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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to explain the edematous appearance found in infants after ECC associated with hyponatremia, the authors studied the supply of
sodium
per and post-operatively in 42 children aged from 11 days to 13 years undergoing correction of the
cardiopathy
under ECC. This study enables one to find that there is an inflation of
sodium
after intervention under ECC, which is even more important, the longer the duration of the ECC. It is not related to a failure in urinary excretion of
Na+
and predominates in infants. It is related with the supply of
sodium
during transfusion and seems to be the cause of certain respiratory complications met with following ECC.
...
PMID:[Sodium supply in operations under extracorporeal circulation in children]. 1 23
During aortic clamping, drug protection of the myocardium, far from supplanting hypothermia, complements it, particularly in the case of left ventricular hypertrophy. Ultramicroscopy and new techniques of histobiological exploration of the myocite have enabled one to distinguish the lessions provoked by anoxia from those induced by reperfusion. At present, drug protection, extended to energetic solutions and electrolytes, aim at preserving energy metabolism by stocking of the substrate and at avoiding interferences which precipitate exhaustion of the adenosine triphosphate and phosphocreatinine reserves. In order to do this, hemodilution in particular is limited in subjects with decompensated
cardiopathy
; choice of anesthetics is orientated towards neuroleptanalgesia or fluothane, and it is attempted to neutralize the adrenergic reaction by the use of beta-blocking substances. Furthermore, it is preferred to interrupt electrogenesis at the stage of polarization: depolarizing cardioplegic solutions rich in potassium and
sodium
are rejected and in preference membrane stabilizers are used (procaine, magnesium, tetrodoxine...) The ultramicroscopic analysis of the structural modifications leads to sparing of the integrity of the lysosomial membrane by corticoids and alkalines. The use of calcium is deferred, anti-calcium techniques are even proposed (washing poor in calcium, verapamil). Cellular edema is prevented and treated by solution (mannitol - sorbitol) whose osmolarity must be less than 300 M osm/l. A conditioning of the biochemical and physicial structures and of cardiac work is being more and more thought of which leads to the classification of beta stimulating substances as negative, and their indications must be seriously thought of and used with reserve.
...
PMID:[Drug protection of the myocardium during cardiac surgery]. 1 31
Human cardiac myosin isolated from operatively obtained samples of ventricular septum and left ventricular free wall of subjects with asymmetric septal hypertrophy (ASH) was compared, with respect to structural and enzymatic properties, to myosin isolated from hearts of subjects without
heart disease
. The following parameters were studied: (1) activation of myosin ATPase activity by K+-EDTA and Ca2+, (2) molecular weight of the heavy and light chains of myosin as determined by electrophoretic migration in polyacrylamide-
sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gels and (3) ability to form bipolar aggregates at low ionic strength, as examined by electron microscopy. No difference was present in any of these parameters between human cardiac myosin from subjects with ASH and from subjects without
heart disease
. Thus, the genetic defect present in subjects with ASH is not expressed in the particular structural and functional characteristics of myosin evaluated in this study.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of myosin from subjects with asymmetric septal hypertrophy. 14 25
Insulin accelerates the entry of glucose and amino acids into muscle cells by acting upon the 'carrier-facilitated' transport mechanism. For glucose this process is passive and leads to equilibration of intracellular and extracellular concentrations. In heart muscle, glucose transport is a rate-limiting step for glucose uptake. During hypoxia and ischemia the heart turns to anaerobic glycolysis for energy production and therefore, maximal glucose transport becomes important. Insulin is necessary to insure proper protein synthesis, probably at the level of membrane-bound polyribosomes. However, during myocardial hypoxia, insulin alone cannot restore the associated depression in protein synthesis. Although insulin hyperpolarizes the cell, a change in the ratio of intracellular to extracellular activities of potassium is not its primary mode of action. An insulin-induced configurational change in the plasma membrane could simultaneously account for the effects of insulin on
sodium
and potassium permeability and the action on facilitated transport. Intracellular levels of cyclic adenylate may be reduced by insulin in adipose tissue because of inhibition of adenyl cyclase or stimulation of phosphodiesterase. However, at this time there is little evidence that insulin alters cyclic AMP levels in the heart. Insulin secretion is depressed in patients with
heart disease
in proportion to the reduction of cardiac index sustained. Since the ischemic heart is dependent upon glucose as the major fuel, insulin lack may deprive the heart of adequate substrate.
...
