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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
108 women aged 28 to 74 years underwent cardiac angiography for evaluation of
chest pain
or other
heart disease
. 29 were found to be free of coronary disease and formed a control group. Multi-variable analysis indicated that hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, familial coronary disease and diabetes were the most relevant atherogenic risk factors.
...
PMID:[Risk factors in coronary arteriosclerosis in women]. 667 37
In a study of the prevalence of ischaemic heart disease in middle aged men in 24 British towns, the subjects were asked whether a doctor had ever told them that they had any form of cardiovascular disease. Their recall of various diagnoses was related to evidence of ischaemic heart disease obtained by an administered questionnaire on
chest pain
and electrocardiography. Twenty one per cent of men recalled a diagnosis of cardiovascular disease, in one quarter of whom it was ischaemic heart disease. There was a sixfold increase in the prevalence of recall of a diagnosis of ischaemic heart disease over the age range studied. Only one third of the men with possible myocardial infarction on questionnaire recalled such a diagnosis having been made by a doctor. Only half of those with a definite myocardial infarction on an electrocardiogram could recall a diagnosis of ischaemic heart disease. Even in severe (grade 2) angina 40% could not recall being told that they had
heart disease
. Overall, only one in five of those regarded as having ischaemic heart disease was able to recall such a diagnosis having been made by a doctor, and these were likely to be those most severely affected. Ischaemic heart disease is common in middle aged British men, but most of those affected are apparently not aware of their condition. This low level of awareness among patients and doctors may contribute to a lack of public concern regarding the need for action to reduce the incidence of ischaemic heart disease in Great Britain.
...
PMID:Recall of diagnosis by men with ischaemic heart disease. 673 90
Left ventricular function at rest and during supine bicycle exercise was assessed by gated radionuclide angiography in 20 diabetic patients and 18 normal control subjects without clinical evidence of
heart disease
. The diabetic patients were aged 21 to 44 years and all except one used insulin. No subject developed
chest pain
or electrocardiographic changes during exercise. Both groups had a similar rest and exercise heart rate and blood pressure, and both achieved similar work loads. The control group had an ejection fraction at rest of 65.4 +/- 6.2% (mean +/- SD) and only 1 of 18 showed a decrease with exercise; peak exercise ejection fraction averaged 77.1 +/- 7.8%. The diabetic group had a mean ejection fraction at rest of 63.7 +/- 6.5%, similar to that of the control group, but 7 of 20 showed a decrease during exercise; the exercise ejection fraction averaged 67.7 +/- 9.7%, significantly lower than that of the control group (p less than 0.01). The diabetic patients varied widely in ejection fraction response to exercise, ranging from an increase of 25% to a decrease of 21%. This response did not correlate with age, sex, duration of diabetes, smoking, retinopathy, exercise heart rate, blood pressure or rate-pressure product, work load attained or ejection fraction at rest. These data suggest that approximately one-third of patients with diabetes have subclinical left ventricular dysfunction without correlation to risk factors for atherosclerosis or other diabetic complications. Whether this is due to unrecognized coronary artery disease or primary myocardial disease remains unknown.
...
PMID:Clinically unrecognized ventricular dysfunction in young diabetic patients. 673 64
All 662 patients admitted to the two coronary care units in Nottingham during 12 consecutive months were followed up prospectively for one year. At the time of discharge from hospital they were categorised according to set criteria into the following diagnostic groups: definite, probable, or possible myocardial infarction; ischaemia
heart disease
without infarction;
chest pain
?cause; and other diagnoses. Eighty-nine patients (13% of admissions) were categorised as having
chest pain
?cause. No deaths occurred among these patients during the observation period, although two were readmitted with myocardial infarction. Patients with
chest pain
?cause had few problems during the year after admission, and at the end of that time 75% were in their original employment. Patients admitted with ischaemic heart disease had a similar death rate (between six weeks and one year after admission) to those with myocardial infarction, and only 36% were in their original employment one year after admission.
Chest pain
?cause is a clinically useful diagnostic category to which patients may be allocated after only simple investigations.
...
PMID:Prognosis of patients with "chest pain ?cause". 678 59
Three cases of radiation-related chronic
heart disease
are reported. All three patients had been treated for Hodgkin's disease with a mantle technique six to ten years earlier. Ten years after radiation treatment, a 34-year-old woman had dyspnea during exercise. Her heart was enlarged, and an ECG showed a RBBB. An echocardiogram showed pericardial effusion. Right-sided catheterization revealed an infundibular stenosis. A 31-year-old man had
chest pain
nine years after radiation. An ECG showed complete RBBB and an exercise stress test signs of ischemia; a coronary angiogram showed three proximal stenoses; and an echocardiogram revealed pericardial effusion. A 12-year-old boy had angina pectoris six years after radiation; one year later, he suffered an acute posterior infarction. Two weeks later he died suddenly. An autopsy showed a severe fibrotic and calcified narrowing of the proximal part of the left main coronary artery. Regardless of the patient's age, radiation-related cardiac complications must be kept in mind. Echocardiograms and, in cases of
chest pain
, exercise stress tests should be a part of routine postradiation follow-up.
...
