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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixteen of 994 patients with arteriosclerotic
heart disease
and dominant right coronary arteries had isolated left circumflex obstruction. Of these, 6 patients had significant (75%) narrowing in the main circumflex, 10 in 1 or the marginal branches and 1 in the atrioventricular groove branch.
Angina
was mild in 5, moderate to severe in 8, and unstable in 1. Four patients had prior myocardial infarction (MI), and 1 had a recent MI complicated by posterior papillary muscle rupture. The EKG was normal in 5, showed an MI in 2, LBBB in 1, RBBB in 2, ST-T wave changes in 3, LVH in 2, and atrial fibrillation in 2. Left ventricular angiography performed in the right anterior oblique projection revealed normal contraction in 9 patients, apical hypokinesis in 4, posterobasal hypokinesis in 1, and diffuse hypokinesis in 2. The left ventribular end diastolic pressure was normal in 11 patients and elevated in 5. The cardiac index was normal in 12 patients and reduced in 2. Isolated, nondominant, left circumflex coronary disease is an uncommon entity in symptomatic patients. However, when present, it may produce significant clinical and hemodynamic impairment.
...
PMID:The clinical and angiographic spectrum of isolated, nondominant, left circumflex coronary disease. 99 Dec 64
157 cases affected with "unstable angina" and hospitalized were observed over a period of from 8 to 24 months (average observation time: 16 1/2 months). The patients were treated with: nitroderivates, beta blocking drugs (when not contra-indicated); treatment of side affects (hypertension; arrhythmias, decompensation, associated pathology, correction of risk factors of coronary heart disease). 9 cases were lost and 148 were studied for the course of the illness. 10.6% died from
cardiopathy
(2.8% through sudden death; 7.4% from myocardial infarction); there was a 12.1% total incidence of myocardial infarction; 50% of the cases were alive but with sumptoms of stabilized
angina
, whilst 32.4% were completely asymptomatic. Coronographic alterations and myocardial contractility negatively affect the course of the illness. Negative effects (disease or infarction) were not checked in the cases of stenosis of only one coronary branch. In the casuistry, there were no negative effects in patients with stenosis of one coronary branch, and in cases of two or more branches, negative effects were 28%. 41% of patients with alterations of ventrical contractility gave negative results. An asymptomatic course of the illness was checked more frequently in the intermediate stages than in
angina
cases.
...
PMID:[Natural history of unstable angina. Observations on 157 cases (author's transl)]. 101 Jan 71
Whether a person is medically fit to engage in sports depends not only on his or her present state of health but also on his or her previous medical history, age, personality, and of course, the nature of the particular sport in question. Anyone that feels fit, is physically in good condition, abstains from tobacco, alcohol and other intoxicant stimulants, and passes a thorough medical examination is healthy and fully capable of taking part in any sport whatever. Participation in any form of sport, on the other hand, is absolutely contra-indicated for persons suffering from severe or malignant hypertension, inflammatory or bacterial
heart disease
, severe
angina pectoris
- especially with an attendant risk of myocardial infarction - or haemodynamically significant arrhythmias that manifest themselves during, or are aggravated by, physical exertion. Physical activity is generally deleterious in patients with advanced pulmonary disease and chronic cor pulmonale, severe decompensated heart failure or severe renal insufficiency. Severe intercurrent infections also constitute an absolute contra-indication for sport. Between these two extremes of absolute fitness and absolute unfitness there are many intermediate states, e.g. diseases like essential hypertension (WHO Stages I and II), coronary disease and peripheral arterial circulatory disorders, in which patients can derive considerable benefit from properly chosen and carefully graded sporting activity.
...
PMID:[Medical fitness for sports, with particular reference to cardiovascular conditions]. 102 Apr 74
Near maximal stress testing conducted on a group (N = 90) of randomly selected Los Angeles City fire fighters (age 40-59 yrs.) revealed that 10% had ischemic ECG changes. These ischemic ECG responses were confirmed during a second test conducted two to four weeks after the initial test. Coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factor analysis revealed that in general the men were not at high risk for CHD. Six of the nine men elected to undergo cardiac catheterization and angiography. One patient had severe triple vessel disease and subsequently underwent aorto-coronary bypass surgery. Another had 50% obstruction in the circumflex branch of the left coronary while the other four men had no visable signs of coronary obstruction. The men with "normal" coronaries, however, did show signs of abnormal cardiac function during atrial pacing. One man had cardiac enlargement, hypokinesis, ischemic ECG and abnormal lactate metabolism. Another had abnormal lactate metabolism and ischemic ECG. A third man had moderate cardiac enlargement with anterior wall hypokinesis. The fourth had ischemic ECG changes with
angina
but otherwise normal cardiac function. All four of these men had pressures which were within normal limits. These data show that some fire fighters have "ischemic"
heart disease
with patent coronary arteries. This disease may be due to job related factors (i.e. carbon monoxide and other noxious fumes, catecholamines, etc.) which reduce myocardial oxygen supply or greatly increase myocardial oxygen demands.
