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)

Steady state serum concentrations of digoxin were determined repeatedly in 34 infants with congenital heart disease. Simultaneous measurements of renal clearances of digoxin, creatinine and urea were obtained in 29 of the subjects. Serum digoxin concentrations were markedly higher in children under the age of 3 months than in those over this age, despite equal weight--adjusted 24 h doses. This finding was explained by a very rapid increase in renal digoxin clearance in the first 3 months--32 +/- 7 ml/min/1.73m2 at 1 week to 65.6 +/- 30 at 3 months. The subsequent increase in digoxin clearance was much slower, e. g. to 87.7 +/- 43 ml/min/1.73m2 at 12 months. Renal clearance of digoxin was equally well correlated with creatinine clearance (r = 0.87) as with urea clearance (r = 0.83), but it exceeded that of creatinine in all age groups. The findings indicate that both glomerular and tubular function is involved in the renal elimination of digoxin in young children, and that development of renal elimination of the drug parallels that of the maturation of renal function in the early months of life. The neonate and infant with congestive heart failure display impaired ability to eliminate digoxin. The impairment lessens rapidly with the development of renal function over the first 3 months of life. Diminished doses of digoxin should be advocated in this age group if therapeutic serum concentrations of the drug are to be maintained and toxicity avoided.
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PMID:Steady state serum concentrations and renal clearance of digoxin in neonates, infants and children. 65 6

Some new predictors of postoperative psychosis in open-heart surgery have been identified in a multifactorial study of somatic and psychological factors: Somatic predictors are lower body weight, higher blood levels of urea nitrogen and creatinine, preoperative use of tranquilizers, especially in patients with double valve replacement or congenital heart disease and preoperative cerebral embolism in mitral valve disease. Bypass-time has not proved to be a valid predictor. Psychological predictors are distress provoked by severity and duration of illness, repeated delay of surgery as well as the manner of psychological coping with the illness.
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PMID:[Some somatic and psychological predictors of psychopathological disorders after cardiac surgery (author's transl)]. 108 27

The long-term results of pediatric heart transplantation were evaluated in 53 patients, aged 0.25 to 18.94 years, who received transplants at Stanford University Medical Center between 1974 and 1989. Indications for transplantation were idiopathic cardiomyopathy (68%), congenital heart disease (21%), endocardial fibroelastosis (8%), and doxorubicin cardiomyopathy (3%). Immunosuppression was achieved with combinations of cyclosporine, prednisone, and azathioprine. Thirty-seven of 42 recipients leaving the hospital after transplantation were alive and in New York Heart Association class I at study's end. Cumulative survival was 79% at 1 year, 76% at 3 years, and 69% at 5 years. Fourteen recipients have survived more than 5 years (5.1 to 12.4 years). Hospital readmission for illness has been infrequent, decreasing from 6.8 days to 0.9 days per year over 5 years. Eleven patients have required no rehospitalization. Posttransplant deaths were due to infection (19%), rejection (4%), pulmonary hypertension (4%), coronary artery disease (2%), and lymphoproliferative disease (2%). Retransplantation was required for intractable rejection in 4 patients and advanced coronary artery disease in 2. Hypertension and elevated blood urea nitrogen and creatinine levels were common in individuals receiving cyclosporine. Growth was often impaired in prepubertal children receiving daily prednisone. Based on this 15-year experience, it is concluded that heart transplantation represents a reasonable alternative for selected young patients with end-stage cardiac disease.
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PMID:Pediatric heart transplantation at Stanford: results of a 15-year experience. 186 16

Newlyborn infants with congenital heart disease who develop acute renal failure are particularly difficult to treat. There are often complex associated medical problems and the mortality is high. Continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration (CAVH) provides a slow and gentle removal of fluid, together with the possibility of correcting metabolic abnormalities. We used CAVH in six newlyborn infants all with severe congenital heart disease, who developed acute renal failure early in life. In four patients it was necessary to insert a blood pump into the circuit to maintain adequate blood flow. CAVH alone, with or without a blood pump, was unable to reduce the plasma urea and creatinine, and in three of the infants, dialysis across the filter was required. CAVH was effective in controlling fluid balance. Although mortality remains high we feel CAVH has an important role in selected patients.
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PMID:Continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration in the newlyborn with acute renal failure and congenital heart disease. 251 91

To find reliable indicators of digoxin clearance (CLdig) in the neonatal period, we investigated the linear correlation of CLdig and the reciprocal of CLdig (1/CLdig) with serum beta 2-microglobulin (S beta 2-MG), serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, age, and weight on 25 occasions in 21 neonates with congenital heart disease. The S beta 2-MG value showed a significantly closer correlation to 1/CLdig (r = 0.84, p less than 0.0001) than to the other values. The regression equation was (1/CLdig) = 0.15 X (s beta 2-MG) + 0.08. Creatinine and blood urea nitrogen values correlated less closely with 1/CLdig (r = 0.67 and 0.71, respectively). Age and weight had no significant linear correlation with CLdig and 1/CLdig. Determination of s beta 2-MG values allowed an estimate of CLdig by means of the regression equation between s beta 2-MG and 1/CLdig, and permitted a prediction of the required maintenance dose of digoxin. We conclude that s beta 2-MG is a good indicator of CLdig in neonates, and that the determination of s beta 2-MG values may facilitate the advance individualization of digoxin therapy in the neonatal period.
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PMID:Digoxin clearance and serum beta-2-microglobulin in neonates. 267 32

