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)

Long-term follow-up of the amplitude of fibrillatory waves (f waves) on the standard electrocardiograms 0.6 +/- 3.3 yr, up to 20 yrs) was performed in 45 patients with chronic stable atrial fibrillation (24 men and 21 women, average age 60.2 +/- 11.5 yrs). The patients were divided into three groups on the basis of the underlying heart disease. Seventeen patients with mitral stenosis were classified as the MS group, 11 with hypertensive heart disease, old myocardial infarction, and aortic insufficiency as the HD group, and 17 without apparent heart diseases as the no heart disease (NHD) group. The f wave amplitude was measured at lead V1 according to the technique employed by Peter. The initial f wave amplitudes of the MS group (0.24 +/- 0.12 mV, mean +/- SD) and of the HD group (0.19 +/- 0.08 mV) were significantly larger than that of the NHD group (0.13 +/- 0.08 mV, p less than 0.05). The f wave amplitudes were significantly decreased during the observation period in each group, and the terminal f wave amplitudes (expressed as the percent of the initial f wave amplitude) were 61 +/- 34% in MS group, 59 +/- 26% in the HD group and 67 +/- 34% in the NHD group. In the NHD group, there was no significant difference in the terminal f wave amplitude between the cases with (n = 10) and without (n = 7) maintenance dose of digitalis. These results showed the apparent reduction of the f wave amplitude with perpetuation of this arrhythmia, and suggested that maintenance doses of digitalis had little effect on this process.
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PMID:[Long-term follow-up of the f wave amplitude in chronic atrial fibrillation]. 261 99

Thirty nine cases, in which sudden cardiac death (SCD) was suspected, were studied to evaluate the mechanism and the prediction of SCD in arrhythmia-patients using electrophysiological studies (EPS). The 39 cases (28 male and 11 female) were located by surveying 2098 patients who underwent EPS for the evaluation of arrhythmias. Age at time of EPS ranged from 4 to 86 years, average 50.5 years. Time from EPS to death was 2 to 163 months, average 27.9 months. Underlying heart disease was: dilated cardiomyopathy in 11, old myocardial infarction in 5, ischemic heart disease in 5, hypertensive heart disease in 5, valvular heart disease in 3, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 2, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia in 1, myocarditis in 1, sarcoidosis in 1, cor pulmonale in 1, and no obvious heart disease in 4. Fifteen had a permanent pacemaker implanted. SCD in cases without a permanent pacemaker (24 cases): 2 had chronic complete A-V block (one BH block, one HV block), 1 had advanced A-V block (HV block), 3 had bundle branch block with first degree HV block, 9 had ventricular tachycardia (VT), 3 had sick sinus syndrome (SSS), 3 had paroxysmal atrial flutter, 1 had WPW syndrome and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, 1 had paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, and 3 had premature ventricular beats and first degree HV block. SCD in cases with permanent pacemaker (15 cases): 5 had SSS, and 10 had A-V block. In 3 of the 5 with SSS and 7 of the 10 with A-V block, VT was found before pacemaker implantation. In our study, brady and tachyarrhythmias coexisted in 25 cases (64%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mechanism and prediction of sudden cardiac death in arrhythmia patients using electrophysiological studies. 263 27

The prevention of cardiovascular disease antedates our current preoccupation with risk factors for coronary heart disease and hypertension. Indeed, earlier preventive efforts have in part been so successful that many people have forgotten that they existed. The almost forgotten entity, beriberi heart disease, was first prevented in 1883 by Takaki of Japan. With diphtheria, it was the identification of the causative bacillus by Klebs in 1883, leading finally to the development of diphtheria toxoid by Ramon in 1923, which resulted in the disappearance of diphtheritic heart disease. Success in the attack on syphilitic heart and vascular disease began with Bordet and Gengou in 1901 with the discovery of the phenomenon of complement fixation, and with the formulation of Salvarsan by Ehrlich in 1907. The story of the prevention of rheumatic fever has a large cast of characters, but special recognition must be given to Coburn for his observations confirming the role of the hemolytic streptococcus published in 1931 and showing the prophylactic value of sulfanilamide published in 1939. The important association of maternal rubella with congenital heart malformations was revealed by Gregg in 1941. Alcoholic heart disease was identified particularly by Brigden and Evans in 1957 and 1959, respectively. In relation to coronary and hypertensive heart disease, the names of Anitschkow (1933), Leary (1935), and Keys (1948) in relation to diet, of Freis (1967) in the field of hypertension treatment, of White (1927) in relation to physical exercise, and of English, Willius, and Berkson (1940) and Hammond and Horn (1954) in the role of cigarette smoking, deserve special recognition.
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PMID:Background of the prevention of cardiovascular disease. II. Arteriosclerosis, hypertension, and selected risk factors. 266 Oct 54

