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)

To elucidate the pathophysiologic mechanism of cardioembolic stroke in elderly people and to devise therapeutic strategies for it, was analyzed 120 consecutive patients (77 men and 43 women aged 65 +/- 13 years) with acute cardioembolic stroke who were admitted within 7 days of the stroke onset. We compared underlying heart diseases. NIH stroke scale on admission, lesion size on computed tomography (CT), the relation between anticoagulant therapy and recurrence, complications during admission. ADL at discharge, recurrence, and death during the follow up period in three groups: patients aged less than 65 years (the young group), those aged from 65 to 74 years (the "non-old" group), and those aged more than 75 years (the "old old" group). In the "old old" group, non valvular atrial fibrillation (75.8%) was the most common underlying heart disease and so was rheumatic heart disease (33.3%) in the "non-old" group. NIH stroke scale score (median, 11) and the proportion of patients with a large lesion (> 3 cm) of CT were higher in the "old old" group than in the other two groups. Immediate anticoagulation (A/C) within 14 days of onset was performed in more than 70% of the "non-old" and the "young old" groups but in only 57.6% of the "old old" group. Stroke recurred more often in 34 patients who did not receive immediate A/C than in the 86 who did (11.8% v.s. 2.3%. Chi square test, p = 0.053). Hemorrhage during immediate A/C and other complications (infection and pulmonary embolism) were seen in 2 and 14 patients, respectively, in both the "young old" groups, but not in the "non-old" group. Good outcomes (able to walk with or without cane) were more common in the "non-old" group (78.9%) than the other groups (57.1%, Chi square test, p < (0.01). A/C after the acute stage was done in more than 80% of those in the "non-old" and the "young old" groups, but in less than 30% of those in the "old old" group (Chi square test, p = 0.0514). Survival without recurrence during the observation period (605 +/- 550 days) was significantly lower in the "old old" group than in the other two groups (log-rank test, p = 0.0091). Cardioembolic stroke in the elderly may be characterized as follows: (1) non valvular atrial fibrillation is the most common, (2) severe neurologic deficits on admission and large lesions on CT are noted, (3) complications (infection and pulmonary embolism) often occur, (4) A/C in both acute and chronic stages are done infrequently. Therefore, the indication and intensity of A/C for primary and secondary prevention and prevention of complications are important in management of cardioembolic stroke in the elderly.
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PMID:[Pathophysiology and treatment of cardioembolic stroke]. 989 77

From 1978 to 1993 in the Veneto region, we collected 200 cases of sudden death in the young (</=35 years). Sudden death was cerebral in 15 cases (7.5%), respiratory in 10 (5%), and cardiovascular in 163 (81.5%), whereas it remained unexplained in 12 cases (6%). Among cardiovascular sudden death, obstructive coronary atherosclerosis accounted for 23% of cases, arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy for 12.5%, mitral valve prolapse for 10%, conduction system abnormalities for 10%, congenital coronary artery anomalies for 8.5%, myocarditis for 7.5%, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy for 5.5%, aortic rupture for 5.5%, dilated cardiomyopathy for 5%, nonatherosclerotic-acquired coronary artery disease for 3.5%, postoperative congenital heart disease for 3%, aortic stenosis for 2%, pulmonary embolism for 2%, and other causes for 2%. Cardiac arrest remained unexplained in 6% of the cases. Specific pathology and pathogenetic mechanisms of each disease were investigated and correlated with clinical signs and symptoms in detail. A large spectrum of cardiovascular disorders, both congenital and acquired, may represent the organic substrate of sudden death in the young. The underlying abnormality is frequently concealed and discovered only at postmortem examination. Most of the diseases, although asymptomatic, are potentially detectable during life with proper imaging tests.
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PMID:Cardiovascular causes of sudden death in young individuals including athletes. 1042 63

