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)

We undertook a case-control study to investigate the association between chemicals in maternal drinking water consumed during pregnancy and congenital heart disease in the offspring. Two hundred and seventy affected children and 665 healthy children were enrolled in the study. Information on contaminant levels in maternal drinking water was available from records of routine water analysis of samples taken from public taps in the communities where the mothers resided during pregnancy. Mothers provided information during a telephone interview on their health, pregnancy management, and demographic characteristics. Nine inorganic metals were analysed for detection of an association with congenital heart disease. The chemical exposures of particular interest were arsenic, lead, mercury and selenium. None of the chemicals was associated materially with an increase in the frequency of congenital heart disease overall. Arsenic exposure at any detectable level was associated with a threefold increase in occurrence of coarctation of the aorta (prevalence odds ratio = 3.4, 95% confidence interval = 1.3-8.9). Detectable traces of selenium in drinking water were associated with a lower frequency of any congenital heart disease than was observed among children exposed to drinking water not containing detectable levels of selenium (prevalence odds ratio = 0.62, 95% confidence limits = 0.40-0.97). A dose-response effect was observed over four levels of selenium exposure. Non-differential errors in the measurement and classification of exposure to contaminants routinely monitored in drinking water could account for lack of positive findings. In addition, most of the contaminant levels were below the maximum levels set by the Environmental Protection Agency, so that lack of evidence of effect may have been due to the low exposure levels in this population.
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PMID:Chemical quality of maternal drinking water and congenital heart disease. 320 40

The volume of extravascular lung water is currently measured in vivo from the difference in mean transit times of the extrapolated first-pass dilution curves of two indicators, one diffusible and the other confined to the intravascular space. To overcome the limitations of this method, one can prolong the measurement interval, introduce a highly diffusible indicator, or both. In the first case, recirculating indicators are measured and included in the computation by deconvolution of the mean transit time through the lung. In the second case, heat is used as the water indicator. In the third case, not yet explored, recirculating heat would be measured and long thermal transit times uncovered. In view of the complexity of the deconvolution method and the pitfalls of the thermal dilution method, a radiographic score of pulmonary edema may be more useful clinically to assess the volume of extravascular lung water in patients with heart disease or adult respiratory distress syndrome.
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PMID:Theoretical and practical considerations of measuring extravascular lung water. 329 81

In addition to radionuclide ventriculography and thallium scintigraphy, already well established in nuclear medicine, assessment of myocardial metabolism is also of interest for diagnosis and follow-up observations in heart disease. Under aerobic conditions and in the fasting state, the heart muscle primarily oxidizes fatty acids; during ischemia, in contrast, there is slowing of fatty acid turnover and increased anaerobic glycolysis. With 11C-palmitic acid, in humans, reduced fatty acid uptake has been documented in infarcted myocardial regions. The analysis of 11C-palmitic acid in dogs showed a three-phased elimination curve in normal myocardium. In ischemic myocardium, there was diminished utilization of free fatty acids and the glucose utilization was concomitantly increased. After insulin-glucose infusion, as well, there was increased glucose utilization and a reduction in fatty acid utilization. Studies with 11C-palmitic acid require the equipment for positron emission tomography (PET); because of the short half-life of 20.3 minutes, the nuclide must be generated by a cyclotron in the immediate vicinity. In the search for well-suited isotopes for use in planar scintigraphy employing a gamma camera, the uptake and elimination of a variety of isotopically-marked fatty acids were measured and compared with the characteristics of 14C-palmitic acid. For 17-123I-heptadecanic acid (IHA) the elimination curve was similar to that of 14C-palmitate: disadvantage, however, was the relatively high percentage of water soluble marked catabolites which required dual parameter analysis by means of 99-m-technetium pertechnetate or 123I sodium iodide to quantify the amount of myocardial fatty acid utilization through subtraction of the externally measured water soluble catabolite from the externally measured total activity. In studies with the gamma camera in fasting patients in whom 2 to 3 mCi IHA was injected intravenously after symptom limited bicycle ergometry, in healthy subjects the elimination halftime for the first rapid phase was 24.4 +/- 4.7 minutes. Patients with angiographically-documented coronary artery disease, in the afflicted myocardial segments, had diminished fatty acid uptake and prolonged elimination halftime as compared with normally perfused segments. In patients with dilated cardiomyopathy there was an inhomogeneous distribution of activity in the myocardium and, in contrast to coronary artery disease, a discordance between local fatty acid uptake and turnover rate. After chronic and acute alcohol consumption there were comparable findings which were shown to be reversible after several weeks of abstinence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Planar scintigraphy versus PET in measuring fatty acid metabolism of the heart]. 349 62

