Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 300 consecutive adult patients who underwent open-heart surgery in our department, 16 patients (ischemic heart disease in 8 patients, valvular heart disease in 7 and congenital heart disease in 1) were preoperatively complicated with chronic renal failure (CRF); creatinine clearance (Ccr) < 40 ml/min and serum creatinine (Scr) > 1.6 mg/dl. The effects of open-heart surgery on renal function were studied in these CRF patients who were divided into the following 3 groups according to their preoperative Ccr values: Group 1 (6 patients), 30 < Ccr < 40 ml/min; Group 2 (5 patients), 20 < Ccr < 30 ml/min; and Group 3 (5 patients, 4 of whom were on dialysis preoperatively), Ccr < 10 ml/min. In addition, Group C (38 patients, Ccr > 50 ml/min) was set up as normal controls. Instead of hemodialysis, the extracorporeal ultrafiltration method (ECUM) was employed for all patients during the cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The Ccr in Group 1 showed the lowest value of 24.2 +/- 12.0 ml/min on postoperative day (POD) 0 which then recovered to the preoperative level on POD 1. This quick recovery of the Ccr in Group 1 was similar to that in Group C. In contrast, the Ccr in Group 2 showed the lowest value of 13.0 +/- 6.0 ml/min on POD 1, followed by a delayed recovery that did not reach the preoperative level until POD 5. The Ccr in Group 3 was quite low (< 5 ml/min) throughout the test period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Effects of open-heart surgery on renal function in patients with chronic renal failure--is hemodialysis during cardiopulmonary bypass really required?]. 143

The author gives an overview on usefulness of exercise ECG in cardiology. There is a summary of indications and contraindications of the test and of the personal requirements. The exercise ECG do not recommended to screen asymptomatic individuals. The test is very important in the diagnosis and the prognostic evaluation of patients with ischemic heart disease. The exercise ECG and coronary arteriography are equally important prognostic determinants of future cardiac events. The exercise ECG has been proved an objective tool in the evaluation of functional impairment of patients with congenital and acquired heart disease. The author summarizes the work of exercise laboratories in Hungary, points out the necessity of it's technical improvement and suggests to increase their productivity.
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PMID:[Usefulness of exercise test in combination with ECG]. 143 19

The effects of nicorandil and diltiazem on serum lipid, apolipoprotein, and lipoprotein levels in 37 patients with ischemic heart disease were examined in a randomized, multicenter study. Nicorandil (n = 20, 10-40 mg/day, b.i.d.) and diltiazem (n = 17, 60-240 mg/day, b.i.d.) were administered for 12 weeks. Both nicorandil and diltiazem administration showed an effective antianginal effect. Diltiazem administration showed a significant hypotensive action. There were no significant changes in serum lipids, apolipoproteins, and lipoproteins for both nicorandil and diltiazem. There were no significant changes in body weight, uric acid, and fasting blood sugar levels during the test period for both drugs. These data show that nicorandil, like diltiazem, does not have any adverse effects on lipid metabolism and that it is a favorable drug to use as an agent for treating arteriosclerotic heart disease.
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PMID:A multicenter comparison of nicorandil and diltiazem on serum lipid, apolipoprotein, and lipoprotein levels in patients with ischemic heart disease. 145 91

Interventional treatment is necessary for fatal drug-refractory tachyarrhythmias. Thirty-three, 33 and 16 patients (pts) with intractable ventricular tachycardia (VT) and/or fibrillation (VF) were managed with cryosurgery (CS), electrical catheter ablation (EA) and implantable pacer-cardioverter-defibrillator (PCD), respectively. Seventy-six and 43 pts with sudden death risk in the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (WPW) also underwent CS and EA, respectively. CS success rates were 85% in VT/VF and 95% in WPW. Those of EA were 48% and 81%, respectively. EA success rates were 100% (6/6) in idiopathic verapamil-sensitive VT originated from LV, 0% (0/2) in VT following TOF repair and 0% (0/2) in idiopathic VT originated from right ventricular outflow tract. A new VT developed in 5 of 11 pts with arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD) following EA. PCD was effective for prevention from sudden death in idiopathic VF and pleomorphic VT. All of pharmacologic, EA and CS therapies were relatively effective in ischemic heart disease without low EF. In conclusion, the decision of VT-VF therapy may be affected by the underlying heart disease and EA may be established as an initial intervention for high risk WPW.
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PMID:[Surgical versus nonsurgical therapy of fatal tachyarrhythmias]. 147 Jan 8

