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

In an attempt to determine predictive factors of spontaneous death in patients needing heart transplantation, we studied 27 clinical and paraclinical variables in 171 patients aged from 14 to 61 years. Sixty-one of these patients died before transplantation could be performed, 59 were still alive awaiting transplantation and 51 received a heart transplant. The actuarial survival rate with or without transplantation was 65 percent at 1 year and 51 percent at 2 years. Univariate analysis showed that the following factors were associated with a higher mortality rate: age, history or symptoms of right heart failure, poor general condition, end-diastolic left ventricular diameter and ejection fraction. There was no correlation between high mortality rate and type of heart disease, sex, duration of symptoms, NYHA functional class, cardiothoracic ratio and data obtained from electrocardiography and right heart catheterization. At multivariate analysis (Cox's model), no variable could be selected as predictive factor of mortality. The natural outcome of patients needing heart transplantation therefore is globally unfavourable. This means that once has been decided to perform heart transplantation the operation should not be delayed.
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PMID:[Spontaneous development and prognostic factors in patients needing heart transplantation. Multivariate analysis of 171 patients]. 250 Sep 6

Plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) concentration was determined and cardiac ultrasound studies were performed in 50 patients with malignant mid-gut carcinoid tumors. The extent of carcinoid-related heart disease varied among the patients. The patients with the most severe right-sided heart disease, who often had signs of right ventricular failure, had significantly (p less than 0.001) higher plasma ANP concentrations than either patients with less or no abnormal ultrasound findings or age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects. ANP levels were serially determined for 0.5 to 4 years (median 2.1) in 12 patients. The levels increased above the reference range in patients with clinical findings of right ventricular failure. In patients without cardiac decompensation the levels remained within the reference range. In 3 patients who had successful tricuspid and pulmonary valve replacements, signs and symptoms of right ventricular failure disappeared and plasma ANP levels declined and normalized. Five patients with progressive right ventricular failure and increasing plasma ANP levels during follow-up eventually died from cardiac decompensation. This study demonstrates the predictive value of serial determinations of plasma ANP in carcinoid heart disease. Such measurements can be an additional guide in the clinical management of these patients.
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PMID:Plasma atrial natriuretic peptide in carcinoid heart disease. 252 30

The manifestations of carcinoid heart disease are usually right heart failure due to pulmonary and tricuspid valve disease and sometimes high output failure due to peripheral vasodilation. Recently there has been one case report of progressive central cyanosis due to right to left shunting through a patent foramen ovale. We present a similar case where such a shunt developed and was also complicated by significant valvular disease affecting the left side of the heart.
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PMID:Left heart involvement with cardiac shunt complicating carcinoid heart disease. 263 66

Disorders of the heart frequently cause pulmonary dysfunction because of the close structural and functional association of the heart and lungs. The pulmonary vasculature is very commonly affected by cardiac pathology. The pulmonary vasculature is normally a low-pressure, low-resistance circuit with high compliance and tremendous vascular reserve. Although resting vascular tone is low, there are many identified mediators of pulmonary arterial tone that may help mediate pulmonary blood flow. Alveolar hypoxia is clearly a stimulus for increasing pulmonary vascular resistance although factors that mediate the response to hypoxia are not fully understood. Patients with left-to-right shunting due to congenital heart disease because of elevations in pulmonary artery flow and pressure tend to develop progressive anatomic changes in the pulmonary vasculature. This leads to an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance, irreversible pulmonary hypertension, right heart failure, reversal of shunt flow, and Eisenmenger's syndrome. The degree of anatomic vascular damage due to left-to-right shunting can be graded histologically. Lesser grades of damage are reversible with corrective surgery, whereas more severe grades show no improvement or progression with operation. Chronic left-sided congestive heart failure seen in rheumatic mitral stenosis can cause secondary changes in the pulmonary vasculature. Pulmonary hypertension and increased pulmonary vascular resistance can increase reflexly and form a "second stenosis" that further limits cardiac output. Unlike congenital heart disease, severe grades of pulmonary arterial damage are not seen in left heart failure from mitral stenosis or other causes, and consequently with surgical correction pulmonary hypertension reverses. Pulmonary function testing is adversely affected by congestive heart failure. Both restrictive (stiff lungs) and obstructive (cardiac asthma) defects are observed in congestive heart failure. DLCO is abnormally decreased. With treatment of heart failure these defects reverse. Both elevated systemic and pulmonary venous pressures affect fluid filtration in the pleural space and cause pleural fluid accumulation. The fluid is transudative with low protein, low lactate dehydrogenase, and low cell counts. Transudative effusions from heart failure resolve with treatment. With large effusions and cardiomegaly, pulmonary dysfunction results because of atelectasis from compression and space-occupying effects of the heart and pleural fluid. Following myocardial infarction, cardiac surgery, or other cardiac trauma, the postcardiac injury syndrome can result. The syndrome is characterized by exudative pleural and pericardial effusions along with pulmonary infiltrates, fever, chest pain, leukocytosis, and an elevated ESR. The syndrome must be diagnosed by exclusion of bacterial pneumonia, pulmonary emboli, and congestive heart failure. Treatment is with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents or systemic co
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PMID:Pulmonary and pleural complications of cardiac disease. 268 66

