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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Spontaneous gyriform brightness seen on CT scan is an unusual finding unless associated with arteriovenous malformations (AVM). There are sporadic case reports in the literature of its occurrence in association with herpex simplex virus
encephalitis
(HSVE), purulent meningitis, following chemotherapy for leukaemia, in a child with chronic renal failure, and in a child with folic acid deficiency. We present a series of seven cases exhibiting this phenomenon, none of whom have AVMs, who have been scanned at this hospital in the first 2 1/2 years following the installation of a CT scanner. Four of the cases had congenital
heart disease
requiring corrective surgery or cardiac catheterisation. The other three had probable meningo-
encephalitis
. In all cases the gyriform brightness followed an ischaemic insult to the child's brain. We hypothesise that this phenomenon is an ischaemic response in the immature brain and that its occurrence is not so rare as the literature may suggest.
...
PMID:Transient gyriform brightness on non-contrast enhanced computed tomography (CT) brain scan of seven infants. 204 56
Non-otogenic cerebral abscess is becoming relatively more frequent compared with otogenic. It arises in a setting of sepsis, trauma, or congenital
heart disease
. The onset presents a meningo-encephalitic picture, often with two stages, followed by epilepsy and/or a hemiparesis. The best investigations are an EEG and, probably, an isotope scan. The angiogram may be misleading as 40% may not have a midline shift. 'Acute localized non-suppurative
encephalitis
' seems to be more frequent than in the past. Antibiotics and aspiration appear to be the best treatment.
...
PMID:Non-otogenic cerebral abscess. 414 39
UNICEF decided to achieve the 1977 World Health Organization objective Health For All By The Year 2000 through primary health care, utilizing growth monitoring, oral rehydration therapy, breast-feeding, immunization, family planning, and education of women. Since the 1960s BCG (bacillus Calmette-Guerin) vaccination, DPT (diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus) and OPV (oral polio vaccine) have been available in Sri Lanka. The expanded program of immunization has almost eliminated diphtheria, pertussis, neonatal tetanus, and poliomyelitis. Tuberculous meningitis, bone and joint tuberculosis, measles, and miliary tuberculosis have become very rare. Among other vaccine-preventable diseases, mumps is the commonest cause of aseptic meningitis and viral
encephalitis
in children. Maternal rubella in the first trimester causes abortion or gross teratogenic effects including congenital
heart disease
. Safe vaccines may be used to prevent mumps and rubella. In recent years there has been a resurgence of measles in North America among school children, and presently a 2nd dose of vaccine is recommended for children. Japanese B encephalitis has a mortality rate of over 30% and half the survivors have residual brain damage. The Ministry of Health has immunized susceptible children in some of the prevalent areas. This vaccine also gives partial protection against dengue hemorrhagic fever. In Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan hepatitis B vaccine is part of the national immunization schedule because of the common occurrence of primary hepatoma of the liver. At present this vaccine is recommended for health workers in Sri Lanka. Meningococcal meningitis occurs in some Middle East countries such as Saudi Arabia, thus Haj pilgrims are advised to be vaccinated against it before the pilgrimage. In Sri Lanka beta-thalassemia major is prevalent, and as most of these patients are subjected to splenectomy, pneumococcal vaccine should be given to them. Currently research work is being carried out for development of vaccines against rotavirus, streptococcal, and hepatitis A infection.
...
PMID:Improving child survival through immunisation. 814 30
The records of all admissions to a 6-bed pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) over a period of 6 years were reviewed. The age, diagnosis, clinical service provided, duration of stay and outcome were recorded. Of the 3025 children admitted, 2092 (69.2%) were males. Neonates constituted 13.1% (400) and infants 57.1% (1727) of total admissions. The duration of stay ranged from 6 hours to 46 days, and 61 patients stayed for longer than 13 days (long-stay patients). The most common cause for admission was septicemia, seen in 459 patients (14.8%); 418 (13.8%) children had congenital
heart disease
, 407 (13.5%) lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) and 261 (8.6%) meningitis. The most common conditions necessitating long-stay in the PICU were meningitis (20%), Landry-Guillain-Barre syndrome (16.6%), acute renal failure (20%), and septicemia (16.6%). There were 721 deaths giving a mortality of 23.5%. Of these 134 (18.6%) were due to septicemia, 103 (14.2%) due to congenital
heart disease
, 77 (10.6%) due to meningitis and 55 (7.6%) due to LRTI. The highest case fatality rate was seen with
encephalitis
(52.6%), followed by hepatic coma (51.3%), malignancies (43.2%), septicemia (29.1%) and meningitis (29.5%). The mortality was lower (9.8%) in long-stay patients than in short-stay patients (24.6%). There was gradual increase in proportion of cases requiring interventions including artificial ventilation (1% to 35%), peritoneal dialysis (1.5% to 11%), insertion of central venous pressure lines (0 to 10%), over the last 6 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The profile and outcome of patients admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit. 824 86
A 32-month-old spayed female Pug was referred for an MRI study due to convulsions. The MRI examination indicated
encephalitis
. However, echocardiography and pathological examinations revealed that this case had a ventricular septal defect and double chambered right ventricle which is a rare congenital
heart disease
in the dog. An anomalous muscle bundle crossed the right ventricular outflow tract, dividing the right ventricle into 2 chambers.
...
PMID:Double-chambered right ventricle in a dog. 1090 95
Central nervous system infections in adolescents range from the diffuse cerebritis of
encephalitis
to the regional inflammation of meningitis, and very focal disease of brain abscess. Clinical presentations reflect this wide spectrum, with
encephalitis
primarily characterized by altered mental status, meningitis by fever, headache, and neck stiffness, and brain abscess manifesting localizing findings.
