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

Dopamine was used as the primary catecholamine to treat circulatory shock, manifested by either systemic arterial hypotension or oliguria or both, in 24 children two days to 18 years (mean = 39 months) of age. The dose of dopamine ranged from 0.3 to 25 (mean = 9.3) microgram/kg/minute. The primary problem in four of the 24 patients was infection; two of these patients survived. The other 20 patients had congenital heart disease; 18 developed shock following surgery. Even of these 20 patients survived. With dopamine infusion the average systolic blood pressure increased from 69 +/- 4 (mean +/- SEM) to 81 +/- 4 mm Hg (P less than 0.001) and the mean urine output increased from 0.8 +/- 0.2 to 2.7 +/- 0.8 ml/kg/hour (P less than 0.05). Dopamine produced no adverse consequences. Thirteen patients responded favorably to the drug, with a significant increase in systemic arterial blood pressure and urine production. Four patients did not respond to dopamine and seven had an equivocal response. None of the four patients in whom dopamine was ineffective survived. Although only nine of the 20 patients who responded favorably or equivocally survived, conventional therapy had failed to alter the unfavoarble course in any of the patients.
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PMID:The use of dopamine in children. 62 15

All non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are prostaglandin inhibitors, which explains their foetal toxicity. So far, no epidemiological study of their cardiopulmonary and renal effects has been carried out, but case-reports have been published. The cardiopulmonary effects of NSAIDs include closure of the ductus arteriosus, pulmonary hypertension cardiopathy and tricuspid valve insufficiency. They were responsible for 31 neonatal accidents, 8 of which were fatal (for 22 pregnant women, 7 bearing twins, 1 bearing triplets). The renal effects of NSAIDs consisted of acute renal failure with oedema, oliguria, hyponatraemia and marked hyperkalaemia. They affected 23 neonates, 8 of whom died (for 17 pregnant women, 4 bearing twins, 1 bearing triplets). A few epidemiological studies have reported foetal haemorrhages when aspirin was used by the mother as anti-inflammatory agent. In comparative trials of indomethacin as short treatment of premature labour and polyhydramnios the drug proved to be effective. In obstetrical tocolysis NSAIDs can be given in the absence of alternative therapy with beta-adrenergic agents, and their risk can be minimized by ultrasonographic examination and monitoring of foetal cardiac function and diuresis. In the field of rheumatology, corticosteroids would be a good alternative to NSAIDs for rheumatic diseases, but using NSAIDs for low back pain, sciatica, haemorrhoids, toothaches, sinusitis, etc., would not be justified in pregnant women. Self medication must be discouraged.
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PMID:[Fetal toxicity of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents]. 129 2

Changes in the hemodynamics and urine output were investigated in 19 patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, five of whom had heart disease with the New York Heart Association classification I (n = 1) and II (n = 4). Systemic blood pressure, central venous pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and cardiac output did not significantly change during the procedure including the establishment of pneumoperitoneum. Urine output 30-60 min after starting the pneumoperitoneum was significantly lower in the patients with heart disease compared to the values before and in the initial phase (0-30 min), and also to the values before and during the procedure in the control group. One patient suffered temporary cardiac decompensation following laparoscopic cholecystectomy which prolonged his hospital stay to seven days. The remaining four patients with heart disease could be discharged on the third or fourth day postoperatively. It is concluded that laparoscopic cholecystectomy is feasible in patients with heart disease but attention should be paid to the possibility of oliguria during prolonged pneumoperitoneum.
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PMID:Hemodynamic changes during laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients with heart disease. 146 94

Acute renal failure (ARF) occurs in as many as 8% of neonates admitted to neonatal intensive care units. Most often, ARF is recognized because of oliguria (urinary flow rate less than 1 ml/kg per hour) although nonoliguric neonatal ARF is being detected with increasing frequency. Among urinary indices utilized to differentiate oliguric neonatal ARF from prerenal oliguria, a fractional excretion of sodium greater than 3% or a renal failure index (RFI) greater than 3 are helpful in confirming ARF. Such indices must be viewed with caution in very premature infants who may have a physiologically high sodium excretion rate and in neonates with the nonoliguric form of ARF. The mortality of oliguric neonatal renal failure may be as high as 60% in medical ARF and even higher in neonates with congenital heart disease, or with anomalies of the genitourinary system. In contrast, nonoliguric renal failure in neonates has an excellent prognosis. Long-term abnormalities in glomerular filtration rate and in renal tubular function are common in survivors of neonatal ARF.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in neonates: incidence, etiology and outcome. 315 95