From January 1988 through October 1997, 167 cardiac transplants were performed. 1246 endomyocardial biopsies (EMBs) from 138 cardiac allograft recipients were investigated and graded according to the Working Formulation (WF) criteria. The specimens were inadequate in 44 EMBs (3.5%), while 598 (48%) showed no rejection. The grade of rejection was: mild (grade 1A and 1B) in 531 EMBs (42.6%), mild/moderate (grade 2) in 38 (3.1%), and moderate (grade 3A and 3B) in 35 (2.8%). The indications for transplantation were: dilated cardiomyopathy (46.1%); ischemic disease (37.1%); valvular disease (12%); hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (1.8%); myocarditis (1.2%); congenital cardiopathy (0.6%), restrictive cardiomyopathy (0.6%) and chronic rejection (0.6%). The most reliable histologic feature of acute rejection was the myocyte necrosis or damage in presence of pironinophilic mononuclear cell infiltrate, so our protocol requires multifocal or diffuse myocyte damage (rejection grade 3A and 3B) to perform an additional treatment, which was required in 35 cases (2.8%). An intermediate grade mild/moderate 2, was introduced from the WF to classify the EMBs in which the myocyte necrosis was scant or not clear; this grade in our series generally resolves without any additional treatment; in order to monitor the rejection another EMB was performed 5 days after in these patients. The EMBs showed also the following lesions other than acute rejection: Quilty A (79 patients; 57.25%), Quilty B (24 pts; 17.39%), early ischemic necrosis (43 pts; 31.15%) and late ischemic necrosis (5 pz; 3.62%). Quilty B and late ischemic necrosis were correlated with acute rejection (grade 2), furthermore the patients with graft vascular disease showed 3 or more episodes of acute rejection. These findings confirm the relationship between acute and chronic rejection. Furthermore, a relationship between chronic rejection (4 pts) and infection from hepatitis C (antibodies positive 3 pts/4) and cytomegalovirus (antibodies positive 4 pts/4) was found in our series. In the follow-up period (117 months), a 30.72% death rate was recorded; the main causes of death were: early failure of the transplanted heart (30 pts) in 4 of them associated with pulmonary hypertension, infections (6 pts), sudden death (4 pts), graft's vasculopathy (4 pts), acute pancreatitis (1 pts) pulmonary embolism (1 pts), lung (1 pts) and ovary (1 pts) carcinoma, acute rejection (1 pts), others (2 pts). In the early period (< 1 month), the most frequent cause of death was the early failure of the transplanted heart, while in the late period (> 1 year) the chronic rejection following by sudden death and tumours. The actuarial survival curve drops to 83.13% after the first post-operative month, abates to 75.30 at the end of the first year, and progressively decreases to 70.48% at the end of the fifth follow-up year. The mortality rate was 38.7% in pts transplanted for ischemic disease and 24.7% for dilated cardiomyopathy. Cardioplegia seems to play an important role in the success of the heart transplant.
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PMID:[Pathology of heart transplantation.(Morphological study of 1246 endomyocardial biopsies from 167 transplanted hearts). Causes of early, intermediate, and late deaths]. 1048 68

Thromboembolic disease (TD), which includes deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), is the most common acute cardiovascular condition after ischemic cardiopathy and stroke. It is often difficult to diagnose, as it is well-known that half of PE episodes appear are recognized while the patient is still alive and which appear in 30-40% of symptomatic patients. Nonetheless, there are two well-differentiated phases in the diagnosis of TD: the suspicion, and the diagnosis. The first is very important, and is within the competence of any physician. The second can be ratified when carrying out specific tests. We have developed successive steps in the two phases of diagnosis, we critically review the distinct parts currently implicated in the strategic diagnosis of TD. Finally, we analyze the new diagnostic techniques to substitute, possibly, angiography in many cases, and perhaps to include ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) pulmonary gammagraphy, once become generally available.
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PMID:[Current and future diagnostic strategies in venous thromboembolic disease]. 1082 68

