Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The symptoms in myasthenia gravis are mainly due to reduced function of skeletal muscle. But some patients, especially those with a thymoma, have symptoms or signs of myasthenia-related heart disease. Some of our patients with histological myocarditis have died suddenly and unexpectedly. The frequency of electrocardiographic abnormalities among myasthenic patients has increased. Patients with myasthenia gravis should be subjected to cardiac monitoring after thymic surgery and during myasthenic crisis and other severe illnesses. If clinical examination leads to suspicion of myocarditis, the patient should receive immunosuppressive therapy.
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PMID:[Heart disease in myasthenia gravis]. 233 46

The purpose of this study was to investigate, if besides the hypocontractility, which is the main finding in Primary Cardiomyopathy (PDC) there was some other mechanism in the development of heart failure and if this fact could influence in it's prognosis. We studied 13 patients with PDC in the hemodynamic cardiac laboratory from January 1982 to January 1988, these with systemic arterial hypertension. Coronary heart disease, myocarditis, primary valvular lesion, infiltrative disease, nephropathy, congenital heart disease, diabetes and alcoholism, were excluded. The control group was formed by 12 healthy subjects, which were studied for another purpose. We analyzed nine variables, including ejection fraction, peripheral vascular resistance, systolic and diastolic circumferential stress, left ventricular mass, left ventricular end diastolic and systolic volumes as well as force-velocity and force-fiber length relationship. The patients were followed up from 8 to 60 months (average 39 months). The cases with PDC were divided in two groups, "compensated" and "decompensated". The last ones with low ejection fraction and significantly increases systolic stress. We investigated which was the mechanism of compensation and decompensation through the force-velocity and force-fiber length relation. We found that compensation is associated with great increase of the after-load forces, the more end systolic volume at the end of the systole is not only controlled by the "force", but the decompensation is developed when the hypocontractility is added to the incompetence to compensate the after load. We found that the three deaths in this study had these hemodynamic characteristics, being the cause of death: the presence of heart failure in two patients and ventricular fibrillation in one.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Prognostic indexes in primary dilated cardiomyopathy]. 234 26

Heart disease responsive to steroids is well described in many disorders, including sarcoidosis, systemic lupus erythematosus, polyarteritis nodosa, myocarditis and Churg-Strauss syndrome. The underlying disorder is often obvious and the response is usually slow. We describe a woman who had severe left ventricular failure, cardiac dilatation and pericardial effusion which were rapidly rectified by steroid therapy. Steroid withdrawal led to recurrence of signs, which were reversed by recommencing steroids. The aetiology was not determined.
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PMID:Steroid responsive cardiomyopathy. 239 29

The incidence of autoantibodies against human conducting tissue was studied in 45 pacemaker patients with sick sinus syndrome (SSS), in 17 patients with bradyarrhythmia, and five patients with hypersensitive carotid sinus syndrome. Antibodies against the human sinus node were demonstrated in 29% of patients with SSS and in 24% of patients with bradyarrhythmia; a tenfold risk of SSS could be calculated in patients with this antibody as compared to age-matched controls. At least two subtypes of anti-sinus node antibodies were demonstrated: an antibody absorbable and another one not absorbable with ventricular myocardium. Patients with SSS and prior myocarditis of rheumatic fever have a threefold incidence of that antibody, demonstrating that anti-conducting tissue antibodies are etiologic indicators for former inflammatory heart disease. These antibodies may play a role in the secondary immunopathogenesis of sick sinus syndrome. This hypothesis emerges as an interesting new pathogenetic concept.
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PMID:Antibodies to human sinus node in sick sinus syndrome. 243 16