The clinical, ECG and electrophysiological data of 37 patients (28 males and 9 females) with spontaneous intra-hisian block are reported. Of these patients, 11 had hypertensive heart disease and 5 had ischemic heart disease with previous myocardial infarction; in 21 patients, clinical signs of heart disease were not evident. In 18 patients, a single or recurrent episode of syncope had occurred. One patient had junctional rhythm and 36 sinus rhythm; among these, 12 patients presented PR greater than 200 msec (7 with a narrow and 5 with a wide QRS); 12 patients had a single or bilateral bundle branch block; 12 had a normal ECG. The electrophysiological study showed a split H-H1 in 22 patients, a wide His deflection (H greater than 25 msec) in 4 and HV greater than 65 msec with narrow QRS in 11. In 17 patients a more or less marked sinoatrial node and/or atrioventricular node dysfunction was present. Atrial pacing, performed in all, induced 2nd degree Mobitz 2 intra-hisian block in 9 patients. Ajmaline was used in 16 patients but induced a complete intra-hisian block in only one. In 28 patients a preventive pacemaker was implanted after electrophysiological study. During the follow-up (mean 25 months/pt.), 38% of the patients developed complete atrioventricular block. No recurrence of syncope occurred in the paced patients. Comparison of patients who developed atrioventricular block and those who maintained normal atrioventricular conduction did not show differences as far as heart disease, previous syncope, ECG pattern and results were concerned.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Spontaneous grade I bundle of His block. Clinical, electrocardiographic and electrophysiological studies in 37 patients]. 274 10

The year 1987 marks the centennial of electrocardiography. As Beamish reminds us, it was the first and foremost technical aid to the cardiologist. During the history of cardiovascular epidemiology, which dates back roughly forty years, electrocardiography has played a central role as a relatively specific marker for coronary and hypertensive heart disease. The lack of sensitivity of electrocardiography and the advent of new technologies such as ultrasonography for assessment of such heart disease in cardiology and cardiovascular epidemiology has raised questions as to whether electrocardiography might be replaced in the next century. Recent developments in computer electrocardiography have rendered suggestions of the decreased importance of electrocardiography premature. Use of computer analysis of electrocardiograms in epidemiologic studies, which dates back less than three decades, has renewed interest in and expanded the role of electrocardiography in cardiology in general and cardiovascular epidemiology in particular. The computer analysis of electrocardiograms has allowed the processing and analysis of large numbers of electrocardiograms in a rapid, efficient, systematic and consistent manner. This has led to new, more sensitive criteria for detection of left ventricular hypertrophy as a discrete variable. In addition, the numerous waveform amplitude and duration measurements by computer have allowed the development of mathematical models to express the likelihood of coronary heart disease (myocardial infarction) and degree of left ventricular hypertrophy (estimates of left ventricular mass) on continuous scales. These developments have contributed substantially to the potential of electrocardiography (and particularly computer electrocardiography) in future studies and clinical applications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The emerging prominence of computer electrocardiography in large population-based surveys. 296 39

We describe our experience with 1000 electric cardioversions performed at the emergency ward in the Hospital of Cardiology y Neumology, National Medical Center I.M.S.S. The objectives are: 1. Report our experience. 2. Investigate if digitalis treatment should be discontinued before the procedure. 3. Determine if all patients should be on anticoagulant therapy for elective cardioversion. 4. Indicate the optimal anesthetic drug with minimal side effects. A therapeutic procedure was performed in 73% of our cases and an elective one in the remaining 27%. Patients were grouped as ischemic heart disease 26%, rheumatic heart disease 24%, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 14%, systemic hypertensive heart disease 13%, without clinical heart disease 6%, preexcitation syndrome 6%, adult congenital heart disease 4%, with implanted pacemaker 2%, pregnancy 2% and diverse myocardial diseases 2%. As a cardiac arrhythmias atrial fibrillation was the main cause 45%. Atrial flutter represented 25%, atrial paroxysmal tachycardia was 21% and ventricular tachycardia 9%. A cardioversion was performed in 43% of patients under digitalis treatment at therapeutic levels, without complications. Atrial flutter reverted to sinus rhythm in 98% of the procedures, and atrial fibrillation in 97%. Elective cardioversion in patients with atrial fibrillation was achieved with energies of 200 joules in 82% of the procedures (P less than 0.001) and in atrial flutter with 100 joules in 89% of the cases (P less than 0.001). The most frequent complications were atrial and junctional premature beats in 41% of the cases. We consider this procedure a safe one, effective at the energy levels described, with no need for discontinuation of digitalis therapy, with no mandatory previous anticoagulant therapy, and with no contraindications on pregnancy or implanted pacemakers.
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PMID:[Electric cardioversion in the emergency service. Experience in 1000 cases]. 296 50

In endomyocardial biopsies from 67 patients with various chronic heart diseases (small vessel disease, cardiomyopathies and hypertensive heart disease) the isoenzymes of Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) and Aspartate Aminotransferase (ASAT) and Glycogen Phosphorylase (GP) were investigated and compared with a reference group without actual morphological and functional evidence of chronic heart disease. The analyzed parameters showed characteristical alterations dependent on the degree of hypertrophy of the heart muscle cells and the stage of the disease as assessed by left ventricular enddiastolic pressure (LVEDP), ventricular kinetics, left ventricular heart mass (LVHM) and exercise electrocardiogram. The biochemical alterations found reflect different metabolic situations in the myocardium and could be useful as additional information for assessing the severity of the disease.
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PMID:Enzyme pattern in endomyocardial biopsies from patients with chronic heart diseases. 296 28

