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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A comparative histochemical and clinical study concerning the state of the intrinsic adrenergic innervation of the human atrial myocardium was carried out, using the glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence histochemical method. Specimens from the right auricular appendage were obtained during open-heart surgery from patients suffering from 1. ischaemic heart disease (IHD), 2. atrial septal defect of the secundum type (ASD), and 3. left-sided univalvular or multivalvular heart disease (VHD) with or without congestive heart failure (CHF) experienced prior to surgery. In the IHD group the densities of both the perivascular and the "free" myocardial adrenergic nerve net were greater than in the ASD group and especially in the VHD/CHF group. Secondly, the intensity of fluorescence of the adrenergic structures was generally higher in the IHD group than that in the VDH/CHF group. Further, the average size of the varicosities, the number of varicosities per given length of axon, and the proportional share of the large varicosities were greater in the IHD group than in the ASD and VHD/CHF groups. The difference between the IHD and ASD groups was not great but was obvious in any case. In some patients with VHD/CHF fluorescing axons were observed only occasionally, and the tiny varicosities exhibited a hardly discernible fluorescence. Thus the amount of noradrenaline (NA) in the adrenergic fibres in the IHD group seems to be higher than in the ASD and especially VHD/CHF groups. The level of NA in the IHD group is assumed to constitute a contributory factor in both intracellular metabolic changes and the systemic changes typical of myocardial ischaemia and infarction. In one patient with IHD and in six patients with VHD/CHF with significantly higher heart volume (mean+/-SD) compared with the rest of the patients (P less than 0.001), huge local axonal accumulations of NA in the form of "droplet fibres" were found. These enlarged, bulging adrenergic axons are assumed to be a consequence of mechanical trauma with stretching or disruption of the axons due to myodegenerative processes. It is further assumed that these "droplet fibres" are relatively common in those patients with diseased myocardium. They may constitute an extra contributory factor to the tendency to arrhythmiility of non-atuomatic tissue.
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PMID:Studies of auricular catecholamines by fluorescence histochemistry in various heart diseases of man. 14 May 8

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.
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PMID:Pulmonary varix regression after mitral valve replacement. 126 59

The relationship of stature with the prevalence of 18 chronic diseases or groups of diseases was analysed using data from the 1983 Italian National Health Survey, based on a sample of 63,859 individuals aged 20 or over randomly selected within strata of geographical area, size of the place of residence and of the household in order to be representative of the Italian population. Rate ratios (RR) were computed using multiple logistic regression, including terms for sex, age, geographical area, education and smoking. For 15 out of 18 diseases or groups of diseases the RR was below unity in the highest quartiles of height, and the inverse trends with stature were significant for 11 (diabetes, RR 0.90 for highest vs lowest quartile; heart disease, RR 0.92; chronic bronchitis and emphysema, RR 0.84; bronchial asthma, RR 0.70; anaemias, RR 0.70; liver cirrhosis, RR 0.62; urolithiasis, RR 0.76; renal insufficiency, RR 0.71; arthritis, RR 0.89; psychiatric and neurological disorders, RR 0.82). None of the diseases considered showed significant direct trends with height, but hypertension (RR 1.09 for the highest vs lowest quartile), haemorrhoids or varices (RR 1.09) and cancers (RR 1.22) tended to be elevated in the highest quartile of height. The generalised inverse relationship between height and prevalence of chronic disease suggests that poorer nutrition in childhood and adolescence is an unfavourable indicator for the subsequent occurrence of several diseases. Major exceptions were hypertension and varices, two conditions highly dependent on the pattern of health care utilization, and cancer.
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PMID:Height and the prevalence of chronic disease. 160 29

