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

The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether ventricular ectopic beats, or ventricular premature beats (VPBs), on routine electrocardiograms in men without apparent heart disease predict the later occurrence of clinical manifestations of ischemic heart disease (IHD). The Manitoba Study cohort consisted of 3983 men predominantly between 25 and 34 years of age and free of IHD at entry. During the 29-year observation period, 401 persons without clinical evidence of heart disease had VPBs on an electrocardiogram at a routine examination. They were followed 10.8 +/- 0.5 (SEM) years and 13.5% (54 men) later manifested IHD. Age-specific total IHD incidence was significantly (p less than 0.05) greater for men 40 to 59 years of age at VPB occurrence compared to men of the same age without VPBs. The clinical manifestation with the strongest association with VPBs was sudden death. VPB characteristics of frequency, configuration, coupling interval, and postextrasystolic T-wave change did not distinguish those who developed IHD. Prematurity index (R-R'/QT) showed a trend toward an association of late coupled ectopic beats (R-R'/QT greater than 1.6) and IHD risk. However, faster basic ventricular rate plus VPBs significantly correlated with greater IHD probability. Thus ventricular ectopic beats on a routine electrocardiogram in men over 40 years of age without apparent heart disease identify those at high risk for a clinical IHD event, especially sudden death.
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PMID:Relationship of ventricular ectopy in men without apparent heart disease to occurrence of ischemic heart disease and sudden death. 746 14

Neonatal mortality due to congenital malformations or genetic disorders has not decreased despite a decrease in overall neonatal deaths with recent advances in medical technology. As a consequence, an increasing percentage of neonatal deaths is attributable to congenital malformations and genetic disorders. This study retrospectively reviewed neonatal deaths associated with congenital malformations over an 11-year period in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at Kosair Children's Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky. Presently, congenital malformations are responsible for approximately 45% (range 32% to 61%) of deaths in the NICU with congenital heart disease, lethal genetic disorders, and pulmonary hypoplasia being the main contributors. Other major causes of neonatal death included extreme prematurity, respiratory disorders, necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis, asphyxia, and primary pulmonary hypertension. It is important that clinicians are aware that improved survival is expected for most diseases because of technological advances, but that further significant reductions in neonatal mortality will depend on genetic counseling and prevention of congenital malformations.
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PMID:The impact of major congenital malformations on mortality in a neonatal intensive care unit. 756 53

The prevelance of IDA in industrialized countries has declined in recent decades, but there has been little change in the worldwide prevalence. IDA is currently estimated to affect more than 500 million people. Recent studies have indicated that anemia per se, the most common manifestation of iron deficiency, is less important from a public health standpoint than liabilities associated with tissue iron deficiency. The most important of the latter are an impairment in psychomotor development and cognitive function in infants and preschoolers, a deficit in work performance in adults, and an increase in the frequency of low birth weight, prematurity, and perinatal mortality in pregnancy. There have been several recent advances in combatting nutritional iron deficiency. One of the major problems has been in distinguishing iron deficiency from other causes of anemia seen epidemiologically such as malaria, HIV infection, chronic inflammation, hemoglobinopathies, and protein energy malnutrition. When combined with serum ferritin and hemoglobin determinations, the serum transferrin receptor assay is a valuable addition in epidemiologic surveys because it provides a quantitative measure of functional iron deficiency and it distinguishes true IDA from the anemia of chronic disease. The most difficult challenge is to develop effective methods of supplying iron to large segments of a population. Supplementation with iron tablets is suitable for only brief periods of need such as during pregnancy. The poor compliance with existing supplementation programs is believed to be due mainly to the gastrointestinal side effects of oral iron which can be eliminated by the use of a gastric delivery system. The most effective long-term strategy is to increase the intake of bioavailable iron in the diet. The customary approach has been to fortify a food staple such as wheat, rice, sugar, or salt, and thereby increase the iron intake of the entire population. However, because of concerns about the risk of cancer and heart disease in individuals with high iron stores, there is an increasing reluctance to supply iron to individuals who do not require it. A more effective strategy is to fortify food vehicles that are targeted to segments of the population at greatest risk of iron deficiency such as infants and school children. Because of the strong inhibitory properties of diets in regions of the world where iron deficiency is most prevalent, the use of NaFeEDTA has important advantages for food fortification.
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PMID:Iron deficiency: the global perspective. 788 26