All the transplantation units within the Italian Heart Transplantation Project are supported by a section of pathology, devoted to the study of the recipient's heart, to patient monitoring by means of a schedule of endomyocardial biopsies, and, if that was the case, to examine the donor's heart and to analyse the causes of death. When successes and failures of the first five years of the Project's activity are weighed up, good results are observed: of the 847 operations performed (orthotopic, heterotopic and heart-lung transplants, and re-transplants) an actuarial survival rate of 77% at 5 years has been achieved. The sections of pathology believe to have contributed significantly to these results, examining as many as 10,446 endomyocardial biopsies. The indications for transplantation were: dilated cardiomyopathy (48.5%); ischemic (35.3%); valvular (5.9%) and congenital (2.4%) heart disease; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (2.2%); endocardial fibroelastosis (1.7%); restrictive cardiomyopathy (1.4%); anthracycline cardiotoxicity (0.8%); myocarditis (0.8%); cardiac tumours (0.5%) and arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (0.2%). Distribution of recipients by sex and age varied according to the indications for transplantation: males were more common among the patients transplanted for ischemic (97%) and valvular (84%) heart disease, as well as for dilated (82%) and hypertrophic (78%) cardiomyopathy, whereas the opposite was true for endocardial fibroelastosis (males constituting 21%) and cardiac tumours (25%). Mean age at transplantation ranged from 49 years (ischemic heart disease) to 6 years (endocardial fibroelastosis). In the follow-up period, a 17.5% death rate was recorded; the main causes of death were the early failure of the transplanted heart (27 pts), postoperative complications (16), hyperacute rejection (4), acute rejection (18), infections (the singular most frequent cause of death, 35 pts), the proliferative endoarteritis of coronary branches (the so-called chronic rejection, that caused 21 deaths and required 14 re-transplants) and the development of neoplasms (11). The actuarial survival curve drops to 89% after the first postoperative month, abates to 82% at the end of the first year, and progressively decreases to 77% at the end of the fifth follow-up year. Rejection monitoring required an average number of 12.5 endomyocardial biopsies per recipient, and allowed 1.7 rejection episodes per patient to be diagnosed. The fewer were the rejection episodes occurring in a unit, the higher was the percentage of deaths due to infections.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The contribution of pathology sections to the Italian Heart Transplant Project in the first 5 years of its activities (1985-1990)]. 147 59

Decreased levels of high-density lipoproteins (HDL) are related to a risk of ischaemic heart disease and are measured as HDL-cholesterol (HDLc), whereas little attention has been paid to HDL-phospholipids (HDLph). Regarding HDL subfractions (HDL2, HDL3) and risk of ischaemic heart disease, there are few studies in the literature and these are contradictory, especially those performed in subjects that were in their second decade of life. This study consisted of 322 healthy volunteers between 11 and 19 years of age. The HDL fractions and HDL3 subfractions were separated by precipitation with polyethylene glycol at defined pH and concentration. Concentrations of cholesterol and triglycerides were measured by enzymatic methods, except for HDL2c and HDL2ph, which were calculated by subtraction. Forty-two percent of the children with parental history of ischaemic heart disease, but only 26% of the children without parental history of heart disease, exhibited HDL3ph levels lower than 0.95 mmol/l (74 mg/dl). Levels of HDLc, HDL3c and HDL2c are relatively constant in girls after puberty and levels of HDLph and HDL3ph are increased; levels of HDLph are relatively constant in boys after puberty while levels of HDLc, HDL3c and HDL2c are decreased. Our results suggest that serum levels of HDL3ph are potential markers for a risk of ischaemic heart disease, together with other more classic risk factors.
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PMID:[Cholesterol and phospholipids in high density lipoproteins and their subfractions in a population in its second decade of life. The Burgos study]. 148 23

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring can play a significant role in evaluating the effects of treatment on the circadian cardiovascular pattern of patients with ischemic heart disease and/or congestive heart disease. In ischemic heart disease, drug therapy should be designed to reduce heart rate and blood pressure throughout the 24-hour cycle, including the early morning surge. Beta-blocking agents appear to accomplish these reductions. In congestive heart failure, some patients maintain their circadian variation while others do not, leaving them without the normal period of cardiac rest during the nighttime hours. Therapy should be designed to reduce this cardiac overload, and vasodilating agents appear to accomplish this. Ambulatory monitoring is especially useful in monitoring the effectiveness of drug interventions throughout the 24-hour cycle.
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PMID:Future uses of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: implications for therapy. 148 27

