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

Sixty-five infants were submitted to complete repairment of a congenital cardiopathy under profound hypothermia and ECC. Description of the preparation of the young surgical patient, of the anesthesia, of the technique of ECC. The overall mortality was 35.5 p. 100. The hypothermia induced by ECC, does not introduce any supplementary risks as long as strict technical rules are respected.
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PMID:[Technics of anesthesia and hypothermia for the infant. Choice of replacement fluid for the circuit]. 1 39

Clinical and necropsy findings in 10 dogs with a spontaneous primary hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are described. Each dog had marked cardiac hypertrophy, and 8 dogs had disproportionate thickening of the ventricular septum with respect to the left ventricular free wall (compared with dogs with normal hearts or with cardiac hypertrophy due to acquired or congenital heart disease). Septal:free wall thickness ratios in the 10 dogs ranged from 1.1 to 1.5; 6 had ratios greater than or equal to 1.3. However, marked cardiac muscle cell disorganization in the ventricular septum, characteristic of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, was present in only 2 of the 10 dogs. Death occurred most commonly while the dogs were under anesthesia during the course of operative procedures (5 dogs) or suddenly and unexpectedly in animals without previous symptomatic manifestations of cardiac disease (3 dogs). Four dogs had clinical signs of congestive heart failure, including 2 with marked cardiac decompensation. In addition, 2 of these 4 dogs with heart failure and 1 dog without previous symptoms (that died during a noncardiac operation) manifested complete heart block. It is conceivable that dogs with spontaneous hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may prove useful in the future investigations of the clinical, hemodynamic, and pathologic features of this disease in humans.
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PMID:Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the dog. 15 45

Necropsy findings in 10 dogs with naturally occurring cardiac disease closely resembled hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in human beings and cats. Each dog had marked cardiac hypertrophy, and 8 dogs had disproportionate thickening of the ventricular septum with respect to the left ventricular free wall (compared with dogs with normal hearts or with cardiac hypertrophy due to acquired or congenital heart disease). Ratios of septum to free wall thickness in the 10 dogs ranged from 1.1 to 1.5, and 6 had ratios greater than or equal to 1.3. Marked cardiac muscle cell disorganization in the ventricular septum, characteristic of human patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, was found in only 2 of the 10 dogs. Death occurred while the dogs were under anesthesia during the course of operative procedures (5 dogs) or unexpectedly in animals without previous manifestations of cardiac disease (3 dogs). Four dogs had clinical signs of congestive heart failure, including 2 with marked cardiac decompensation. Two of these 4 dogs with heart failure and 1 dog that died during unrelated surgery, but without prior signs of heart disease, had electrocardiographic evidence of complete heart block.
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PMID:Canine hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. 42 33

Catecholamine, serotonin and histamine metabolism and the level of acid metabolites and the activity of the enzymes lactate dehydrogenase and catalse in blood were studied in patients with congenital heart disease who were operated on under conditions of extracorporeal circulation and morphine anesthesia. The results obtained were compared with the values of acid-base balance, haemodynamics and volume of diuresis. It wwas found that the period of morphine induction was marked by a significant increase in the blood plasma noradrenalin content in the absence of essential changes in the other biochemical and hemodynamic indices studied. No significant changes were noted in the systems of neurohumoral and tissue regulation, indices of the redox processes and renal excretion in the most traumatic periods of the operation. The data obtained allow morphine to be accepted as an anesthetic which provides adequate protection of the organism from operative trauma.
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PMID:[Sympathetic-adrenal and enterochromaffin systems and homeostatic indices in open-heart surgical operations under morphine anesthesia]. 51 66

Stress ulcer has become an important clinical entity and its two major complications--bleeding and perforation--are among the most baffling problems, in terms of management, in clinical practice. Perforation, though the less common of the two, is perhaps the most formidable particularly when this occurs in a very sick infant. Four such infants (cyanotic heart disease, gastroenteritis and two severe pneumonias) all developed this severe complication of their illness and after surgery two survived. Two of these infants presented with bleeding prior to perforation of their stress ulcer. The perforation diagnosis was initially not apparent and was first made after radiological examination. Clinical signs of peritonitis were absent as these infants were too sick for such signs to be elicited. All four ulcers were situated in the posterior wall of the duodenum. Two of these infants developed cardiac complications on the operating table, the cause of which was not very clear. It may have been due to the debilitation of these babies with the additional effect of anesthesia perhaps leading to myocardial toxicity. It is therefore recommended that: all sick infants on steroid therapy be placed on prophylactic antacids; abdominal girth measurements be taken frequently in sick infants to appreciate any unexplained increase in girth; such increase in abdominal girth must be evaluated with an upright abdominal x-ray; operative closure of the perforation must be simple and expedient.
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PMID:Perforated stress ulcer in infants: a silent threat. 51 70

Eighty patients who had undergone bilateral carotid endarterectomy at the same operation were reviewed. All operative procedures were performed under general anaesthesia and during systemic heparinization and in all but six cases by using internal shunt. There were three deaths related to the operation representing 3.8% hospital mortality. Transient neurological deficits were noted in four patients (5% incidence) and permanent neurological deficits in four patients (also 5% incidence). A 100% late follow-up after an average period of 48 months revealed that 85.7% of the long-term survivors were functionally normal or improved. There were ten late deaths with heart disease accounting for 50% and stroke 30%.
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PMID:Surgical experience with simultaneous bilateral carotid endarterectomies. 54 36

