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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The echocardiographically recorded movement of the aortic root was studied by analysing the relation between posterior aortic wall motion and other intracardiac events. The systolic anterior movement of the aortic root continued beyond aortic valve closure and in cases with
mitral regurgitation
began significantly earlier than in normal subjects. The diastolic rapid posterior movement began after mitral valve opening but did not occur in patients with mitral stenosis. The total amplitude of aortic root motion was increased in patients with
mitral regurgitation
, diminished in cases of mitral stenosis, and was normal with aortic regurgitation. In patients with atrioventricular block an abrupt posterior movement followed the P wave of the electrocardiogram irrespective of its timing in diastole. These observations correlate with the expected changes in left atrial volume during the cardiac cycle both in the normal subjects and patients with
heart disease
. The results support the hypothesis that phasic changes in left atrial dimension are largely responsible for the echocardiographically observed movement of the aortic root and indicate a potential role for echocardiography in the analysis of left atrial events.
...
PMID:Aortic root and left atrial wall motion. An echocardiographic study. 91 59
A servocontrol system was developed to regulate a single roller pump left atrial-aortic (La-A) assist device. Responsiveness of the servomechanism to blood volume changes, myocardial damage, and
mitral regurgitation
was evaluated in 5 sheep and 6 dogs. Myocardial damage was induced by occlusion of coronary arteries. and the hemodynamic effects of La-A assistance were evaluated. While La-A assistance reduced left atrial pressures to low levels, the left ventricular end-diastolic pressure remained elevated in the severely damaged heart. LaA-assistance was used in 3 patients. Two were weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass after failure of intraaortic balloon counterpulsation, and 1 is a long-term survivor. The third was supported for 48 hours after attempt repair of complex congenital
heart disease
. The servocontrol device added to the safety of prolonged La-A assistance. This mode of assistance should be considered when intraaortic balloon counterpulsation has failed.
...
PMID:A servocontrolled atrial-aortic assist device: experimental findings and clinical experience. 99 80
In 167 patients with congenital and acquired
heart disease
(ventricular septum defect (VSD), atrial septum defect (ASD), mitral stenosis (MS),
mitral insufficiency
(MI), combined mitral stenosis and insufficiency (MV) aortic stenosis (AS), aortic insufficiency (AI), combined aortic stenosis and insufficiency (AV), idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (HOK) hemodynamic measures (arterial pressure, right and left heart pressures, cardiac output, cardiac index, stroke volume, cardiac work), left ventricular volumes (endiastolic volume, endsystolic volume, ejection fraction, regurgitant flow) and diastolic pressure-volume relationships (on the basis of diastolic pressure-volume changes) were determined during routine right and left heart catheterization and left ventriculography. 1...
...
PMID:[Hemodynamics, left ventricular volumes and compliance in 167 patients with congenital and acquired heart disease (author's transl)]. 120 78
Coronary- and LV-angiography in coronary heart disease are indicated I) to clarify whether or not surgery is required (e.g. aorto-coronary-bypass operation, aneurysmectomy) in 1) drug resistent angina pectoris, 2) myocardial aneurysms (or the suspicion of), 3) VSD following myocardial infarction and/or 4) as preoperative investigations in
mitral regurgitation
or 5) other valve lesions. II) These investigations are furthermore indicated in the under-50-yr.-old considering their prognosis and diagnosis 1) following myocardial infarction 2) to clarify a pathological exercise test with or without angina pectoris 3) in the differential diagnosis of myocardial diseases and 4) occasionally in patients with a number of risk factors or exposed to particular occupational hazards or from families with a high incidence of early deaths from
heart disease
. Coronary- and LV-angiography are contraindicated in 1) generalized stenosing atherosclerosis, 2) acute myocardial infarction, 3) failure from other organ-systems (e.g. kidney), 4) drug resistent endogenous risk factors and/or relevant obesity, 5) biological age over 60-65.6) continued nicotine dependence. In many cases the specific diagnostic investigations will include the assessment of coronary flow at rest and during maximal drug induced coronary dilatation. This enables us to estimate the coronary reserve and to diagnose coronary insufficiency in patients with normal coronary angiograms.- Instructive morphological and/or functional results illustrate this presentation.
...
PMID:[Indications for coronary arteriography and left ventriculography in coronary heart disease (author's transl)]. 125 Nov 19
Simultaneous measurements of left ventricular dimension and wall thickness by echocardiography, and of pressure by micromanometer, were made at cardiac catheterization in 30 patients with
heart disease
, in order to study mechanisms of impairment of left ventricular systolic function. Echocardiograms and pressure traces were digitized so that continuous measurements of left ventricular wall thickness and dimensions with their rates of change could be obtained. Ejection fraction was estimated from digitized cineangiograms. In all patients, except those with severe
mitral regurgitation
, there was close correlation (r=0.92) between peak left ventricular dP/dt and peak rate of reduction of dimension. Myocardial power values, calculated as the product of circumferential shortening rates and wall stress were plotted throughout the cardiac cycle, and peak values in patients with normal left ventricular function were in the range 30 to 60 mW cm-3 myocardium. Pressure-dimension loops were constructed, which reflected the relation between the function of a localized region of cavity studied by echocardiography and that of the ventricle as a whole in the pressure wave form. Incoordinate contraction was associated with distortion of the loop and a reduction in its area to less than 75% that of the maximum for the cycle in question (cycle efficiency). In patients with left ventricular disease, ejection fraction, peak power, and cycle efficiency were all reduced, either singly or in combination. There was no consistent pattern, however, suggesting that clinical left ventricular disease may be the resultant of a number of different types of disturbance. These include structural abnormalities, reduction in peak rates of myocardial shortening or power development, and incoordinate contraction. The present investigation suggests ways in which these may be separated and studied in individual patients.
