Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is demonstrated that right ventricular volumes can be measured accurately by biplane cineangiography using the Simpson's rule or various area-length methods. In order to validate the single plane approach a biplane (30 degrees RAO-60 degrees LAO) right ventricle (RV) cineangiography was performed in 10 adults investigated for chest pain without coronary artery disease or any other heart disease. RV volumes (EDV: end-diastolic; ESV: end-systolic; SV: stroke volume) and EF (ejection fraction) were measured by biplane and single plane analysis with the same area-length method using the pyramide with triangular base as geometric model (Ferlinz). The results are: RVEDV (ml/m2) biplane (B) 81 +/- 10, monoplane (M) 82 +/- 11; RVESV (ml/m2) B 33 +/- 6, M 35 +/- 8; RVSV (ml/m2) B 48 +/- 8, M 47 +/- 10; RVEF (%) B 59 +/- 6, M 57 +/- 8. Equations of linear regression show the following correlations: RVEDV R = 0.82 p less than 0.01; RVESV R = 0.77 p less than 0.01; RVSV R = 0.92 p less than 0.001; RVEF R = 0.85 p less than 0.01. Authors conclude to a good enough correlation between monoplane and biplane analysis especially for RVSV and RVEF. They underline the great variability of individual values.
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PMID:[Measurement of right ventricular volume by cineangiography. Validation of monoplane analysis compared with biplane]. 361 5

Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy with 201-TL was performed in a group of subjects affected by exercise-induced, rate-dependent left bundle branch block (LBBB). The aim of the study was: to define the significance of the exercise-induced conduction abnormality: "primitive" or "ischemic". 14 patients, aging 28-58 years (x = 42), 8 with chest pain (4 typical angina, 4 atypical angina) and 6 without any symptoms were studied. None had history of prior myocardial infarction or clinical and echocardiographic signs of heart disease. LBBB appeared at a heart rate ranging from 70 to 160 beats/min. 6 patients showed repolarization abnormalities (ST changes, deep and negative T wave) suggestive for ischemia, during successive QRS normalization. 201-TL-uptake was normal in 5 subjects; in the remaining 9 ones reversible TL defects were demonstrated in the septum (6), in the septum and apex (2), in the septum and inferior-apical wall (1). No patients had irreversible impaired perfusion. All the patients had normal coronary angiography, with negative ergonovine test for coronary artery spasm. In conclusion, in the majority of our subjects (64%) with exercise-induced LBBB, a reversible TL-uptake defect, usually located in the septum without diagnostic value of obstructive CAD, has been observed. Further studies will establish if the TL-defect is only an "apparent phenomenon" due to contraction abnormality secondary to LBBB, or, on the contrary, an expression of myocardial ischemia with normal coronary vessels as a consequence of the LBBB.
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PMID:[Study of myocardial perfusion by means of scintigraphy with thallium-210 in left bundle branch block induced by exertion]. 366 78

In order to study the validity of non-invasive assessment of left ventricular response to isometric exercise, 21 subjects with chest pain, but without any cardiac abnormalities performed an isometric handgrip test during cardiac catheterization, M-mode echocardiography and radionuclide angiography. Fourteen of the subjects were suitable for comparison of all the three methods. In response to handgrip exercise the ejection fraction (EF) remained unchanged in contrast angiography (68 +/- 9% at rest; 68 +/- 9% during exercise) and echocardiography (74 +/- 4% at rest; 74 +/- 5% during exercise), but showed a small increase on radionuclide angiography (from 57 +/- 5% to 60 +/- 7% (p less than 0.01). Individual changes in ejection fraction during the handgrip exercise had a reasonable correlation between contrast angiography and radionuclide angiography (r = 0.63, p less than 0.01). In order to validate the reproducibility of M-mode echocardiography and radionuclide angiography, the haemodynamic and left ventricular responses during two consecutive handgrip tests were compared in eight subjects. No significant differences were seen in the haemodynamic responses or between the changes in ejection fraction or fractional shortening in the two tests. Thus, in subjects without heart disease the non-invasively determined results of the left ventricular response to the handgrip exercise were similar to those obtained invasively and could be reliably reproduced.
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PMID:Comparison of echocardiographic and radionuclide methods with contrast angiography assessment of left ventricular function--response to isometric exercise in subjects without definite heart disease. 367 34

