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)
Sudden cardiac death due to ventricular arrhythmias remains a significant problem. In most studies about 50% of all death related to coronary artery disease and heart failure are sudden and unexpected and are caused by acute fatal ventricular tachycardia and fibrillation. Most of the patients suffering sudden cardiac death have some kind of structural
heart disease
but 80% of SCD events are associated with coronary artery disease, 10-15% with dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and only small fraction with the less common disorders as valvular heart disease, ventricular dysplasia and cardiac involvement in
sarcoidosis
or amyloidosis. In some patients the anomaly responsible for sudden cardiac death is not structural but mainly electrical as in patients with the long QT syndrome, WPW syndrome or in patients with a proarrhythmic effect from antiarrhythmic drugs. In this review, data from clinical trials and other studies on on antiarrhythmic therapies have been evaluated in order to determine effective strategies for the prevention sudden cardiac death in high risk patients. Taken together with the mortality data routine prophylactic use of class I antiarrhythmic drugs in the patients survivors of acute myocardial infarction and patients with heart failure is associated with increased risk of death. Conversely beta-blockers are associated with significant reduction in nonfatal cardiac arrest in the short term trials and sudden cardiac death in long term trials. These benefits are likely due to relief ischemia, reduction of heart rate and maintenance favourable autonomic nervous system balance. Overall trial data on amiodarone suggests that this agent is effective in reducing the risk of death in survivors of cardiac arrest, post infarction patients, and patients with heart failure but the routine prophylactic use of amiodarone remains of uncertain efficacy. The physician who considers the use of antiarrhythmic medications in patients with ventricular arrhythmias must be aware of which arrhythmias are malignant or potentially malignant and which are benign and the decision to initiate antiarrhythmic therapy should be based on consideration of the patients absolute mortality risk.
...
PMID:[Antiarrhythmic agents in the prevention of sudden cardiac death]. 1036 92
Secondary and infiltrative cardiomyopathies are the least common forms of cardiomyopathy and often are the most difficult to treat. In all cases, efforts should be made to establish a specific diagnosis because the removal or avoidance of the causative agent (eg, alcohol, cocaine, persistent tachycardia) holds the best promise for reversal of ventricular dysfunction. Patients who present with a dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) should be treated with standard heart failure therapy. However, the "standard" is changing and clinicians need to take heed of results of recent trials establishing the role of beta-blockers, aldosterone, and angiotensin receptor antagonists in addition to the regimen of digoxin, diuretics and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. In contrast, patients who present with a more infiltrative clinical picture often manifest more diastolic dysfunction and need strict volume control to maintain euvolemia. For patients with biopsy-proven myocarditis, immunosuppressive therapy generally should be considered in an effort to maintain and potentially improve ventricular function. Patients with
sarcoid
heart disease
have shown the greatest response to high-dose corticosteroids. Patients with hemochromatosis related cardiomyopathy should be treated with iron chelation therapy and phlebotomy. The role of cardiac transplantation is limited, as most of the secondary and infiltrative causes of cardiomyopathy are associated with an adverse posttransplant outcome. Other surgical options, such as left ventricular assist devices, may offer hope to patients who would otherwise be ineligible for cardiac transplantation. On the horizon, biventricular pacing and treatments targeted at cytokines and hormonal receptors hold the promise of improving symptoms and prolonging survival by counteracting the deleterious effects of these secondary mediators.
...
PMID:Secondary and Infiltrative Cardiomyopathies. 1109 42
The electroanatomic mapping system Carto((R)) with its combination of anatomic and electrophysiologic information has substantially improved our understanding of arrhythmia mechanisms and substrates in patients with ventricular tachycardia (VT) and structural
heart disease
. Identification of the individual arrhythmogenic substrate and successful ablation guided by the combination of sinus rhythm voltage mapping and conventional electrophysiologic techniques like pace and activation/entrainment mapping are best described for patients with recurrent VT in remote myocardial infarction. In about 75-90% of the patients, the target VT can be ablated with acute success and the patients remain free of any VT recurrence in up to 75%. First results of electroanatomically guided ablation in patients with arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia are promising. Data on ablation of VT in other structural heart diseases are very limited, since the arrhythmogenic substrate is very diffuse, e. g., in dilated cardiomyopathy, or there are only small patient numbers, e. g., for cardiac
sarcoidosis
or monomorphic VT after repair of congenital
heart disease
. In this article, the current status of electroanatomically guided endocardial mapping and ablation of VT in patients with structural
heart disease
is described.
