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)

The case files of 4,456 medical admissions in 1975--1976 at Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Kaduna, Nigeria, included 354 cardiovascular patients. The most common causes were hypertension (45.5%), cardiomyopathy (20.6%) and chronic rheumatic heart disease (14.4%). The mean age of hypertensive and cardiovascular patients was lower than in Europe. The majority of hypertensive patients suffer from essential hypertension. Congestive cardiac failure is the commonest complication of hypertension and cardiomyopathy. Rheumatic valvular disease with mitral incompetence is frequent and sometimes severe in young people. Other cardiovascular diseases included pericardial disease, bacterial endocarditis, cor pulmonale, anaemic heart failure, congenital and syphilitic heart disease. Coronary heart disease was only encountered in non-Africans. Cardiovascular mortality in hospital was high (20%).
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PMID:Cardiovascular disease in Northern Nigeria. 31 94

Between 1976 and 1981, 173 patients with severe symptomatic mitral incompetence were referred for preoperative assessment. The etiological diagnosis was based on echocardiography, catheterisation, angiography, and, in the 71 patients operated on, the surgical findings. Rheumatic valvular disease was demonstrated in 40 cases (23,1 p. 100), bacterial endocarditis in II cases (6,3 p. 100), myocardial disease in 30 cases (17,3 p. 100) including 19 cases of mitral incompetence during cardiomyopathy with dilatation, and II cases of mitral incompetence during hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy: ischemic heart disease was the underlying cause in 27 patients (15,6 p. 100), congenital heart disease in 9 patients (5,3 p. 100); dystrophic valvular disease (mitral valve prolapse with or without chordal rupture) was detected in 56 cases (32,3 p. 100). These results show a continuing reduction in the incidence of rheumatic fever and an increase in the number of cases of dystrophic mitral valve disease in patients of 50 to 70 years of age, a condition often rapidly progressive with hemodynamic characteristics very similar to those of mitral incompetence observed in ischemic heart diseases.
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PMID:[Current etiology of organic mitral insufficiency in adults]. 641 10

We retrospectively assessed the clinical course and outcome of left-sided endocarditis in pediatric patients to find out the prognostic significance of the presence and size of echocardiographically detected vegetations. Among the children admitted to our institution with endocarditis between January 1987 and October 1999, 16 patients (mean age 9.03 +/- 4.95 years) who met the Duke criteria for the diagnosis of infective endocarditis (IE) were included in this study. Rheumatic valvular disease was the most frequent underlying heart disease (10 patients: 62.5%). Five patients were operated at a mean of 13.9 months before endocarditis, and all had residual defects. Vegetation was detected in 11 cases (69%). Ten patients had major complications (within 2 weeks in 6 patients). Three patients developed congestive heart failure (CHF), six had intracranial and one had lower extremity emboli. Among them four were operated because of complications (CHF: 3 cases, intracranial emboli: 1 case). All the operated cases are doing well. The association between intracranial embolic events and echocardiographically detected vegetations was determined by calculating specificity (40%), sensitivity (100%), positive predictive value (50%), and negative predictive value (100%). No intracranial embolism occurred in patients without vegetations. All vegetations were < or = 6 mm in patients with systemic embolism. There were four deaths, three of which were because of intracranial embolism. This study suggests that intracranial emboli have a major risk of mortality in left-sided endocarditis. The larger size of the vegetation is not a predictor of complications; furthermore, the absence of vegetations predicts that the patient is safe from embolic events. Therefore all patients with left-sided IE should be considered for earlier surgical intervention.
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PMID:Complications and outcome in left-sided endocarditis in children. 1185 80