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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Experiments proved gutimine capable of intensify the collateral coronary circulation, intraventricular pressure and the rate of its accretion (dp/dt), the excitability and permeability of the heart, as well as to raise the cardiac contractility in dogs during an acute period of
myocardial ischemia
. In rats with pituitrin-isadrine induced
cardiopathy
the drug drastically depressed the permeability of the histohematogenous barriers of the myocardium and lengthened somewhat the life span of the animals. Parallel with is rising doses gutimine depressed the excitability threshold of the frog's heart "in situ" in a test with a liminal current producing extrasystole.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of the cardiotropic effect of gutimine]. 6 52
Fifty-nine patients between the ages of 13 and 88 with sinus node disease, who received a permanent ventricular pacemaker between 1965 and 1976 at one institution, were followed to determine the natural history of the disorder after permanent pacing. Nineteen had
ischemic heart disease
, six had primary myocardial disease, and eight valvular heart disease. In 26, no etiology for the arrhythmia was apparent. The one- and five-year survival was 85.5% and 73.1%, respectively. Patients with underlying
heart disease
had a significantly poorer survival when compared to those without (58% versus 94% at 36 months) and all but 3 of 13 deaths in the first 36 months were in those with
ischemic heart disease
. There was a distinct trend toward poor survival in those with heart failure prior to pacemaker implant and those over age 65. Patients with sinus bradycardia alone did best (91% survival three years after implant), while those with bradycardia-tachycardia syndrome and those with sinoatrial arrest alone did distinctly worse (76% and 65% survival at three years, respectively). Twelve of 18 deaths were due to progression of underlying
heart disease
. The long-term prognosis with symptomatic sinus node disease can be predicted in part by (1) etiology of the underlying
heart disease
, (2) pre-implant arrhythmia, and (3) ventricular function prior to implant.
...
PMID:Symptomatic sinus node disease: natural history after permanent ventricular pacing. 9 95
Fourteen term newborn infants have been recognized as having transient tricuspid insufficiency associated with significant perinatal stress. Five of these infants underwent cardiac catheterization for presumed congenital
heart disease
, but had only massive tricuspid valve insufficiency. The other nine infants were diagnosed on the basis of a murmur characteristic of tricuspid valve insufficiency and on other clinical grounds. All had a history of significant perinatal stress in the form of asphyxia with or without hypoglycemia. Frequently, congestive heart failure, persistent cyanosis, and ECG evidence of
myocardial ischemia
were present. Twelve of the 14 survived, and in each of them all cardiac signs and symptoms, including the murmur, spontaneously resolved. The two patients who died had histopathologic evidence of necrosis in the anterior papillary muscle of the tricuspid valve. The constant features of perinatal stress, ST-T wave abnormalities on the ECG, and spontaneous resolution of the transient tricuspid insufficiency strongly suggest that this syndrome is secondary to a reversible form of myocardial dysfunction, perhaps by affecting papillary muscle specifically. We believe that hypoxia with or without hypoglycemia precipitates the events leading to this clinical syndrome which is distinguishable from other cardiac abnormalities in the newborn by the history, distinctive murmur, and the ECG abnormalities.
...
PMID:Transient tricuspid insufficiency of the newborn: a form of myocardial dysfunction in stressed newborns. 13 40
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.
...
PMID:Studies of auricular catecholamines by fluorescence histochemistry in various heart diseases of man. 14 May 8
Echocardiographic assessment of left ventricular size and function correlates well with that made by cineangiography. The technic is particularly suited to the early detection and serial monitoring of left ventricular hypertrophy and dysfunction in valvular heart disease, hypertensive heart disease and the cardiomyopathies. It also has advantages over angiography in experimental situations in which frequently repeated or continuous assessment of left ventricular size and function may be required. The limited usefulness of a single ultrasound beam in segmental
heart disease
, such as
ischemic heart disease
, may be overcome in the future with improvements in two-dimensional echocardiographic technics.
...
PMID:The evaluation of left ventricular function by echocardiography. 14 83
Atrial fibrillation is well known to increase greatly the risk of systemic arterial embolism in patients with mitral valve disease. In light of the clinical frequency of embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation due to other types of
heart disease
, a study was made of embolic occurrences in 333 autopsy patients with atrial fibrillation associated with various kinds of
heart disease
. Considering only symptomatic emboli with pathologic or surgical confirmation, embolism occurred in 41% of patients with mitral valve disease, 35% of those with
ischemic heart disease
, 35% of those with coexisting mitral and
ischemic heart disease
and 17% of those with "other" types of
heart disease
. Embolism was found in only 7% of a control group of 58 autopsy patients with
ischemic heart disease
without atrial fibrillation. These findings suggest a high risk of embolism from atrial fibrillation of any origin, but particularly from that caused by
ischemic heart disease
and mitral valve disease.
