percentages similar to the respective expected values. However, 12.7% were suffering from heart disease which was over twice the expected value. 3) Analysis of health habits showed that the percentages of the elderly who had "good sleep and rest", "nutritious meal", and "moderate exercise" were higher than expected. Only 2.3% did not practice good health habits, which was one sixth of the expected value. 4) As for meal habits of the elderly, 88.3% had three meals a day, and 33.7% made efforts to take less salty foods. 5) Dietary habits of the elderly indicated that 83.8% were frequent consumers of meat, fish and soybeans products, 62.3% vegetables, 51.0% sweet confectionery (significantly higher), 49.2% milk (significantly higher), 22.3% fried foods like tempura (significantly higher), and 22.3% salty vegetables (significantly lower).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Health status and care of the urban elderly]. 129 37

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.
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PMID:[Preventive drug therapy of recurrence of atrial fibrillation]. 129 92

In 1969, a Pacific Northwest American Indian community cohort (n = 100) was interviewed for the presence of physical and psychiatric illnesses. The same community was studied again in 1988. This study describes the outcome among the original 100 subjects. The schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia Lifetime Version (SADS-L) served as the basic interview instrument, supplemented by data from medical records, death certificates, and medical and community informants. Twenty-five subjects had died, 13 from cardiovascular disorders and seven from alcohol-related illnesses. Among the 46 subjects re-interviewed, hypertension, heart disease, and diabetes had become significant sources of medical morbidity. Alcoholism was the most significant cause of psychiatric morbidity, particularly among males. This study indicates that greater attention should be focused upon prevention and treatment of alcoholism, cardiovascular disorders, and diabetes in this community and in other American Indian populations.
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PMID:The natural history of medical and psychiatric disorders in an American Indian community. 130 32

This study was based on a survey of the death certificates of Pu-Li Town in Taiwan, issued over the past 20 years from 1966 to 1985. Age-adjusted mortality trends as well as cause-specific mortality trends were analyzed and compared with nationwide Taiwan data. As a whole, Pu-Li had a higher age-adjusted mortality than that of the overall Taiwan area. This finding may result from a higher mortality from tuberculosis in Pu-Li. Based on these data, the five leading causes of death in Pu-Li were cerebro-vascular disease, accident, heart disease, cancer and tuberculosis. Hypertension and diabetes were the 5th and 6th leading causes of death in 1985 and ranked 12th and 13th, respectively, in 1966. This data point out the increasing importance of hypertension and diabetes rates in Pu-Li. Tuberculosis and pneumonia had been controlled, ranking from the 1st and 3rd in 1966 to the 10th and 12th, respectively, in 1985. Suicide, cancer, and accident were usually coded as the single cause of death without other co-existent causes of death noted, so that there was in most instances not much difference between analyses based on the underlying cause of death and multiple causes of death. However, this was not true for hypertension and diabetes. If multiple causes of death were analyzed, only 34.5% of hypertension and 66% of diabetes were coded as the underlying cause of death. 37.2% of cerebro-vascular diseases co-existed with hypertension, and 20.3% of diabetes co-existed with hypertension.
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PMID:Mortality trends in the past 20 years in Pu-Li, Taiwan. 132 83


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