PMID:Radiation-related chronic heart disease. 685 89
One hundred adolescents with
chest pain
were prospectively analyzed to determine the etiology, functional consequences, and illness attributions of patients seen in a general pediatric clinic. The typical patient had frequent pain (63% had two or more episodes weekly) of moderate duration (51% of the pain lasted longer than six minutes) that had been occurring for many months (36% had pain occurring longer than 6 months). Stressful events, such as a death in the family, major illness, an accident, family separations, and school changes occurred in 31% of patients. The most frequently diagnosed condition was musculoskeletal problems (31%) including costochondritis (14%), chest wall syndrome (13%), skeletal trauma (2%), and ribcage anomalies (2%). Hyperventilation accounted for 20% of diagnoses and 5% had breast-related problems. Thirty-nine percent of patients had pain not readily classifiable. Serious underlying illness was a rare cause of
chest pain
, although several patients had associated organic disease not responsible for their
chest pain
. More than two thirds of patients restricted physical activities; more than 40% were absent from school. When patients were questioned about their understanding of their illness, 44% were afraid that they were experiencing a heart attack, 12% worried about
heart disease
, and 12% feared cancer.
Chest pain
is a prevalent problem that is usually benign but is commonly misunderstood and causes considerable dysfunction and anxiety in adolescents.
...
PMID:Adolescent chest pain: a prospective study. 685 1
Endogenous modulators of platelet aggregability and vascular tone may play a part in coronary-artery disease. We therefore measured the release of prostaglandins and thromboxane into the coronary circulation in patients with various kinds of cardiac disease. Simultaneous coronary-sinus (CS) and ascending-aortic (AO) blood samples were obtained from 60 patients for measurement of 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha (6-keto-PGF1 alpha, a prostaglandin I2 metabolite) and of thromboxane B2 (TxB2). Samples from 45 of these patients were also tested for prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and lactate. Patients with unstable angina pectoris who reported
chest pain
within 24 hours of study had higher TxB2 CS/AO ratios (5.8 +/- 2.8, mean +/- S.D.) than patients whose most recent anginal pain was more than 96 hours before study (1.3 +/- 0.6; P less than 0.05), than those with nonischemic
chest pain
(1.2 +/- 0.4; P less than 0.05), or with valvular or congenital nonischemic
heart disease
(1.2 +/- 0.6; P less than 0.05). Those whose most recent anginal pain occurred 24 to 96 hours before study were distributed bimodally: the majority had low TxB2 CS/AO ratios (range, 0.5 to 2.1) like the patients in the three aforementioned groups, whereas a few had markedly elevated values (range, 10.5 to 46.6). The 6-keto-PGF1 alpha and PGE2 CS/AO ratios and myocardial lactate extraction were not significantly different among the five groups. These data suggest that local thromboxane release is associated with recent episodes of angina in patients with unstable angina pectoris, but whether this release is a cause or an effect is not yet known.
...
PMID:Release of prostaglandins and thromboxane into the coronary circulation in patients with ischemic heart disease. 689 16
Heart disease
in SSCL may be primary or secondary. Primary involvement includes pericarditis, myocardial fibrosis, and contraction band necrosis with congestive cardiomyopathy, conduction system fibrosis, intramural coronary artery lesions and, rarely, valvular disease. Symptoms include those of left and right ventricular failure,
chest pain
, palpitations, syncope, and sudden death. Pathogenesis may be related to functional Raynaud's phenomenon of the heart and/or structural small vessel disease. Therapy at present is symptomatic; however, new therapeutic approaches are warranted.
...
PMID:Primary heart disease in systemic sclerosis (scleroderma): advances in clinical and pathologic features, pathogenesis, and new therapeutic approaches. 703 42
Acute elevation of the ST segment in several ECG leads was observed in seven patients with bacterial shock during the course of therapy. Six patients had bacterial pneumonia, one had acute cholecystitis, and none had a previous history of
heart disease
. At the onset of the ST elevation, all patients were receiving dopamine infusion, which in four of them was inadvertently increased shortly before the ECG changes, the ST elevation was not associated with
chest pain
, pericardial friction rub, or acute changes in the heart rate, or arterial blood pressure. In four patients the maximum ST elevation was greater than or equal to 5 mm. In each instance the ST segment returned to the isoelectric line within 24 hours, and subsequent development of Q waves or changes in the QRS was not observed. Although the existence of an acute pericarditis or an acute myocarditis as possible causes of the ST elevation cannot be fully ruled out, the sudden onset, prominent magnitude, and brief duration of the ST elevation are perhaps more indicative of an acute ischemic event, possibly related to a transient coronary vasoconstriction induced by the dopamine infusion.
...
PMID:Acute and transient ST segment elevation during bacterial shock in seven patients without apparent heart disease. 706 10
Visualization of the lumen of the coronary arteries by angiography has greatly expanded the ability of the physician to evaluate the extent of disease in patients suspected of having an ischaemic
cardiac disorder
. Criteria for coronary angiography have been developed in part by reviewing the experience in the Coronary Artery Surgery Study, CASS. During a five year period at 15 participating sites 24959 consecutive patients undergoing angiography for suspicion of coronary artery disease were enrolled.
Chest pain
was the dominant symptom in more than 80%. Unstable angina occurred in more than 1/3 of patients classified as definite or probably angina pectoris. The majority of patients were in Canadian Class 2,3. In a study previous reported by CASS a mortality of 002 and a morbidity (myocardial infarction) of 003 was found; presence of left main disease increased mortality 6.8 times. In males, 79% had significant and 12% no CAD; left main disease occurred in 9%. In females 45% had significant and 40% no CAD; left main disease occurred in 4%. The distribution of 1,2 and 3 vessel disease will be presented. From these data and a survey of clinical experience during the past several years, 10 indications for visualization of the coronary artery anatomy by angiography have been developed. These indications are presented for discussion.
...
PMID:[Indications for coronary arteriography]. 706 86
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