Encephalitis
and viral meningitis are frequently caused by the seasonal enteroviruses and arboviruses, while most adolescent bacterial meningitis is due to Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus pneumoniae. The microbiology of brain abscess reflects underlying host risk factors. Gram-positive cocci are seen in patients with congenital
heart disease
, while respiratory flora including anaerobes are associated with sinus or otic disease. Lumbar puncture to characterize and culture the CSF remains the optimal test for the diagnosis and management of
encephalitis
and meningitis, while CT-guided needle biopsy may be both diagnostic and therapeutic for brain abscesses. New diagnostic tests include the use of PCR. A variety of safe and effective treatment regimens exists for most bacterial infections as well as for some herpesvirus infections. New vaccines are under study to further control bacterial meningitis.
...
PMID:Serious infections of the central nervous system: encephalitis, meningitis, and brain abscess. 1091 31
The purpose of our study was to determine the usefulness of echo-planar diffusion-weighted imaging (EPDI) in the evaluation of watershed hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in pediatric patients. Eighteen patients ranging in age from 3 weeks to 12 years were evaluated for evidence of ischemic/infarction changes on conventional MR and EPDI. Included in the study group were five patients with sickle cell disease, four with congenital
heart disease
, four with hypotensive episodes with various etiologies, three with sepsis, and two with
encephalitis
or meningitis. Patients were examined 2 h to 6 days after the initial insult, with follow-up studies in four patients at 1 to 62 days after the initial examination. After conventional MR imaging (T1, FSE T2, and FLAIR), diffusion-weighted MR imaging was performed using high-speed, single-shot EP techniques with TR 6000, TE 144, matrix 96 x 128, FOV 23.3 x 31 and five b values of 0, 160, 360, 640, and 1,000 s/mm2. EPDI demonstrated abnormally increased signal in watershed ischemic/infarction zones in all initial cases. Apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) were obtained in 59 lesions. When compared with radiographically normal (on EPDI) contralateral brain parenchyma, 45 demonstrated a relatively decreased ADC, while eight had normal ( +/- 10%) and six had increased ADC. In four cases, signal abnormalities on EPDI were not seen or exceeded that seen with conventional MR imaging. In the remaining cases, signal abnormalities were obvious on EPDI and more subtle on conventional MR imaging. Follow-up studies demonstrated resolution of abnormal EPDI signal with persistent abnormalities on conventional imaging in some cases, while others revealed an increase in size or number of EPDI signal abnormalities, suggesting ongoing acute ischemic/infarctive changes. EPDI is a rapid, sensitive technique for detecting watershed ischemic/infarction changes in pediatric patients with hypoperfusion episodes, at times before such changes are apparent on conventional MR images and/or are clinically apparent.
...
PMID:Diffusion-weighted imaging in the evaluation of watershed hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in pediatric patients. 1176 Jul 94
The objective of this work was to evaluate the most frequent causes of emergency in patients with Chagas disease. Between January 1998-January 1999, individuals with Chagas disease inside the shock-room of Santojanni Hospital in Buenos Aires city, were included in a prospective study. For the statistical analysis, X test with Yates correction has been used. From a total of 1.680 patients entered, there were 95 (6%) with reactive serology for Chagas disease. In 31 individuals the enter cause was syncope, in 28 cardiac insufficiency, in 18 acute coronary events, in 5 stroke, in 3 acute edema of hypertensive lung and in 2 acute
encephalitis
associated to AIDS. In conclusion, significant association has been observed between: 1) presence of
cardiopathy
and hospitalization, 2) cardiac insufficiency, syncope, acute
encephalitis
and mortality, 3)
cardiopathy
development and mortality and 4) origin place and mortality.
...
PMID:[Emergencies in patients with Chagas' disease in Buenos Aires city, Argentina]. 1261 43
Pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) is rarely diagnosed in cats, and the clinical features of the disease are not well known. PTE was diagnosed at postmortem examination in 17 cats, a prevalence of 0.06% over a 24-year period. The age of affected cats ranged from 10 months to 18 years, although young (<4 years) and old (>10 years) cats were more commonly affected than were middle-aged cats. Males and females were equally affected. The majority of cats with PTE (n = 16) had concurrent disease, which was often severe. The most common diseases identified in association with PTE were neoplasia, anemia of unidentified cause, and pancreatitis. Cats with glomerulonephritis,
encephalitis
, pneumonia,
heart disease
, and hepatic lipidosis were also represented in this study. Most cats with PTE demonstrated dyspnea and respiratory distress before death or euthanasia, but PTE was not recognized ante mortem in any cat studied. In conclusion, PTE can affect cats of any age and is associated with a variety of systemic and inflammatory disorders. It is recommended that the same clinical criteria used to increase the suspicion of PTE in dogs should also be applied to cats.
...
PMID:Pulmonary thromboembolism in cats. 1532 May 93
We report a case of infective endocarditis (IE) caused by an unusual micro-organism in a previously healthy young man. Our patient presented with meningo-
encephalitis
and embolic signs due to IE caused by Neisseria sicca. Risk factors for IE due to Neisseria sicca, such as intravenous drug use and pre-existing
heart disease
were absent. The patient recovered well after mitral valve surgery and antimicrobial therapy. IE due to Neisseria spp. is associated with embolic manifestations and valve destruction. However, no deaths have been reported in patients who are treated with appropriate antimicrobial and surgical therapy.
...
PMID:Severe infective endocarditis due to Neisseria sicca: case report and review of literature. 1724 Jul 41
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