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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eighty patients with various forms of
heart disease
were studied with the use of a newly developed ultrasonic system having 20 transducers arranged in a linear array. This system allows visualization of the heart in two dimensions in real time. All 15 patients with the mitral valve prolapse syndrome, 13 patients with mitral stenosis, five patients with
pericardial effusion
, four patients with atrial septal defect, and one patient with left ventricular dyssynergy were properly recognized with this system. One of five patients with hypertrophic myopathy and one of four patients with congestive myopathy were not recognized with this system. Criteria for the recognition of these system. Criteria for the recognition of these conditions are presented as well as the probable cause for false-positive and false-negative diagnoses in this series. Since only qualitative criteria were used, it was not possible to differentiate patients with coronary artery disease or patients with left ventricular volume overload from patients without cardiac pathology. The accuracy of this new system was judged against the clinical examination, conventional echocardiography, cardiac catheterization, and left ventricular angiography. It is assumed that the criteria for diagnosis developed during this study will be supplemented and the equipment improved in the future; however, the ease of operation of this system and the relative accuracy of diagnosis at this stage of its development are extremely interesting. It presents an excellent opportunity to obtain additional information about the cardiac patient without using invasive procedures and without risk.
...
PMID:Diagnostic accuracy of an ultrasonic multiple transducer cardiac imaging system. 12 12
A study of 55 patients with
heart disease
suspected of being viral in origin was carried out a Medical College Hospital, Nagpur, over a period of 2 years. Virus studies as well as other routine tests were carried out on all patients. In 19 patients a virus aetiology of the
heart disease
was proved by isolation of one of the subtypes of Coxsackie B virus and/or on the basis of fourfold rise in neutralizing antibody titre in paired sera. Of these patients, 5 had acute myocarditis and 5 had acute myopericarditis; 3 had acute pericarditis; 3 had congestive cardiac failure of obscure aetiology; 2 had pleuropericarditis, and the remaining 1 developed post-partum heart failure with cardiogenic shock. All had electrocardiographic abnormalities. Thirteen had cardiomegaly; 1 had a right-sided pleural effusion and 2 had
pericardial effusion
. Virus could not be isolated from pericardial fluid or pleural fluid in these 3 patients. Follow-up studies up to 10 weeks from discharge revealed that 8 patients were clinically normal but 4 of these 8 had persisting ST-T wave changes, and in 4 the electrocardiogram had returned to normal. Of the remaining 11 patients, 3 had persistent chronic heart failure, 3 had vague symptoms of praecordial pain but no abnormal signs, and 5 patients were lost to follow-up.
...
PMID:Heart disease caused by Coxsackie virus B infection. 12 98
In a consecutive series of 1,225 routine echocardiograms, a
pericardial effusion
(PE) was present in 15% and was considered substantial in 10%. Sixty-one percent (68/111) of the latter were clinically unsuspected. A retrospective analysis of these patients showed that 60% (41/68) had underlying
heart disease
such as congestive heart failure, left ventricular hypertrophy, or asymmetric septal hypertrophy without other discernible causes for PE. In patients referred specifically for suspected
pericardial effusion
, 67% (29/43) had diseases recognized as causes of
pericardial effusion
. Unsuspected substantial PE are commonly detected by echocardiography, especially in patients with underlying
heart disease
.
...
PMID:Unsuspected substantial pericardial effusions detected by echocardiography. 13 24
Single beam echocardiography is now an established diagnostic tool in non-invasive cardiology. The principle indications are valvular diseases,
pericardial effusion
, aneurysm of the ascending aorta, and congenital
heart disease
. In the absence of regional contraction disorders, left ventricular function can be assessed by the extent of systolic shortening of the left ventricular diameter. More recently, two-dimensional echocardiography has made a very significant contribution to anatomical and functional evaluation of the heart and the great vessels, since the cardiac structures can be visualized in various cross-sections. This technique is especially helpful for the assessment of left ventricular regional contraction disturbances, the diagnosis of dysfunction of artificial valves and bioprotheses, the detection of dissecting aneurysm, and the estimation of mitral valve area in mitral stenosis. Since various left ventricular axes can be determined, the quantitation of left heart volumes appears to be within the capability of the two-dimensional technique.
...
PMID:[The value of echocardiography in the diagnosis of cardiac diseases]. 42 20
Characteristic computed tomographic findings were present in two patients with confirmed
pericardial effusion
. A review of 30 chest scans without evidence of
heart disease
showed that the pericardium can be seen in the majority of cases.
...