The prognosis of patients with heart disease and prediction of sudden cardiac death can be assessed through heart rate variability, an indirect measure of abnormal autonomic control. The authors have evaluated the heart rate variability by 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring in 25 diabetic patients, 19 ischemic heart disease patients, 18 congestive heart failure patients, and 10 normal subjects. Thirteen diabetic patients had autonomic neuropathy and 12 patients did not. Heart rate variability index (mean SD) in patients with diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease, and congestive heart failure was significantly lower (34.5 +/- 12.6 ms, 43.7 +/- 15.4 ms, and 34.6 +/- 15.8 ms vs 65.6 +/- 16.7 ms, p less than 0.05) than that of normal subjects. Mean SD was significantly lower in patients with autonomic neuropathy as compared to patients without autonomic neuropathy (26.4 +/- 6.5 ms vs 44.2 +/- 11.0 ms, p less than 0.05) mean SD as compared to survivors: 49 +/- 7 ms in patients with mild ischemic heart disease, 48 +/- 15 ms in patients with severe ischemic heart disease, and 23 +/- 7 ms in patients who died. Similarly, the mean SD in 4 congestive heart failure patients who died was lower significantly (p less than 0.05) than in those who survived (19.0 +/- 5.6 ms vs 40.0 +/- 14.5 ms). Among congestive heart failure patients, clinical improvement by therapy was associated with a significant increase in mean SD. When the mean SD of 30 ms was used as the cutoff point for detection of autonomic dysfunction or patient death, specificity exceeded 90% and sensitivity was 75%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Heart rate variability in patients with diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease, and congestive heart failure. 152 1

The clinical features of congestive heart failure in the elderly were investigated in 104 patients (57 males, 47 females, mean age of 79.2). Patients were divided into two subgroups, the readmission group, 33 patients who were readmitted within 6 months after discharge, and the non-readmission group. Chief complaints were dyspnea, edema, chest pain, loss of appetite, chest compression, and palpitation. Heart failure was caused by infection, myocardial ischemia, arrhythmia, inappropriate drug usage including poor drug compliance, the use of beta-blockers, excessive intake of sodium, and anemia. Careful use of drug was essential especially in the readmission group. Major underlying heart disease were ischemic heart disease (39.4%), valvular disease (26.9%), hypertensive heart disease (9.6%), with cardiomyopathy, congenital heart disease seen in the minority. There was no statistically significant difference in underlying heart diseases between the two groups. Supraventricular arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillations, paroxysmal atrial fibrillations, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias, and premature atrial contractions were noted in 85.3% of the cases. Drugs for treatment were diuretics, digitalis, isosorbide dinitrate, calcium antagonists. ACE inhibitors and alpha-blockers were also used, showing that vasodilators were more extensively used than before. The major complications were hypertension (39.4%), renal dysfunction (27.9%), cerebrovascular disease (26.9%), diabetes mellitus (16.5%), arteriosclerosis obliterans (7.7%). Renal dysfunction, arteriosclerosis obliterans was seen significantly more frequently in the readmission group. The prognosis at one year after admission was significantly worse in the readmission group. In summary, the major underlying diseases were ischemic heart disease, valvular disease, and hypertensive heart disease. Ischemic heart disease was seen more frequently than in previous investigations at our hospital.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Congestive heart failure in elderly readmitted patients]. 152 7

During recent years there has been growing interest in the possibility that dietary fish confers some protection against ischaemic heart disease. In four prospective studies, people who ate moderate amounts of fish tend to have a lower mortality from heart disease than persons who ate little or no fish. A randomized controlled trial showed that mortality after myocardial infarction was less among men who were advised to increase their intake of fatty fish than in a control group. Studies of fish oil administered to volunteers suggest that it is the omega-3 fatty acids which are responsible. The effects of fish oil include a reduction in serum triglyceride concentration, a reduction in platelet activity, a reduction in blood pressure, and (in animals) prevention of arrhythmias. Some of these effects require doses much larger than those that would normally be supplied by dietary fish.
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PMID:Fish food, fish oil and cardiovascular disease. 154 Oct 36


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