Cryopreserved allograft valves and valved conduits have been used in 122 patients during the past 3 years for surgical repair of congenital heart disease. In 55 of these patients, the right ventricular outflow tract was reconstructed with a pulmonary allograft conduit. Although most children requiring a conduit had complex lesions, 12 patients with tetralogy of Fallot without pulmonary atresia or absent valve syndrome have been treated in this manner since April 1985. Patients were selected for conduit therapy because of congenital or iatrogenic pulmonary artery problems (nine patients had 12 prior shunts) or increased pulmonary vascular resistance. Ages ranged from 7 months to 6 years (mean 3.1 years) and weights from 7.4 to 18.5 kg (mean 12.2 kg). Pulmonary artery conduit size ranged from 16 to 24 mm internal diameter (mean 22 mm). Distal pulmonary artery reconstruction beyond the bifurcation was required in nine patients and the proximal connection was completed with a hood-shaped patch. One operative death (8.3%) occurred at 20 days as a result of severe right ventricular dysfunction. Left pulmonary artery thrombosis was discovered postmortem. Eleven survivors observed for 3 to 37 months (mean 17 months) are without cardiac symptoms. A chronologically overlapping group of tetralogy of Fallot repairs accomplished with a transannular patch was also reviewed. Twenty-five patients aged 2 months to 4 years (mean 1.7 years) and weighing 3.6 to 14.8 kg (mean 9.2 kg) underwent this procedure from April 1983 to January 1987 (seven patients had one prior shunt each). The mortality rate in this group was 28% (six operative deaths and one late death). Of 18 survivors observed from 20 to 60 months (mean 41.4 months), five (28%) have required pulmonary artery conduit reconstruction for chronic right ventricular failure. Postrepair right ventricular/left ventricular pressure ratios were available in 19 patients, including five of seven who died and three of five who required reoperation. The ratios averaged 0.54, which indicates adequate relief of obstruction. The operative mortality rate from a number of series for transannular patch repair of tetralogy of Fallot averages 16%, ranging from 3% to 63%. However, when distal pulmonary artery problems are added as a risk factor this rate rises to 21%, and valved conduit insertion increases the mortality rate (Kirklin and Barratt-Boyes, 1986). Although not clearly superior, pulmonary artery conduit repair of tetralogy of Fallot achieves results comparable with those of transannular patch repair and is recommended as an alternative, particularly when distal pulmonary artery anatomy is abnormal or vascular resistance is elevated.
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PMID:Pulmonary allograft conduit repair of tetralogy of Fallot. An alternative to transannular patch repair. 281 14

Plasma levels of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) were measured in patients with organic heart disease undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterization. Independent of nature and duration of the disease (valvular heart disease, congestive cardiomyopathy) plasma ANP levels were closely related to the severity of cardiac failure. Furthermore, plasma ANP levels were found to be negatively correlated with the cardiac index and to be positively correlated with right and/or left atrial and with pulmonary artery pressures. During physical exercise (bicycle ergometer) a marked increase of plasma ANP levels was observed, which was closely related to increments in mean pulmonary artery pressure. This rise in plasma ANP levels during physical exercise was not attenuated in patients with already elevated resting plasma concentrations of ANP. In patients with congestive cardiomyopathy, afterload-reduction by ACE-inhibition resulted in changes of central hemodynamics, which were closely reflected by venous concentrations of ANP. The measurement of plasma ANP levels may serve as an indicator of the severity of cardiac failure. Plasma concentrations of ANP, however, are neither helpful in establishing the etiology of the underlying heart disease nor in differentiating left and right heart failure. However, in cases of already established organic heart disease plasma ANP levels may be used as a marker for assessing the efficacy of the therapeutic regimen.
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PMID:[Does the measurement of plasma ANP have a diagnostic or prognostic value in patients with organic heart disease?]. 297 Jan 74

