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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
With the advent of cardiac catheterization, cardioangiography, and selective coronary arteriography, specific types of cardiac disease can be recognized and clearly defined. This is appropriate because myocardial biopsy alone rarely plays a major role in cardiac diagnosis. Excluding Aschoff's nodules in patients with rheumatic valve disease, the light microscopic findings in patients with rheumatic heart disease, congenital
heart disease
,
pericardial disease
, hypertensive and arteriosclerotic
heart disease
are similar and nonspecific. In these, interstitial fibrosis and/or myocardial hypertrophy is the dominant tissue diagnosis. Occasionally a pericardial and myocardial specimen is helpful to distinguish constrictive pericarditis and restrictive cardiomyopathy. Myocardial biopsy has provided the only method for diagnosis in a small number of patients with normal hemodynamics, normal coronary arteriograms and normal ventriculograms. The patients were studied because of chest pain and/or cardiac arrhythmias. Supraventricular and/or ventricular arrhythmias were encountered. In these patients the tissue diagnosis was interstital fibrosis and/or myocardial hypertrophy. These findings are consistent with primary myocardial disease which was not recognized clinically or by angiographic studies. The procedure seems to play a major role in the diagnosis of specific types of primary myocardial disease. It is valuable in the recognition of glycogen storage disease, amyloidosis, hemochromatosis, and myocarditis. On the basis of current experience, the indications for myocardial biopsies depend on the need for a tissue diagnosis in determining the management of the patient and the availability of adequately trained personnel to perform the procedure and manage the complications.
...
PMID:The role of myocardial biopsy in cardiac diagnosis. 12 52
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%).
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease in Northern Nigeria. 31 94
The aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of M-mode echocardiography as a non-invasive diagnostic tool when facilities for cardiac catheterization were not available. We used this technique to study 275 patients whose clinical diagnosis included hypertension, rheumatic heart disease, cardiomyopathy, peripartum cardiac failure,
pericardial disease
and some forms of congenital
heart disease
. Characteristic echocardiographic patterns made specific cardiac diagnoses possible and allowed a distinction to be made between clinically similar conditions. It is concluded that echocardiography is very useful in the African setting because it is safe and repeatable.
...
PMID:M-mode echocardiography in the diagnosis of heart diseases in Africans. 55 66
The contribution of M-mode echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis was evaluated in a series of 1,000 successive patients. Among subjects in whom a presumptive clinical diagnosis had been made, echocardiography demonstrated totally unexpected findings in 10 per cent, supported the clinical diagnosis in 50 per cent and was entirely within normal limits in 19 per cent. Among patients with evidence of
heart disease
but no firm clinical diagnosis, echocardiography established the diagnosis in 23 per cent, including 20 per cent of all patients referred for evaluation of chest pain or arrhythmia of unclear etiology. "Missed" clinical diagnosis frequently involved patients with mitral valve prolapse, congestive cardiomyopathy,
pericardial disease
or asymmetrical septal hypertrophy of the heart. This study quantifies the amount of independent information contributed by echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis and demonstrates that this technic provides data of important clinical relevance in a surprisingly large number of cardiac patients.
...
PMID:Contribuiton of M-mode echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis. An assessment in 1,000 successive patients. 70 38
Echocardiography in veterinary medicine has both enhanced our ability to diagnose and treat cardiac diseases in small animals and added confusion to what we already know. Because we can actually see the heart beating and visualize blood flows within the cardiac chambers as well as measure velocities of blood flows, we have a tool that increases our non-invasive diagnostic abilities. On the other hand, the lines between different heart diseases are not always clear-cut, and the more we learn about
heart disease
the more we see the shades of distinction between different diseases become blurred. This chapter will look at the main abnormalities we see in veterinary medicine (mitral regurgitation,
pericardial disease
, and the different feline and canine cardiomyopathies) and will attempt to help the veterinary echocardiographer avoid common problems encountered in acquired
heart disease
as well as use echocardiographic information to gain a better understanding of the disease process occurring in animals.
...
PMID:Problems in veterinary ultrasonographic analysis of acquired heart disease. 183 66
A 66-year-old man without history of
heart disease
or symptoms of left ventricular (LV) failure was admitted with transudative ascites. Echocardiography showed no valvular or
pericardial disease
and normal LV function. Gated pool scintigraphy confirmed normal LV systolic function but demonstrated severe right ventricular systolic dysfunction. Catheterization revealed left ventricular diastolic dysfunction as the cause of right-sided failure. The clinician evaluating transudative ascites cannot exclude LV failure on the basis of noninvasive assessment of systolic function alone. Appreciation of an elevated central venous pressure remains the most important evidence of a cardiac source of ascites.
...