We analyzed pre- and postoperative data from 36 consecutive patients, who developed acute renal failure requiring hemodialysis after open heart surgery, to determine which factors predicted survival. Seventeen patients (47%) survived. Age, sex, preoperative renal dysfunction, severity of underlying heart disease, perioperative myocardial infarction, cardiopulmonary bypass time, and oliguria did not influence outcome (by univariate analysis). However, the number and type of postoperative complications, before the first hemodialysis and 48 hours thereafter, were found to be significant predictors of outcome. Univariate as well as multivariate analysis showed that the highest mortality rate was associated with the presence of respiratory failure, central nervous system dysfunction, hypotension, and infection (48 hours after first hemodialysis). Thirty-three (92%) of the 36 patients were correctly classified as survivors or nonsurvivors based on the presence or absence of any one of three prognostic indicators (three or more complications before the first hemodialysis and persisting 48 hours later; hypotension before the first dialysis and persisting 48 hours later; or central nervous system dysfunction 48 hours after hemodialysis was initiated). We conclude that an assessment of prognosis can be made in such patients as early as 48 hours after the first hemodialysis based on the number and type of complications.
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PMID:Survival of patients with acute renal failure requiring dialysis after open heart surgery: early prognostic indicators. 357 8

The treatment of hydrops fetalis, a critical state of extravascular fluid overload in the newborn, poses a great medical challenge. The aim of this study was to investigate the use of continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration (CAVH) in the treatment of five critically ill newborns with hydrops fetalis of different etiology. All patients had anasarca, oliguria not responsive to diuretics, were on mechanical ventilation, and were treated with inotropic drugs and sedation. The duration of treatment ranged from 42 to 114 h and all patients, except one who died from congenital heart disease, achieved the clinical goals of weight loss and restoration of diuresis. Regular clinical and neurological follow-up to the age of 2 years was normal for the four surviving patients. In conclusion, CAVH appears to be a safe treatment of fluid overload in newborns with hydrops fetalis.
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PMID:Treatment of hydrops fetalis with hemofiltration. 1109 3

In spite of improvements in chemical structure, contrast media assisted X-ray examination is still the third leading cause of hospital-acquired acute renal failure. An increase >50% or >88 micro mol/L in S-creatinine is a clinically important acute renal failure. The peak in S-creatinine occurs within 2-5 days after exposure. The frequency of oliguria, transient or permanent haemodialysis is unknown. The cause is a hypoxic tubular injury due to vasoconstriction with release of free oxygen radicals. Major risk factors are prior renal insufficiency and diabetes mellitus. Minor risk factors are congestive heart disease, dehydration, hypotension, hypoxia, amount of contrast, ionic and high osmolar contrast, repeated examinations at short intervals, abdominal examination, and perhaps age, smoking, hypercholesterolaemia, and use of Non-Steroidal Anti inflammatory Drug. Prevention seems possible by omission or reduction of contrast, ameliorating predisposing factors, saline hydration 24h before and after exposure, and 600 mg acetylcysteine orally twice daily 24h before and after exposure. A three-day treatment with 20mg nitrendipine daily, starting 1 day before examination may also be preventive. The present research is unfortunately characterised by small numbers, lack of clinical important renal failure, and lack of long term results. The latter may be important after new data indicate that radiation may trigger a chronic oxidative process through a similar pathway.
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PMID:Radiocontrast induced nephropathy. 1265 Nov 66