The aim of this study was to define normal left ventricular performance at rest and during supine bicycle exercise with equilibrium radionuclide ventriculography in a normal population other than young healthy volunteers. Thirty-one patients (mean age 45 years +/- 9 SD) with chest pain of varying origin and no evidence of heart disease proven by means of noninvasive and invasive techniques were studied. Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) at rest averaged 0.64 +/- 0.07 SD and increased with peak exercise to 0.73 +/- 0.08 SD (P less than 0.005). Change in LVEF from rest to maximum exercise ranged within 0-0.19. Six patients (19%) failed to augment LVEF with exercise to more than 0.05; none of the patients dropped LVEF during exercise. Multivariate analysis revealed no significant predictors of LVEF response to exercise. However, there was a tendency that resting LVEF and enddiastolic volume index with exercise might influence LVEF response to exercise. Peak left ventricular ejection rate (LVER) at rest averaged 3.3 s-1 +/- 0.6 SD and increased to 5.1 s-1 +/- 1.1 SD (P less than 0.005) with exercise. Peak left ventricular early filling rate (LVFR) was 2.8 s-1 +/- 0.6 SD at rest and was measured 5.5 s-1 +/- 1.3 SD at maximum exercise (P less than 0.005). Left ventricular enddiastolic volume (EDV) did not change significantly from rest to maximum exercise, whereas left ventricular endsystolic volume (ESV) decreased to 79% +/- 19 SD (P less than 0.01) of the value at rest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Radionuclide assessment of a normal left ventricular response to exercise in patients without evidence of heart disease. 369 48

This is a review of relative indications and contraindications for the selection of patients for coronary arteriography. Patients with angina pectoris at rest ("unstable" angina pectoris) and after low levels of effort despite a good medical regimen, those with chest pain that cannot be distinguished from angina pectoris at low or moderate levels of effort with or without abnormal 201Tl perfusion scans or radionuclide ventriculograms during stress, and those with suspected significant left main coronary arterial stenosis based on exercise testing should undergo coronary arteriography. In addition, coronary arteriography is usually an important part of the clinical evaluation of the patient with unexplained and clinically important congestive heart failure, recent myocardial infarction treated with thrombolytic therapy, a mechanical complication of myocardial infarction requiring cardiac surgery, including a large ventricular septal defect, hemodynamically important mitral insufficiency, or a large ventricular aneurysm leading to heart failure, hemodynamically important valvular, subvalvular, or supravalvular heart disease in whom corrective surgery is contemplated, suspected anomalous origin or communication of a major coronary artery, and sudden death syndrome unrelated to acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Selection of patients for coronary arteriography. 390 56

The circumstances surrounding 60 sudden deaths (59 men, one woman) associated with squash playing are described. The mean age (SD) of those who died was 46 (10.3) years (range 22-66 years). Necropsy reports were available in 51. The certified cause of death was coronary artery disease in 51 cases, valvar heart disease in four, cardiac arrhythmia in two cases, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in one case. There were only two deaths from non-cardiac causes. Forty five of those who died had reported prodromal symptoms, the most common of which was chest pain, and 22 were known to have had at least one medical condition related to the cardiovascular system during life, the most common of which was systemic hypertension (14 subjects). Those dying from coronary artery disease had a high frequency of risk factors. Some of these deaths might have been prevented by appropriate counselling of players after prospective medical screening, which would have detected most of the patients with overt cardiovascular disease and some of those with subclinical coronary artery disease.
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PMID:Sudden death and vigorous exercise--a study of 60 deaths associated with squash. 394 53

