Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three cases of brain abscess following an occlusion of the internal carotid artery were reported. Case 1: A 6-year-old girl with congenital
heart disease
was admitted with headache, disturbance of consciousness and left hemiparesis. Right carotid angiography revealed an occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. After 6 months, she was readmitted with high fever. CT scan revealed a low density area and a ring-like shadow at the same site of cerebral infarction. Case 2: A 69-year-old man was admitted in semicoma and with right hemiplegia. Left angiography revealed an occlusion of the left internal carotid artery. After 2 months, a brain abscess was noted in the infarcted area. Case 3: A 20-year-old man with congenital
heart disease
, was admitted due to headache, vomiting and high fever. CT scan revealed a brain abscess in the right frontal lobe. Carotid angiography showed bilateral internal carotid artery occlusion. We concluded that diminution of cerebral oxygen and
encephalomalacia
are predisposing factors to the evolution of brain abscess.
...
PMID:[Brain abscess (Part 5)--Brain abscess following internal carotid occlusion (author's transl)]. 49 56
Brain abscess is a serious complication of congenital cyanotic
heart disease
. We retrospectively evaluated the risk factors for brain abscess in 21 such patients treated between 1975 and 1990 in comparison with a control group. The mean arterial oxygen saturation, arterial partial pressure of O2, arterial blood oxygen content, and base excess in patients with brain abscess were significantly lower than in the control patients. The mean arterial partial pressure of CO2, pH, hematocrit, hemoglobin, and red blood cell content in patients with brain abscess were not significantly different. Patients with congenital cyanotic
heart disease
may develop minute
encephalomalacia
due to severe hypoxemia and increased blood viscosity resulting from compensatory polycythemia. The increased blood viscosity and reduced blood flow in the microcirculation may induce cerebral thrombosis or exaggerate minute
encephalomalacia
during dehydration or cardiac dysfunction, and shunted blood containing infectious organisms at such sites may be followed by focal cerebritis.
...
PMID:Risk factors for brain abscess in patients with congenital cyanotic heart disease. 138 54
A Blalock-Taussig-anastomosis was performed at the age of 2 years in a boy with transposition of the great arteries, ventricular septal defect, and pulmonary atresia. Nine years later he developed a transient aphasia. Cranial computed tomography (CT-scan) revealed a structure compatible with brain abscess. The boy was conscious and no neurological deficit was found. Initial therapy consisted of Ampicillin, Tobramycin, and Metronidazole, 12 days later an acute hemiplegia developed. 30 ml of pus were aspirated from the brain abscess, and the boy's condition dramatically improved. Streptococcus milleri was found bacteriologically and antibiotic therapy was continued over six weeks. Serial CT-scans during and after therapy demonstrated disappearance of the brain abscess. The presented case shows that after a shunt procedure in cyanotic
heart disease
right-to-left-shunting and therefore chronic oxygen desaturation and polycythemia are still present as facilitating factors for focal
encephalomalacia
, cerebritis, and brain abscess. In case of short duration of neurological symptoms and a size of abscess less than 4 cm in diameter antibiotic therapy without total excision may eliminate the infection.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of a brain abscess with antibiotics and drainage puncture in an 11-year-old boy with a complex cyanotic heart defect]. 358 39
Over 60 entries in the genetic catalog have cardiomyopathy features--32 autosomal dominant, 35 autosomal recessive and X-linked. Over 40 present in, or can have survival into, adult life. Major clinicopathologic categories of these cardiomyopathic disorders included: sudden death (13 entities); cardiac conduction disturbance important feature; associated myopathy or motor dysfunction; storage diseases with cardiac involvement; cardiac amyloidoses; and, other categories. Genes, abnormality of which can cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), have been identified on chromosomes 1, 14 and 15, the locus on chromosome 14 involving the B-myosin heavy chain gene, but at least one unidentified locus is known to exist and there is a suggestive locus on chromosome 16, so that HCM is not a single disease but a group of disorders with clinicopatholopic similarities. To investigate these aspects of HCM in some detail, sixty-six patients with "sharply demarcated" differential myocardial fiber bundle hypertrophy (DMBH), considered to be of significant degree, from a pediatric autopsy data base of approximately 8,000 cases, were reviewed. Twenty-three of the patients died suddenly, without antecedent significant cardiac dysfunction, seven had clinical congestive heart failure of varying duration, three were stillborn, six showed evidence of aspiration of amniotic sac content (three had history of fetal distress), five had ischemic bowel disease, three (two with clinical cerebral palsy and one with Ondine's curse syndrome) had cerebral atrophy and sclerosis and one had extensive more acute
encephalomalacia
, and a variety of other major "causes of death" were present. Whether all infants and children with DMBH meeting the criteria used, who do not have congenital
heart disease
, have dominant hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) cannot be established by studies of this type, but the "concentration" of a gene or genes for HCM in pediatric autopsy series because the strong effect of HCM on life expectancy is relevant to this possibility. The data raise the question that stillbirth, fetal distress with aspiration of amniotic sac content, ischemic bowel disease and cerebral atrophy and sclerosis may be hitherto underappreciated features of HCM in childhood, and that patients with HCM may be peculiarly liable to die with certain types of septic shock, such as acute meningococcemia. In the material of this study, sudden death was statistically more frequent in females than in males in childhood (p < .029).
...
PMID:Cardiomyopathy in childhood and adult life, with emphasis on hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. 783 Nov 49
A 19-year-old woman with congenital cyanotic
heart disease
(Epstein anomaly and ventricular septal defect) had persistent headaches and intermittent fever for five weeks. Physical examination revealed central cyanosis, finger clubbing and fever. The leucocyte count was elevated. Cerebral MR imaging showed the characteristic features of brain abscesses in the right frontal lobe, including multiloculation with adjacent satellite lesions, ring enhancement, T1-hyperintense and T2-hypointense signal areas within the abscess rim, as well as hypointense internal concentric rings on T2-weighted images. The diagnosis of brain abscesses was confirmed by craniotomy and pus drainage. She made a good recovery with a combination of antibiotics and surgery. Follow-up CT scans showed only changes of
encephalomalacia
at the healed abscess site. The aetiology, clinical features, and the role of CT and MR imaging in the diagnosis and management of brain abscess are discussed.
...
PMID:Clinics in diagnostic imaging (51). Multiloculated cerebral abscesses due to paradoxical cardiac emboli. 1102 6