The authors examined comprehensively a group of 23 patients with angiodysplastic changes of the type of Klippel-Trenaunay's syndrome. It is a longitudinal investigation, incl. a paediatric and genetic examination. The authors recorded the main phenotypical characteristics of the disease with emphasis on biomechanical aspects. The genealogical examination revealed microsymptoms in the family in a total of 52.2%, such as varicose veins and crural ulcers, haemangiomas and congenital heart disease. The genetic examination proves the assumed polygenic type of heredity with a low risk for grade 1 relatives, i.e. children and siblings of the affected subjects, who are isolated cases in the pedigree. In rare instances the authors recorded complete transmission in two generations. The clinical picture of the disease involves above all hemihypertrophy or asymmetry ensuing from trophic changes, mainly of the extremities and adequate part of the trunk. These changes were recorded in 100% of the investigated patients. Usually the lower half of the body is affected--52.2%, a lateral predilection was not observed. The authors mention also other facultative characteristics of the syndrome.
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PMID:[Clinical and genetic characteristics of the Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome]. 217 74

The relation between education, prevalence of 17 chronic diseases or groups of diseases, and pattern of health care utilisation was evaluated from data from the 1983 Italian National Health Survey, based on 58 462 individuals aged 25 or over randomly selected within strata of geographical area, size of place of residence, and size of household, in order to be representative of the whole Italian population. Most of the diseases considered, including diabetes, hypertension, myocardial infarction and other heart disease, haemorrhoids or varices, chronic respiratory disease, anaemias, gastroduodenal ulcer, cholelithiasis and liver cirrhosis, kidney and urological diseases, arthritis, and psychiatric and neurological disturbances, were consistently less prevalent among more educated individuals. The age and sex adjusted risk estimates for individuals educated in high school or university compared with those with only a primary school education or less ranged between 0.21 for liver cirrhosis and 0.80 for anaemias. The sole exception was allergy, which was more prevalent among the more educated individuals (relative risk = 1.42). General practitioner visits and hospital admissions were reported less frequently by the more educated individuals, but specialist consultations of potential preventive value were less frequent among the less well educated. The results were similar when occupation was utilised as an indicator of social class. Thus, the findings of this national survey provide confirmation and quantitative assessment of considerable differences in health and health service utilisation according to indicators of social class.
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PMID:Education, prevalence of disease, and frequency of health care utilisation. The 1983 Italian National Health Survey. 365 37

Although only about 2-3 percent of annual deaths are attributed to one of the four underlying causes linked to chronic alcohol use, research results suggest that the impact of alcohol is much greater. The recent issue of mortality multiple cause of death tapes from National Center for Health Statistics permit exploration of associations of chronic alcohol abuse with conditions coded as underlying cause of death and provide leads for case-finding. Data analysis is reported from certificates of resident deaths in the United States in 1978. There are 12 groups of underlying causes for which the percentage of pairings with chronic alcohol abuse ranges from 4-16 percent of the number of deaths from the underlying cause. Age, sex, and metropolitan status of residence are associated with a listing of chronic alcohol abuse among decedents of liver cancer, varicose veins, symptomatic heart disease, septicemia, and respiratory system disease. Planners concerned with secondary prevention can use these clues provided by logistic regression modelling as an aid in case-finding.
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PMID:The influence of alcohol abuse as a hidden contributor to mortality. 402 76

Modern contraceptive methods are discussed, with special emphasis on oral contraceptives, which are regarded as the most effective. They are also regarded as generally safe, although there are contraindications and the drugs should only be prescribed after careful examination. The need for selecting the drug most suitable for the individual patients, mainly on the basis of the characteristics of the menstrual cycle (suggesting a predominance of estrogen or progestin, within safety limits, such as 50 mcg of estrogen), is emphasized. The examinations required include a general clinical, gynecological, and breast examination, cytology tests, evaluation of the menstrual flow pattern, measurements of arterial pressure, weight, glucose, cholesterol and triglyceride levels, and urine tests. They should be repeated at 6-month intervals, or 3-month intervals in the case of high-risk patients (varicose veins, obesity, heavy smokers, high cholesterol and triglyceride levels, history of jaundice, slight heart condition, clinical or potential diabetes, porphyria or predisposition to uterine myoma). Oral contraceptives are contraindicated in cases presenting a history of thromboembolism, phlebitis, cerebral apoplexy; sickle cell anemia, which indicates a predisposition to thromboembolic accidents; serious liver disease or recent hepatitis; serious heart disease; hormone-dependent neoplasia (breast cancer); predisposition to uterine cancer; erythematous lupus; metorrhagia of unknown origin; psychic disorders, especially of a depressive type. They should also be avoided for 3-4 years after puberty, in order to avoid interfering with the development of the hypothalamus and with growth. A carcinogenic effect of the pill and an increase in the risk of giving birth to abnormal children can be ruled out, although the incidence of abortions due to chromosome anomalies after suspending treatment is rather high (due to the previous inhibition of ovulation, a situation similar to repeated pregnancies at short intervals, which involve the same risk).
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PMID:[Current clinical problems of contraception]. 502 53

