Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total of 2,764 students were examined from five schools in Bang Pa-in, district, Ayutthaya Province, Thailand; 12 were found to have
heart disease
, a prevalence of 4.34 per thousand examined. Of these 4 cases were known by their parents to have
heart disease
prior to our study. The prevalence of congenital
heart disease
was 3.3 and of
rheumatic heart disease
1 per thousand students. The incidence of functional heart murmur was 46%. The prevalence rate of
heart disease
in Thai school children was similar to rates in reports from Canada, America and Iran.
...
PMID:Prevalence of heart disease in school children in Thailand: a preliminary survey at Bang Pa-in. 102 15
A survey was carried out amongst 7062 people of different age groups in Dacca city and in a village. It was found that 207 (2.92%) persons had some sort of
heart disease
. Hypertension was present in 83 (1.10%) persons.
Rheumatic heart disease
, ischaemic heart disease and cardiac arrhythmia were detected in 53 (0.75%), 24 (0.33%) and 16 (0.22%) persons respectively. Congenital heart disease was found in 13 (0.18%) individuals, and 18 (0.25%) persons were suffering from cardiomypathy or corpulmonale.
Rheumatic heart disease
was common in poor people of younger age. More ischaemic heart disease was found in well-to-do people but poor people were not immune from this.
...
PMID:Congenital and acquired heart diseases: (A survey of 7062 persons). 103 68
A retrospective study was done on patients admitted to the University of Michigan Hospital from 1962 to 1972 with a diagnosis of bacterial endocarditis. The findings in the group studied indicate that Streptococcus viridans was the predominant causative organism, males were affected three times as often as females, erythromycin was effective against organisms of oral origin, dental procedures were not definitely established as responsible for the onset of the disease in any of the cases, and
rheumatic heart disease
and congenital
heart disease
were the predominant, but not the only, predisposing factors.
...
PMID:Bacterial endocarditis: a retrospective study. 105 48
A retrospective review of 149 episodes of bacterial endocarditis (BE) in 141 patients under 25 years of age, at The Children's Hospital Medical Center from 1933 through June of 1972, demonstrates increasing survival and a distinct change in the frequency of underlying congenital
heart disease
and
rheumatic heart disease
(
RHD
). Certain forms of congenital
heart disease
such as tetralogy of Fallot, small ventricular septal defect, and aortic stenosis are at particular risk for BE. Following BE, patients with ventricular septal defect and tetralogy of Fallot have less morbidity and higher survival rates than children with aortic outflow lesions. over the entire time period, alpha Streptococcus is the most common pathogen and Staphylococcus aureus, second most frequent organism. Surgical correction in patients with congenital
heart disease
may offer the best form of prevention.
...
PMID:A forty-year review of bacterial endocarditis in infancy and childhood. 111 49
1. The authors present 86 children and adolescents with
rheumatic heart disease
of the Pediatric Cardiology Service of the Instituto Nacional de Cardiologia who received valve replacements in the period between September, 1964 and April, 1973, a series which is more numerous and of longer follow-up than any published up to the present 2. In order to obtain comparable results, patients with mitral
heart disease
of other origen and aortic replacement as well as those subjected to double or triple exchange, were omitted from the study. 3. The symptomatology, the presence of compensated heart failure, the progression of cardiomegaly, the radiologic and electrocardiographic changes, the presence of atrial fibrillation, the mean venocapilary, pulmonary arter, and left right ventricle telediastolic pressures, the pulmonary resistence figures and the results of cineangiocardiography were the fundamental elements used to establish the surgical indication. 4. None were operated with clinic or laboratory data suggesting rheumatic activability. The shortest period between the last bout of rheumatic fever and surgery was 10 months. 5. The clinic improvement was remarkable. Half of the cases receiving digitalis and diuretics were released without this prescription and only 10% continue to take digitalis. With the exception of five patients, the physical capacity is normal and most play sports. The postoperatory radiologic and electrocardiographic changes were remarkable, most were obtained a few months after surgery. With the exception of one case, atrial fibrillation disappeared (in 58% before six months in a group of 31 patients). 6. The later complications attributed to the valve replacement as well as the 15 deaths in the total lot were analyzed. It was pointed out that the hospital death rate was 12.6% and the later was 5.3%, extraordinarily low figures if it is taken into account that the material corresponds to nine years of work and the problems inherent to the initial period are included. It gains still greater importance if compared to the series published up to the date. The global mortality rate of 17.9% is small in relation to the only comparable publication, -30 and if only the results of the last three years are compiled (61 cases equals 70 of the series), the global death rate was 9.8%. 7. It was noted that the results are due to the system adopted for establishing the surgical indication, to the good state of the myocardial fiber...