...
PMID:Electroanatomic mapping of the endocardium. Implication for catheter ablation of ventricular tachycardia. 1468 18
This review may serve as a basis for evaluating publications on the topic "myocardial biopsy for myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy" in the clinical practice. The literature is particularly analyzed to answer the question, whether an endomyocardial catheter biopsy is indicated in patients with these myocardial disorders in the clinical routine besides its unequivocal scientific value. The judgment of the biopsy samples has been based on the classically histological and for years on the additional immunohistochemical and molecular biological-virological examination. The analysis of the literature data shows that outside scientific studies there is no indication to perform myocardial biopsy, or in other words, this procedure is not suitable for diagnosis, therapy, detection of early stages or prognostic evaluation in the disease spectrum "myocarditis, inflammatory
heart disease
, dilated cardiomyopathy". Reasons are the subjectivity in the judgment and interpretation of bioptic findings resulting in considerable interobserver variability, a missing standardization in biopsy performance, methods of examination and diagnostic criteria, the bioptic sampling error, missing therapeutic and prognostic consequences and potentially severe complications in performing myocardial biopsies. So far, the specificity of inflammatory changes in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy has not been proven in controlled blinded studies. The bioptic changes could be understood also as an unspecific inflammatory process in front of increasing pathophysiological evidence for myocardial inflammation in any form of heart failure. In addition, regarding the specific etiology of dilated cardiomyopathy, primarily a genetic, noninfectious or autoimmunologic origin plays an increasing role. The favorable clinical course and the very good prognosis of the acute, clinically diagnosed or supposed viral myocarditis should also be taken into account for the evaluation of myocardial biopsy. It should also be considered that the proof of causality between acute myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy is still lacking. Regarding the diagnosis "inflammatory cardiomyopathy" and multiple inflammatory subsets among patients with dilated cardiomyopathy or unclear regional contraction disorder, there is no adequate clinical validation of different diagnostic methods, criteria and interpretations so far. It is missleading to replace the well-established clinical diagnosis myocarditis by the bioptic diagnosis "inflammatory cardiomyopathy". However, endomyocardial catheter biopsy is clearly indicated in rare patients with fulminant myocarditis, giant-cell myocarditis and myocardial storage disease. Its probably underestimated role in
sarcoid
heart disease
still needs to be clarified by systematic studies.
...
PMID:[Indication for myocardial biopsy in myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy]. 1617 Jun 44
Four cases of sudden unexpected death associated with pulmonary hypertension are described. In all cases, the presence of pulmonary hypertension had not been clinically detected. In each case, the underlying etiology of the pulmonary hypertension was different with one case each of occult adult congenital
heart disease
, pulmonary
sarcoidosis
, pulmonary tumour microembolism from gastric adenocarcinoma, and familial primary pulmonary hypertension. These cases indicate that the forensic pathologist must be aware of occult pulmonary hypertension as a cause of sudden unexpected death in a variety of age groups.
...
PMID:Sudden death with clinically undiagnosed pulmonary hypertension. 1619 69
Sarcoidosis
is a multi-system granulomatous disorder of unknown etiology with symptomatic cardiac involvement in up to 7% of patients. The clinical features of
sarcoid
heart disease
include congestive heart failure, arrhythmias, conduction disturbances, and sudden death. We evaluated the value of contrast-enhanced multi-detector computed tomography in delineating myocardial scar and granulomatous inflammation by comparing our findings with gadolinium magnetic resonance in a patient diagnosed with cardiac
sarcoidosis
.
