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

Alcohol has acute and chronic cardiovascular effects. Acutely, alcohol depresses cardiac function and alters regional blood flow. Even when withdrawn from alcohol for several days, alcoholics may still manifest evidence of left ventricular dysfunction. In some alcoholics a severe muscle disorder may ensue with the clinical features of a dilated cardiomyopathy. The concomitant presence of a thiamine deficiency or cirrhosis may produce hemodynamic changes that can obscure the clinical features of alcohol-induced heart muscle disease. Alcoholics may also develop acute myocardial infarction with patent coronary arteries; some may have cardiac arrhythmias even without other evidence of heart disease. Although epidemiological studies suggest that moderate users of alcohol have fewer coronary events than teetotalers, such studies also demonstrate a relation between alcohol abuse and hypertension and an increased occurrence of coronary disease. Thus, the injurious cardiovascular effects of alcohol must be considered when establishing recommendations for its use.
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PMID:Cardiovascular effects of alcohol with particular reference to the heart. 639 13

Fifteen patients aged 59.3 +/- 11.5 years (mean +/- standard deviation [SD]) had recurrent symptomatic ventricular tachycardia (VT) refractory to at least 2 conventional antiarrhythmic drugs. All patients had organic heart disease; 4 had an acute myocardial infarction. The mean ejection fraction was 0.30 +/- 0.09. TWelve patients had overt congestive heart failure. Five had bundle branch block. Before treatment with intravenous amiodarone, the patients had had 6 to 40 episodes of symptomatic VT over 1 to 8 days of hospitalization. All patients received an initial bolus of 5 mg of amiodarone/kg over 15 minutes. Seven patients also received a continuous infusion of 600 to 1,000 mg of amiodarone over 12 to 24 hours. Additional doses depended on the patients' clinical responses. In 11 of 15 patients, antiarrhythmic drugs that had failed to suppress VT were continued during administration of amiodarone. In 12 of 15 patients acute control of VT was obtained with intravenous administration of amiodarone either alone or in combination with previously ineffective drugs. Three patients continued to have frequent episodes of VT while being treated with intravenous amiodarone. Mobitz type I atrioventricular block developed in 1 patient. No patient had high degree atrioventricular block, symptomatic hypotension, or a clinically apparent worsening of congestive heart failure. The use of intravenous amiodarone represents a significant advance in the acute treatment of frequent life-threatening VT refractory to other drugs. With appropriate monitoring, it can be used safely in patients with congestive heart failure, bundle branch block, or acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Intravenous amiodarone in the acute treatment of recurrent symptomatic ventricular tachycardia. 640 73

Nitroglycerin ointment (NTGO) was applied to the precordial area in 88 patients with heart failure arising from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) or other types of heart disease, and its effects on hemodynamic parameters were determined. After NTGO was applied, patients' systolic blood pressure (P less than 0.001), double product (heart rate X systolic pressure, P less than 0.001), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (P less than 0.001), and systemic vascular resistance (P less than 0.001) decreased significantly. These changes began 30 to 60 minutes after NTGO was applied and lasted two to six hours. Based on these hemodynamic changes, we conclude that NTGO is beneficial for patients with heart failure due to AMI or other heart disease.
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PMID:Multicenter studies of 2% nitroglycerin ointment in patients with heart failure. 643 84

Therapeutic modalities for ventricular tachycardia include antiarrhythmic drugs, direct current cardioversion, electrical pacing and surgical intervention. Lidocaine, procainamide and bretylium are all capable of controlling recurrent ventricular tachycardia; bretylium has the advantage of also being antifibrillatory and of raising the threshold for ventricular fibrillation. Lidocaine and bretylium are available only in i.v. form. Procainamide is available in i.v. as well as oral form. Other oral antiarrhythmic agents include quinidine, disopyramide, beta-blockers such as propranolol and verapamil. The latter may be useful in ventricular arrhythmias induced by ischemia; of these, only beta-blockers appear to significantly raise the threshold for ventricular fibrillation. Control of ventricular ectopy does not always preclude ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation. In treating ventricular tachycardia, bretylium tosylate is generally given 5 to 10 mg/kg i.v. over 10 to 20 minutes. Given too rapidly, it may cause nausea and vomiting. Orthostatic hypotension, a common side effect, generally abates with continued use and may be ameliorated with tricyclic antidepressants such as protriptyline. Significant supine hypotension may be encountered in patients with acute myocardial infarction and may be managed with pressor agents or fluids, or both. The antiarrhythmic efficacy of bretylium was analyzed in 40 patients. Five etiologic groups were defined by cardiac catheterization: 19 patients had atherosclerotic heart disease, 6 had primary myocardial disease, 4 had mitral valve prolapse, 4 had rheumatic heart disease and 7 had miscellaneous or no heart disease. All patients had recurrent ventricular tachycardia (VT); 23 had ventricular fibrillation (VF) as well. Other antiarrhythmic agents had failed in 38 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Therapy of ventricular tachycardia. 646 97