...
PMID:"Ischemic" heart disease in fire fighters with normal coronary arteries. 103 66
Cardiac arrest developed in two patients after the administration of oral potassium. Neither patient had renal insufficiency, but both had underlying
heart disease
. In one patient fatal ventricular fibrillation developed 4 days after he received an aortic valve replacement for aortic stenosis and while he was receiving oral potassium supplements. The serum potassium level before cardiac arrest was 8.1 meq. The second patient had
angina
and was given 40 meq of potassium orally 15 minutes after an exercise test which produced chest pain and S-T segment depression. One hour later, ventricular fibrillation developed. Resuscitation was successful. Both patients had electrocardiographic evidence of hyperkalemia. Oral administration of potassium may produce severe cardiac toxicity in patients with
heart disease
even when renal function is clinically normal.
...
PMID:Cardiac arrest due to oral potassium administration. 111 63
Fifteen patients had left ventricular function measured by the angiotensin infusion method. Seven patients had no evidence of
heart disease
, and eight patients had
angina pectoris
and coronary arteriographic evidence of coronary disease without congestive heart failure. During angiotensin infusion, those patients without
heart disease
had a decrease in cardiac index (average, 0.63 L. per minute per square meter) and a decrease in heart rate (average, 12 beats per minute.) The ventricular function curve had a poor SWI response in four of the seven subjects. The patients with coronary artery disease also had a reduction in cardiac index during angiotensin (average, 0.44 L. per minute per square meter) and the heart rate was unchanged in four subjects, increased in two subjects, and decreased in two subjects. Six of the subjects had flat or descending slopes on the function curve, and in one subject there was only a very gradual ascending slope. Many of the curves of both groups looked similar so that the function curves did not differentiate between those patients with or without
heart disease
. The mechanism for production of bradycardia, reduction of cardiac output, and depressed function curves with angiotensin is multifactorial, but is probably due to the baroreceptor reflex response, the increase in coronary artery resistance, and possible to the direct effect of increased left ventricular afterload itself. The ventricular response to angiotensin is so variable that the angiotensin infusion method of evaluating ventricular function is not reliable.
...
PMID:The angiotensin infusion test as a method of evaluating left ventricular function. 111 66
Deaths from ischemic heart disease(IHD) occurring during a period of one year in Helsinki in persons aged 65 years or younger have been investigated by the Ischaemic
Heart Disease
Register. Altogether 526 fatalities were registered. Autopsy data were collected in 432 cases, the autopsy rate being 82 percent. The results are presented separately for persons autopsied in the pathologic departments, representing mostly delayed deaths in hospitals, and for medico-legally autopsied persons representing sudden deaths outside hospitals. The diagnosis of IHD death was either based on the positive patho-anatomic or clinical evidence of an acute heart attack or supported by a history of clinical IHD in 92 percent of all registered fatal cases. In the remaining fatalities the possibility of other causes of death had been more or less definitely excluced. All persons with an acute attack of IHD and all autopsied cases showed a division into four socio-economic groups very similar to that of the population of Helsinki. Men belonging to the lowest social group were over-represented among medico-legally autopsied cases. A history of a previous
heart disease
, visits to a doctor and the use of digitalis were less common in persons autopsied medico-legally than in those autopsied in the pathologic departments. In the former an acute infarction was most often located in the posterior wall and in the latter in the anterior wall of the left ventricle. The prevalence of an occlusion was highest in the right coronary artery in the former and in the left anterior descending coronary artery in the latter; In medico-legally autopsied cases in which a recent myocardial infarction was observed the interventricular septum was involved in 81 percent, but in cases with an old infarction the septum was involved in only 52 percent. No difference in the size of the hearts, the frequency of an old infarction or the prevalence of coronary occlusions was found between persons autopsied in the pathologic and forensic departments. Although a previous
angina
was about equally common in both sexes, old infarctions were more common in men. The increase in heart weight had occurred proportionally to the same extent in both sexes.
