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

Gout is rarely noted as a clinical problem in secondary polycythemia-- even if profound polycythemia exists, as in cyanotic congenital heart disease. A retrospective study of 81 patients with congenital heart disease was done to assess the incidence of hyperuricemia. Twenty of 46 patients with cyanotic congenital heart disease had serum levels of uric acid greater than 8 mg/dl. Thirteen of 16 (81%) cyanotic male patients more than 15 years old had serum levels greater than 8 mg/dl. For cyanotic patients, serum levels of uric acid were related directly to the degree of polycythemia (r = .44; P less than .02). Impaired renal function or drug therapy did not seem to account for the hyperuricemia. Because levels of uric acid greater than 10 mg/dl probably are nephropathic, many of these patients may be incurring subclinical uric acid nephropathy.
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PMID:Hyperuricemia in congenital heart disease. 68 9

A retrospective study of 194 patients is carried out. Patients were divided into two groups: 154 patients with acute cerebrovascular accident (ACA) and 40 patients without vascular pathology, hospitalized for other causes. A descriptive analysis of these patients is made with respect to age, sex, type of ACA, previous ACA and potential relationship between the type of this first ACA and the one motivating current hospitalization. In addition, ACA is related to risk factors (hypertension, dyslipemia, diabetes, cardiopathy). In our series, variables that can be considered as risk factors, with significant differences between both groups, are: HTA, tobacco consumption, cardiopathy, dyslipemia (hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglycemia, hyperuricemia and diabetes. Alcoholism, anticoagulation, antiaggregation or polyglobulia were not risk factors. In 33.2% of patients with current ACAs, there were antecedent of clinically documented cerebrovascular pathology; one thing of them were transitory cerebral ischemias and more than half of them, cerebral infarcts. In conclusion, we stressed the role of primary and secondary prevention acting against risk factors, given the recurrence of this pathology and the irreversibility of the injuries once happened.
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PMID:[Cerebrovascular accident: study of risk factors and development in 154 cases]. 179 Feb 78

In a prospective study, 10 children with congenital heart disease were studied before and after surgery (24-48 h). Mean age and weight, type of disease and surgery performed are described in Table 1. Six patients had acyanotic disease and 4 were cyanotic. Before surgery, the acyanotic group (AG) showed hyperuricemia compared to normal children of the same chronological age (mean +/- SE: 5.53 +/- 0.42 vs 4.27 +/- 0.22, p less than 0.02). Initial seric creatinine (sCr), increased in 3 patients of the AC and in the 4 patients of the cyanotic group (CG) compared to normal values of sCr for height (AG: 0.47 +/- 0.05 vs 0.34 +/- 0.03, p less than 0.05; CG: 0.63 +/- 0.05 vs 0.38 +/- 0.05, p less than 0.01). Post-surgery, sCr and serum uric acid (sUA) increased significantly at 24 and 48 h in both groups (Fig 1); at 24 h the increment in sUA in the AG was higher than that in the CG (p less than 0.05). There was a direct and significant correlation between the increment in sUA and sCr in the AG (Fig. 2). The urine excretion of uric acid paralleled the increment of sUA in the CG (Table 2). Fractional excretion of, sodium (FENa) was less than 1% and greater than 1% in the AG and the CG, respectively, being the basal FENa of the AG significantly lower (Table 3).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Postoperative hyperuricemia of cyanotic and acyanotic congenital cardiopathies]. 182 May

The ideal body weight (kg) of each individual can be calculated by the following formula: ideal body mass index x the height (m)2, since body mass index is expressed by the body weight in kilogram divided by the height squared in meters. We investigated an ideal body mass index with respect to morbidity in 4565 Japanese men and women aged 30-59 years. Ten medical problems served as indices of morbidity: lung disease, heart disease, upper gastrointestinal disease, hypertension, renal disease, liver disease, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia, diabetes mellitus and anemia. The value of body mass index associated with the lowest morbidity was 22.2 kg/m2 in men and 21.9 kg/m2 in women, according to the quadratic regression curves relating body mass index to morbidity. From these findings, we propose that the ideal body weight is 22 x height (m)2. Our recommendations apply to the age group studied, namely 30-59 years.
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PMID:Ideal body weight estimated from the body mass index with the lowest morbidity. 201 Feb 54

