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

The case files of 4,456 medical admissions in 1975--1976 at Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Kaduna, Nigeria, included 354 cardiovascular patients. The most common causes were hypertension (45.5%), cardiomyopathy (20.6%) and chronic rheumatic heart disease (14.4%). The mean age of hypertensive and cardiovascular patients was lower than in Europe. The majority of hypertensive patients suffer from essential hypertension. Congestive cardiac failure is the commonest complication of hypertension and cardiomyopathy. Rheumatic valvular disease with mitral incompetence is frequent and sometimes severe in young people. Other cardiovascular diseases included pericardial disease, bacterial endocarditis, cor pulmonale, anaemic heart failure, congenital and syphilitic heart disease. Coronary heart disease was only encountered in non-Africans. Cardiovascular mortality in hospital was high (20%).
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PMID:Cardiovascular disease in Northern Nigeria. 31 94

Most cardiovascular problems in pregnant women arise from the complications of preexisting chronic conditions (e.g., rheumatic and congenital heart disease) and hypertensive vascular disease. Regular supervision of these patients is essential to detect incipient pulmonary congestion or disturbances of cardiac rhythm. Even if the pregnancy has been uncomplicated, hospital admission 1-4 weeks before the due date is recommended to ensure optimal conditions for labor. Vaginal delivery at term with adequate sedation and use of forceps to shorten the 2nd stage of labor is the perferred mode. Induction of labor may be indicated in hypertensive vascular disease or in cases where adjusting or discontinuing drug therapy calls for precise timing of delivery. Eisenmenger's disease and primary hypertension are potential medical indications for pregnancy termination. The distribution pattern of organic heart disease encountered in pregnant women has changed in the past 20 years, with a decrease in rheumatic and an increase in congenital heart disease. The incidence of chronic rheumatic heart disease in pregnant women fell from 3.5% of all deliveries at Newcastle General Hospital in 1942-51 to 1.1% in 1962-71. Acute pulmonary edema in mitral stenosis is currently a major risk during pregnancy. There is no optimal stage of pregnancy for valvotomy, nor evidence that this procedure induces miscarriage in the early weeks. Pregnancy has become less hazardous in severe forms of congenital heart disease as more patients with these disorders have undergone cardiac surgery prior to pregnancy. Pregnancy is not believed to have any effect on the longterm course of rheumatic heart disease. Patients with aortic stenosis, coarctation of the aorta, primary pulmonary hypertension, Fallot's tetralogy, Eisenmenger's syndrome, and surgically untreated cyanotic lesions require special attention during pregnancy. The outlook for women who become pregnant after an acute cardiac infarction episode depends on the functional state of the heart at the time of pregnancy and the presence or absence of angina pain. There has been a gradual decline in perinatal mortality, especially in cases complicated by rheumatic heart disease.
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PMID:Cardiac disorders. 34 Jan 1

All autopsies on Black patients who died of heart disease at Baragwanath Hospital were examined for the years 1959, 1960 and 1976. The commonest form of heart disease encountered in South African Blacks is undoubtedly hypertensive heart disease and by far the majority of these cases are of essential hypertension. There appears to have been a slight rise in the incidence of hypertension. Rheumatic heart disease is extremely common, and affects young people, who often have advanced valvular lesions by puberty. The incidence of idiopathic cardiomyopathy does not seem to have altered materially, although there has perhaps been a slight drop, which may be accounted for by the tendency of clinicians to place cases of congestive cardiac failure with mild hypertension in the hypertensive group rather than in the idiopathic cardiomyopathy group. There was a significant alteration in the incidence of myocardial infarction; in 1959 and 1960 these cases comprised less than 1% of all cardiac deaths but in 1976 they comprised nearly 12%. There has also been a dramatic fall in the incidence of cardiovascular syphilis.
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PMID:The changing pattern of heart disease in South African Blacks. 60 91

