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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Methods for measurement of blood flow with MR were devised many years ago but have been used for diagnosis in only the past few years. The two methods of measurement that have been used most extensively are based on the principles of time of flight and phase shift. A number of factors can influence the accuracy of MR measurements of blood flow. In vitro studies using flow phantoms have verified the accuracy of the phase-shift technique for measuring flow velocities exceeding 5 m/sec, which for practical purposes, encompasses the peak flow encountered in cardiovascular disorders. The flow measurements have been used to quantify valvular heart disease, congenital
heart disease
, pulmonary arterial disease, thoracic aortic disease, and
peripheral vascular disease
.
...
PMID:MR measurement of blood flow in the cardiovascular system. 150 4
Estimates of the cost of diabetes should take into account the development of complications. Patient records identified from the 1987 National Hospital Discharge Survey were used to evaluate the risk of hospitalization due to late complications. Hospitalization for diabetic nephropathy reached a peak of 6.74/1000 between the ages of 45 and 54 years, compared to 0.14 to 1.80/1000 in controls. Diabetic patients less than or equal to 45 years of age were 46 times more likely to be hospitalized due to neuropathy. The risk of cardiovascular complications is high, with a greater incidence of arterial than venous disorders. Diabetic patients were 22 times more likely to be admitted for skin ulcers/gangrene, 15 times more likely due to
peripheral vascular disease
, and 10 times due to atherosclerosis. The risk of cerebrovascular accident and
heart disease
was 6 to 10 times greater in diabetic patients. Seventy-five per cent of diabetic cardiovascular disorders are myocardial infarction or chronic ischaemia. Hospitalization from renal complications occurs at younger ages than in the general population. Ophthalmic complications increase with age. Diabetic complications account for 2% of the total hospital admissions in the US in 1987. The total cost of the treatment of late diabetic complications was estimated at +5091 million (cardiovascular 74%; renal diseases 10%; nephropathy 3.6%; ophthalmic disorders 1.5%; other unspecified diseases 10%).
...
PMID:The cost of hospitalization for the late complications of diabetes in the United States. 182 50
The preceding discussions outline the various forms of cirrhosis that may be encountered in the elderly population. Cirrhosis is not uncommon in older patients. Although it has been stated that most cirrhosis in the elderly is due to alcohol, these assumptions are perhaps overestimations. In the authors' experience, many older patients are inappropriately labeled with alcoholic liver disease--presumed guilty until proven otherwise--and have subsequently been shown to have nonalcoholic liver disease. Careful investigation is required. Hepatotoxic drug exposure (e.g., to alpha methyldopa, nitrofurantoin, or isoniazid) should be ruled out, and hepatitis B and hepatitis C serology obtained. Primary biliary cirrhosis may occur in both sexes, and thus antimitochondrial antibody should be assayed. Severe
heart disease
may result in cardiac cirrhosis in the elderly, with ascites and hepatomegaly. Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, primary sclerosing cholangitis, idiopathic hemochromatosis, and chronic autoimmune hepatitis may result in advanced cirrhosis in the elderly; appropriate serum studies should be obtained. If questions remain and if therapy may be changed, liver biopsy can be performed. A recent study suggested, however, that the risk of hemorrhage from liver biopsy in the elderly may be increased, especially if malignancy is present. The era of treatment for liver diseases has arrived. Colchicine, methotrexate, ursodeoxycholic acid, and others have shown promise in the treatment of PBC, primary sclerosing cholangitis, and alcoholic liver disease. Corticosteroids may be lifesaving in autoimmune liver disease. Phlebotomy remains the treatment of choice for hemochromatosis in any age group. Interferons and other antiviral agents are being used in chronic type B and type C hepatitis. Treatment of the complications of cirrhosis in the elderly may be safely accomplished. Advanced age is not a contraindication to variceal sclerotherapy. Vasopressin, however, may be contraindicated in the elderly patient if there is an underlying history of atherosclerotic coronary or
peripheral vascular disease
. Large-volume paracentesis and peritoneal venous shunting can afford symptomatic relief of ascites, even in the geriatric population. Finally, as noted previously, advanced age is no longer to be considered an absolute contraindication for liver transplantation. The evaluation of liver disease in the elderly may be diagnostically challenging, and its treatment rewarding.
...