Joint studies of the ALIMDA and Society of Actuaries, notably those of 1935, 1959 and 1979, established that there is a progressive rise in cardiovascular mortality with successive increments in blood pressure. This has provided the basis of underwriting. The converse is not true, or at least has not been true until very recently. Drugs that effectively reduce blood pressure have been available for several decades, but reduction and maintenance of blood pressure is still accomplished in only a minority of hypertensives. Long-term trials employing a combination of drugs, i.e., diuretics, vasodilators and reserpine and subsequently beta-blockers, almost without fail have not shown that treatment with these agents significantly reduces heart disease mortality and sudden death. This has been attributed, perhaps without basis, to an unfavorable countering effect of increased lipid levels, aggravating this risk factor, and other undesirable metabolic effect of diuretics, such as hypokalemia and depletion of body magnesium, increasing the propensity to ventricular arrhythmias, hyperglycemia, worsening diabetes, and hyperuricemia. A survey of 674 persons with hypertension seen personally during the period 1985-89, who were under the care of approximately that many physicians, reveals striking changes in drug prescription and use during this brief period that portend a major change in the outlook of hypertension. Two classes of drugs have increased rapidly in popularity: these are the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE inhibitors) and the calcium blockers. Both classes of drugs effectively lower blood pressure and have minimal side effects with good compliance. They act not only to reduce peripheral vascular resistance, but also locally in the heart muscle to directly cause left ventricular hypertrophy to regress, an effect of great consequence. The drugs used in former trials such as the vasodilators and diuretics have no effect on left ventricular hypertrophy, unlike the ACE inhibitors and calcium antagonists. Left ventricular hypertrophy is the key lesion in hypertension and is only in part due to increased work load imposed by elevated pressure. It is associated with elevated blood pressure, but not closely and occurs independently; ventricular myocytes as well as myocytes of the vasculature being stimulated to growth by angiotensin and calcium, potentiating the effect of norepinephrine. Left ventricular hypertrophy greatly increases the propensity to ventricular arrhythmias and sudden death, and is a prime cause of cardiac mortality and sudden death not only in hypertension, but also in obesity, aging and diabetes, in which conditions left ventricular hypertrophy also is very common.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Major new developments affecting treatment and prognosis in hypertension. 235 5

We undertook a prospective study of 23 male patients with Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS) (New York Criteria), 18 HLA-B27 positive and 5 HLA-B27 negative, five of them had hyperuricemia. The following data of evolution were taken into consideration: age at onset of disease, time course of the disease, presence of urolithiasis, heart disease, flares of uveitis. Clinical activity and degree of disability were evaluated every one to 3 months; on each visit, every patient had determinations of serum and urinary uric acid levels, serum and phosphorus, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), serum protein electrophoresis, as well as X-ray films of the vertebral spine and pelvis. Three groups of patients were detected, all of them with equal age at onset, duration of disease, frequency of B27, peripheral arthritis, and leukocytosis. One group had hyperuricemia (5 of 23 patients, 80% of them HLA-B27 positive) and a lesser degree of clinical activity of the disease (p less than .001, a higher frequency of uveitis (40%, lower levels of serum gammaglobulins (p less than 0.05) and ESR (p less than 0.05), a lesser degree of ankylosis of the spine, and a better functional prognosis than the other groups. Another group (8 of 23 patients, 75% of them were HLA-B27 positive) had normouricemia and hyperuricosuria, and showed a higher frequency of fever (50%), an abnormal urinalysis, and urolithiasis (25%).
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PMID:[Purine metabolism in ankylosing spondylitis: clinical study]. 260 1

Hematologic management of adults with cyanotic congenital heart disease has received little recent attention. The lack of practical therapeutic guidelines prompted us to consolidate our observations on 124 cyanotic adults for general physicians, cardiologists, and hematologists who care for these patients. Specific attention focused on regulation of erythrocyte mass and concepts of compensated and decompensated erythrocytosis, symptoms of deficient tissue oxygen transport, hyperviscosity and iron deficiency, the potential relation between elevated hematocrit levels and brain injury, hemostasis, urate metabolism, and renal function. Cerebral infarction was not seen in any patient. Phlebotomy is best reserved for treatment of symptomatic hyperviscosity. Iron therapy is indicated for symptomatic iron deficient erythropoiesis. Abnormal hemostatic mechanisms are the rule. Antithrombotic medications have little or no role in treatment. Hyperuricemia is the result of abnormal renal uric acid excretion not urate overproduction, and serves as a marker of abnormal renal function. Drugs that promote urate excretion are the preferred maintenance treatment in symptomatic hyperuricemic patients.
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PMID:Adults with cyanotic congenital heart disease: hematologic management. 304 12