Cardiac transplantation has become an established part of the therapy of end-stage heart disease. The number of cardiac transplants performed, as well as the number of centers performing them, has increased dramatically in the past 2 years. A paucity of literature on the anesthetic management of patients undergoing cardiac transplantation prompted this survey of 46 United States and Canadian institutions. The report summarizes the perioperative anesthetic management of a total of 1,273 transplant recipients in 34 institutions. Generally, similar anesthetic techniques and agents were used. One notable exception was the percentage of institutions using perioperative pulmonary artery catheter monitoring. As determined from this survey, right ventricular failure remains the leading cause of inability to terminate cardiopulmonary bypass in this patient population. Further, in surveyed institutions, cardiac transplantation expends more physician as well as hospital resources per patient than coronary artery bypass surgery.
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PMID:Anesthetic management for cardiac transplantation in North America--1986 survey. 297 12

Results with mechanical circulatory assistance for the treatment of profound cardiopulmonary failure after conventional heart surgery have been encouraging. Its usefulness after heart transplantation is not known. Since August 1982, eight patients (of 59 transplant patients) have required support 0 to 48 hours (mean, 19.5 hours) after transplantation. The ages of the patients ranged from 7 days to 52 years (mean, 28.4 years). Underlying recipient heart disease was ischemic in three patients, congenital in two, cardiomyopathic in two, and rheumatic in one patient. Preoperative North American Transplant Coordinators Organization (NATCO) classification was status 9 in one patient (on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [ECMO]), status 1 in five patients, and status 3 in two patients. Reasons for graft failure, although usually multifactorial, were primarily pulmonary hypertension with right ventricular failure in five patients and pneumonia, hyperacute rejection, and fat embolus in one patient each. In three patients, there was a mismatch in graft size (too small in two adults and too large in one neonate). Graft ischemic times ranged from 75 to 229 minutes (mean, 171 minutes). Two patients received mechanical support with an intra-aortic balloon (IAB), three with ECMO, and three with a right ventricular assist device (RVAD). One of the patients on ECMO and two of the patients with an RVAD also had IABs. Duration of support ranged from 4 hours to 8 days (mean, 3.2 days). Initial hemodynamic stability was achieved in all patients. Complications were common, including sepsis in seven patients and kidney failure in five patients. Only three patients were weaned. One patient with pulmonary hypertension, who was treated with ECMO, died 36 hours after being weaned.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mechanical circulatory assistance after heart transplantation. 330 17

Beri-beri heart disease is a distinctive clinical entity which must be distinguished from alcoholic cardiomyopathy and other forms of heart disease in chronic alcoholics. A 27-year-old man is described who for six months before the onset of symptoms of right heart failure-admitted to hospital with dyspnea and pitting edema in the lower limbs and over the sacrum-had lived over a tavern and consumed 24 pints of beer daily.The pathophysiology of beri-beri heart disease includes right heart failure, edema and peripheral vasodilatation in the muscular bed. These features were described by Wenckebach and others as early as 1928. Within the main entity, beri-beri heart disease, a number of sub-groups with special features and prognosis such as acute pernicious beri-beri have been described. Beri-beri heart disease is due to vitamin B(1) deficiency and is curable if this deficiency is corrected in time.
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PMID:Beri-Beri heart disease. 594 Jul 85

Eighty-seven cases were studied in which IABP was used with open heart surgery, and 19 in which V-A bypass was employed. IABP was used in 31 patients with ischemic heart disease, which had the best survival rate (52%). Recent experience shows that the effects of IABP increase the operability of certain high-risk patients with severely impaired left ventricular function. In valvular heart disease, IABP was used with a survival rate of 34%. In congenital heart disease, the IABP survival rate was the worst among the groups studied because, in addition to left heart failure, many other factors also as cause the low cardiac output syndrome during corrective surgery for complicated cardiac anomalies. In total right heart bypass, or Fontan's procedure, three out of five cases were weaned from IABP; one of them is still alive. IABP was used with success in one case of valvular heart disease with almost no contraction of the right ventricle after repair. Therefore, IABP could be expected to improve the condition of severe postoperative right heart failure, or the equivalent condition, when there is subnormal left ventricular function in the postoperative period and pulmonary vascular resistance is normal. There has been only one successful V-A bypass lasting 11 hours, in valvular heart disease, and another case, in congenital heart disease, where the patient was weaned after V-A bypass lasting four days.
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PMID:Mechanical control of circulation: clinical results with intra-aortic balloon pumping and veno-arterial bypass in left and/or right cardiac failure. 660 93


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