Bronchiolitis, a lower respiratory tract illness most often caused by respiratory syncytial virus, generally affects children under two years of age, commonly during the winter months. Necrosis of epithelial cells in the small airways leads to inflammation and airway obstruction, causing decreased oxygen saturation, with cough and wheezing. Hospital admission should be considered for children with pulse oximetry levels less than 95 percent at rest. Treatment consists of humidified oxygen, intravenous hydration and administration of nebulized albuterol. Infants with mild disease who are identified early in the course of illness should be reevaluated in 24 hours. Infants with congenital heart disease, bronchopulmonary dysplasia or a history of prematurity, who are at high risk for severe disease, should be treated with ribavirin.
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PMID:Bronchiolitis. 784 31

Between January 1988 and December 1990 health workers referred 139 infants suspected of heart disease to a skilled pediatric cardiologist at the University Hospital of Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe. The physicians considered patent ductus arteriosus of prematurity to be a congenital heart disease if it still existed after the neonatal period. The incidence of congenital heart disease was 6.08 cases/1000 live births with a sex ratio of 1:1. 12% of chromosomal abnormalities, especially Down's syndrome. Physicians diagnosed 92% of all cases in the 1st year of life. 35% (49 infants) went to the Pediatric Cardiologic Department of Hospital Necker in Paris, France, to undergo catheterizations. 32 of these infants also underwent chest surgery. Prevalence of coarctation of the aorta (3.1/10,000 live births) essentially equalled that of developed countries. The prevalence of hypoplastic left heart disease was considerably higher than the rate in the literature (3.5/10,000 live births vs. 0.5-2.7/10,000 live births). It was the 4th ranking congenital heart disease in this population (5.7% of all cases). All the infants with hypoplastic left heart disease died.
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PMID:Congenital heart disease diagnosed in Guadeloupe. 833 13

The purpose of the present study is to compare risk factors of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) between two group: group A, newborns with the disease and group B, newborns with other diseases different from NEC, in order to know if these risk factors are more frequent or not in the first group. We assessed the clinical records of all the patients hospitalized in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and Neonatology Service of the La Raza General Hospital between 1987 and 1991 with the diagnosis of NEC. They were compared with 65 clinical records chosen at random of patients hospitalized in the same Unit with other diagnosis at the same time, and who were discharged by improvement or deceased. In all of them were look for known risk factors for NEC generally accepted such as: prematurity, neonatal asphyxia, poliglobulia, cyanotic congenital heart disease, patent ductus arteriosus, respiratory distress syndrome, catheterization of umbilical vessels, early feeding of elevated formula increases, exchange exchange transfusion, hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, infection, etc. Just 25 records of the possible 50 with the diagnosis of NEC full filled inclusion criteria. There were no statistically significant difference in weight, sex, mortality and known risk factors of NEC between both groups. Were concluded that NEC is a disease of unknown etiology that should be studied more thoroughly. The known risk factors must be avoided because the patient susceptibility probably play an important role.
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PMID:[Risk factors of necrotizing enterocolitis]. 837 46