PMID:Demonstration of the pericardium and pericardial effusion by computed tomography. 47 11
Echocardiography is a new noninvasive tool which provides real-time motion visualization of intracardiac structures for the evaluation of anatomy and physiology in patients with congenital
heart disease
. This paper is presented to acquaint the pediatrician with the utilization and potential of this technique as practiced by pediatric cardiologists. A discussion of principles of physics and instrumentation in echocardiography is followed by a description of normal echocardiographic anatomy. Specific malformations which can be diagnosed reliably by this technique include: hypoplastic left heart syndrome, transposition of the great vessels, tetralogy of Fallot, idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis, mitral valve prolapse, and
pericardial effusion
. In addition, the evaluation of patients with atrial septal defects and patent ductus arteriosus is discussed. New advances in instrumentation and their potential impact in pediatric cardiology are reviewed.
...
PMID:Pediatric echocardiography: a review of its clinical utility. 117 31
Emergency pericardiocentesis, guided by a two-dimensional echocardiography, was performed on twenty patients with symptomatic
pericardial effusion
of various types and causes. There were fourteen men and six women. The underlying causes were: primary lung cancer (6 cases), metastatic cardiac tumors (3 cases), tuberculosis (4 cases), complicated interventional procedures with cardiac chamber or vessel perforations (2 cases), dissecting aortic aneurysm (1 case), systemic lupus erythematous (1 case), idiopathic pericarditis (1 case), bacterial pericarditis (1 case), and myxedema
heart disease
(1 case). Seventeen cases were performed through the left xipho-sternal approach and 3 cases through the apical approach. None of the patients died as a result of these procedures. A two-dimensional echocardiogram is useful in diagnosing cardiac tamponade as well as in guiding pericardiocentesis, and obtaines highly positive results (20/20). The positive rate of pericardial fluid cytology for malignant cells was 89% (8/9), however, pericardial fluid cultures or direct smear for tuberculosis were negative (0/4). In cancer patients, the mean survival time following pericardiocentesis was 4.2 months (range, 1-7.8 months). We concluded that neoplastic involvement of the pericardium is the most frequent cause of symptomatic
pericardial effusion
. Pericardiocentesis assisted by a two-dimensional echocardiogram is safe and easy. In addition, pericarditis caused by TB is still significant and must be considered in every case in our nation.
...
PMID:Pericardiocentesis: a 20 patients study. 133 Feb 47
We present a patient with pericardial tamponade due to amyloid
heart disease
. A 64-yr-old man was admitted to the hospital because of fatigue and the abrupt development of chest pain and dyspnea. Echocardiography showed severe
pericardial effusion
and total pericardiectomy was necessary. Ten months later laboratory studies revealed proteinuria and high serum creatinine. A rectal biopsy showed amyloid deposition that was also found in the pericardial tissue. Pericardial tamponade is an extremely rare complication of cardiac amyloidosis. To our knowledge, only one previous case of cardiac tamponade due to amyloid
heart disease
has been reported.
...
PMID:Cardiac tamponade as presentation of systemic amyloidosis. 142 40
A 24 year old female with a stage III-B Hodgkin disease involving the mediastinum was subjected to chemotherapy and supradiaphragmatic radiotherapy. A year later she developed heart failure. LV dilatation and decreased systolic function with anteroseptal and lateral hypokinesia and a small
pericardial effusion
were shown by X Ray and echocardiography. An initial clinical diagnosis of radiation
heart disease
was changed to myocardial involvement by Hodgkin disease after performing and endomyocardial biopsy.
...
PMID:[Myocardial involvement in Hodgkin's disease. Usefulness of endomyocardial biopsy. Report of a case]. 184 26
In this study from two specialized centres 85 patients with histologically proven myocarditis (n = 10) and clinically ascertained perimyocarditis (
pericardial effusion
and cardiomegaly or segmental wall motion abnormality; n = 75) were followed up for 4.5 + 1.9 years. Immunosuppressive treatment was not applied. After a mean follow-up period of 4.5 + 1.9 years 55% of patients had improved clinically and 35% of patients were completely free of symptoms. Relapses had occurred up to three times. Chronic forms were found in 20% of patients, mostly in those with pericarditis and effusions. Eighteen percent of the patients deteriorated gradually. In 20% of the chronic or deteriorating patients congestive heart failure developed (postmyocarditic heart muscle disease). Fifteen percent of the patients died, mainly from bacterial perimyocarditis and to a lesser extent from inflammatory
heart disease
from enteroviruses. Patients who succumbed after more than 6 months died either suddenly or from progressive heart failure. A favourable outcome was often accompanied by a decrease in titre, but this decrease was less impressive in those who had antimyolemmal and antisarcolemmal antibodies. The persistence of these antibodies in high titres predominated in patients with poor prognosis and postmyocarditic dilated heart muscle disease, as did cytolytic serum activity.
...
PMID:Prognostic determinants in conventionally treated myocarditis and perimyocarditis--focus on antimyolemmal antibodies. 191 61
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