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)

A new arterial prosthesis made of polytetrafluoroethylene (OTFE) was evaluated in 10 infants with complex cyanotic congenital heart disease. All grafts used were 4 mm. in diameter and varied in length from 0.8 to 6 cm. The grafts were anastomosed to the main pulmonary artery or its bifurcation in 8 infants and to the right and left pulmonary arteries in one each. There were two early deaths, one of which was related to shunt failure. The advantages of a shunt to the main pulmonary artery are obvious, and the intraoperative procedure is facilitated with the prosthesis. Follow-up averages 9 months in the 8 survivors, and the patients have nearly doubled their preoperative weight. A shunt murmur is present in each case and the children have mild-to-moderate cyanosis at rest. Repeat aortograms in 2 patients, 8 and 10 months postoperatively, show a smooth graft without luminal narrowing. The aortic oxygen saturations were 73 per cent. The PTFE graft and/or anastomoses will not grow with the growth of the child and therefore may not accommodate growth by increased flow. This may prove to be a limiting factor in its long-term use in fants. We reserve the use of these grafts for infants with complex cyanotic defects undergoing emergency surgery or in older children in whom a conventional shunt is not possible or a previous shunt has failed.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1976 Sep
PMID:Arterial prosthesis of microporous expanded polytetrafluoroethylene for construction of aorta-pulmonary shunts. 95 53

The influence of several diseases and conditions upon the prevalence of pulmonary embolism in autopsies performed over the July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1974 period at the University of Michigan Medical Center (Ann Arbor, Michigan) were analyzed. The prevalence of pulmonary was 12.3% in the 4600 necropsies in this sample. Patients with pulmonary fat emboli or tumor emboli and patients thought to have thrombosis of the pulmonary artery were not designated as having pulmonary thromboembolism. The patients were categorized with regard to heart disease on the basis of both clinical and necropsy findings. The major factors contributing to an increase in risk of development of pulmonary embolism include heart disease, certain types of cancer, obesity, acute paraplegia and accidental and operative trauma. Other risk factors which could not be assessed in this study include a prior history of venous thromboembolism, pregnancy and the puerperium, use of oral contraceptives, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Age plays a major role in the prevalence of pulmonary embolism. A portion of the effect of age is related to the age distribution of other diseases contributing to an increased risk, yet advanced age alone may have an independent influence. The risk factors defined should be used in a selective program designed to increase the rate of detection of deep venous thrombosis before pulmonary embolism occurs. Alternatively, patients at increased risk should be treated with prophylactic low dosage heparin during hospitalization.
Surg Gynecol Obstet 1976 Sep
PMID:Risk factors in pulmonary embolism. 95 58

Ultrasonic studies were performed in 19 neonates with the hypoplastic left heart syndrome whose diagnosis was confirmed at angiography or autopsy, or both. The patients were classified in two echocardiographic groups: Group I, 10 infants whose ventricular septum could be recorded, and Group II, 9 infants whose septum could not be recorded. The findings in these groups were compared with those in 60 neonates without congenital heart disease also studied with ultrasound. Two additional neonates who presented with signs of shock were also studied. The diagnostic echocardiographic features of hypoplastic left heart syndrome were: (1)a left ventricular end-diastolic dimension of less than 9 mm; (2)an aortic root diameter of less than 6 mm; (3)a ratio of left ventricular end-diastolic to right ventricular end-diastolic dimension of less than 0.6; and (4)a mitral valve echo that is absent or greatly distorted and of small amplitude. These echocardiographic criteria differed significantly from findings in the normal group (P less than 0.01). Echocardiography proved valuable in neonates with shock. It is a safe, reliable technique that can be used to delineate the intracardiac anatomy in sick neonates with the hypoplastic left heart syndrome.
Am J Cardiol 1976 Sep
PMID:Echocardiographic sepctrum of the hypoplastic left heart syndrome: a clinicopathologic correlation in 19 newborns. 96 8

37 patients with mixed cardiac pathologies were subjected to isometric exercise (hand grip) during routine cardiac catheterization. On the basis of a simple and safe grip test it was possible to distinguish three groups of patients according to the left ventricular pressure at rest and its response to this test. Group 1 consisted of 14 patients with left ventricular end diastolic pressures remaining below 12 mm Hg both at rest and on exercise. These patients were considered to have normal left ventricular function some, even in the presence of organic heart disease. No deaths occurred in this group during the follow-up period which averaged 33.8 months. At the other extreme (Group 3) there were 12 obviously disabled patients with resting left ventricular filling pressures above 12 mm Hg rising further under isometric stress. Six of these patients (50%) died during the period of the study. (Average follow-up 21.4 months). By the application of the hand grip test, an intermediate population (Group 2) of 11 patients was discernible. These patients were able to maintain a normal cardiac reserve at rest (LVEDP less than 12 mm Hg) but not during isometric effort (LVEDP greater than 12 mm Hg). Two of these patients (18%) died during the follow up period (average 22.1 months). Assuming a pathological progression with time from groups 1-3 and in view of the different prognoses observed in the course of the long-term follow-up it would appear that the Group 2 patients should be considered more critically and offered more active management.
Eur J Cardiol 1976 Sep
PMID:The grip test: a simple method for the assessment of left ventricular performance. 96 82