PMID:Liver diseases in the elderly. 185 64
We report on the incidence of new macrovascular disease among the 497 members of the London Cohort of the WHO Multinational Study of Vascular Disease in Diabetics (aged 35-54 years at recruitment) over a mean 8.33 year follow-up period. Overall at the end of the follow-up period the prevalence of macrovascular disease in the cohort was 45%; 43% of the subjects showed evidence of ischaemic heart disease, 4.5% of cerebrovascular disease and 4.2% of
peripheral vascular disease
. The incidence rates for new disease in those subjects who were free at baseline expressed per 1000 patient years of follow-up were: ischaemic ECG abnormality 23.6 (patients with insulin-dependent diabetes 19.8, patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes 28.1), myocardial infarction 17.6 (patients with insulin-dependent diabetes 16.5, patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes 18.8), all ichaemic
heart disease
31.7 (patients with insulin-dependent diabetes 30.3, patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes 33.4), cerebrovascular disease 5.9 and
peripheral vascular disease
5.2. Incidence rates were generally similar among men and women except for myocardial infarction in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes where men had a significantly higher incidence rate. Macrovascular disease is a major problem in patients with diabetes and in this age group is mainly manifested as ischaemic heart disease.
...
PMID:Incidence of macrovascular disease in diabetes mellitus: the London cohort of the WHO Multinational Study of Vascular Disease in Diabetics. 193 62
Recognition of cardiac problems and their impact on the treatment of dysvascular amputees is important during rehabilitation because the energy demands and cardiac work loads of functional activities are substantially greater when performed by persons with amputation than when performed by control subjects. For this reason, monitoring the cardiovascular response to therapeutic exercise might be expected to enhance the medical and rehabilitative management of dysvascular amputees. In the present study, 31 amputees with
peripheral vascular disease
underwent continuous noninvasive dynamic cardiovascular monitoring during an initial physical therapy session. The sample had a mean age of 65 yr. There were 20 females. Twenty patients had unilateral below knee amputation. Fifty-two percent had a preamputation history of cardiac disease and six experienced major cardiovascular complications during rehabilitation. After a mean acute hospitalization of 20 days and a mean rehabilitation stay of 36 days, 11 patients were walking independently and 25 were discharged to home. During the monitored physical therapy session, patients achieved a mean maximum heart rate of 113 beats/min, mean maximum blood pressure of 159/81, mean maximum rate-pressure product of 14,546, and mean percent of age-predicted maximal heart rate of 73%. Seventeen (55%) patients demonstrated abnormalities during the monitored session, four of whom had no prior history of
heart disease
. These changes consisted predominantly of ST-T segment abnormalities, but also included exercise-induced arrhythmias and decreases in blood pressure. Patients with a history of
heart disease
demonstrated significantly more abnormalities during the monitored session than did those without a history of
heart disease
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dysvascular amputee rehabilitation. The role of continuous noninvasive cardiovascular monitoring during physical therapy. 230 33
This third paper from the Persantine Aspirin Trial examines the data to identify risk factors for stroke in persons with a history of carotid territory transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) Fifteen centers in the United States and Canada participated, and 890 subjects were admitted and randomly allocated to either aspirin plus placebo or aspirin plus dipyridamole (Persantine). Persons with the following characteristics were in greater jeopardy for stroke, retinal infarction, or death: older age, history of
heart disease
, history of
peripheral vascular disease
, and persisting neurologic deficit from a recent event. Elevated diastolic blood pressure, diabetes, use of estrogen, and smoking were not found to be risk factors. Elevated systolic blood pressure was a risk factor primarily in subjects with a history of
heart disease
. Estrogen use may actually have had a protective effect for women. This cannot be considered as a report of the natural history of TIA patients; it does identify risk factors in a specific cohort of subjects under treatment.
...