...
PMID:Influence of etiology of atrial fibrillation on incidence of systemic embolism. 14 84
Myocardial ischemia
occurs when there is an imbalance between myocardial oxygen demand and supply, and it is usually entirely or predominantly subendocardial. Animal experiments have shown that relative subendocardial ischemia (a reduced inner:outer flow ratio) can be predicted quite accurately from the ratio of two pressure-time areas:DPTI, the area between diastolic aortic and left ventricular pressures, and SPTI, the area beneath the systolic left ventricular pressure curve. Although the importance of relating supply and demand is obvious, care is needed in applying the results of these animal experiments to man. Recent work has shown that the critical DPTI:SPTI ratio below which subendocardial ischemia occurs is about 0.4 to 0.5 rather than 0.7 to 0.8, as originally reported. On the other hand, the critical ratio may be raised to an unknown extent by myocardial edema or hypertrophy, or by thickened or narrowed coronary arteries. Furthermore, the critical ratio is not independent of absolute coronary diastolic pressure: It is much lower than 0.4 when coronary pressures are high, perhaps because intramyocardial diastolic pressures are much higher than once thought. Further work is required to allow an important physiologic concept to be used in making decisions about patients with
heart disease
.
...
PMID:The myocardial supply:demand ratio--a critical review. 14 25
Results are presented on the study of lipid metabolism in normal individuals of different are groups with reference to the hereditary taintness as to ischaelic
heart disease
, and the results of correlation analysis of the level of some lipid indices of the blood of patients with
ischaemic heart disease
and of their relatives. In young normal individuals, whose family history is hereditary teinted with
ischaemic heart disease
, the level of total lipids, cholesterol, cholesterol of beta-lipoproteids, beta-lipoproteids and non-estherified fatty acids was statistically significantly higher than in the control group. In the older age groups, however, this difference becomes insignificant. The blood level of cholesterol and beta-lipoproteids is determined by genetic factors to a higher degree than the level of total lipids. The introduction of a correction factor into the correlation analysis of the above biochemical parameters indicates the changes developing with age in the proportional role of the environmental and genetic factors in the lipid metabolism disorders, the importance of the environmental factors progressively growing.
...
PMID:[Changes in blood lipid content with aging and genetic studies of ischemic heart disease]. 17 45
The chemical composition of ultracentrifugal fractions of VLDL (d less than 1006), LDL (d 1006-1063) and HDL (d less than 1063) has been studied in males affected by atherosclerosis of different vascular beds. Thirty-seven subjects affected by post-infarction
cardiopathy
(M.I.) showed significantly higher values of total-C, VLDL-C and LDL-C when compared to 52 controls. Twenty-three patients affected by non-occlusive
ischaemic heart disease
(I.H.D.) showed higher values than controls of total-C, VLCL-C, LDL-C, total TG, VLDL-TG, and GDL-TG. Twenty-three patients with atherosclerosis of the inferior limbs (P.A.) were characterized by increased levels of total-TG, VLDL-TG, VLDL-C, HDL-C. A group of patients who had suffered a stroke from cerebro-vascular disease (C.V.D.) did not show any significant difference from controls. In the M.I. group, 56% of the patients had a high level of C-VLDL. Patients with I.H.D. were characterized mostly by an increase in C-LDL, Patients with P.A. showed the highest values of total -TG, VLDL-TG and LDL-TG. Some of the observed differences are probably due to different metabolic backgrounds. Some other differences may be due to variations in dietary habits after heart infarction. Patients with levels of plasma cholesterol and triglyceride beyond the 90th percentile of the normal group showed many abnormalities in the chemical composition of their lipoproteins. It is noteworthy that increased amounts of cholesterol may collect in lipoprotein classes different from LDL while increased amounts of triglyceride may collect in classes different from VLDL.
...
PMID:Chemical composition of ultracentrifugal fractions in different patterns of human atheroslcerosis. 18 83
This study was designed to assess HDL levels in children of young men with
IHD
, compared with children of asymptomatic men. Like their fathers, sons of patients with
heart disease
, had significantly lower HDL cholesterols than controls. This difference was independent of fasting triglycerides, obesity, diet or physical activity, and was the only "coronary risk factor" in this young age group.
...
PMID:High density lipoprotein levels in children of young men with ischaemic heart disease. 22 9
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