A hypochondriacal personality has been shown to be a major determinant of continued pain in patients with chest pain, both in the presence and absence of significant (less than 75%) coronary stenosis. We investigated preoccupation with cardiac illness among 106 patients (63 women, 43 men) within a few days after coronary angiography, carried out for evaluation of chest pain, showed no significant stenosis. Thirteen questions were used in a structured interview to assess patients' beliefs, behaviors, and expectations pertaining to their cardiac health. Information about persistence of pain was obtained 1 year later by telephone interview. A composite variable, called Self-Label of Coronary Vulnerability, was determined by factor analysis; it accounted for 65% of the variance in the responses. In a multivariable regression analysis, a high score on Self-Label showed the strongest association (p less than 0.005) with continued, unimproved chest pain 1 year later even after adjusting for other variables. As a result, perhaps of a self-labeling process a set of beliefs about vulnerability to serious heart disease helps explain persistence of pain, despite the absence of significant coronary disease.
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PMID:Perceived vulnerability to serious heart disease and persistent pain in patients with minimal or no coronary disease. 394 13

Thirty-three patients with chest pain despite angiographically normal coronary arteries underwent both coronary flow studies during pacing and resting and exercise gated blood pool scintigraphy. During atrial pacing after administration of ergonovine, those patients developing their typical chest pain demonstrated significantly lower great cardiac vein flow (97 +/- 31 vs 150 +/- 33 ml/min, p less than .001), higher coronary resistance (1.27 +/- 0.43 vs 0.77 +/- 0.18 mm Hg/ml/min, p less than .005), and less lactate consumption (30.5 +/- 22.0 vs 69.7 +/- 41.1 mM . ml/min, p less than .005) and a higher left ventricular end-diastolic pressure after pacing (20 +/- 4 vs 12 +/- 1, p less than .001) compared with those without pain and in the absence of significant luminal narrowing of the epicardial coronary arteries. The 26 patients with abnormal vasodilator reserve demonstrated reduced left ventricular ejection fraction during exercise (58 +/- 8%) compared with the seven patients with appropriate vasodilator reserve (66 +/- 4%, p less than .05) and with a group of 52 control patients of similar age and sex distribution and free of known heart disease (66 +/- 10%, p less than .001). In addition, 12 of the 26 patients with abnormal vasodilator reserve demonstrated exercise-induced regional wall motion abnormalities. Many of these patients also manifested impaired left ventricular diastolic filling at rest compared with the control subjects (peak filling rate 2.6 +/- 0.7 vs 3.2 +/- 0.7 end-diastolic volume/sec, p less than .005). Thus, patients with chest pain resulting from abnormal vasodilator reserve demonstrate abnormalities of left ventricular systolic and diastolic function suggestive of myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Left ventricular dysfunction in patients with angina pectoris, normal epicardial coronary arteries, and abnormal vasodilator reserve. 396 67

True aneurysms of the pulmonary artery are most frequently associated with congenital heart lesions that have lead to sustained high pulmonary artery flow rates and pulmonary hypertension. A maternal death secondary to a dissecting aneurysm of the pulmonary artery is presented. Death occurred 17 hours postpartum, and the acute dissection may have been precipitated by the high flow rates accompanying parturition or, alternatively, by the Valsalva maneuver. The authors suggest a baseline chest radiograph and electrocardiogram in all women with known or suspected congenital heart disease to evaluate for pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary artery aneurysms. The occurrence of symptoms such as dyspnea or chest pain warrants repeat evaluation with strong consideration being given to right heart catheterization and pulmonary angiography. If a dissecting aneurysm is diagnosed, then emergency surgical repair seems warranted in view of the rapidity with which this condition progresses to death.
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PMID:Maternal death secondary to a dissecting aneurysm of the pulmonary artery. 397 75

Mitral valve prolapse syndrome is the most common cardiac disorder today. However, it is relatively new in the medical literature and not well understood by most health care professionals. This article discusses the history, pathophysiology and etiology of the syndrome. An in-depth study of the psychological aspects of the disease is also presented. The syndrome is considered by some authors to be the same as soldier's heart and neurocirculatory asthenia. Mitral valve prolapse syndrome can produce disabling symptoms such as chest pain, chronic anxiety, syncope and many others. The cause of these symptoms is not well understood. Autonomic dysfunction and a congenital brain malfunction are proposed explanations for the symptoms. Nurse practitioners who are aware of and knowledgeable about this disease can provide an invaluable service to those afflicted with it.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse syndrome: etiology and symptomatology. 399 Oct 85


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