...
PMID:Assessment of left ventricular systolic function in man from simultaneous echocardiographic and pressure measurements. 125
Pulmonary varix is a rare finding; only 35 documented cases have been reported. The first case was described in 1843 as an icidental postmortem finding. The first clinical diagnosis was not made until 1951. In more than half of the 35 cases, the varix was present in the absence of congenital and acquired
heart disease
. Six patients have had concomitant mitral rheumatic heart disease. This communication describes the second patient with rheumatic
mitral regurgitation
in whom the pulmonary varix became radiographically invisible after prosthetic mitral valve replacement.
...
PMID:Pulmonary varix regression after mitral valve replacement. 126 59
The clinical profile of 28 consecutive patients admitted with infective endocarditis (IE) between 1987 and 1988 was studied. There were 21 males and seven females with a mean age of 24 +/- 11 years. Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) was the commonest underlying disease (68%) followed by congenital
heart disease
(CHD).
Mitral regurgitation
with aortic regurgitation were the commonest valvular lesions (47%) in those with RHD while ventricular septal defect was the commonest (43%) in those with CHD. A younger age of onset, complicated course and high mortality were seen in these six patients with acute IE. Persistently positive blood cultures during life or at autopsy were obtained in 21%. Strep viridans was the commonest isolate and was often resistant to streptomycin. 2D echocardicgram revealed vegetations in 96% of patients, the aortic valve (39%) being more commonly affected than the mitral valve (11%). ESR of more than 20 mm drop 1st hour (Wintrobe) was seen in 96%. Thrombophlebitis was a common complication of therapy and cloxacillin the commonest drug implicated. A mortality of 21% as a result of refractory congestive heart failure (CHF) (50%), uncontrolled sepsis (33%) and embolic events (17%) was seen. A rising incidence of culture negative IE, combined aortic and mitral valve disease and CHF is noted.
...
PMID:Changing spectrum of clinical and laboratory profile of infective endocarditis. 130 28
Among 388 cases of congenital
heart disease
with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from September 1990 to February 1992, we came across two cases of Ebstein's anomaly. They had been previously diagnosed as Ebstein's anomaly by echocardiography and cinecardioangiography. The first case was a three-year-old boy with complex congenital
heart disease
that included Ebstein's anomaly, a double-outlet right ventricle, pulmonary hypertension, tricuspid regurgitation,
mitral regurgitation
, a ventricular septal defect and an atrial septal defect. The second was a 13-year-old boy who also had Ebstein's anomaly, but had received a tricuspid valve replacement at the age of five. In Ebstein's anomaly, we found that MRI offers exquisite endocardial and epicardial details. We anticipate that in the future MRI will help to eliminate invasive studies.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of Ebstein's anomaly: report of two cases. 136 45
Clinical data from 186 patients (133 males and 53 females) with 190 episodes of infective endocarditis (IE) occurring between January 1981 and July 1991 were studied retrospectively at a large referral hospital in Northern India with the intention of highlighting certain essential differences from those reported in the West. The mean age was much lower (25 +/- SD 12 years, range 2 to 75 years). Rheumatic heart disease was the most frequent underlying heart lesion accounting for 79 patients (42%). This was followed by congenital
heart disease
in 62 (33%) and normal valve endocarditis in 17 (9%). Twenty-four patients had either aortic regurgitation (n = 15) or
mitral regurgitation
(n = 9) of uncertain etiology. Prosthetic valve infection and mitral valve prolapse were present in only 2 patients each. A definite predisposing factor could be identified in only 28 patients (15%). Postabortal sepsis and sepsis related to childbirth accounted for 6 and 5 cases, respectively. Only 1 patient had history of intravenous drug abuse. Two-dimensional echocardiography showed vegetations in 121 patients (64%). Blood cultures were positive in only 87 (47%), with a total of 90 microbial isolates. Commonest infecting organisms were staphylococci (37 cases) and streptococci (34 cases). Except for a significantly higher number of patients with neurologic complications in the culture-negative group, there were no differences between patients with culture-positive and culture-negative IE. Of the 190 episodes of IE, the patients had received antibiotics before admission in 110 (58%) instances. A significantly greater number of culture-negative patients had received antibiotics than did culture-positive patients (87 vs 23, p < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Active infective endocarditis observed in an Indian hospital 1981-1991. 144 18
In an 82-year-old female case of endocardial cushion defect (ECD), a systolic regurgitant murmur was heard at the apex, and her ECG showed atrial fibrillation without right bundle branch block or left axis deviation. An echocardiogram demonstrated atrial septal defect (ASD) and a cleft of the anterior mitral leaflet with calcification. She died of refractory congestive heart failure. Autopsy revealed ECD (intermediate type) with mitral and tricuspid cleft, and ASD (ostium primum type, 2.0 x 1.0 cm in diameter). In addition, mitral ring calcification and calcification of the cleft mitral valve was disclosed, causing mitral stenosis in addition to
mitral regurgitation
due to the cleft mitral valve. This was the second oldest Japanese autopsy case of ECD. We concluded that echocardiographic examinations, including color flow imaging, in aged patients with heart murmur are necessary to confirm the diagnosis of congenital
heart disease
in the aged.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of endocardial cushion defect (ECD) in an 82-year-old female]. 150 14
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