To assess the incidence and clinical characteristics of carotid sinus hypersensitivity and the relationship to electrophysiologic findings, 76 patients with unexplained syncope underwent carotid sinus massage during electrophysiologic studies for syncope evaluation. Twenty-one patients (28%) were found to have carotid sinus hypersensitivity. Of these 21 patients, 11 (52%) had coronary artery disease, two (10%) had hypertensive heart disease, and eight (38%) had no organic heart disease. During electrophysiologic studies, abnormal sinus node function was found in three patients (14%), abnormal atrioventricular (AV) node function was noted in four (19%), and combined abnormal sinus node and AV node functions were seen in three (14%). Eleven patients (53%) had a normal electrophysiologic study. During carotid sinus massage, sinus arrest alone was observed in 12 patients (57%), and combined sinus arrest and AV nodal block was seen in nine (43%). Thirteen patients were treated with a permanent pacemaker, in whom either carotid sinus massage reproduced the symptom or concomitant sinus node or AV node abnormality, or organic heart disease was present. With a mean follow-up of 42 +/- 19 months, none of these 13 patients had recurrent syncope. However, one of eight patients (13%) who did not receive a pacemaker had recurrence of syncope. Subsequently, this patient has done well after implantation of a pacemaker. These observations suggest that there is a significant incidence of carotid sinus hypersensitivity in patients with unexplained syncope. Permanent pacing appears to be beneficial in selected patients based on clinical and electrophysiologic findings.
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PMID:Carotid sinus hypersensitivity in patients with unexplained syncope: clinical, electrophysiologic, and long-term follow-up observations. 317 98

Cardiac sources of emboli have been frequently described in patients with Transitory Ischemic Attacks (TIAs). The aim of our study was to assess the value of two-dimensional echocardiography (2D-E) in the investigation for possible cardiac aetiology of TIAs. As an offshoot of a larger epidemiologic study which aimed at determining the period prevalence of TIAs in 6.504 subject(s) of the general population aged between 40-65, fifty subjects with TIA (group A) and 66 controls (group B) were studied. A heart disease was found in 20/50 s. (40%) in group A (coronary artery disease: 5; hypertensive heart disease: 4; mitral valve prolapse: 5; left ventricular aneurysms: 2; aortic valve disease: 2; aortic valve prosthesis: 1; atrial fibrillation: 1) and in 5/66 s. (7.5%) in group B (p less than 0.01) (coronary disease: 2; hypertensive heart disease: 1; mitral valve prolapse: 2). A potential source of emboli was present in 11 s. in group A (22%) and in 2 s. in group B (3%) (p less than 0.01). In 4/50 s. in group A and in 1/66 in group B the diagnosis was obtained by means of 2D-E only, because other clinical signs and ECG data were negative. 2D-E could only confirm the diagnosis in the remaining cases, with no additional information (i.e., no intracavitary masses were seen). In conclusion there is a high prevalence of heart disease in patients with TIA over 40 years of age. A cardiac source of emboli may be suspected in a substantial number of cases. Nevertheless the value of routine 2D-E in disclosing an otherwise undetected source of emboli is rather low.
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PMID:[Role of two-dimensional echocardiography in the diagnosis of embolic cardiopathy in patients with transient cerebral ischemia attacks]. 323 58

A clinical evaluation of the surface-averaged ECG (SAE) to record His-Purkinje activity (HPA) was made on 70 patients who underwent His bundle electrograms (HBE). The recorded signals first judged as HPA in 43 patients by the noninvasive method alone were later verified in 37 patients by HBE; the accuracy of the HPA recordings (predictive value) was 86.0%. The HPA-V interval measured noninvasively had a high correlation with the HV interval by HBE (r = 0.89, p less than 0.01). The verified detection rate in all 70 patients was 52.9%: HPA was detected in 12 of 18 patients (66.7%) with sclerotic and hypertensive heart disease (Group I), five of 19 patients (26.3%) with rheumatic heart disease (Group II), 11 of 17 patients (64.7%) with congenital heart disease (Group III), and nine of 16 patients (56.2%) with miscellaneous conditions (Group IV). The detection rate was markedly lower in Group II than in other groups (Group II vs Group I or III, p less than 0.025). The PR segment was significantly longer in the patients in whom HPA was detected than in those in whom it was not detected (71.5 +/- 22.3 msec vs 43.9 +/- 19.5 msec, p less than 0.001). His-Purkinje activity (HPA) was detected in 32 of 52 recordings (61.5%) with sinus rhythm and seven of 20 recordings (35.0%) with atrial fibrillation, including two recordings in each of two cardioverted patients (p less than 0.05). We conclude that the surface-averaged ECG (SAE) has clinically acceptable sensitivity and accuracy except in patients with rheumatic heart disease, short PR segments or atrial fibrillations.
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PMID:Sensitivity and accuracy in recording His-Purkinje activity by surface-averaged electrocardiography. 335 11


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