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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this report we study the value of ambulatory transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in the clinical setting after a 2-year experience at our department. Since December 1988 until February 1991, 470 TEE examinations were indicated in 430 patients. Excluded were 8 cases, two out of them due to a formal contraindication and six who did not tolerate the procedure. The clinical indications for the examination, in the 462 studies performed, were as follows: possible cardiac source of emboli in 165 (35%); native mitral valve disease in 91 (20%); prosthetic valve dysfunction in 54 (12%); diseases of the aorta in 44 (10%); suspected infective
endocarditis
in 41 (9%); study of left ventricular function in 26 (6%); congenital
heart disease
in 18 (4%); tumor or intracardiac mass in 11 (2%); miscellaneous in 12 (2%). Based on this experience, we can conclude that TEE is a clinically useful technique for: 1) the study of mitral regurgitation, either native or prosthetic; 2) the detection of vegetations and abscesses in infective
endocarditis
; 3) the evaluation of a possible cardiac source of emboli; 4) the examination of the aorta in cases of suspected dissection; 5) the completion of the anatomic study in some congenital heart diseases, particularly after a surgical correction; 6) the study of patients with a technically inadequate transthoracic approach.
...
PMID:[Ambulatory transesophageal echocardiography: 2 years of experience]. 175 25
Cardiac diseases
of cattle may involve valvular structures, myocardium, pericardium, or blood vessels and are manifested by the clinical signs of cardiac dysrhythmias, cardiac murmurs, generalized edema, muffled heart sounds, jugular venous distention, jugular venous pulsations, pulmonary edema, pleural effusion, or ascites. Digoxin, quinidine, and furosemide can be used effectively to control signs of CHF and cardiac arrhythmias. Combination antimicrobial therapy can be successful for cows with infective
endocarditis
and thrombophlebitis. Pericardial fluid drainage may temporarily improve cattle with traumatic pericarditis or lymphosarcoma so that short-term goals may be reached.
...
PMID:Treatment of cardiovascular disease in cattle. 176 Jul 59
Thrombus formation in the left atrium and left ventricle is primarily due to stasis of blood which causes activation of the coagulation system. Migration of thrombotic material into the circulation depends on the dynamic forces of the circulation. Atrial fibrillation is the commonest underlying
cardiac disorder
predisposing to thromboembolism. Rheumatic mitral stenosis, left atrial enlargement, prior myocardial infarction, hypertension, and echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy are risk factors for thromboembolic stroke in elderly patients with chronic atrial fibrillation. Non-valvular atrial fibrillation accounts for 45% of cardiac sources of thromboembolic stroke and includes patients with ischemic heart disease, hypertension, thyrotoxic
heart disease
, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, chronic sinoatrial disorder, and idiopathic atrial fibrillation. 15% of cardiac sources of thromboembolic stroke are associated with acute myocardial infarction, 10% with left ventricular aneurysm and mural thrombi remote from an acute myocardial infarction, 10% with rheumatic valvular heart disease, and 10% with prosthetic cardiac valves. Mitral valve prolapse, mitral annular calcium, nonischemic cardiomyopathies, infective
endocarditis
, nonbacterial thrombotic
endocarditis
, left atrial myxoma, paradoxical embolism associated with congenital
heart disease
, calcific aortic stenosis, and complex atherosclerotic plaque within the proximal aorta also contribute to thromboembolism.
...
PMID:Etiology and pathogenesis of thromboembolism. 176 43
67Ga imaging was performed in sixteen patients (age: 8 m.-18 y.) who had persistent fever and positive acute phase reactants after surgery for congenital
heart disease
. Abnormal uptake of 67Ga over the heart and the lungs was evaluated with a computer. Abnormal uptake of 67Ga was observed in seven patients, three of them showed it in the area of peripheral pulmonary artery and another four showed it in the area of artificial vessels for pulmonary artery reconstruction. In six patients with positive blood cultures, five showed abnormal uptake of 67Ga and in ten patients with negative blood cultures, two showed it. Vegetation was detected with 2D-echocardiography in four patients and all of them showed abnormal uptake of 67Ga, while in 12 patients without vegetation three showed it. In conclusion, 67Ga imaging was useful to detect the foci of infective endoarteritis or pulmonary embolism caused by the vegetation in infective
endocarditis
in the patients after surgery for congenital
heart disease
, especially in the peripheral pulmonary arteries and artificial vessels which could not be detected with 2D-echo.
...
