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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The pathology of the heart following surgical correction for congenital cardiac defects has not been fully explored. This study is based on valvar aortic stenosis, atrioventricular septal defect, complete transposition of the great arteries, and Fallot's tetralogy. Emphasis has been put on preexistent gross pathology, with histological verification, and postoperative complications. Among patients with aortic valve stenosis preexistent anomalies dominated (left ventricular hypoplasia, mitral valve abnormalities, left ventricular
endocardial fibroelastosis
). The findings suggest that the cases represent an extreme within a spectrum and could explain the late postoperative dismal results in patients suffering from congenital left heart obstruction. In patients with atrioventricular septal defects the important pathology related predominantly to the operative procedure (injury to the atrioventricular bundle, patch dehiscence at the site of the atrioventricular node, inadequate repair of the left atrioventricular valve leaflets) and to pulmonary obstructive vascular disease. In complete transposition of the great arteries, with or without ventricular septal defects, technical problems dominated. Obstruction of the systemic and pulmonic venous pathways, atrial dysrhythmia, and tricuspid valve injury were the most serious complications following Mustard's procedure. The Rastelli-type procedure was complicated by degeneration and calcification of the porcine valve and crowding of the left ventricle. The arterial switch was complicated by abnormal origin and course of the left circumflex artery, which led to kinking and myocardial infarction. In Fallot's tetralogy surgical complications (injury to the atrioventricular bundle and the tricuspid valve) were the most important. The study discloses that the heart after surgery for congenital
heart disease
cannot be considered without taking preexistent pathology into account. Careful preoperative investigations are mandatory, since most anomalies could have been detected and, hence, might have changed the operative result.
...
PMID:The heart after surgery for congenital heart disease. 306 2
Cardiac transplantation represents an expanding therapeutic modality for end-stage
heart disease
in children and adolescents. During the past 5 years, 27 patients (15 boys; 12 girls) between the ages of 2 and 18 have undergone cardiac transplantation. The preoperative diagnosis was cardiomyopathy in 24 (six familial), congenital
heart disease
in two, and
endocardial fibroelastosis
in one. Immunosuppression included cyclosporine, azathioprine, and prednisone. There were 22 survivors, with four hospital deaths (three infection, one pulmonary hypertension), and one death at 4.5 years from graft atherosclerosis. The actuarial survival at 4 years was 83 +/- 7.4% and that at 5 years was 69 +/- 14.2%. Renal function was stable at 4 years, with an average creatinine clearance of 69.75 +/- 27.0 ml/min/m2. Hypertension was present in 21 of 22 patients, who require multiple drug therapy. Rehabilitation is 100% among discharged patients, with 14 in school, six employed, and two toddlers.
...
PMID:Cardiac transplantation in children and adolescents. 331 54
We describe a premature neonate with endocardial fibrosis associated with hydrops fetalis. The infant did not have any other
cardiac disorder
and expired with congestive heart failure when five days old.
Endocardial fibroelastosis
has been previously described in neonates but is rare and is usually associated with other cardiac malformations. In only two previous reports was
endocardial fibroelastosis
associated with hydrops and in both of these cases there were also valvular deformities. We also discuss the possible significance of this association.
...
PMID:Endocardial fibrosis and hydrops fetalis in a premature infant. 384 37
Left ventricular (LV) dimensions and function were assessed by echocardiography in 22 children with dilated cardiomyopathy. They had survived an initial episode of congestive heart failure in infancy for greater than or equal to 2 years. At the time of echocardiography, when they were 3 to 16 years old, 8 patients (Group 1) still had signs of dilated cardiomyopathy and 14 (Group 2) had lost all roentgenographic and electrocardiographic evidence of
heart disease
. All 8 patients in Group 1 (average follow-up 4.5 years) had significantly increased LV dimensions. The end-diastolic dimension averaged 144 +/- 18% of the normal value. Fractional LV shortening with systole was significantly reduced and averaged 23 +/- 3%. The E point-septal separation ranged from 7 to 17 mm (mean 12 +/- 4) and was far above the normal limit in all. Of the 14 patients in Group 2, seven (average follow-up 7 years) had normal ventricular dimensions and 7 (average follow-up 10 years) had LV dimensions larger than the upper range of the 95% prediction limit. In 6 of the latter patients the fractional LV shortening with systole was less than or equal to 31% and the E point-septal separation in excess of the upper limit of normal. These findings indicate that about half of the patients who had apparently recovered still had residual lesions as judged from the echocardiogram. In 6 patients in group 1, two-dimensional echo-cardiography allowed the visualization of a thickened endocardium. One of these 6 patients died. The echocardiographic image correlated well with the process of LV
endocardial fibroelastosis
found at necropsy.