Electrophysiologic studies were performed in 10 patients (8 M, 2 F, mean age: 60.2 yrs) who had survived an episode of cardiac arrest due to ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation. The purpose was to evaluate the usefulness of serial acute drug testing in selecting an effective chronic antiarrhythmic regimen. The cardiac arrest had always been sudden and unexpected. It occurred outside the hospital in 7 cases and in the hospital in 3 cases. Patients in whom cardiac arrest was associated with evidence of acute myocardial infarction were excluded from the study. Nine of the patients were suffering from chronic ischemic heart disease with 1 or more previous myocardial infarctions while 1 had no evidence of organic heart disease. A ventricular aneurysm was present in 4 of them. During control electrophysiologic study a sustained VT was induced by ventricular stimulation (single and double extrastimuli at various paced ventricular cycle lengths + bursts of rapid ventricular pacing) in 9 of the 10 patients (90%) and a non sustained VT was induced in 1 of them (10%). In 3 patients (30%) VT could be initiated only by right ventricular stimulation at a site different from the apex (outflow tract). During serial acute drug testing a totally effective drug regimen (successful in preventing the induction of any ventricular arrhythmia) was found in 6 of the 9 patients (66.7%) who underwent this procedure and a partially effective drug regimen (sustained VT no longer inducible, easier to interrupt and considerably slower) was found in 2 patients (22.2%). None of the patients who received a chronic antiarrhythmic therapy based on the results of serial acute drug testing died suddenly during a mean follow-up of 14.8 months (range: 3-29) and only 1 had a recurrence of cardiac arrest. The latter, however, was taking antiarrhythmic drugs at a dosage less than that proved to be effective during electropharmacological testing. The only patient who refused serial acute drug testing and received an empiric antiarrhythmic therapy died suddenly at the 21st month of the follow-up. It is also noteworthy that amiodarone, alone or in combination, was given chronically to 6 of our patients (60%). These results 1) indicate that serial electropharmacological testing is useful in selecting an effective long-term drug regimen in survivors of cardiac arrest, and 2) suggest that amiodarone may be effective in preventing sudden death in these patients.
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PMID:[Value of a serial electropharmacologic study in survivors of a cardiac arrest secondary to ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation]. 651 Jun 19

Ambulatory electrocardiography was performed on 21 consecutive acute stroke patients on the day of admission and 14 and 42 days later. There was no statistically significant difference in cardiac arrhythmias between stroke patients and a group of age- and sex-matched controls. There was considerable variation in the frequency of cardiac arrhythmias on each day but none of the arrhythmias was associated with a sudden deterioration in the condition of the patients and no arrhythmias produced symptoms in either the stroke or the control groups. Fourteen per cent of stroke patients had an associated acute myocardial infarction and 57% had a history of previous heart disease. While a history of previous heart disease or the occurrence of major ventricular arrhythmias were associated with an increased six-week mortality rate, routine continuous monitoring of cardiac rhythm would not appear to be of value in acute stroke.
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PMID:Are cardiac arrhythmias important in stroke? 662 7

Kawasaki disease or mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome (MCLS) is a recently recognized clinical entity in infants and young children with fever and characteristic mucocutaneous involvements accompanied by swelling of the cervical lymph nodes. It has aroused much interest because it may cause sudden death due to coronary arteritis with subsequent aneurysmal formation and thrombotic occlusion. Between January 1973 and September 1982, 611 patients with Kawasaki disease were evaluated with coronary angiography after the acute stage of illness. Of these patients, 136 (22%) were diagnosed as having coronary aneurysms, which were the most common abnormal finding at this stage. Serial two-dimensional echocardiography was useful to evaluate noninvasively the lesions of the coronary artery, and it was discovered that coronary aneurysms appeared in the eighth to 15th day of the illness, and some of them revealed an early restoration. Pericardial effusion appeared in 35% of the patients in the second to third week of the illness. Follow-up coronary angiography was performed in 72 cases who previously had coronary aneurysms five to 18 months after the acute illness. Thirty-nine cases showed completely normal findings at the second study, suggesting the regression of coronary aneurysms in this entity within one or two years after the onset of the illness. The remaining 33 patients showed abnormal findings such as stenotic or obstructed lesions, the irregular arterial wall and persistent aneurysms of coronary arteries at the follow-up study. Among the patients with abnormal angiographic findings myocardial infarction and mitral regurgitation were occasionally present. Three patients died suddenly from myocardial infarction at four months, four and six years after the onset of the illness, respectively. Early initiation of aspirin therapy (10-30 mg/kg) remains the mainstay to prevent thrombus formation and ischemic heart disease. The intracoronary thrombolysis by Urokinase was useful for prevention or treatment of acute myocardial infarction. Patients with Kawasaki disease are mostly in Japan, however, an increasing number of patients have recently been published in the foreign literatures, and this entity has become an important cause of heart disease in children. The long-term follow-up study and establishment of the effective treatment as well as elucidation of the etiology of this disease are essential.
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PMID:[Kawasaki disease: new and important problems in cardiology]. 667