PMID:Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction presenting as ascites: the importance of clinically assessing central venous pressure. 200 53
Sixty-seven patients were examined with a small portable echocardiograph in Wad Medani Teaching Hospital in central Sudan. The cardiac alterations detected in the referred patients, namely valvular disease and pericardial effusion, suggested a high prevalence of inflammatory
heart disease
in this area. Other findings were dilatative cardiomyopathy, congenital
heart disease
, mitral valve prolapse and a cardiac mass. Echocardiographic examination of patients with advanced hepatosplenic schistosomiasis revealed no evidence of cardiac alterations or abnormal right heart function. For echocardiography a general purpose ultrasound scanner, as defined by the World Health Organization, was used, additionally equipped with M mode facilities. It was concluded that echocardiography is applicable even in remote tropical areas and that its value, considering costs, therapeutic consequences and clinical benefit in developing countries, can be substantial. It was particularly helpful with
pericardial disease
.
...
PMID:Results of echocardiographic examinations in a regional hospital of central Sudan. 227 91
Heart disease
related to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) encompasses a number of pathologic findings that may or may not be associated with specific cardiac signs and symptoms. A review of 30 reports revealed that cardiac disorders were apparent in 424 (74%) of 574 AIDS patients. Neoplasms and opportunistic infections each were reported in 46 (8%) patients. The area of the heart most commonly affected was the myocardium.
Pericardial disease
as a single disorder was apparent in 14 patients, the etiologic bases of which were Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Cryptococcus neoformans infection, and unspecified fibrinous pericarditis. Endocardial disease was histologically evident in 18 patients with nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis, and one patient was found to have Nocardia asteroides endocarditis. Although cardiac symptoms (dyspnea and chest pains); signs (pulsus paradoxus and murmurs); or ECG, roentgenogram, or echocardiographic manifestations of AIDS may be significant, they are not generally helpful in establishing a clinical diagnosis. Echocardiograms and a heightened degree of clinical suspicion have proven useful in detecting cardiac dysfunction and life-threatening cardiac tamponade.
...
PMID:AIDS-related heart disease: a review of the literature. 267 Dec 77
Consecutive requests of 1557 echocardiographic studies performed between January 1984 and June 1988 were analysed in order to identify common cardiac abnormalities encountered, the pattern of referral and most important the usefulness of the procedure at our hospital. Organic
heart disease
was found in 1240 patients, of whom 541 (43.6%) had acquired valvular heart disease; 338 (27.4%) congenital heart abnormalities; 154 (12.4%) cardiomyopathies; 139 (11.2%)
pericardial disease
and 68 (5.4%) other cardiac abnormalities. The diagnostic yield was high 1093/1128 (96.8%) when
heart disease
was clinically diagnosed or strongly suspected. It confirmed stated diagnosis in 789 (70.0%) and the echocardiographic diagnosis was different from that of the referral in 304 (26.9%). In the remaining 35 (3.1%) no
heart disease
could be identified. The yield was low, 147/429 (34.2%) (12% of the total positives), when patients were referred to "rule out" or "exclude"
heart disease
. It is concluded that echocardiography is not very useful for the detection of unsuspected diseases, while on the other hand, it is a simple, relatively cheap and highly dependable tool in the assessment of known cardiac abnormalities.
...
PMID:Diagnostic utility of echocardiography in Ethiopia. 275 30
While salmonellosis is often considered to affect primarily the gastrointestinal tract, infection at other sites may occur, producing characteristic clinical syndromes. We reviewed cases from our institutions and the literature on focal manifestations of salmonella infections. In the past, most extra-intestinal salmonella infections were caused by S. choleraesuis; however, we found S. typhimurium to be the predominant serotype. The mortality rate for patients in our series was considerably lower than the rate described for focal infections in other reviews. This may in part be due to lower proportion of infections due to S. choleraesuis, improved microbiologic and diagnostic techniques, increased use of ampicillin, and improved surgical techniques. Salmonella endocarditis usually occurs in patients with preexisting
heart disease
. Unlike other salmonella infections, S. choleraesuis is the most frequent serotype. Salmonella endocarditis is often very destructive, with a fatality rate of 70%. Nonvalvular (mural) endocarditis occurs in one-fourth of patients and survival has not been reported. While antibiotic therapy should be tried initially, if response is not prompt the clinician should look for an associated site of infection (intra- or extra-cardiac abscess), which will often require surgery. Salmonella pericarditis often presents with cardiac or pulmonary symptoms, but typical signs of
pericardial disease
(pulsus paradoxus, friction rub) or characteristic electrocardiographic changes (low voltage, elevated ST segments) are uncommon. Early diagnosis, before infection involves other areas of the heart, is crucial for survival. In addition to antibiotic therapy, pericardiocentesis or pericardiectomy is required. Salmonella may infect the peripheral or visceral arteries, but the abdominal aorta is the most frequent site of vascular infection. Most patients are men over age 50 with preexisting atherosclerosis of the aorta who do not have a previous history of gastroenteritis. About one-fourth of patients have associated lumbar osteomyelitis. No patients have been reported to survive with medical therapy alone. Specific guidelines for surgical removal of infected aneurysms have been proposed and these (in addition to increased use of ampicillin) may be responsible for higher survival rates in recent years. Due to the high incidence of relapses, postoperative blood cultures should be done routinely. Arterial infection should be considered in any elderly patient with salmonella bacteremia especially with prolonged fever or bacteremia after an "adequate course" of antibiotic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Extra-intestinal manifestations of salmonella infections. 330 60
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