...
PMID:Long-term echocardiographic assessment of dilated cardiomyopathy in children. 663 26
From April 1987 to September 1993, 60 infants underwent a Norwood operation for complex congenital
heart disease
including hypoplastic left heart syndrome (n = 41), ventricular septal defect and subaortic stenosis with aortic arch interruption/severe coarctation (n = 7), complex single right ventricle with subaortic stenosis (n = 8), critical aortic stenosis with
endocardial fibroelastosis
(n = 2), and malaligned primum atrial septal defect with coarctation (n = 2). Age at operation ranged from 1 day to 3.9 months (mean 9 days, median 3.5 days). The operative mortality (< 30 days) was 33% (20 patients). Late mortality was 17% (10 patients). Nine of the 20 (45%) operative deaths occurred during the first 2 days after the operation as a result of sudden hemodynamic instability. All four infants with premature closure of the foramen ovale had pulmonary lymphangiectasia and died of pulmonary failure. Seven operative deaths have occurred in 36 patients since 1990 (19%); in the past 2 years, no operative deaths have occurred in 22 patients. Overall, there are 30 long-term survivors (50%). Twenty-one of these 30 infants have undergone a two-stage repair with a modified Fontan operation at 7.3 to 27.6 months of age (mean 18.1 months) with no mortality. Six patients have entered a three-stage repair strategy by undergoing a hemi-Fontan procedure at 6.8 to 23.0 months (mean 8.8 months) with no mortality, and two of these patients have now had their modified Fontan operation at 23.0 to 46.7 months of age with no mortality (four are still awaiting surgery). Two patients have undergone a two-ventricle repair with a Rastelli procedure, with no mortality at 7.4 and 14.1 months of age. Early in our experience, infants undergoing the Norwood operation had a high early mortality most often related to sudden hemodynamic instability. After we instituted a protocol that adds carbon dioxide to the inspired gas during postoperative mechanical ventilation, the postoperative course became more stable and there have been no operative deaths. In summary, the operative mortality for the Norwood operation continues to improve. A subsequent Fontan operation can be performed with excellent clinical results.
...
PMID:The Norwood operation and subsequent Fontan operation in infants with complex congenital heart disease. 771 12
Paediatric cardiac transplantation (pHTX) has gained widespread acceptance as a therapy in end-stage myocardial failure and some forms of congenital
heart disease
, particularly hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS). The major problems to the anaesthesiologist in these patients are induction of anaesthesia in infants with HLHS and treatment of pulmonary hypertension in the early post-bypass period. PATIENTS AND METHODS. Anaesthesia for pHTX was performed in 15 children < 1 year of age (4-237 days); 12 suffered from HLHS, 2 from
endocardial fibroelastosis
, and 1 from dilatative cardiomyopathy. Induction of anaesthesia in patients with HLHS IS a challenge to the anaesthesiologist, as he has to maintain the delicate balance between pulmonary and systemic blood flow. Anaesthesia was induced with fentanyl (10-15 micrograms/kg) and pancuronium (0.2-0.4 mg/kg) and maintained with fentanyl (total dosage 70-100 micrograms/kg). Modification of ventilatory parameters such as FiO2, PaCO2, and airway pressure (PEEP, I:E ratio) was used to influence systemic and pulmonary blood distribution in the pre-bypass period according to changes in haemodynamics (target: O2 saturation approximately 75%-80%, PaCO2 45-50 mmHg). Treatment of pulmonary hypertension in the weaning and early post-bypass period consisted of respiratory (PaCO2 < 30 mmHg) and metabolic alkalinisation (pH 7.45-7.55, BE > +3 mmol/l), the use of prostaglandin E1 (3-6-12 micrograms/kg.h), and the phosphodiesterase inhibitor enoximone (10-15 micrograms/kg.min). Additional positive inotropic support was achieved with dobutamine (5-10 micrograms/kg.min), adrenaline (0.1-0.5 micrograms/kg.min), and/or orciprenaline (0.1-0.2 micrograms/kg.min) and calcium chloride (25-100 mg/kg). RESULTS. Two children died intraoperatively and 1 on the 1st postoperative day from overwhelming pulmonary vascular resistance and right ventricular failure. Three children died between 3 and 4 weeks postoperatively, 1 from cytomegalovirus infection, 1 from sepsis, and 1 from acute rejection. Nine patients survived and are well up to 5.5 years after transplantation. CONCLUSION. Pulmonary hypertension in the weaning and early post-bypass period is the main anaesthesiological problem of pHTX, particularly in children with HLHS. A polypragmatic approach to this problem consisting of alkalinisation, pulmonary vasodilatation, and inotropic support is presented and seems to be effective. Further improvements in concepts of pHTX are limited by the lack of donor organs. Though the experience with pHTX in neonates and infants is growing slowly, it might be a routine procedure from the anaesthesiological point of view within a few years in some selected centres.
