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

Spasm of coronary arteries can cause chest pain indistinguishable from classic angina pectoris in patients without atherosclerosis of these vessels or recognizable heart disease. Associated electrocardiographic changes usually correspond to the coronary artery affected and disappear when the attack of pain ends. Sublingual nitrates are excellent agents for the control of the episodic anginal symptoms. There have been scattered reports of myocardial infarction occurring in patients with normal coronary arteries; a role of arterial spasm in these cases in speculative.
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PMID:Myocardial ischemia from coronary arterial spasm. 0 82

A postmortem coronary angiography technique employing aortic injection of contrast medium and double contrast visualization of the aortic bulb and large epicardial coronary trunks was applied to the study of coronary ostia in a series of 124 deaths from acute myocardial infarction and a series of 89 sudden deaths without recent infarction and 42 violent deaths. A stenosis of 50 per cent or more of the lumen was found in the right ostium in 45 per cent and in the left ostium in 8 per cent of infarct cases. The corresponding figures in sudden deaths were 37 per cent on the right and 4.5 per cent on the left side, and in violent deaths 7 per cent in the right ostium and none in the left. Most ostial stenoses were caused by coronary atherosclerosis. In 9 patients, two with a recent infarct and 7 sudden deaths, an ostial stenosis was the only stenosed site in the coronary arterial tree. Of theses 9 patients, 7 were known to have suffered from symptomatic heart disease during life, chest pain on effort and arrhythmias being the most common complaint.
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PMID:Occurrence of coronary ostial stenosis in a necropsy series of myocardial infarction, sudden death, and violent death. 12 64

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.
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PMID:The role of myocardial biopsy in cardiac diagnosis. 12 52

Isopaque Coronar and Amipaque (metrizamide) were evaluated in a comparative double-blind study of 30 patients with heart disease undergoing selective coronary angiography. Amipaque alone was also used for 9 additional patients undergoing left ventriculography, aortic root injection, and selective coronary angiography. Amipaque resulted in significantly less of a decrease in diastolic pressure and heart rate, reduced chest pain and heat sensation, and longer coronary contrast transit time. Electrorocardiographic parameters and image quality were equivalent with the 2 agents. No pathological changes were noted in the 9 patients undergoing complete angiocardiographic study.
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PMID:Amipaque: a new contrast medium in coronary angiography. Report of a double-blind study in man. 33 6

A possible relationship between heart disease, oesophageal dysfunction (OD) and symptomatology was studied in 47 patients with valvular heart disease. They were investigated with oesophageal manometry and oesophageal acid perfusion test. OD was found in 32 percent of the patients. A local pressure increase in the middle part of the oesophagus, probably an effect of cardiac enlargement and compression of the oesophagus, was found at manometry in 38 percent. The incidence of OD and of oesophageal symptoms was the same in patients with and without oesophageal compression. We did not find any indications that valvular disease in itself provokes OD, nor that symptoms of chest pain and cough in patients with valvular heart disease are due to OD.
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PMID:Oesophageal symptoms and manometry in valvular heart disease. 52 38

In order to determine their exercise tolerance, 20 patients with artificial ventricular demand pacemakers below the age of seventy were studied by bicycle ergometry. Only 30% of the patients showed a normal exercise tolerance according to the criteria by Kaltenbach, while 70% stopped the test prematurely because of leg fatigue, dyspnoe or chest pain. In terms of their exercise tolerance, there was no difference between patients who developed normal sinus rhythm or rapid atrial fibrillation during the exercise and those who remained at the fixed pacemaker rate throughout the test. It is concluded, therefore, that the exercise tolerance of pacemaker-patients is not only limited by the fixed heart rate but mainly by the underlying heart disease (coronary heart disease, cardiomyopathy, hypertensive heart disease etc.) and the general physical condition of the patients. In an age-matched control group of 20 patients 50% showed a normal exercise tolerance and the duration of exercise in this group was only slightly longer (21%) than in the pacemaker-group.
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PMID:[Exercise tolerance of patients with artificial cardiac pacemakers (author's transl)]. 54 95

Idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (IHSS) occurs more commonly in the elderly than is generally believed, and is often unsuspected. In 26 patients above the age of 60, the diagnosis was recognized in only 7 (27 percent) prior to echocardiography. Symptoms included dyspnea in 17, chest pain in 16, and dizziness or syncope in 8 patients. In 10 patients, establishing the correct diagnosis led to therapy with propranolol, with or without discontinuation of digitalis; in 7 of these, the chest pain was significantly reduced. An accurate diagnosis is particularly important because drugs that are useful in other forms of heart disease may have adverse effects in IHSS. Echocardiography is the diagnostic procedure of choice and is indicated in the presence of an unexplained systolic murmur, especially when it is associated with chest pain, syncope or left ventricular hypertrophy.
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PMID:Unsuspected hypertrophic subaortic stenosis in the elderly diagnosed by echocardiography. 57 Sep 83

The diagnosis of primary dilated cardiomyopathy depends on the recognition of a dilated poorly contracting left ventricle with increased end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes in the absence of a detectable cause. The diagnosis is made only after exclusion both of structural heart disease and of known causes of secondary heart muscle disorder. The natural history is still largely unknown and is probably as variable as the likely causes. The left ventricular disorder does not cause symptoms until heart failure supervenes except for occasional patients who develop an early atrial or ventricular dysrhythmia, conduction defect, chest pain or murmur of mitral regurgitation. This period of latency may be short, prolonged or even permanent since it is unlikely that all cases progess to the point of failure. A few patients recover normal or near-normal cardiac function. The interplay between high blood pressure, hypertensive heart failure and dilated cardiomyopathy is illustrated by patients who recover from heart failure to become hypertensive and vice versa and in current treatment with vasodilators and diuretics for patients at either end of the spectrum.
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PMID:Diagnosis and natural history of congested (dilated) cardiomyopathies. 70 14

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.
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PMID:Contribuiton of M-mode echocardiography to cardiac diagnosis. An assessment in 1,000 successive patients. 70 38

For half a century the systolic click and late systolic murmur lay dormant as innocent auscultatory curiosities. The thirteen years since Barlow related these phenomena to mitral leaflet prolapse have witnessed an astonishing information explosion. We have sought to bring together the accumulated data in this review. An Historical Perspective traces the evolution from the now abandoned "pericardial" or "extracardiac" phases, through the leafletchordal phase (redundancy), the myocardial phase (segmental left ventricular contraction abnormalities), to the anular phase (dilatation and faulty systolic contraction). Functional Anatomy is dealt with in terms of pathology, pathophysiology, hemodynamics, angiocardiography, echocardiography, and physical and pharmacological interventions. Clinical Manifestations are concerned with prevalence, natural history, symptoms, physical signs, electrocardiographic abnormalities and roentgen fingings. The four Major Complications- sudden death, infective endocarditis, spontaneous rupture of chordae tendineae, and progressive mitral regurgitation- are examined. Associated Cardiac Diseases, i.e., Marfan's syndrome, ostium secundum atrial septal defect and atherosclerotic coronary artery disease, are discussed, and a section on Treatment deals chiefly with prophylaxis for infective endocarditis and the management of arrhythmias and chest pain. A final section on Evolving Information considers etiologic concepts, the nature of left ventricular contration abnormalities, the cause of chest pain, the relationship to Marfan's syndrome and ostium secundum atrial septal defect, and the effect of aging and sex differences on leaflet chordal redundancy.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse. 77 40


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