A quasi steady-state noninvasive, radioisotopic technique for measuring regional lung water distribution in man is described. The method depends upon the dilution principle. 123I labelled human serum albumin (HSA) and sodium iodide (NaI) were injected intravenously, allowed to mix completely within the body fluids and then counted externally over the chest. The size of each compartment to which the markers are confined was calculated from the external count rate and the isotopic concentration of the marker in plasma. 123I-HSA was used to estimate intravascular water and 123I-NaI extracellular water. Ratio analysis of the differential attenuation of the two photoenergies of 123Iodine (29 keV, 159 keV) by the lung and chest wall was used to estimate the absolute amount of isotope in the lung, independent of chest wall contribution, after validation by phantom studies. Regional pulmonary plasma (PPVr) and interstitial (PIVr) fluid volumes in normal subjects were 7.1 +/- 1.4 and 7.6 +/- 1.3 ml.100 cm-3 lung (mean +/- SD; n = 13) at mid-tidal volume, respectively. In patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome, PPVr and PIVr were 7.0 +/- 2.9 and 15.9 +/- 4.6 ml.100 cm-3 lung (n = 18), respectively. The pulmonary artery wedge (Paw) pressure was normal (12.5 +/- 2.5 mmHg; n = 5). In patients with pulmonary oedema due to left heart disease, PPVr and PIVr were 7.2 +/- 2.7 and 12.1 +/- 3.7 ml.100 cm-3 lung (n = 8), respectively. The mean Paw pressure in this group was high (28.5 +/- 3.9 mmHg).
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PMID:Noninvasive measurement of regional lung water distribution in healthy man and in pulmonary oedema. 369 23

Aerosolized ribavirin was evaluated in the treatment of respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory tract disease in 53 infants, 36 of whom had underlying diseases. Of the total infants, 26 were studied in a double-blind, placebo-controlled manner; 14 received ribavirin and 12 received placebo, a water aerosol, for an average of five days. When the infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia and congenital heart disease treated with ribavirin were compared with those receiving placebo, the treated infants showed a significantly faster rate of improvement in their illness severity score. The degree of improvement in the total group of infants receiving ribavirin compared with those receiving placebo was similarly greater, and at the end of therapy significantly greater improvement was also demonstrated in their arterial blood gas values and in the amount of virus shed from their nasal washes. No toxic or adverse effects of the aerosol therapy were observed in any of the 53 infants studied, and resistance to ribavirin did not develop in any of the respiratory syncytial virus strains isolated, despite prolonged treatment in some of the more ill infants.
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PMID:Ribavirin treatment of respiratory syncytial viral infection in infants with underlying cardiopulmonary disease. 390 39

Fluoride contributes to stability of both teeth and bones and to reduction of caries, especially if ingested before eruption of teeth. Reduction of caries continues at about 60% in persons drinking fluoridated water only as long as fluoride washes over teeth. One-half the population of the US does not have access to water with an optimal fluoride concentration of about 1 mg/L. Misinformation about fluoridation contributes to reluctance of communities to supplement the natural but inadequate fluoride of those water supplies. Fluoridation of water has no positive or negative effect on incidence or mortality rates due to cancer, heart disease, intracranial lesions, nephritis, cirrhosis, mongoloid births, or from all causes together. The collective decision to increase the natural fluoride content of water supplies is not an infringement of civil rights, nor does it establish a precedent in the binding sense of the law. Supplemental fluoride in water makes it available to all members of the community in a safe, practical, economical and reliable manner. Fluoridation saves money in dental costs and time lost from work. Fluoridation is an appropriate action of government in promoting the health and welfare of society.
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PMID:Thirty years of fluoridation: a review. 391 99

Thirty-two infants were treated for congenital diaphragmatic hernia at our institution from 1979 to 1984. Eight were in no or minimal distress at birth and had operative intervention when they were more than 24 hours old; survival was 100%. The remaining 24 neonates required immediate intubation and ventilation followed by operation at less than 12 hours of age. Overall survival was 54%; survival was 31% (4 of 13 patients, Group 1) in the first three years of the series and 82% (9 of 11 patients, Group 2) in the last three years (p less than 0.001). Apgar score, gestational age, birth weight, and incidence of associated congenital heart disease were equal for the two groups (all, p greater than 0.05). The two groups also were examined with reference to alveolar-arterial oxygen differences P(A-a)O2 and mean airway pressure (MAP). The best preoperative P(A-a)O2 was greater than 600 mm Hg for 7 neonates in Group 1 and 6 in Group 2, and survival was 0% and 71%, respectively (p less than 0.001). Infants with a postoperative MAP of 13 cm H2O or greater had a higher mortality (100% in Group 1 and 50% in Group 2, p greater than 0.05). Our treatment protocol was studied to determine those methods related to improved survival. Sodium bicarbonate infusion was used earlier in Group 2 as a prophylaxis against persistent fetal circulation (PFC) (p greater than 0.05). The incidence of severe PFC dropped from 85 to 54% (p greater than 0.05). Higher ventilator rates rather than pressures were used to achieve equally effective ventilation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Improving survival in the treatment of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. 394 36