The aims of this study were to compare the clinical features of patients with pulmonary embolism (PE) and patients in whom the initial suspected diagnosis was not confirmed by the complementary studies and to determine the possible clinical differences among patients with PE according to age. A retrospective review of the charts of a group of patients with PE (n, 96) and another without PE (n, 96) was carried out. The patients with PE over 65 years of age (n, 64) were compared with those under 66 years of age (n, 32). The variables related to PE were absence of known heart disease, duration of symptoms </=2 days, pleuritic chest pain, absence of cough, pCO(2) <4.8 kPa (36 mmHg), and normal chest X-ray. The variables associated with the existence of PE in patients over 65 years of age, when contrasted with younger patients, were female sex, absence of pleuritic chest pain, abnormal chest X-ray, hypoxemia (pO(2) < 8.7 kPa (65 mmHg) and absence of S1Q3T3 pattern in ECG.The duration of symptoms and the presence of hypocapnia, pleuritic chest pain, and normal chest X-ray may lead to the suspicion of PE. Pleuritic pain and S1Q3T3 pattern are less commonly found in old patients with PE.
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PMID:Influence of age on clinical presentation of acute pulmonary embolism. 1086 63

Dr. Lewis Dexter was an outstanding cardiovascular physiologist and clinician, a respected teacher and scientist, and, most importantly, a fine human being. During his life, he brought the cardiac catheter from the laboratory to the patient and trained several generations of cardiologists. Dexter's laboratory was the first to elucidate the pathophysiologic alterations present in many forms of congenital heart disease, including atrial septal defects, patent ductus arteriosus, tetralogy of Fallot, ventricular septal defects, and pulmonic stenosis. Subsequent work in Dexter's laboratory led to the 1st measurements of pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and to the precise calculation of stenotic valve areas from hemodynamic parameters measured during cardiac catheterization. During a teaching exercise, Dexter demonstrated that exercise with a cardiac catheter in the heart was safe and produced clinically important data, by having a cardiac catheter inserted in himself. Over the years, many significant pathophysiologic studies that explored pulmonary embolism, valvular heart disease, right and left ventricular function, and pulmonary hypertension were published from Dexter's laboratory. But Lewis Dexter was more than a brilliant researcher "Lew" was very close to his fellows and students, whom he considered extensions of his family Dexter was a remarkable teacher, a compassionate physician, and a scrupulously honest investigator. Dr Lewis Dexter had a major impact on modern medicine and was one of the great cardiologists of the 20th century.
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PMID:A biographical sketch of Lewis Dexter. 1167 69

Cardiovascular disorders in patients affected with hyperthyroidism are very common; the increase in the heart rate and in inotropism combines with a rise in the cardiac index towards which the reduction in peripheral resistances and an increase in the venous return to the heart contribute. The increase in myocardial excitabi1ity, caused above all by triiodothyronine, may be attended with atrial extrasystoles or even with atrial fibrillation. Congestive heart failure during hyperthyroidism, even if rare, may either reveal itself in association with pre-existent cardiopathy or to be precipitated by tachyar-rhythrmia, particu1arly, by paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. The case is described of a young woman affected with Graves' disease, presenting an ingravescent dyspnoea, in which sinusal tachycardia, the S1Q3 electrocardiographic figure and the echocardiographic reports of a right ventricu1ar overload with pulmonary hypertension and systemic venous congestion, suggest picture of acute pulmonary embolism. The isolated dysfunction of the right ventricle resolved quickly after an adequate antithyroid therapy. The oddness of presentation of Graves' disease in this case would suggest the execution of the thyroid profile for all patients with a primary diagnosis of heart failure, in order to single out hyperthyroid subjects with reversible myocardial dysfunction.
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PMID:[Right ventricular heart failure in hyperthyroidism]. 1153 53