...
PMID:[Mitral valve replacement in children and in adolescents. Surgical indication and long-term results in 86 cases]. 113 59
One hundred and twenty-four patients treated by Fogarty balloon catheter embolectomy from 1964 through 1973 were reviewed and compared to an earlier series of 82 patients treated by direct extraction during the interval from 1948 to 1963. In patients undergoing embolectomy, the incidence of
rheumatic heart disease
(
RHD
) declined from 55 to 27 percent, and that of arteriosclerotic
heart disease
(ASHD) rose from 39 to 55 percent. The operative mortality rate of those with
RHD
was unchanged and that of patients with ASHD declined from 74 to 36 percent. This was attributed, in part, to the lesser degree of operative stress entailed by the Fogarty catheter and the local anesthesia. Limb salvage was 82 percent when ischemic symptoms were less than 24 hours in duration and 66 percent when such symptoms were more than 24 hours in duration. The amputation rate for the entire group was 22 percent. The low 2 year survival of patients with ASHD and of amputees was ascribed to the wide extent of their atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. This was emphasized by the fact that 44 percent of late deaths were due to myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Changing clinical trends in patients with peripheral arterial emboli. 124 75
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
This study was made to determine whether zinc deficiency is one of the factors involved in growth retardation of infants of high-risk pregnancies. The high risk factors were hypertension of pregnancy, diabetes mellitus, congenital
heart disease
, chronic nephritis,
rheumatic heart disease
and hyperthyroidism. 102 neonatal infants were divided into 3 groups: breast fed group, 37 cases; test group, 32 cases formula-fed with supplementary zinc 1.14-2.28 mg/kg/d; and control group, 33 cases formula-fed and supplemented with Vitamin B complex as placebo. The groups were divided by double-blind and randomized method. There were no differences in the 3 groups in sex ratio, growth status and serum zinc concentration at the beginning of the study. Anthropometric data were obtained at 0, 3 and 6 months.
...
PMID:Growth promoting effect of zinc supplementation in infants of high-risk pregnancies. 129 Dec 3
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
Rheumatic heart disease
contributes to significant cardiac morbidity and mortality in India. The disease predominantly affects the valvular endocardium culminating in crippling valvular deformities, preferentially involving the mitral valve which may be severely affected in children and young adults. This appears to be unique to India and has been termed juvenile mitral stenosis. It is characterized by cardiomegaly, refractory congestive heart failure, and marked by elevated pulmonary vascular pressures and a progressive, fulminant clinical course. Autopsies of patients dying of
rheumatic heart disease
revealed that the mitral valve was most commonly afflicted either alone or in combination with the aortic and tricuspid valves in 31.6% and 52.8%, respectively. Organic involvement of the tricuspid valve was documented in 38.4% of cases. The extent and severity of the disease process was most marked in the mitral valve, followed by the aortic and tricuspid valves. Mitral valves showed various degrees of calcification, moderate or severe calcification being observed in 36.4%. Chronic inflammatory cell infiltration was observed in both calcified and non-calcified valves. The phenotypic profile of the inflammatory cells by immunohistochemical staining revealed a significant number to be T-helper/inducer lymphocytes. Lungs from cases of mitral stenosis exhibited prominent vascular and parenchymal changes. Pulmonary vessels revealed moderate to marked medial hypertrophy of the medium sized branches of the pulmonary artery. Dilatation lesions were also seen in a few cases. The most striking parenchymal change was the prominent smooth muscle in the bronchoalveolar walls. The extent and severity of the vascular and parenchymal changes were more marked in juvenile patients. The presence of inflammatory cells in cases of chronic
heart disease
reflects a possible ongoing insult/injury to some persistent antigenic stimulus by beta hemolytic streptococcal antigens that have primed the various target tissues. Further study of surface characteristics of various mesenchymal cells may help in understanding the nature and pathogenesis of this serious cardiac problem.
...
PMID:Chronic rheumatic heart disease in India: a reappraisal of pathologic changes. 134 Dec 28
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>