In an attempt to assess cardiac risk in non-cardiac surgery, 1001 patients over 40 years of age who underwent major operative procedures were examined preoperatively, observed through surgery, studied with at least one postoperative electrocardiogram, and followed until hospital discharge or death. Documented postoperative myocardial infarction occurred in only 18 patients; though most of these patients had some pre-existing heart disease, there were few preoperative factors which were statistically correlated with postoperative infarction. Postoperative pulmonary edema was strongly correlated with preoperative heart failure, but 21 of the 36 patients who developed pulmonary edema did not have any prior history of heart failure. Nearly all of these 21 patients were elderly, had abnormal preoperative electrocardiograms, and had intraabdominal or intrathoracic surgery. In the absence of an acute infarction, bifascicular conduction defects, with or without PR interval prolongation, never progressed to complete heart block. Spinal anesthesia protected against postoperative heart failure but not against other cardiac complication. By multivariate regression analysis, postoperative cardiac death was significantly correlated with (a) myocardial infarction in the previous 6 months; (b) third heart sound or jugular venous distention immediately preoperatively; (c) more than five premature ventricular contractions per minute documented at any time preoperatively; (d) rhythm other than sinus, or premature atrial contractions on preoperative electrocardiogram; (e) age over 70 years; (f) significant valvular aortic stenosis; (g) emergency operation; (h) a 33% or greater fall in systolic blood pressure for more than 10 minutes intraoperatively. Notably unimportant factors included smoking, glucose intolerance, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, peripheral atherosclerotic vascular disease, angina, and distant myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Cardiac risk factors and complications in non-cardiac surgery. 66 58

Between January 1965 and August 1977, 122 patients with 135 arterial emboli were treated on the Peripheral Vascular Service at the Ohio State University Hospital. The heart was the source of the embolus in 94 patients (77%), one-third of whom had experienced a myocardial infarct. Thirteen patients died after the operation, which in 102 patients (84%) consisted of embolectomy only, making the hospital mortality 10.6%. Fourteen patients (11.5%) required subsequent amputations during the same hospitalization or on a later admission. The corrected limb salvage rate of 80.9% was unrelated to the length of delay in presentation. Although only 70 patients (57.4%) had palpable distal pulses following operation, 89 (73%) had a functional limb at the time of discharge or on later follow-up. An aggressive approach to the patient with an arterial embolus, regardless of the duration of symptoms, is urged. Embolectomy under local anesthesia is advocated in all cases after prompt correction of fluid and electrolyte imbalance and stabilization of the underlying cardiac disorder, except in patients with frank gangrene and irreversible rigor. In the absence of distal pulses or obvious revascularization, an intraoperative arteriogram is mandatory.
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PMID:Improved limb salvage after arterial embolectomy. 68 79

In 12 patients with heart disease, hypercarbia was induced for carotid endarterectomy. Anesthesia was maintained with nitrous oxide in oxygen and methoxyflurane. In addition to intra-arterial measurements of blood pressure, cardiac output, systolic time intervals (STI), and pressure time indices (PTI) were determined in order to assess cardiovascular responses in these patients. Internal carotid stump blood pressure was measured in five patients before and after induction of hypercarbia. Mild elevation of the Paco2 level affected systolic time intervals but not heart rate and blood pressure. When Paco2 levels reached 56 to 65 torr, systolic but not diastolic blood pressure rose significantly, heart rate and cardiac output increased, while the shortening in the preejection period (PEP), left ventricular ejection time (LVET), and the decrease in the PEP/LVET ratio signified increased mechanical cardiac activity. Hypercarbia caused intense sympathetic stimulation as demonstrated by twofold to threefold increases in plasma catecholamine levels. Stump blood pressure was elevated. Cardiac oxygen demand was significantly increased, while coronary filling time was shortened, as indicated by the increase in the tension time index and shortening in the diastolic time. This signified a relative myocardial underperfusion. Thus, while hypercarbia to levels of 66 to 70 torr increased internal carotid artery stump pressure, it also caused increased cardiac mechanical activity and concomitant unfavorable balance between myocardial oxygen consumption and supply. The measurement of STI and the computation of PTI provided early detection of alterations in cardiac function.
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PMID:Cardiac function and hypercarbia. 70 41

Despite the almost complete disappearance of the so called "postperfusion lung syndrome" after cardiac surgery with extracorporeal circulation (ECC), there is still a need for respiratory treatment in some cases, primarily for cardio-circulatory or respiratory reasons. In addition postoperative artificial ventilation is provided routinely in many centers for at least a few hours, until stabilization of cardio-circulatory and metabolic state is achieved. In 4 groups (I-IV) with a total of 659 patients (18 to 72 years old) undergoing open cardiac surgery for acquired heart disease (I: aortic valve, II: mitral valve, III: multivalvular disease, IV: coronary artery disease) postoperative cardio-circulatory and pulmonary complication rate, duration of artificial ventilation needed, PaO2 and some influencing factors have been evaluated. Group II and III show the highest rate of complications, 15.5 and 19.8% respectively, versus 7.7 and 8.1% in group I and IV respectively. The mean duration of postoperative respiratory treatment in cases with complications within all groups (133--156 h) is about 6 times the duration of respiratory treatment in the non complicated cases (23--24 h). In all 4 groups mean PaO2 at the time of extubation is lower for the complicated compared with the non complicated cases. Age of patients, severity of disease, preoperative pulmonary function, prolonged duration of ECC and myocardial ischemia have been found to be predisposing factors for postoperative cardio-pulmonary complications, whereas the duration of anesthesia and the type of anesthesia do not show any influence.
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PMID:[Cardio-pulmonary complications, respiratory treatment and PaO2 after open heart surgery (author's transl)]. 72 Oct 50


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