Whether a person is medically fit to engage in sports depends not only on his or her present state of health but also on his or her previous medical history, age, personality, and of course, the nature of the particular sport in question. Anyone that feels fit, is physically in good condition, abstains from tobacco, alcohol and other intoxicant stimulants, and passes a thorough medical examination is healthy and fully capable of taking part in any sport whatever. Participation in any form of sport, on the other hand, is absolutely contra-indicated for persons suffering from severe or malignant hypertension, inflammatory or bacterial heart disease, severe angina pectoris - especially with an attendant risk of myocardial infarction - or haemodynamically significant arrhythmias that manifest themselves during, or are aggravated by, physical exertion. Physical activity is generally deleterious in patients with advanced pulmonary disease and chronic cor pulmonale, severe decompensated heart failure or severe renal insufficiency. Severe intercurrent infections also constitute an absolute contra-indication for sport. Between these two extremes of absolute fitness and absolute unfitness there are many intermediate states, e.g. diseases like essential hypertension (WHO Stages I and II), coronary disease and peripheral arterial circulatory disorders, in which patients can derive considerable benefit from properly chosen and carefully graded sporting activity.
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PMID:[Medical fitness for sports, with particular reference to cardiovascular conditions]. 102 Apr 74

1. Nine paatients with clinically unimportant heart disease or benign essential hypertension were given frusemide intravenously during right-heart catheterization. 2. Pressures in both atria decreased rapidly and in parallel. The magnitude of the pressure decrease was clearly related to decrease in plasma volume loss. 3. Plasma renin activity increased significantly after 5 min (P less than 0-01), but did not correlate with plasma volume loss. 4. Venous tone in the forearm was unchanged. 5. It is concluded that the pressure reduction was secondary to plasma volume depletion through diuresis and that increased plasma renin activity was mainly caused by intrarenal changes.
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PMID:The early effects of intravenous frusemide on central haemodynamics, venous tone and plasma renin activity. 120 85

The effects of the calcium antagonist nitrendipine and the diuretic hydrochlorothiazide on plasma calciotropic hormone concentrations and lumbar bone density were compared during the treatment of hypertension in a randomized, double-blind, 8 week parallel study, followed by a 52 week open label study. There were 32 subjects with stable essential hypertension (sitting diastolic blood pressure > or = 95 mm Hg and < or = 115 mm Hg without medication) without evidence of renal insufficiency or active heart disease. They were randomly assigned to receive either 10 mg nitrendipine twice daily or 50 mg hydrochlorothiazide daily. In order to reach and maintain target blood pressure (diastolic blood pressure < or = 95 mm Hg) during the open label period, the nitrendipine dose was titrated up to 30 mg twice daily, and additional antihypertensive drugs, of differing classes, were added as necessary. Blood samples were analyzed for concentrations of calcium, parathyroid hormone, and calcitonin, and lumbar bone density was determined by dual photon absorptiometry, at the baseline and at 24 and 52 weeks of antihypertensive drug therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparative effects of nitrendipine and hydrochlorothiazide on calciotropic hormones and bone density in hypertensive patients. 128 36

In this review, the coronary haemodynamics of hypertrophic heart disease are discussed with reference to data published over the last 15 years. Coronary reserve is reduced in the presence of concentric cardiac hypertrophy, but is similar to normal in hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and aortic stenosis, despite marked left ventricular hypertrophy. A moderate decrease in coronary reserve is found in aortic incompetence and in dilated essential hypertension. In hypertensive heart disease, improvement in coronary reserve can be achieved by long-term vasodilator therapy.
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PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy, myocardial blood flow and coronary flow reserve. 130 Dec 55