The risk factors of low birth weight infant (LBW) were prospectively studied in 26,941 pregnant women. Investigations included sociodemographic risks, environmental behavioural conditions, medical diseases before pregnancy and current pregnancy complications. The adjusted odds ratios for various risk factors were calculated from multiple logistic regression model. In this analysis, placenta abnormalities uterine malformations and pregnancy-induced hypertension were shown to be the main risk factors. Preterm delivery occurred more frequently in women with diabetes and injuries in the third trimester. Term SGA babies were usually seen in women who had inadequate diet during pregnancy or in women with maternal heart disease. The risk factors of maternal age, educational background, parental smoking etc were less important than maternal diseases or pregnancy complications. The present study indicated prenatal care, started early with regular check-ups was mast important in preventing prematurity and LBW infant in China.
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PMID:[Maternal, medical and obstetric complications are major risk factors for low birth weight infant]. 850 5

A total of 206 cases of sudden infant deaths examined at the Institute of Science and Forensic Medicine, Singapore, over a 5 year period (1989-93) were identified to assess the pattern of sudden death in this age group, which was subdivided into the neonatal and post-neonatal periods. A total of 34% (70) of infant deaths occurred in neonatal life and the remaining 66% (136) in the post-neonatal period; 90% of the neonatal deaths were natural, of which over half were due to congenital heart disease and complications of prematurity. Unnatural deaths in this period were uncommon, there being only seven such deaths. In the post-neonatal period, unnatural deaths constituted 25% of the total with trauma and aspiration heading the list. Natural deaths in the post-neonatal period are predominantly due to infections (34%) and a group of sudden natural deaths with minimal findings (31%). The latter group may arguably represent cases of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). The yearly incidence of this group in our study varied between 0.08 to 0.2 per 1000 live births, which is considerably lower than the incidence quoted for Western populations. The criteria for the classification and the impact of sudden infant deaths in Asian countries are discussed.
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PMID:Sudden infant death in a tropical environment: Singapore's experience. 863 69

Acute otitis media (AOM) has been associated with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection; AOM develops in up to one third of children with RSV illness. A masked multicenter trial used an immune globulin enriched with RSV-neutralizing antibodies (RSVIG) to prevent RSV infection of the lower respiratory tract in 249 children with either bronchopulmonary dysplasia, congenital heart disease, or prematurity. To determine whether monthly RSVIG therapy might decrease the incidence of AOM, we retrospectively analyzed the records of 109 children in two of the centers. RSVIG was administered during RSV season of a high dose of 750 mg/kg monthly or a low dose of 150 mg/kg monthly; control children received no RSVIG. Children were examined for AOM by masked observers using pneumatic otoscopy. No difference in sex, race, underlying diagnosis, number of persons in the home, exposure to smoking, or atopy was found between groups studied. In recipients of high doses of RSVIG, significantly less AOM developed per season than in control children (mean episodes, 0.15 vs 0.78; p = 0.003), and fewer episodes of RSV-related AOM occurred (0 vs 5; p = 0.047). Low doses of RSVIG did not have a clinically significant impact. High doses of RSVIG appeared to have a significant impact on preventing AOM (both RSV- and non-RSV-related AOM) in these-high risk populations. This finding may have important implications in the development of improved preventive modalities for AOM.
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PMID:Respiratory syncytial virus-enriched globulin for the prevention of acute otitis media in high risk children. 876 15

It has recently been recognized that neonates may develop pneumonia as a result of Legionella pneumophila. The objective of this study is to characterize the epidemiology, risk factors, diagnosis, clinical features, and outcome of neonatal legionellosis. Review of the literature revealed nine cases of neonatal Legionella infection. Five neonates were term infants and four were preterm. Eight had potential risk factors such as prematurity, congenital heart disease, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, or corticosteroid therapy. Diagnosis was proven by culture in all cases. The main presentation was acute respiratory distress requiring mechanical ventilation. In six infants, the infection had a fatal outcome, including five who were not treated with erythromycin. All the cases were nosocomial, and environmental Legionella was documented in five cases. As has been noted in adults and children with Legionella, early recognition and institution of appropriate therapy are the most important determinants of the prognosis.
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PMID:Legionella pneumonia in neonates: a literature review. 973 Jan 99


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