A 30-year-old woman with severe mitral insufficiency had large, rounded opacities at the right hilus as seen on her chest x-ray film. These were shown to be varicosities of the right pulmonary veins by pulmonary angiography and by direct injection of contrast medium from a Brockenbrough catheter, which entered the varices from the left atrium. A year after mitral valve replacement there was complete regression of the venous dilatations. When a pulmonary varix is detected there is associated heart disease in 40% of cases. Mitral valve disease (usually mitral insufficiency) is the cardiac abnormality in 27%. This would indicate that pulmonary varix is a complication of mitral insufficiency. Four patients who have undergone valve replacement for mitral reflux have shown regression of the caricosities, suggesting that relief of mitral insufficiency will reduce or eliminate the risk of varix rupture.
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PMID:Regression of multiple pulmonary varices after mitral valve replacement. 735 Mar 78

The complications (thromboembolism and jaundice), averse effects (metabolic disorders, hypertension and bleeding) and the risks (cancer and teratologic effects) of oral contraceptives are summarized and compared to those of other methods. Venous thrombosis is more frequent than arterial thrombosis; both are rare but can be severe; risk is decreased with minidose pills. Cholostatic jaundice is likely only in those with history of such jaundice in pregnancy. Decreased oral glucose tolerance similar to diabetes of pregnancy, similarly, is more common with high dose pills. Triglycerides, pre-beta lipoproteins and t otal cholesterol levels are increased to the upper limit of normal, but stabilize after 3 months of pill intake in normal women. Mixed hyperlipidemia in some women can be detected by the cholesterol to triglycerides ratio after 8 and 12 hours of fasting. Other possible side effects are hypertension, elevated thyroid hormone, depression due to abnormal tryptophan metabolism, acne, cholasma, varices, spotting, amenorrhea. The risk of cancer is still unknown, but that of chromosomal defects in unfounded. To avoid these complications, the physician must observe the contraindications of history of thromboembolism, heart disease, jaundice, hypertension and cancer, and follow patients regularly by gynecologic exam, glucose tolerance and blood lipid tests and take blood pressure. In comparison, diaphragms give 15% failure rates, and copper IUDs less than 1%, but about 10% expulsions and 10% removals for bleeding.
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PMID:[Complications of contraception]. 1225 11

The strong activation of the clotting cascade that occurs during total hip arthroplasty places patients at increased risk for venous thromboembolism. The risk is higher in those patients with the following predisposing factors, listed in approximate order of importance: hip fracture; malignancy, particularly if associated with chemotherapy; antiphospholipid syndrome; immobility; history of venous thromboemholism; administration of tamoxifen; raloxifene; oral contraceptives or estrogen; morbid obesity; stroke; atherosclerosis; and an American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status classification of 3 or greater. The following risk factors are weak or controversial: advanced age; diabetes mellitus; congestive heart disease; atrial fibrillation; varicose veins; and smoking. However, 50% of patients who develop thromboembolism after total hip arthroplasty have no clinical predisposing factors. In a matched, controlled study, we defined the major genetic predispositions that increase the risk of venous thromboembolism after total hip arthroplasty: deficiency of antithrombin III (< 75%) and protein C (< 70%), and prothrombin gene mutation. Preoperative genetic screening in conjunction with the recognized clinical risk factors can help categorize postoperative venous thromboembolism risk and differentiate patients who can be protected with milder and safer prophylaxis (eg, aspirin, intermittent pneumatic compression) compared with those at higher risk who need to be anticoagulated.
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PMID:Thromboembolic disease after total hip arthroplasty: who is at risk? 1700 73


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