Since the advent of the Doppler color flow echocardiography, the presence of a small degree of insufficiency of the cardiac valves has been detected with relative frequency in structurally and functionally normal hearts. Data about this so-called 'physiological' regurgitation are presently available only in normotensive subjects and athletes. We therefore studied the prevalence of this phenomenon in a group of patients with essential hypertension compared to a population of normotensive subjects. To this purpose, a Doppler color flow echocardiographic study was performed in 130 essential hypertensive patients (72M/58F; age 44.2 +/- 13.5 years; BP 154.3 +/- 12.8/98.3 +/- 7.1 mm Hg) without any evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy or cardiopathy and in 100 normal subjects (59M/41F; age 41.2 +/- 14.8 years; BP 119.1 +/- 8.1/79.2 +/- 8.1 mm Hg). We conclude that in patients with essential hypertension the physiological regurgitant jets are present in one or more cardiac valves; moreover, the regurgitation of the mitral and aortic valve is found with more frequency than in the normotensive control group (36.1 vs. 27.0% and 17.7 vs. 11.0%, respectively). These data suggest that the increased afterload of the left ventricle may play an important role in the pathogenesis of even minor degree of insufficiency of the cardiac valves. As this finding does not appear to have a pathological relevance, the main clinical implication of this study is that it is not advisable to create a jatrogenic heart disease in the hypertensive patients routinely screened by the echo-Doppler technique.
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PMID:Prevalence of physiological valvular regurgitation in hypertensive patients: echocardiographic and color Doppler study. 130 18

We used color-Doppler echocardiography in an investigation of cardiac morphology and function to verify the cardiac anatomic and functional changes in acromegalic patients with or without hypertension and hyperlipemic states. Fifteen patients with growth hormone-secreting pituitary adenoma (mean age: 47.9 years) and 15 healthy control subjects were studied. We measured serum growth hormone (GH), somatomedin-C, cholesterol, triglyceride levels and carried out echocardiographic studies of the following cardiac morpho-functional parameters: left ventricular diameter, volume, mass and wall systolic stress. Serum GH and somatomedin-C levels were significantly higher in acromegalic patients than in controls (p < 0.001 and p < 0.001 respectively). Echocardiography evidenced increased left ventricular mass (60% of the acromegalic patients; p < 0.05) and increased wall systolic stress (53.3%; p < 0.05). Color-Doppler analysis evidenced abnormal diastolic function in 8 acromegalic patients (p < 0.001). We thus conclude that the most characteristic feature of acromegalic heart disease is left ventricular involvement, diastolic dysfunction, increased left ventricular mass or wall systolic stress. The pathogenesis is most probably multifactorial: essential hypertension, associated with slow and progressive evolution of heart disease, appears to be a determining factor.
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PMID:[Acromegalic cardiopathy: a morphofunctional study with color-Doppler echocardiography]. 145 53

Mitral flow was assessed by Doppler echocardiography in patients with systemic hypertension. The study was carried out on 40 patients (27 men and 13 women) aged 24-50 years, mean 43 years with essential hypertension stage II according to WHO classification. No patient had other heart disease or diabetes. All patients were randomly assigned to verapamil (20 patients) or propranolol (20 patients). The daily dose of verapamil was 60-120 mg, mean 80 mg and propranolol 120-180 mg, mean 140 mg. Pulsed Doppler studies in all patients were performed before the treatment and after 4-6 weeks of the treatment. Echocardiographic examination was performed with Hewlett-Packard 707020 A ultrasound system using 2.5 MHz transducer. Two dimensionally guided pulsed Doppler echocardiograms were recorded with sample volume positioned in the inflow area below the mitral annulus. The following Doppler parameters were measured: early diastolic flow velocity (EDF), late diastolic flow velocity (LDF) and their ratio (EDF/LDF) which represents the ratio of early and late diastolic flow velocity of left ventricular filling. The study has showed that before treatment the value of EDF, LDF and EDF/LDF ratio in both groups did not significantly differ. Heart rate and arterial pressure in patients with systemic hypertension after treatment with verapamil or propranolol were significant lower than before treatment. Treatment with verapamil caused significant increase of EDF from 61.2 to 78.2 cm/sek and increase EDF/LDF ratio from 1.02 to 1.30. While LDF values were not changed. In the group of patients treated with propranolol the values of EDF, LDF and ratio EDF/LDF were similar to those before treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Effects of verapamil and propranolol on the left-ventricular diastolic function in patients with primary arterial hypertension]. 176 83


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