...
PMID:Deaths from ischemic heart disease in persons aged 65 or younger in Helsinki in 1970 with special reference to patho-anatomic findings in hearts.?211. 112 61
Four hundred and sixteen patients with documented arteriosclerotic
heart disease
(ASHD) underwent 424 diagnostic and therapeutic surgical procedures during the year 1970 at the Henry Ford Hospital. They were classified according to the specific clinical manifestation of their cardiac abnormality. Patients with a history of old, well-compensated myocardial infarction, and those with cardiac arrhythmia, bundle-branch block, congestive heart failure and A-V block (pacemaker-protected) but no evidence of previous myocardial infarction fared almost as well as subjects of the same age without cardiac disease, and were considered to run the lowest operative risk. Patients with
angina
, especially if there was a history of infarction, were an intermediate risk in terms of complications and mortality. Patients with a history of previous infarction complicated at the time of the surgical procedure by arrhythmia, A-V block, bundle-branch block, or congestive heart failure were in the "highest risk" category. A severe A-V block indicated the need for insertion of a "prophylactic" pacemaker before any attempt at a diagnostic or therapeutic procedure. No patient with clinical or electrocardiographic evidence of a recent infarction (less than three months' duration) should undergo any elective surgical procedure under any form of anesthesia unless the surgeon is prepared for a high mortality rate that may approach 90 percent. In contrast, the patient with old, well-compensated myocardial infarction and no evidence of dysrhythmia, block or congestive failure can tolerate even a major surgical operation under any form of anesthesia extremely well.
...
PMID:Operative and nonoperative risks in the cardiac patient. 120 86
Coronary- and LV-angiography in coronary heart disease are indicated I) to clarify whether or not surgery is required (e.g. aorto-coronary-bypass operation, aneurysmectomy) in 1) drug resistent
angina pectoris
, 2) myocardial aneurysms (or the suspicion of), 3) VSD following myocardial infarction and/or 4) as preoperative investigations in mitral regurgitation or 5) other valve lesions. II) These investigations are furthermore indicated in the under-50-yr.-old considering their prognosis and diagnosis 1) following myocardial infarction 2) to clarify a pathological exercise test with or without
angina pectoris
3) in the differential diagnosis of myocardial diseases and 4) occasionally in patients with a number of risk factors or exposed to particular occupational hazards or from families with a high incidence of early deaths from
heart disease
. Coronary- and LV-angiography are contraindicated in 1) generalized stenosing atherosclerosis, 2) acute myocardial infarction, 3) failure from other organ-systems (e.g. kidney), 4) drug resistent endogenous risk factors and/or relevant obesity, 5) biological age over 60-65.6) continued nicotine dependence. In many cases the specific diagnostic investigations will include the assessment of coronary flow at rest and during maximal drug induced coronary dilatation. This enables us to estimate the coronary reserve and to diagnose coronary insufficiency in patients with normal coronary angiograms.- Instructive morphological and/or functional results illustrate this presentation.
...
PMID:[Indications for coronary arteriography and left ventriculography in coronary heart disease (author's transl)]. 125 Nov 19
Over the span of two or three days in August, 1972, in two separate communities in eastern Massachusetts two men, one aged 39, the other 66, each without previous overt
heart disease
, were stung by wasps. Each went into shock rapidly after an interval of over a half-hour developed chest pain and, later, sequential electrocardiographic changes diagnostic of acute myocardial infarction. Each survived; each had normal electrocardiograms before the sting. Though preexistent coronary artery disease can be excluded in neither, the view is favored that acute myocardial infarction in each was caused by deficient coronary perfusion secondary to anaphylactic shock induced by the wasp stings. An intriguing case was just recently reported58 of a 62-year-old man with previous
angina
who developed pulmonary edema but no chest pain following wasp sting and went on to show rapidly reversed electrocardiographic changes attributable to subendocardial ischemia or infarction. In a sense, this sequence fills the gap as an intermediate phase between the normal and the two individuals described here who developed pain after anaphylactic shock, then proceeded, perhaps through this phase, to develop transmural infarction.
...
PMID:Acute myocardial infarction following wasp sting. Report of two cases and critical survey of the literature. 125 36
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