PMID:[67Ga imaging in the patients with infective endocarditis after surgery for congenital heart disease]. 177 Jun 43
33 patients with infective
endocarditis
were treated from 1980 to 1989. 31 of them were operated on for primary
endocarditis
complicated by congenital
heart disease
(5 patients) and valvular heart disease (26 patients). Two patients (6.5%) died postoperatively and 2 patients with primary
endocarditis
complicated by aortic insufficiency died without operation. In 10 patients with
endocarditis
secondary to open-heart surgery, 6 were reoperated upon but 5 of them died; in the remaining 4 who were not reoperated on died. We consider that surgical intervention for
endocarditis
, either primary or postoperative, should be taken as early as possible after a short period of ineffectiveness of antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:[Surgical intervention of infective endocarditis]. 181 19
Thirty-two patients with native valve infective
endocarditis
who presented over a 10-year period at our hospital were analyzed retrospectively. The presenting symptom was a persistent fever in 22 patients. In 30 patients, the New York Heart Association functional class was less than II before the development of
endocarditis
. Blood cultures were positive on all occasions in 24 out of 29 culture-positive patients. All of the viridans streptococci, accounting for 79% of the isolated pathogens, were highly susceptible to ampicillin. Treatment consisted of a 6 week course of antibiotics, usually ampicillin, at a dose of 12 grams/day. In 9 cases, we had to change or stop the antibiotics because of severe side effects. The longer the period before making a diagnosis, the more severe were the symptoms of congestive heart failure and the more frequent was the incidence of cerebral hemorrhage. To initiate treatment as early as possible, in order to minimize valve destruction and to reduce the risk of cerebral hemorrhage, serial blood cultures are recommended in patients with valvular heart disease or congenital
heart disease
and a persistent fever, with minimal cardiac symptoms.
...
PMID:Native valve infective endocarditis in adults--analysis of 32 consecutive cases over a ten-year period from 1980 to 1989. 182 92
Archibald Garrod was apparently the first to document congenital
heart disease
as a component of Down syndrome. This arose from his interest in fetal
endocarditis
, a theoretical cause of cardiac malformations, in vogue roughly from 1840-1940, that drew its strength from analogies with rheumatic heart disease in adults. Garrod's discovery sheds light not only on nineteenth century ideas about teratology, but also on his methodology, genius, and approaches that, in many ways, foreshadowed the techniques that guided his later work on inborn errors.
...
PMID:Sir A. E. Garrod, congenital heart disease in Down syndrome, and the doctrine of fetal endocarditis. 183 62
Primary care pediatric cardiology is principally concerned with prevention of
heart disease
and early detection of existing disease. One of the clinician's major resources for practice is tables of normal values. These include tables for height, weight, heart rate, respiratory rate, BP, and cholesterol. A second resource is the recommendations for preventive treatment of RF and infective
endocarditis
. The clinician also must have a preventive attitude toward practice and be able to maintain vigilance of "well" children for years in order to help prevent illnesses that constitute the nation's most prevalent threat of mortality.
...
PMID:A primary care focus on pediatric cardiology. 184 Sep 30
Infective endocarditis is a serious disease and should be, if possible, prevented. Two risk groups are classified in relation to the patient's underlying cardiac lesions. At high risk are patients with prosthetic valves or with a previous infective
endocarditis
. Patients with congenital and acquired
heart disease
, mitral valve prolapse with regurgitation and hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy are at moderate risk. Patients of these two groups should receive antibiotic prophylaxis before dental or surgical procedures that cause bacteremia. For patients at moderate risk a single dose of an orally administered antibiotic should be given one hour before the procedure (e.g. amoxicillin 3 g for procedures of the oropharyngeal, gastrointestinal or genitourinary tract, where the causitive agents of
endocarditis
are Viridans streptococci or enterococci). Multiple doses are recommended for patients at high risk. The combination of amoxicillin and gentamicin (vancomycin and gentamicin in penicillin-allergic patients) offers the widest margin of safety in high-risk patients.
...
PMID:[Antibiotic prevention of bacterial endocarditis]. 185 64
Two-dimensional echocardiography has had a significant impact on and is considered the technique of choice for the diagnosis and management of infective
endocarditis
. Over a thirty-six month period, 106 patients were evaluated by echocardiography for the possibility of
endocarditis
. The diagnosis of
endocarditis
was determined by strict clinical and laboratory criteria. All clinical histories, blood cultures, echocardiograms, and autopsy results were reviewed. Five echocardiograms were technically inadequate, resulting in a study population of 101 patients. The age of the patients ranged from forty-five days to eighty-eight years (mean fifty-seven years). The clinical manifestations of
endocarditis
included fever (83%), chills (60%), congestive heart failure (25%), and splenomegaly (18%). Twelve patients had preexisting valvular or congenital
heart disease
. Gram-positive cocci were the most common microorganisms. Complications included mitral regurgitation, subarachnoid hemorrhage, renal infarction, stroke, and a pulmonary embolus. The patients were divided into two groups: Group I consisted of 36 patients with definite vegetations by echocardiography, and Group II had 65 patients with no vegetations. In Group I, acute infective
endocarditis
was present in 35 patients, whereas only 4 patients had
endocarditis
in Group II. The sensitivity of two-dimensional echocardiography for detecting
endocarditis
was 90%. The specificity was 98%. The predictive accuracy for a positive test was 97%, and the predictive accuracy for a negative test was 94%. Thus, two-dimensional echocardiography appears to have a high sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value in the evaluation of patients with suspected
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:The role of two-dimensional echocardiology in the diagnosis of infective endocarditis [corrected]. 186 15
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