PMID:Insulin: fundamental mechanism of action and the heart. 18 67
In a survey of 3 California communities by the Stanford
Heart Disease
Prevention Program, we obtained data on blood pressure, medications, age, height and weight, blood for measurement of plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma renin concentration (PRC), plasma renin reactivity (RR), and plasma renin substate concentration (PRS), and urine for measurement of urinary
sodium
and creatinine. No effect of conjugated estrogens (Premarin) on blood pressure could be discerned when the blood pressure, corrected for age and relative weight, of 575 women on no medication was compared to that of 82 women taking only Premarin. Premarin increased PRA, PRS, and RR, but had no effect on PRC. We also found in both Premarin-treated woman and controls 1) that RR was positively correlated with PRS, and 2) that PRA is dependent on PRC and PRS. These data indicate that the reninrenin substrate reaction of plasma, even at normal substrate concentration, is strongly deprendent on PRS.
...
PMID:The effect of conjugated estrogens on the renin-angiotensin system. 19 9
The effects of aminophylline on renal function in 10 premature infants with idiopathic apnea are evaluated. The percent increases in creatinine clearance (128 +/- 339%, mean +/- SD) and
sodium
clearance (196 +/- 304%, mean +/- SD) are variable while the percent increase in fractional
sodium
excretion (69 +/- 109%, mean +/- SD) is significant. This effect is postulated to be at the proximal tubule and may be modified by the effects of postnatal age and infusion of albumin. Gestational age, birth weight,
heart disease
, water and
sodium
intake and ventilatory support did not appear to influence the results. Hyponatremia is a potential consequence of theophylline therapy for apnea.
...
PMID:The effects of theophylline on renal function in the premature newborn. 43 87
Haemophilus parainfluenzae endocarditis is characterized by great variation in the acuteness of presentation, difficulty in isolation of the pathogen, a 50% to 60% incidence of major arterial emboli, and variability of response to therapy. Prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE) due to H parainfluenzae biotype II occurred in a 14-year-old girl with congenital
heart disease
and a Starr-Edwards mitral valve prosthesis. Management was complicated by a prolonged culture-negative period (eight days), intermittent bacteremia (only five of 15 positive blood cultures), an embolus to the right femoral artery, progressive congestive heart failure, and urgent prosthestic valve replacement. Cure was achieved with 44 days of ampicillin
sodium
-gentamicin sulfate therapy monitored by serum bactericidal titers.
...
PMID:Prosthetic valve endocarditis due to Haemophilus parainfluenzae biotype II. 44 17
High potassium together with low
sodium
in diet and intravenous fluids has been observed clinically by Sodi-Pallares to have a beneficial effect on chronic heart failure and on acute myocardial infarction. Recent studies from the laboratory of Ling indicate that high potassium, low
sodium
environments can partially restore damaged cell proteins to their normal undamaged configuration. It follows that by this mechanism cell proteins damaged by the chronic or acute hypoxia of
heart disease
are probably partly repaired when high potassium, low
sodium
therapy is used.
...
PMID:Successful therapy of heart disease by high potassium together with low sodium in accord with predictions from the associated cation, structured water concept of the cell. 50 67
To assess the relation of hyperaldosteronism and potassium depletion to the intensity of diuretic therapy we have measured plasma aldosterone by radioimmunoassay and total exchangeable potassium by radioisotope dilution in 24 patients when they were stable at the end of their preparation for cardiac operation. Some patients required intensive frusemide therapy to reach an optimal state for operation and many showed hyperaldosteronism. Plasma aldosterone was significantly related to daily dose of frusemide (r=0.77). Depletion of total exchangeable potassium expressed in terms of predicted weight was significantly related to plasma aldosterone (r= -0.64). The reduction in total exchangeable potassium is interpreted as chiefly related to loss of lean tissue mass from the wasting that leads to cardiac cachexia, but evidence is presented on the basis of measurements of extracellular fluid volume as sulphate space (20 patients) of entry of
sodium
into the cells which may indicate a true cellular potassium loss. Although plasma potassium is usually easily maintained with oral potassium supplements or aldosterone antagonists, we postulate that intensive diuretic therapy in severe
heart disease
may provoke hyperaldosteronism which accentuates potassium loss and may contribute to wasting and to intracellular potassium depletion in critical tissue, such as myocardium.
...
PMID:Relation of plasma aldosterone concentration to diuretic treatment in patients with severe heart disease. 50 54
The effects of intravenous infusion of
sodium
nitroprusside were studied in 11 children immediately after open-heart surgery for congenital
heart disease
. The patients were selected because, following bypass, their cardiac index was below 2,0 L/min/m2 and their systemic vascular resistance exceeded 30 units. In order to eliminate the effects of preload, mean left atrial pressure was maintained at a constant level by blood transfusion. During infusion of nitroprusside the mean decrease of mean arterial pressure was 18.6%, of systemic vascular resistance was 53.7%, and the increase in cardiac index was 76.9%. All children recovered.
...
PMID:Nitroprusside after open-heart surgery. 94 76
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