Twenty-four-hour electrocardiographic monitoring in 49 of 50 consecutive patients with acute pericarditis and sinus rhythm at onset (29 with etiologic or unrelated heart disease) disclosed 4 instances of intermittent supraventricular tachycardia, 2 in patients in whom tamponade developed and 1 in a patient with acute myocardial infarction. Eight other arrhythmias, also nonsustained. occurred exclusively in patients with heart disease. Ectopic beats without other arrhythmia occurred in 10 patients without heart disease, but were infrequent (1 to 30 per hour) in 9. Ectopic beats without other arrhythmias occurred in 19 patients with heart disease but were infrequent in 16. Pericarditis per se does not appear to be a recognizable arrhythmogenic influence. As a corollary, significant rhythm disturbance--particularly continuous-beat arrhythmias--during acute pericarditis implies a cardiac abnormality.
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PMID:Frequency of arrhythmias in acute pericarditis determined by Holter monitoring. 670 35

The induction of a repetitive ventricular response (RVR) by programmed electrical stimulation (PES) in patients with malignant ventricular arrhythmias such as ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation is associated with poor prognosis. However, the incidence and clinical significance of RVR in patients with normal hearts and in those with coronary artery disease (CAD) who do not have a history of malignant ventricular arrhythmias are unknown. In this paper, we present our views on the clinical value of PES in those patients. The incidence of RVR in patients without evidence of heart disease remains controversial. The possible reasons for the disparities between studies are due to differences in the study populations and stimulation protocols used. In 38 patients with normal hearts proven by left ventricular and coronary angiography no patient had three or more ventricular depolarizations in response to PES with single and double premature stimuli. The same stimulation protocol was used in 136 patients with coronary artery disease. The incidence of RVR greater than or equal to 3 (three or more ventricular depolarizations in response to PES) was related to the time interval to prior acute myocardial infarction and to the degree but not to the extent of left ventricular wall motion abnormalities. The relationship between spontaneous ventricular arrhythmias and those induced by PES was compared in 267 patients. Although there was some correlation between absence or presence of both types of arrhythmias, the presence of RVR greater than or equal to 3 did not predict precisely the presence of high grade ventricular arrhythmias during Holter-monitoring. The prognostic significance of RVR greater than or equal to 3 in patients with chronic stable coronary artery disease remains to be determined. However in patients with recent acute myocardial infarction it has been found that subjects at risk of sudden death (SD) can be identified by PES. We feel that until the prognostic significance of RVR is better defined its use as a basis for guiding antiarrhythmic therapy is not warranted.
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PMID:[Repetitive ventricular response by programmed electrostimulation of the heart: frequency and clinical significance]. 670 84

Two groups of patients with anatomically proved acute myocardial infarction were compared in order to study specificity and sensitivity of the ECG criteria previously described in clinical and experimental right ventricular infarction ( RVI ). Group 1 included 21 patients with left inferior infarction and with a variable degree of right ventricular involvement; group 2 included nine patients with myocardial infarction confined to the left inferior wall. In both groups the presence of ST elevation (at least 0.05 mV) and the morphology of the QRS complex in V4R , V3R, and V1 were assessed in ECGs performed at the time of admission. Also, in order to evaluate the morphology of the ST segment and QRS complex in right precordial leads in normal subjects, an ECG with 12 standard and four right precordial leads ( V6R to V3R) was performed in 82 subjects (group 3) without clinical and ECG evidence of heart disease. Our data reveal that in normal subjects an rS pattern is always present in V3R and frequently (91%) in V4R . On the contrary, the presence of QS or QR complexes in both V4R and V3R are specific markers of right ventricular necrosis (specificity 100%; sensitivity 78%). The presence of injury and necrosis waves in V4R or V4R to V3R during inferior infarction is a useful diagnostic criterion in that it insures a highly specific diagnosis of acute RVI in the great majority (76 and 71%, respectively) of the cases with autopsy evidence of right ventricular involvement.
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PMID:Right precordial ST and QRS changes in the diagnosis of right ventricular infarction. 673 Dec 62


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