...
PMID:[Anesthesia for heart transplantation in newborn and suckling infants. Special aspects of the hypoplastic left heart syndrome]. 778 53
Familial cases of childhood congestive cardiomyopathy with X linked recessive inheritance and abnormalities of heart muscle mitochondria have been previously reported. We report here three families with possible X linked congestive cardiomyopathy and specific mitochondrial abnormalities. The
heart disorder
presented as
endocardial fibroelastosis
with neonatal death in two brothers in one family, and as heart failure and death in infancy in two brothers in the other two families. In one family a maternal uncle may also have been affected. Pyodermia and neutropenia was reported in one of the boys. Electron microscopy of heart muscle after necropsy showed increased numbers of mitochondria and abnormal mitochondrial crystal condensations and paracrystalline inclusions in all sibships. Barth's syndrome has been mapped to Xq28 and includes cardiomyopathy, skeletal muscle myopathy, neutropenia, and mitochondrial abnormalities similar to those found in the three families reported here. Since the clinical picture differed in the three families, they may represent more than one entity.
...
PMID:Possible X linked congenital mitochondrial cardiomyopathy in three families. 848 69
Fetal echocardiography has recently caused an impact on the treatment of congenital
heart disease
and in the field of therapeutic, cardiological intervention. The present study reports on a case of critical aortic stenosis, diagnosed in utero at 27 weeks' gestation, and in which balloon dilatation was attempted to improve the poor prognosis associated with this condition. Since the endocardium at this stage of development was apparently normal, this therapeutic intervention was attempted to avoid irreversible damage to the left ventricle. Although hydrops disappeared and the myocardium hypertrophied,
endocardial fibroelastosis
progressed and the neonate died within the first day of life, after surgical aortic valvotomy. More data are necessary to clarify whether
endocardial fibroelastosis
is really a consequence of high pressure in the left ventricle resulting from stenosis of the aortic valve or whether it is a disease, the progression of which is unavoidable once it takes hold.
...
PMID:Balloon dilatation of the aortic valve in the fetus. A case report. 882 12
The case records of 151 dogs diagnosed with congenital
heart disease
were reviewed retrospectively. The most common defect was aortic stenosis, accounting for 35 per cent of all cases, followed by pulmonic stenosis (20 per cent), ventricular septal defect (12 per cent), patent ductus arteriosus (11 per cent), mitral valve dysplasia (8 per cent), tricuspid valve dysplasia (7 per cent),
endocardial fibroelastosis
(1.9 per cent) and tetralogy of Fallot (0.6 per cent). Fifty-one breeds were represented, with golden retrievers, German shepherd dogs and boxers predominating. No overall sex predilection was obvious. Seventy-five per cent of the dogs were asymptomatic at presentation. The defects most often associated with presenting symptoms, such as dyspnoea, syncope, ascites, failure to grow and depression, were mitral valve dysplasia, atrial septal defect, tricuspid valve dysplasia and
endocardial fibroelastosis
. The latter presented with the most severe signs of heart failure. In some cases of aortic stenosis and pulmonic stenosis, where the defect could not be accurately visualised with two-dimensional echocardiography, Doppler echocardiographic examination was needed for definitive diagnosis.
...
PMID:Retrospective study of congenital heart defects in 151 dogs. 909 39
Endocardial fibroelastosis
is an uncommon congenital
heart disease
in dogs that may be manifested by signs of left-sided congestive heart failure. A three-month-old, male, Fila Brasileiro dog developed signs of generalised heart failure. Physical examination revealed normal temperature, ascites, and pale and cyanotic mucous membranes. The pup died just after radiography which revealed ascites, hepatomegaly, severe cardiac enlargement and pulmonary oedema. At necropsy, serosanguineous fluid in the thorax and abdomen, pulmonary oedema, right ventricular dilatation, hypertrophy and dilatation of the left ventricle, and mitral valve incompetence were observed. The histopathological examination demonstrated that the thickening of the endocardium of the left atrium and left ventricle was due to the presence of elastic and collagen fibres, although there were no signs of an inflammatory process.
...
PMID:Endocardial fibroelastosis in a dog. 912 86
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