...
PMID:Cardiac sarcoidosis evaluated with gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance and contrast-enhanced 64-slice computed tomography. 1625 60
Primary cardiac tumors involving the heart may be either benign or malignant. Most of the benign tumors are myxomas, which are most commonly located in the left atrium. Primary malignant neoplasms usually involve the myocardium and the interior of the cardiac cavities, whereas neoplasms metastatic to the heart most commonly involve pericardium, and pericardial effusion and constriction are the most common consequences. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are becoming the most useful instruments of precision for the diagnosis of cardiac tumors. Pericardial cysts, teratomas, lipomatous hypertrophy of the atrial septum, papillary fibroelastomas, thrombi, and
sarcoid
are frequently mistaken for cardiac neoplasms. There are a number of cardiac consequences of malignancy, including radiation
heart disease
, cardiac hemorrhages, cardiac infection, cardiac adiposity or the corticosteroid-treated heart, cardiac hemosiderosis, and toxicity due to anthracycline chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Neoplasms involving the heart, their simulators, and adverse consequences of their therapy. 1636 47
We report the development and spontaneous resolution of annular erythematous skin lesions consistent with
sarcoid
dermatitis in a child with DiGeorge syndrome (DGS) carrying the 22q11.2 microdeletion. The skin lesion developed after she was treated with isoniazid (INH) following exposure to active tuberculosis (TB). After resolution of the skin lesions, this child developed sterile hyperplastic osteomyelitis consistent with SAPHO (synovitis, acne, pustulosis, hyperostosis, and osteitis) osteomyelitis in her right mandible triggered by an odontogenic infection. This child had congenital
heart disease
, dysmorphic facies, recurrent sinopulmonary infection, gastroesophageal reflux disease, scoliosis, reactive periostitis, and developmental delay. She had a low CD4 and CD8 T cell count with a normal 4/8 ratio, but normal cell proliferation and T cell cytokine production in response to mitogens. When she was presented with sterile osteomyelitis of right mandible, she revealed polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia with elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)/angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) levels, but negative CRP. Autoimmune and
sarcoidosis
workup was negative. Inflammatory parameters gradually normalized following resolution of odontogenic infection and with the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The broad clinical spectrum of DGS is further expanded with the development of autoimmune and inflammatory complications later in life. This case suggests that patients with the DGS can present with unusual sterile inflammatory lesions triggered by environmental factors, further broadening the clinical spectrum of this syndrome.
...
PMID:SAPHO osteomyelitis and sarcoid dermatitis in a patient with DiGeorge syndrome. 1649 84
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has evolved from an effective research tool into a clinically proven, safe and comprehensive imaging modality. It provides anatomic and functional information in acquired and congenital
heart disease
and is the most precise technique for quantification of ventricular volumes, function and mass. Owing to its excellent interstudy reproducibility, cardiovascular MRI is the optimal method for assessment of changes in ventricular parameters after therapeutic intervention. Delayed contrast enhancement is an accurate and robust method used in the diagnosis of ischemic and nonischemic cardiomyopathies and less common diseases, such as cardiac
sarcoidosis
and myocarditis. First-pass magnetic contrast myocardial perfusion is becoming an alternative to radionuclide techniques for the detection of coronary atherosclerotic disease. In this review we outline the techniques used in cardiovascular MRI and discuss the most common clinical applications.
...
PMID:Clinical applications of cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. 1703 Sep 42
Cardiac
sarcoid
is a rare and frequently fatal disease. We report a case of isolated cardiac
sarcoid
diagnosed during elective cardiac surgery. Although this patient presented with a history that was consistent with
sarcoid
heart disease
, diagnosis is challenging when there is no other organ involvement with
sarcoid
. The patient was successfully treated with steroids and 8 years later remains clinically free of
sarcoidosis
.
...
PMID:Intraoperative diagnosis of isolated cardiac sarcoid. 1725 47
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>