Ventricular pacing can prevent bradycardia-dependent ventricular ectopic activity (VEA) and is helpful in some cases of drug-refractory ventricular tachycardia (VT). This study is a prospective evaluation of VVI pacing for the control of VEA not related to underlying bradycardia, drug side-effects, or prolonged QT interval syndromes. Twenty-nine patients undergoing serial electrophysiologic-pharmacologic testing for VT control were studied. Eighteen of these patients (12 men; mean age = 60.1) both completed the protocol and had sufficient VEA for analysis. Coronary disease was present in 13 patients, cardiomyopathy in two patients, and one patient each had myocarditis, mitral valve prolapse, and no structural heart disease. Ambulatory (Holter) monitor recordings during VVI pacing were compared with control recordings made in the absence of pacing. VVI pacing rates were 10-15 bpm above the mean daily heart rate (mean = 92 bpm; range = 63-110). Hours from paced recordings were paired with hours from control (prior to analysis) according to time of day to reduce the effects of spontaneous variability in VEA frequency. Overall, VVI pacing reduced ventricular premature complexes (VPCs) 26% from 331 to 245/hour (p less than 0.001). During pacing, couplets (pairs, successive VPCs) were reduced from 6.95 to 1.03/hour (p less than 0.000001) and VT (greater than or equal to 3 successive VPCs) from 0.89 to 0.045 episodes/hour (p less than 0.003). Of 13 patients with couplets, 11 had greater than or equal to 50% reduction and five had greater than or equal to 90% reduction. Baseline VT was eliminated in four out of nine patients during pacing. Pacing did not increase VEA significantly in any patient.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Antiarrhythmic effects of VVI pacing at physiologic rates: a crossover controlled evaluation. 244 67

A sensitive and highly specific ELISA assay was developed to determine the anti-myosin humoral immune response (AMA) in various heart diseases: acute viral myocarditis, infective endocarditis, acute myocardial infarction, and valve and coronary bypass surgery. The mean study entry AMA titer of each patient group was already significantly increased compared with age matched controls. During further follow-up (90 d) all the groups except for endocarditis showed a significant increase of AMA titer compared with their entry titer. Anti-myosin antibody titer were higher after cardiac surgery than after myocardial infarction or inflammatory heart disease. These results suggest that anti-myosin immune response is not limited to infectious processes in which the pathogen induces antibodies which cross-react with heart constituents but is merely caused by direct cardiac injury. Myosin as a major compound of heart cellular proteins turned out to be a good candidate to trigger immune response after cardiac injury.
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PMID:Anti-myosin humoral immune response following cardiac injury. 249 42

The authors report the case of a 21-year old, non-immunocompromised girl who presented with severe acute heart failure associated with Toxoplasma infection. The outcome was favourable: cure without sequelae was obtained in a few months with a symptomatic and specific treatment consisting of spiramycin and methylprednisolone. This case is interesting for several reasons. The occurrence of such an acute heart disease is extremely rare in patients with toxoplasmic myocarditis, and so is the presence of a septal focus suspected on the basis of a predominantly septal hypokinesia at echocardiography and of enzymatic changes. The development of an acute heart failure should suggest a diagnosis of toxoplasmic myocarditis, which is rare but important since a specific treatment is available.
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PMID:[Acute cardiac insufficiency and toxoplasmosis]. 251 80

24 endomyocardial biopsies were performed in children aged 4-18 (x = 12.9) without any complications. The endomyocardial biopsy was performed in 12 patients with the heart failure of unknown origin (6 - restrictive heart disease, 4 - dilated cardiomyopathy with arrhythmias, 2-post-inflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy), in 5 patients with a clinical diagnosis of myocarditis, in 1 with the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, in 2 cases of the dilated cardiomyopathy without heart failure and in 1 girl with the recurrent exudative pericarditis. Active myocarditis with fibrosis was stated in 2 cases of a restrictive heart disease, mild inflammatory state in 2 patients with a clinical diagnosis of the myocarditis and in 3 others with the dilated cardiomyopathy. All of 7 patients with the myocarditis underwent the immunosuppressive therapy. In the patient with endomyocardial fibrosis the result of left ventricular biopsy corresponded with angiocardiographic diagnosis. Non-specific changes in biopsies were stated in 2 children with the restrictive cardiomyopathy and in 5 with the dilated cardiomyopathy. Bioptic, morphologic lesions in patients with the dilated cardiomyopathy did not correlate with hemodynamic parameters of contractility. Biopsies were normal in 6 subjects. Endomyocardial biopsy influenced on making a decision of the therapy in 9 of 21 patients (42.8%). Diagnosis was verified in 7 patients (38.3%) basing on endomyocardial biopsy. In 18 of 24 subjects (75%) endomyocardial biopsy contributed to the interpretation of the disease pathology.
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PMID:[Endomyocardial biopsy in children and adolescents]. 261 40