PMID:Persantine aspirin trial in cerebral ischemia--Part III: Risk factors for stroke. The American-Canadian Co-Operative Study Group. 286 49
Epidemiologists studying the risk factors of coronary heart disease, as indicated by a heart attack, often presume that these risk factors combine in a susceptible host to increase the risk of the heart attack. The "biological" basis for the interaction of the key risk factors is often not considered in the analysis. A more rational model for the study of clinical
heart disease
, stroke, and
peripheral vascular disease
would be to separate the epidemiology of atherosclerosis from that of the clinical event. In the past, this has been extremely difficult because of the absence of techniques for the measurement of atherosclerosis in vivo, especially in well-defined populations. However, in recent years, greater emphasis on the quantification of atherosclerosis and its relationship to specific risk factors has improved our ability to study the underlying pathology that is atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis is an example of a common-source epidemic. The environmental agent is the intake of cholesterol and saturated fat. The interaction of specific dietary factors and genetic determinants is the key to the evolution of atherosclerosis. There are marked variations in the evolution of the disease in different vascular beds as well as among individuals exposed to similar environmental factors. In the future, we will probably be able to study atherosclerosis as a continuous variable in populations and to relate the rate of progression, the extent of disease at any point in time, and topical distribution of atherosclerosis within individual vascular beds to specific genetic and environmental determinants.
...
PMID:The epidemiology of atherosclerosis in 1987: unraveling a common-source epidemic. 304 99
In a prospective study of postoperative complications, strokes occurred in 6 out of 2463 patients (0.2%) who underwent non-cardiac, non-carotid artery surgery. The patients who experienced cerebrovascular accidents, including three cases of transient ischemic attack, were significantly older than the rest of the group (mean age 79 years versus 65 years) and had manifestations of atherosclerosis in at least one organ preoperatively. Significant predictors of risk for postoperative cerebrovascular accidents were previous cerebrovascular disease,
heart disease
,
peripheral vascular disease
, and hypertension. Cerebrovascular accidents occurred late in the postoperative period, 5-26 days after surgery, and were not directly related to surgery and anesthesia. They were more frequent after acute than after elective operations. Precipitating factors for some of the stroke incidents were rapid atrial fibrillation and postoperative dehydration.
...
PMID:Postoperative cerebrovascular accidents in general surgery. 321 96
More and more people are turning to exercise as a means of achieving long-term health. The World Health Organization has endorsed this concept. The best available evidence suggests that an employee fitness programme will result in decreased health-care costs, decreased absenteeism and increased productivity for the employer. Regular physical activity is also associated with lower mortality rates. Appropriate physical activity may be a valuable tool in therapeutic regimens for the control and amelioration (rehabilitation) of cardiovascular disease, coronary artery disease, hypertension, congenital
heart disease
,
peripheral vascular disease
, obesity, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, musculoskeletal disorders, end-stage renal disease, stress, anxiety and depression, etc. Regular physical activity, independent of other factors, reduces the probability of coronary artery disease and early death. Patients with risk factors for coronary artery disease need more intensive preexercise evaluation than those not a risk, and those with known or suspected cardiovascular disease need the most intensive evaluation and follow-up. Participation in vigorous sports activities, such as jogging, swimming, tennis, etc., helps to protect against the development of hypertension, even when other predisposing factors are present. Several studies have been conducted on the use of exercise in the treatment of hypertension. Physical exercise also contributes to the control of body weight. Consideration of the metabolic abnormalities in patients with type II (adult onset) diabetes indicates that they would make excellent candidates for an exercise programme. Osteoporosis is an important health problem for the elderly. The best treatment available at present is prevention, and a high level of physical activity throughout life can result in a larger skeletal mass during old age.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The role of physical activity in the prevention and treatment of noncommunicable diseases. 323 11
Surgical risk factors of abdominal aortic disease. Between January 1, 1982 and October 1986, 327 surgical repairs were performed on abdominal aortic obstructive diseases and aneurysms at the St. Luc University Hospital. 150 pre-, per- and postoperative data were collected retrospectively for each patient. Ninety-one per cent of patients were smokers, 57.5 per cent had
heart disease
, 43 per cent arterial hypertension, 51 per cent
peripheral vascular disease
and 28 percent had obstructive lung disease. Concerning cardiac morbidity, the post-operative infarction rate was 4.4 per cent in patients who had previously suffered from an infarction, and 1.9 per cent in patients with no previous infarction. Post-operative angina-ischemia rate were respectively 23 and 4.7 per cent. Two hundred and thirty two elective operations resulted in 6 deaths (2.6 per cent) while 95 emergency operations resulted in 34 deaths (35.8 per cent). The causes of the death and the post-operative complications are detailed. The decrease of the morbidity and the mortality rates inherent to this pathology depends on an early diagnosis and surgical treatment by a team, knowledgeable of this pathology, who are able to prevent and correctly treat the complications, especially those affecting the cardiovascular system.
...
PMID:[Risk factors in surgery of the abdominal aorta]. 338 30
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