Two patients developed transient rapid atrial fibrillation after a blow on the head. There was no evidence of neurological damage or organic heart disease on subsequent investigation. Neither patient was aware of the cardiac irregularity.
Br Heart J 1976 Sep
PMID:Transiet atrial fibrillation after minor head injury. 97 84

Iliac and femoral arteries previously exposed to percutaneous catheterization were examined by angiography in conjunction with re-catheterization in 44 infants and children, most of them with heart disease. Frequency and extension of thrombotic changes were analysed, as well as the relationship between occurrence of thrombotic complications and age, haematocrit value, catheterization time, and tendency to arterial spasm. Only age and arterial spasm were significant for the occurrence of thrombotic complications. Injury of the intima was considered to be the primary cause of these complications.
Acta Radiol Diagn (Stockh) 1976 Sep
PMID:Angiography of the femoral artery following percutaneous catheterization in infants and children. 98 61

A detailed study was made of 150 women delivered of their infants within 72 hours of an amniocentesis where the lecithin/sphingomyelin (L/S) ratio was 2.0 or greater. There were nine neonates with respiratory distress (6.0 per cent). There were two neonatal deaths, both due to severe congenital heart disease. A mature amniotic fluid L/S ratio predicts a newborn infant who will not have respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in most pregnancies. There is a significantly increased risk of RDS in neonates with a mature L/S ratio if the mother has insulin-dependent diabetes or if there is a resulting low Apgar score. The method of delivery (cesarean section or vaginal) does not affect the frequency of RDS where the L/S ratio is 2.0 or more.
Am J Obstet Gynecol 1976 Sep 01
PMID:Respiratory distress syndrome with mature lecithin/sphingomyelin ratios: diabetes mellitus and low Apgar scores. 98 67

This report has delt with in vivo and in vitro examinations in the cases of sixteen children suffering from cyanotic congenital heart disease, and who had been placed under extended therapy with platelet-aggregation-inhibitors. The pharmacological effect of acetylsalicylic acid and dipyridamol has been discussed--as far as it is known. The discrepancy between in vivo and in vitro therapy-effect in the treatment with platelet-aggregation-inhibitors has been subjected to criticism. Consistant treatment of all children suffering from cyanotic congenital heart disease with aspirine and persantine has been advocated, however should only be carried out in collaboration with a competent hamostasiological laboratory.
Klin Padiatr 1976 Sep
PMID:[Hamostasiological changes induced by platelet-aggregation-inhibitors, tested in children with congenital heart disease (in vitro and in vitro examinations) (author's transl)]. 98 5

The hospital course of 144 consecutive patients with pulmonary embolism (PE) demonstrated by pulmonary angiography was reviewed to determine the mortality of patients with treated PE. Twelve patients (8%) died of PE, and eight died of causes other than PE; 124 (86%) survived. Pulmonary embolism was the primary cause of death in only four of the 12 patients who died of PE. Pulmonary embolism contributed to the death of eight other patients, each of whom had associated potentially lethal disease, particularly heart disease. The most important factor affecting mortality was shock due to acute right ventricular failure secondary to massive PE (mortality, 32%). Mortality was not related to magnitude of PE per se; the mortality of patients with massive PE without shock (6%) was the same as that for patients with submassive PE (5%. Patients with PE who survive long enough to have the diagnosis established and appropriate prophylactic therapy begun have an excellent prognosis, unless they have associated severe medical disease.
JAMA 1976 Sep 27
PMID:Mortality in patients treated for pulmonary embolism. 98 13

In 1971 a population-based Ischaemic Heart Disease (IHD) Register was established in the Innsbruck area as part of the WHO international collaborative study. Demographic and geographic data covering the area, as well as the locally-applied methods are described. One hundred and seventy four cases (133 males and 41 females) of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) were registered in the age group 20-64 years. This corresponds to an annual incidence rate of 1.9(0/00) in men and 0.6(0/00) in women. These results confirm indications from the national mortality statistics that Innsbruck belongs to the group of areas in Europe with a relatively low incidence of AMI. The epidemiology of AMI in Europe is discussed. The frequency distribution of AMI according to month of the year, day of the week and hour of the day is reported for this area.
Wien Klin Wochenschr 1976 Sep 03
PMID:[Incidence and presentation of myocardial infarction in Tyrol, Austria; (WHO ischaemic heart disease register Innsbruck 1971/72) (author's transl)]. 99 34


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