Renal transplantation remains a mainstay of therapy for end-stage renal disease. Cardiac disease has a high prevalence in this patient population. This study reviews the factors and outcomes associated with cardiac surgery in renal transplant recipients. We performed a retrospective review of all patients at our institution with a functioning renal allograft at the time of their cardiac surgical procedure. Between June 1971 and April 2000, 2343 patients underwent renal transplantation at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Twenty-six patients with a functioning renal allograft subsequently underwent a cardiac procedure requiring cardiopulmonary bypass. There were 11 women and 15 men. Twenty-four patients underwent coronary bypass, one had a double valve replacement, and one had a combined coronary bypass/valve replacement. The interval from renal transplant to heart surgery ranged between 0.6 and 227 months (mean 79.1). Operative mortality was zero but there were two hospital deaths: one due to multisystem organ failure and one due to pulmonary embolism. Six additional patients died late with only one due to heart disease. Four patients required perioperative dialysis, and one of these went on to require permanent dialysis. Two additional patients returned to dialysis late postoperatively. The requirement for acute perioperative dialysis was predicted by preoperative creatinine, hematocrit, and intraoperative urine output. The overall survival is 69 per cent (18 of 26) with a median follow-up of 38 months. The majority of long-term survivors have minimal cardiac symptoms. Standard cardiac surgery procedures can be performed with relative safety in patients with functioning renal allografts. The incidence of perioperative and late development of renal failure requiring dialysis is low. The long-term survival and symptomatic improvement achieved are favorable and warrant continued performance of cardiac surgery in patients with functioning renal allografts.
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PMID:Cardiac surgery after renal transplantation. 1184 62

Modern medicine 1st made the oral contraceptive (OC), a combined OC, available to women in 1960, and much progress in improving OCs and reducing risks associated with them has occurred. Approximately 200 million women have used OCs worldwide and about 60 million women are currently using this contraceptive method. OCs are efficacious because the hormones in the OCs alter the physiology of the hypothalamo-pituitary-ovarian/uterine axis at 6 sites, e.g., altering the endometrium so implantation of the blastocyst cannot occur. Despite the effectiveness of OCs (virtually 100% effective) in comparison with other contraceptive methods, they often cause side effects and complications. Some side effects and complications from estrogen and predominantly estrogen OCs include vomiting, hypertension, and venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolism. Possible progestogen and predominatly progestogen OC side effects and complications are leucorrhea, urinary tract infections, epilepsy aggravation, and cholestatic jaundice. In addition, pregnancy, venous thromboembolism, heart disease, and malignancies of the breast and genital tract are absolute contraindications to OCs. On the other hand, OCs provide health benefits, in addition to preventing unwanted pregnancies, such as lowered incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease, acne improvement, and protection against endometrial carcinoma and ovarian epithelial neoplasia. In order to ensure that health benefits of OCs are maximized and the risks minimized, family planning practitioners worldwide must monitor OC users for side effects. Recent OC formulations now include the progestogen only OCs, multiphase OCs, low dose OC called gestodene, and the "morning after pill".
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PMID:Oral steroidal contraception: scientific basis and recent development. 1234 71

In May 2002, the Women's Heath Initiative (WHI) clinical trial, designed to clarify the risks and benefits of combination hormone replacement therapy, came to a premature halt. An interim safety review after an average follow-up of 5.2 years found that a combination of estrogen and progestin often prescribed to postmenopausal women increased the risk of invasive breast cancer, heart disease, stroke, and pulmonary embolism. The combination hormone therapy reduced bone fractures and colorectal cancer, but not enough to outweigh the other risks. The WHI trial presents a challenge for patients, physicians, and epidemiologists, since many observational studies have shown cardiovascular benefits of long-term hormone replacement therapy (HRT). At the same time, a companion paper in the same journal reported an epidemiologic study with a 13.4-year mean follow-up suggesting that estrogen replacement therapy, when used alone for 10 years or more, increases the risk of ovarian cancer. The medical community is still recovering from these twin shocks and trying to digest the results of both of these studies. The WHI study calls into question the long-term use of HRT in healthy women. The benefit of the temporary use of estrogen in controlling disruptive symptoms of the menopause is not being contested. Absent from many news releases are the hedging and equivocation typical of other reported clinical trials. There are still some "hanging chads" out there, and this commentary is designed to examine the uncertainties that remain after the WHI report. It is also intended to suggest development of alternative strategies to control symptoms of the menopausal transition that will reduce risks of HRT. The evidence from the WHI study will need to be incorporated into medical decision making, but clinical decisions, like most human decisions, are complex and in the final analysis must be based on information from many sources.
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PMID:The randomized world is not without its imperfections: reflections on the Women's Health Initiative Study. 1273 40


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