Despite many advances in heart transplantation and in mechanical circulatory support, the benefits of staged cardiac transplantation have not been extended to the pediatric transplant recipient, chiefly because implantable circulatory assist devices are still too large. Extracorporeal devices, however, can overcome this impediment. Here we report the 1st case, to our knowledge, in which an extracorporeal left ventricular assist device has been used in a child to support circulation prior to cardiac transplantation. The patient was a 9-year-old boy in New York Heart Association functional class IV, with congestive heart failure as a result of idiopathic biventricular cardiomegaly. In mid-May of 1987, while awaiting a suitable donor, he suffered severe oliguria after an episode of circulatory arrest. Therefore we decided to maintain his circulation-and consequently his peripheral organ function-with an extracorporeal left ventricular assist device. After establishing cardiopulmonary bypass under normothermia and without cardiac arrest, we established flow from the left ventricle through a 36-Fr wire-reinforced straight cannula to a Biomedicus BP-80 centrifugal force pump, with return to the proximal ascending aorta through a 28-Fr wire-reinforced straight cannula. The patient's hemodynamic course under subsequent mechanical circulatory support was remarkably stable, with controllable systemic hypertension and no evidence of hemolysis. Although cardiac activity was minimal and systemic blood flow nonpulsatile, the patient's renal, pulmonary, and hepatic functions improved, and his peripheral circulation was well preserved. After 12 hours of support, a donor heart became available, and a routine orthotopic cardiac transplant was performed. Upon removal, the left ventricular assist device showed a small amount of thrombus formation. The patient's postoperative recovery has been easily manageable, and 20 months after transplant he enjoys unrestricted physical activity. We conclude that an extracorporeal left ventricular assist device can be used as a bridge to cardiac transplantation in children. Moreover, this application of a continuous force centrifugal pump without adverse effect encourages the conclusion that long-term maintenance of terminal heart disease patients might be possible through development of small, implantable pumps with the potential of lower power requirements and reduced thrombogenesis.
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PMID:Use of a left ventricular assist device as a bridge to transplantation in a pediatric patient. 1522 37

Nephrotic syndrome (NS) and deteriorating renal function are associated with congenital cyanotic heart disease (CCHD). We describe a nine-year-old African male child with CCHD, NS and deteriorating renal function. He presented with two weeks' history of progressive generalized body swelling, oliguria and orthopnea. Oliguria did not improve, and the generalized body swelling did not subside with the administration of diuretics. Dipstick urinalysis remained 3+. He was referred to a facility that offers renal replacement therapy in view of worsening renal status. This is the first description known to us of deteriorating renal function in an African and in a child with CCHD, implying that the complication can develop in children or commences in childhood.
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PMID:Sudden deterioration in the renal function of an African child with cyanotic congenital heart disease. 1670 19

In the first stage of labor, pain is caused by distension of the cervix and low uterine segments in combination with isometric contraction of the uterus. Pain in the second stage of labor is dominated by tissue damage in the pelvis and perineum. Labor pain is due to an activation of nociceptors partly resulting from ischemia. The impulses thus generated are conducted into the spinal cord by afferent C fibers from the cervix and lower uterine segments, and by afferent Adelta and C fibers from the pelvis, pelvic organs and perineum. Labor pain is referred to the dermatomes T(11) and T(12) in the early stage of labor. It spreads to the neighboring dermatomes T(10) and L(1) and eventually involves the dermatomes S(2-4) during the second stage of labor and delivery. As in any other type of pain, labor pain stimulates respiration. This reduces the CO(2) concentration in the blood so that, in pain-free periods, respiratory stimulation is lacking and, in consequence, oxygen concentration in maternal and fetal blood is lowered. Pain-induced sympathetic activation will increase cardiac output in a way that may be deleterious in parturients with heart disease, eclampsia and anemia. Moreover, slowing of gastric emptying may cause nausea and vomiting, and slowing of intestinal propulsive movements may result in ileus and oliguria. An increase in plasma catecholamines and glucocorticoids influences uterine contractions. The amount of beta-endorphin released from the pituitary and placenta into the blood is relatively high but obviously not sufficient to depress pain effectively. Adequate nerve block and epidural anesthesia, as well as measures to relieve anxiety, will help markedly to reduce the risks associated with labor pain.
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PMID:[Labor pain-causes, pathways and issues.]. 1841 27


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