Thirty nine cases, in which sudden cardiac death (SCD) was suspected, were studied to evaluate the mechanism and the prediction of SCD in arrhythmia-patients using electrophysiological studies (EPS). The 39 cases (28 male and 11 female) were located by surveying 2098 patients who underwent EPS for the evaluation of arrhythmias. Age at time of EPS ranged from 4 to 86 years, average 50.5 years. Time from EPS to death was 2 to 163 months, average 27.9 months. Underlying heart disease was: dilated cardiomyopathy in 11, old myocardial infarction in 5, ischemic heart disease in 5, hypertensive heart disease in 5, valvular heart disease in 3, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 2, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia in 1, myocarditis in 1, sarcoidosis in 1, cor pulmonale in 1, and no obvious heart disease in 4. Fifteen had a permanent pacemaker implanted. SCD in cases without a permanent pacemaker (24 cases): 2 had chronic complete A-V block (one BH block, one HV block), 1 had advanced A-V block (HV block), 3 had bundle branch block with first degree HV block, 9 had ventricular tachycardia (VT), 3 had sick sinus syndrome (SSS), 3 had paroxysmal atrial flutter, 1 had WPW syndrome and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, 1 had paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, and 3 had premature ventricular beats and first degree HV block. SCD in cases with permanent pacemaker (15 cases): 5 had SSS, and 10 had A-V block. In 3 of the 5 with SSS and 7 of the 10 with A-V block, VT was found before pacemaker implantation. In our study, brady and tachyarrhythmias coexisted in 25 cases (64%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mechanism and prediction of sudden cardiac death in arrhythmia patients using electrophysiological studies. 263 27

To evaluate the mechanism of sudden death in childhood and the physical activity levels at the onset of sudden death, we studied the following items: (1) the incidence and the circumstances surrounding sudden death at school in Kanagawa Prefecture, (2) high risk heart diseases detected among healthy school children by heart disease screening, (3) sudden cardiac death or near miss seen in outpatients with heart disease except congenital heart disease. Among total 15,156,346 school children, sudden death was observed in 97 subjects (M:77, F:20). Annual incidence of sudden death was 6.4 per 10(6). Of the 97 subjects, acute heart failure of unknown etiology was found in 60 (62%), cardiovascular disease in 18 (19%), cerebral vascular accidents in 14 (14%) and heat stroke in 5 (5%). Of the 78 subjects (M:64, F:14) considered as sudden cardiac death, 62 (79%) died during sports activities, and 16 (21%) died at rest. Of the 62 subjects, 29 died during track and field activities and 7 while swimming, both in physical education classes. Eighteen died during athletic club activities and 8 during extracurricular activities. Consequently, 54 subjects (87%) died in the presence of a school teacher. Of the 18 subjects with cardiovascular disease, 9 (hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 3, myocarditis in 3, Kawasaki disease in 2 and long QT in one) were diagnosed initially by the autopsy study. Latent high risk heart diseases, detected among presumably healthy school children by the heart disease screening program, were the following: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, long QT syndrome, Kawasaki disease and some arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia, sick sinus syndrome, A-V block and atrial fibrillation). Follow-up observations of outpatients with heart disease revealed the same results as the heart disease screening program. In order to prevent sudden death at school, the following recommendations should be observed: 1) sports directors should learn "sports medicine in childhood", including primary cardiovascular resuscitation, 2) an accurate heart disease screening program should be operated to detect latent high risk heart diseases, advise on adequate medical treatment, and help ensure an appropriate selection of sports activities, 3) comprehensive autopsy studies should be performed.
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PMID:Sudden cardiac death in childhood. 263 28


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