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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Oesophageal disorders can be identified in about one third of the patients with non cardiac
chest pain
. Motility disturbances and gastro-oesophageal reflux are the leading causes of
chest pain
of oesophageal origin.
Heart diseases
and organic lesions of the oesophagus have to be ruled out by cardiological examination and endoscopy, respectively. Oesophageal motility testing and long-term-pH-metry are useful to further characterize the underlying functional disorder. Because of the spontaneous fluctuations of symptoms and the effects of placebo treatment therapy should be conservative and based on the results of these investigational procedures.
...
PMID:[Disorders of esophageal function as a cause of thoracic pain]. 218 88
Silent myocardial ischaemia can be defined as the presence of transient ischaemic alterations in absence of angina. Those include metabolic, functional, electrocardiographic and anatomic abnormalities without typical
chest pain
. Its incidence, prognostic significance, possible identification in clinical practice as well as need for treatment varies according to the group of patients. In the present review, we discuss these concepts in base of the knowledge supported by the results of different studies. As a rule, the incidence, prognostic significance, and henceforth the need for its identification, increase from the low risk groups of patients to those of high risk according to classical criteria. To this respect, it is useful to differentiate three groups of patients: normal subjects, stable coronary heart disease and unstable
heart disease
. Medical treatment with anti-ischaemic drugs as well as myocardium revascularization procedures have shown to decrease the incidence and severity of silent myocardial ischaemia, but its influence on prognosis is unknown, and it should be emphasized that the main objective in the treatment of silent ischaemia is improve prognosis.
...
PMID:[Silent ischemia. To treat or not to treat?]. 218 63
The symptoms of organic disease vary widely among patients with the same tissue abnormality, because the experience of a symptom is shaped by the patient's perceptual and cognitive style. Thus, the relationship between myocardial ischemia and
chest pain
is variable in that many patients experience pain without ischemia and many others exhibit ischemia without pain-termed "silent" or "asymptomatic ischemia." Although the nature of the ischemic event may be important in determining the degree of associated pain, we suggest more study of the individual who perceives the event. Myocardial ischemia may not generate a spontaneous report of
chest pain
because the patient is generally hyposensitive to visceral sensation; because he or she is coping with the threat of
heart disease
by denying the evidence of it--ie, denying the pain to deny the disease; or because the patient misunderstands the cause and significance of a vague or ambiguous cardiac sensation, normalizing the symptom and misattributing it to a nonpathologic cause.
...
PMID:Silent myocardial ischemia. Is the person or the event silent? 198 46
Atypical, non-cardiac
chest pain
is common and disabling, and often persists despite negative medical investigations. Aetiology is disputed and management is difficult. A multi-causal model in which both psychological and physical factors play a part is helpful; a fundamental factor is continued misinterpretation of minor physical symptoms as evidence of
heart disease
. We report supportive evidence and describe a psychological treatment derived from the model. In a randomized trial, cognitive behavioural methods were effective in reducing
chest pain
, disability and use of medication, in patients both with and without psychiatric disorder. The clinical implications are discussed.
...
PMID:The management of atypical non-cardiac chest pain. 223 82
Anginal
chest pain
in patients with angiographically normal coronary arteries may be caused by a limited coronary flow response to stress because of abnormal function of the coronary microcirculation (microvascular angina). Studies of forearm arterial function suggested that patients with microvascular angina may have a diffuse disorder of smooth muscle tone. Because dyspnea is common in these patients and seems disproportionate to the severity of myocardial ischemia, we studied air flow (forced expiratory volume in 1 second, or FEV1) in the basal state and after methacholine inhalation to determine whether bronchial smooth muscle is affected in this syndrome. Five of 36 patients with microvascular angina had a basal FEV1 of less than 70% of that predicted and did not receive methacholine. Of the remaining 31 patients, 14 (45%) had a more-than-20% reduction in FEV1 after methacholine inhalation (as much as 25 mg/ml), a response significantly greater than that of nine patients with
heart disease
(0%, p less than 0.025) and 24 normal volunteers of similar age and gender distribution (13%, p less than 0.025). Furthermore, the product of the methacholine dose inhaled and the magnitude of decline in FEV1 from baseline (methacholine response score) was significantly lower in patients with microvascular angina than in normal volunteers (16 +/- 8.6 versus 22.2 +/- 3.7, p = 0.026). We conclude that airway hyperresponsiveness is frequently demonstrable in patients with microvascular angina; these findings are consistent with our hypothesis that this syndrome may represent a more generalized abnormality of vascular and nonvascular smooth muscle function.
...