Diminished glomerular filtration rate, proteinuria, and large hypercellular congested glomeruli with segmental sclerosis are found in late survivors with cyanotic congenital heart disease (CCHD). Hyperuricemia is common, acute gouty arthritis is less common than uric acid levels would predict, and overt tophaceous deposits of uric acid are exceptional. The role of the kidney in causing the basic biochemical disturbances, and the relative importance of impaired urate excretion vs urate overproduction have not been established. Accordingly, we reviewed the courses of two index patients and prospectively studied eight additional CCHD patients from 28 years to 46 years old with mean hematocrits of (62 +/- 10%). Plasma creatinine concentration was normal (0.9 +/- 0.1 mg/dl) yet glomerular filtration rate was mildly reduced to 93 +/- 14 ml/min as measured by creatinine clearance and to 81 +/- 6 ml/min as measured by 111In DTPA. Three patients had significant proteinuria and one was nephrotic. Plasma uric acid concentration was high in all but one (8.2 +/- 2.1 mg/dl), mean 24 hr uric acid excretion was normal (564 +/- 221 mg), and fractional uric acid excretion was relatively low (6.3 +/- 2.6%). The two patients with highest plasma uric acid levels (12.0 and 10.2 mg/dl) had the lowest fractional excretions (2.8% and 4.0%). Both of these patients had diminished capacity to excrete a water load (38% and 27%/4 hr) and to maximally concentrate urine (520 and 635 mOsm/kg after water deprivation and vasopressin). In conclusion, high plasma uric acid levels in late survivors with CCHD are secondary to inappropriately low fractional uric acid excretion, not to urate overproduction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Renal function and urate metabolism in late survivors with cyanotic congenital heart disease. 394 50

The value of hyperuricemia as a risk factor for cardiovascular mortality was investigated in 3195 men and 3160 women aged 40-69 years in Finland. Hyperuricemia was associated with obesity, impaired glucose tolerance, hypertension and history of heart disease. The total mortality of hyperuricemic men and women in 5 years was significantly higher than the mortality of normouricemics. Cardiovascular mortality was not higher in hyperuricemics than in normouricemics. However, in hyperuricemic women without known heart disease cardiovascular mortality was significantly increased in the follow-up period between 5 and 12 years. Total and cardiovascular mortality rates were significantly higher in hyperuricemic men with known heart disease than in corresponding normouricemic men. A rise of serum uric acid may be secondary to more advanced atherosclerosis. Thus, hyperuricemia may be associated with more advanced heart disease and it is not an independent cause of cardiovascular diseases.
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PMID:Hyperuricemia as a risk factor for cardiovascular mortality. 696 92

The authors refer on 24 patients over 65 years of age suffering from obliterating arteriopathy of the lower limbs undergoing reconstructive surgery no matter the high surgical risk. These patients represent 12.3% of all vascular patients treated in five years of activity. The following risk factors are considered: 1) Heart disease; 2) Altered lipid metabolism; 3) Diabetes; 4) Arterial hypertension; 5) Hyperuricaemia; 6) Obesity; 7) Renal or hepatic insufficiency. Immediate results were excellent in 23 cases; one patient suffering from aortic barrage died of acute haemorrhagic pancreatitis. Follow-up results also remained good; only one patient had to be re-operated two years later (disobliteration of branch of prosthesis) with a happy outcome. Two other patients died because of non vascular causes. The authors do not consider age amongst risk factors and prefer the extraperitoneal approach in disobliterating operations and refer using the transperitoneal route without problems in aortobifemoral bypasses. The authors state that risk factors did not alter neither the short nor the long-term follow-up results possibly because of medical correction of associated pathological states.
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PMID:[Reconstructive surgery in high-risk arteriopathic patients]. 721 68


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