Pregnant rats were loaded with L-phenylalanine, and the distributions of [14C]leucine and [14C]urea into fetal plasma and tissues were examined. Uptake of [14C]leucine into the supernatant and protein fractions of fetal plasma and tissues was low in the rats loaded with phenylalanine. In contrast, [14C]urea was distributed identically in both groups, indicating that maternal hyperphenylalaninemia did not affect blood flow across the placenta. Administration of phenylalanine and p-chlorophenylalanine produced amino acid imbalance in fetal tissues. Along with these changes, polysomes of the affected fetal heart and brain disaggregated without changes in the ribonuclease activity. These results indicate that high phenylalanine levels in maternal plasma disturb the active transport of amino acids across the placenta, causing an amino acid imbalance and disaggregation of polysomes in fetal heart and brain. These changes may contribute to the congenital heart disease and mental retardation of maternal phenylketonuria.
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PMID:Effects of phenylalanine loading on protein synthesis in the fetal heart and brain of rat: an experimental approach to maternal phenylketonuria. 294 18

Some cardiovascular (heart rate and mean arterial pressure), and renal (glomerular filtration rate-GFR; renal plasma flow-RPF; filtration fraction-FF; blood urea nitrogen-BUN and albuminuria) parameters, coupled with morphologic examination, was undertaken in early (2 months) and late (6 months) stage of streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus in rats. The results showed a temporally (early) bradycardia and gradually increase of blood pressure with morphologic changes typical for diabetic cardiopathy. The increased GFR (by 92%), associated with significantly decreased RPF (by 37%), increased FF (by 133%), increased kidney weight/body weight ratio (by 88%), increased BUN (by 52%) and distinct albuminuria (13.53 +/- 2.08 mg/24 h/100 g b. w.), together with typical morphologic changes, suggested the development of diabetic nephropathy which was progressive with the duration of the disease.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of cardiovascular disorders in streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rat. I. Cardiovascular, renal and morphologic changes in different stages of diabetes. 306 11

We examined specimens from explanted human hearts by two-dimensional electrophoresis. The protocol selected includes: (a) solubilization of the sample in a urea-detergent mix; (b) charge fractionation in the presence of urea and nonionic detergent on a pH 4-10 immobilized pH gradient; (c) size fractionation on a polyacrylamide concentration gradient in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate; and (d) staining with silver nitrate. The method is sensitive enough for analysis of biopsies in the 1-3 mg range (wet tissue). We saw, for explanted hearts, variations in the protein pattern with the site of sample dissection. Results are presented for 11 explanted human hearts: one control organ and 10 pathological samples. The recorded pathologies included dilatative cardiomyopathy (six cases), valvulopathy (one case), ischemic cardiopathy (two cases), and graft rejection (one case). The patterns for whole extracts as well as for cytoplasmic proteins and myofibril components are compared. Extensive individual variability was observed both between control and pathological cases and among the abnormal samples.
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PMID:An examination of heart proteins by two-dimensional electrophoresis. 331 3

A series is presented of 83 patients surgically explored for massive bowel infarction. Old men with previous heart disease and symptoms of peripheral atherosclerosis were primarily affected. Clinical presenting features were abdominal pain (100 per cent), peritonitis (57 per cent), shock (34 per cent) and hypothermia (26 per cent). A third-space syndrome with metabolic acidosis and uraemia was the most common physiological derangement. Age was the only factor that appeared to have influenced the surgeon's decision to perform massive bowel resection (71 years in non-resected versus 64 years in resected patients, P less than 0.006). The overall mortality rate was 71 per cent. Forty-four patients underwent massive bowel resection (mean length of remaining small bowel 60 +/- 40 cm) and twenty-four (54 per cent) survived the procedure. Axillary temperature was higher in survivors (36.7 degrees C versus 36.1 degrees C, P less than 0.03). Early postoperative total plasma protein and albumin concentrations were also higher in survivors (57 versus 46 g/l, P less than 0.005; 27 versus 22 g/l, P less than 0.02). Patients with previous symptoms of atherosclerotic disease and high pre-operative blood urea levels also had a bad prognosis. Survivors had a mean hospital stay of 57 days and parenteral nutrition had to be maintained for a mean of 34 days. The survival rate achieved with massive resection justifies this surgical approach in selected patients with massive bowel infarction.
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PMID:Mesenteric infarction: an analysis of 83 patients with prognostic studies in 44 cases undergoing a massive small-bowel resection. 339 20

The metabolism of halothane was examined in patients with acyanotic and cyanotic congenital heart disease undergoing open heart surgery. Statistically significant (P less than 0.05) pre-surgical differences between acyanotic and cyanotic groups included pH (7.46 +/- 0.02 vs 7.36 +/- 0.02), PaO2 (277 +/- 58 vs 51 +/- 3 torr), O2 saturation (97 +/- 1 vs 74 +/- 4%), and hematocrit (45 +/- 3 vs 58 +/- 2%). Serum fluoride levels were significantly greater in cyanotic than in acyanotic groups 2-4 hours after initial exposure to halothane. Both groups had significant intragroup increases in serum levels of fluoride, bromide, and trifluoroacetic acid. Significant increases in serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase, creatinine phosphokinase, and glutamic oxaloacetate transaminase were observed in both groups, whereas, the cyanotic patients had additional significant increases in blood urea nitrogen and direct bilirubin. The cyanotic group also had higher total and direct serum bilirubin levels than the acyanotic group. Therefore, patients with cyanotic congenital heart disease had greater reductive metabolism of halothane than acyanotics. However, cyanotic and acyanotic patients had essentially similar postoperative derangements in hepatic and renal function.
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PMID:Halothane metabolism in acyanotic and cyanotic patients undergoing open heart surgery. 377 53


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