PMID:Airway hyperresponsiveness in patients with microvascular angina. Evidence for a diffuse disorder of smooth muscle responsiveness. 224 25
We reviewed the clinical history of 191 patients undergoing endomyocardial biopsy and correlated signs and symptoms of
heart disease
with the presence or absence of small vessel disease. Idiopathic congestive heart failure (78%), arrhythmia (35%), and
chest pain
(25%) were the most frequent indications for biopsy. Small vessel disease was noted in 61% of the biopsies (67% female, 56% male): 10% severe, 36% moderate, and 15% mild small vessel disease. Patients with hypertension were twice as likely to have small vessel disease than those without hypertension. Of the 27 females with hypertension, 85% had small vessel disease, 67% with either severe or moderate small vessel disease. Small vessel disease was almost twice as frequent in patients with
chest pain
compared to patients without
chest pain
.
Chest pain
was significantly more common in patients with severe small vessel disease than in those with normal small vessels. Of all patients with
chest pain
, 18% had severe small vessel disease; however, of 20 patients with severe small vessel disease, 45% had
chest pain
. This analysis suggests that small vessel disease seen in endomyocardial biopsy is more common in women and is related to hypertension. When severe, it is likely to be associated with atypical chest pain.
...
PMID:Endomyocardial biopsy diagnosis of small vessel disease: a clinicopathologic study. 229 8
Coronary spasm provocation by intracoronary methylergonovine was performed in 14 patients (8 men and 6 women, mean age 56 +/- 6 years) with syncope that remained unexplained despite neurologic and noninvasive cardiac evaluations. Electrophysiologic testing was also performed in 6 of 14 patients. No patient had structural
heart disease
or significant fixed stenosis of greater than or equal to 75% in the coronary arteries. Six patients had no history of
chest pain
even when they developed syncope. Serious arrhythmia was documented in 2 patients, cardiac standstill in 1 and complete atrioventricular block in the other. Coronary spasm was induced in 9 patients using the methylergonovine provocation test. Multivessel spasms were found in 3 patients. Coronary spasm was induced in the artery supplying the inferior wall in 7 of 9 patients with positive results. In 4 of 9 patients who had a positive result, there was no prior history of
chest pain
. In 1 patient, whose electrocardiogram was recorded during syncope, cardiac standstill was documented and cardiac standstill and syncope also occurred during the provocation test. Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia was not induced by the electrophysiologic study. These results suggest that coronary spasm is involved in unexplained syncope.
...
PMID:Possible role of coronary artery spasm in unexplained syncope. 231 52
Although
chest pain
in children is usually not due to serious organic pathology, its association with
heart disease
is a source of concern for patients and their families. Most cases of pediatric
chest pain
are of unknown etiology. Common diagnoses include musculoskeletal disorders, cough, costochondritis, psychogenic disturbance and asthma. A thorough history and a careful physical examination will determine the diagnosis in most children.
...
PMID:Chest pain in children. 240 23
A retrospective analysis of 202 consultations for preoperative cardiology evaluation was conducted. The most common problems generating the consultation were: (1) abnormal electrocardiogram, 45 patients; (2)
chest pain
, 36 patients; (3) history of myocardial infarction, 27 patients; (4) dysrhythmia, 25 patients; and (5) hypertension, 23 patients. The most common diagnoses by the consultants were: (1) arteriosclerotic
heart disease
, 46 patients; (2) angina, 20 patients; and (3) hypertension, 40 patients. Mitral valve prolapse was the most common valvular disease (18 patients). Of the consultation requests, 108 asked for an evaluation; 79 asked for a "clearance"; 9 did not specifically ask for anything; and 6 asked a highly specific question. Most consultations provided a diagnosis (96%), addressed the problem (80%), and provided logical recommendations (96%). A minority of the consultations "cleared" a patient (28%), provided for follow-up care (41%), or suggested intraoperative monitoring techniques (41%). Out of the 189 patients who eventually had surgery, 137 patients had no change in their preoperative therapy, while 52 patients had a change in preoperative therapy. There was no difference in the incidence of complications between these two groups. An important finding was that 15% of the study group (31 patients) had disease processes (hypertension and angina) that were newly diagnosed by the consultant or felt to be not adequately treated before the consultation. It is concluded that few requesting anesthesiologists and surgeons ask for clarification of a specific problem, while most responses from the cardiology consultants provided necessary information. In addition, the preoperative cardiac consultation was found to identify medical conditions requiring long-term care and follow-up.
...
PMID:The value to the anesthesia-surgical care team of the preoperative cardiac consultation. 252 Oct 24
Mitral Valve Prolapse does not cause
chest pain
or other symptoms and is extremely unlikely to give rise to complications. In practice it is difficult to differentiate a 'prolapsing' valve from one that is 'normal' no matter what methods are used. Since diagnosing '
heart disease
' is itself a well known cause of ill health, the most stringent criteria must be adopted before the mitral valve is labelled as being abnormal. The need for the diagnosis at all is, in most cases, doubtful.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse:--the facts. 231 9
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