Diminished glomerular filtration rate, proteinuria, and large hypercellular congested glomeruli with segmental sclerosis are found in late survivors with cyanotic congenital heart disease (CCHD). Hyperuricemia is common, acute gouty arthritis is less common than uric acid levels would predict, and overt tophaceous deposits of uric acid are exceptional. The role of the kidney in causing the basic biochemical disturbances, and the relative importance of impaired urate excretion vs urate overproduction have not been established. Accordingly, we reviewed the courses of two index patients and prospectively studied eight additional CCHD patients from 28 years to 46 years old with mean hematocrits of (62 +/- 10%). Plasma creatinine concentration was normal (0.9 +/- 0.1 mg/dl) yet glomerular filtration rate was mildly reduced to 93 +/- 14 ml/min as measured by creatinine clearance and to 81 +/- 6 ml/min as measured by 111In DTPA. Three patients had significant proteinuria and one was nephrotic. Plasma uric acid concentration was high in all but one (8.2 +/- 2.1 mg/dl), mean 24 hr uric acid excretion was normal (564 +/- 221 mg), and fractional uric acid excretion was relatively low (6.3 +/- 2.6%). The two patients with highest plasma uric acid levels (12.0 and 10.2 mg/dl) had the lowest fractional excretions (2.8% and 4.0%). Both of these patients had diminished capacity to excrete a water load (38% and 27%/4 hr) and to maximally concentrate urine (520 and 635 mOsm/kg after water deprivation and vasopressin). In conclusion, high plasma uric acid levels in late survivors with CCHD are secondary to inappropriately low fractional uric acid excretion, not to urate overproduction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Renal function and urate metabolism in late survivors with cyanotic congenital heart disease. 394 50

Chronic cigarette use is common in persons who habitually use other cardioactive agents that have been causally associated with heart disease. This study was undertaken to determine if cigarette use intensifies the abnormalities of myocardial function and composition observed in experimental alcoholism over an 18-month period. Young adult male beagles with tracheostomy were divided into four groups. There were 10 controls (group 1); 9 smoked seven cigarettes per day (group 2); 7 were fed ethanol as 20% of calories (group 3), and 6 received both ethanol and cigarettes (group 4). After a period of 18 months, left ventricular function was assessed under anesthesia. Heart rate, left ventricular end-diastolic pressures, and volumes (indicator dilution) did not differ in the four groups. An index of contractility derived by normalizing peak dP/dt for pre- and afterload was reduced significantly below the level of 2.41 +/- 0.7 cm/s in controls to 1.41 +/- 0.35 in group 2, 1.19 +/- 0.38 in group 3, and 1.28 +/- 0.17 in the ethanol cigarette group (each p less than 0.002). Arterial pressures were moderately elevated above group 1 in all three experimental groups without evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy. In contrast to smoking, which elicited no abnormalities of myocardial cation composition, ethanol reduced myocardial potassium and sodium in group 3 without a gain of water content. In group 4, no further decline of tissue cations was observed. Thus, cigarette use when combined with ethanol over a relatively long period produced no greater myocardial abnormalities than ethanol alone and may not be essential to the genesis of cardiomyopathy in alcoholics.
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PMID:Interaction of chronic cigarette and ethanol use on myocardium. 397 84

Extravascular lung water (EVLW) was measured in 16 patients with congenital heart disease by the cold green dye, double indicator dilution technique. Five patients with optimally corrected tetralogy of Fallot served as controls, and EVLW in this group was 4.7 +/- 0.5 ml/kg (111 +/- 13 ml/m2) (mean +/- standard deviation). In 5 asymptomatic patients with atrial septal defect (ASD), normal pulmonary artery (PA) pressure and increased pulmonary blood flow, EVLW was 5.7 +/- 2.8 ml/kg (132 +/- 63 ml/m2), which was not significantly different from the value of control patients. However, in 6 patients with ventricular septal defect, PA hypertension, normal left atrial pressure and an equivalent left-to-right shunt to ASD patients, EVLW was 15.9 +/- 3.8 ml/kg (270 +/- 60 ml/m2). This was significantly different from values in both control and ASD patients (p less than 0.01). It is concluded that in the face of normal pulmonary vascular resistance, PA pressure is transmitted to the microvasculature, causing hydrostatic pulmonary edema. Other factors that may be implicated in the pathogenesis of pulmonary edema, such as increased pulmonary blood flow and relative lymphatic insufficiency in infants, cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Extravascular lung water in children immediately after operative closure of either isolated atrial septal defect or ventricular septal defect. 403 40


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