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

Thyroid storm is a rapid decompensation of severe hyperthyroidism which can best be described by the three criteria of hyperthermia, tachycardia and altered mental state with severe agitation. There has to be a precipitating factor such as infection, iodine contamination, surgery or even I-131 treatment. Severe hyperthyroidism not fulfilling the criteria of thyroid storm can also be an indication for emergency treatment, particularly in the elderly with heart disease. Suppressed serum TSH and elevated free T4 levels are essential to confirm the diagnosis. When rapidly available, radioiodine uptake of the thyroid can be useful. Therapy aims at rapidly reducing the active circulating hormone pool, hypermetabolic state, tachycardia, and finally hormone synthesis. Thyroid secretion can be blocked by ioipanoic acid or ipodate while hypermetabolic state can be reduced with beta-blockers or calcium channel-blockers. Treatment of hyperthyroidism in patients with iodine contamination is a real therapeutic challenge. Myxoedema coma, a complication of severe hypothyroidism, is defined by hypothermia (rectal temperature less than 36 degrees C), bradycardia, slow mentation, precipitating factor such as infection or drug overdose, and increased serum creatine phosphokinase levels. Diagnosis of severe hypothyroidism should be confirmed by serum measurements of TSH and free T4. Treatment consists of general supporting measures including rewarming, correction of serum electrolyte disturbances, and adequate alimentation. Thyroid hormone treatment should initially be aggressive using either 300-400 micrograms of T4 or 20-40 micrograms of T3 intravenously. Cortisone therapy may be added. Patients should be under close monitoring as arrhythmias and myocardial infarction are frequent complications of myxoedema coma and/or its treatment with thyroid hormones.
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PMID:Thyroid emergencies. 173 98

The concentrations of pituitary hormones (TSH and PRL), thyroid hormones (free-T4 and free-T3), thyroid hormone binding protein (TBG) and lipids (TG and FFA) in the blood were measured in order to examine the physiology of nonthyroidal illnesses that occurred as a result of heart surgery as well as their effects on the pituitary and thyroid glands. The subjects of the study consisted of 30 adults with congenital and acquired heart disease. Blood concentrations of TSH, PRL, free-T4, free-T3, and TBG decreased, and those of FFA increased, on the 2nd day following surgery. On the 2nd day following surgery, the decrease in the concentrations of free-T4 and free-T3 in the blood were considered due to a decrease in secretion of T4 from the thyroid gland, as well as due to a decrease in the activity of iodothyronine 5'-deiodinase in the peripheral organs. In the 3rd week following surgery, the concentrations of these items returned to their original values on the day prior to surgery.
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PMID:[Studies on nonthyroidal illness after heart surgery]. 190 17

Systolic time intervals (STI) were measured directly from concurrent aortic and mitral valve echocardiographic tracings in 127 subjects to assess their utility as an index of peripheral tissue thyroid functional status. The subjects were categorized according to clinical symptoms and the results of thyroid function tests into the following 7 study groups: normal subjects (n = 34), overt hyperthyroid subgroup I (n = 12), overt hyperthyroid subgroup II (n = 28), subclinical hyperthyroid (n = 15), subclinical hypothyroid (n = 22), overt hypothyroid subgroup II (n = 6), and overt hypothyroidism subgroup I (n = 10). Compared with normal subjects, overt hyperthyroid subgroup I patients had a significantly shortened mean isovolumetric contraction time (ICT), preejection period (PEP), and PEP/LVET (LVET = left ventricular ejection time; P less than or equal to 0.0005); the overt hypothyroid subgroup I patients also had significantly lengthened mean ICT (P less than or equal to 0.005), PEP, and PEP/LVET (P less than or equal to 0.0005). Compared with normal subjects, overt hyperthyroidism subgroup II patients also had a very significant shortening of ICT (P less than 0.0005) as well as a significantly shortened PEP and PEP/LVET (P less than or equal to 0.005), whereas subclinical hyperthyroid patients (with normal serum free T4 index and total T3, and suppressed TSH by immunoradiometric assay) also had ICT, PEP, and PEP/LVET STI values which were significantly shortened (P less than 0.05) values. Compared to normal subjects, the overt hypothyroid subgroup II patients (who were clinically asymptomatic with reduced serum free T4 index and elevated TSH) had a prolongation of ICT, PEP, and PEP/LVET (P less than or equal to 0.05), whereas the values in subclinical hypothyroid patients were similar to those in normal subjects. From these observations we conclude that in the absence of underlying heart disease, the echocardiographic method used is a rapid, reliable, and sensitive technique for determining STI and provides direct information on peripheral tissue thyroid functional status.
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PMID:Concurrent aortic and mitral valve echocardiography permits measurement of systolic time intervals as an index of peripheral tissue thyroid functional status. 276 Jan 74

Thyroid function alterations induced by amiodarone treatment (200-400 mg/day for 5 days/week) were studied in 50 patients with heart disease (age 34-75 years, mean age 55.5 +/- 11.8) for 25.6 +/- 15.0 months. Statistical analysis was made of the results obtained from the 14 patients who underwent all of the schedule examinations during the same 16-month period. A reduction in T3 was observed after 7 days' treatment; this became statistically significant at 12 and 16 months. FT3 fell significantly only after 7 days; rT3 showed an opposite trend to that of T3 (low T3 syndrome), with significant increases at all observation times. TSH rose at 7 days, then fell gradually to below baseline values after 12 months. No evidence of clinical hyperthyroidism accompanied the significant increases of T4 and FT4 observed at 1, 3, 6, and 16 months; when this complication occurred (in 6% of the cases) it was associated with a rise or lack of reduction in T3 levels. In these cases treatment was withdrawn. Amiodarone was also discontinued in 2 other cases (4%) with elevated thyroid function indices but without clinical symptoms. Seven patients who showed an isolated increase of FT3 were carefully monitored; only in one case did clinical hyperthyroidism develop with a simultaneous rise in the T3 level. A diagnosis of hypothyroidism may be considered only if there is a reduction in T4 levels, since an isolated increase in TSH is not as reliable; treatment had to be suspended for this reason in 2 cases (4%), both without clinical symptoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Alterations in thyroid function induced by chronic administration of amiodarone. 359 42

The concept of hypothyroid heart disease remains controversial. Although hemodynamic abnormalities have been described, the presence of underlying abnormal cardiac structures has not been confirmed. The authors studied 20 hypothyroid patients using M-mode echocardiography before and after l-thyroxine therapy. Fifteen additional hypothyroid patients were studied using two-dimensional echocardiography to confirm the data of the first study. The findings were the same in both studies: during hypothyroidism, the interventricular septum is thickened, the ratio of septal thickness to left ventricular posterior wall thickening is increased, the right ventricular wall is thickened, regional wall motion of interventricular septum and right ventricular wall is decreased, and global function of the left ventricle is decreased. These findings are reversed with l-thyroxine therapy; they occur within 6 months of the development of hypothyroidism, but appear unrelated to elevated TSH levels. Whether the thickened interventricular septum and right ventricular wall represent true muscular hypertrophy requires further elucidation. Nevertheless, these data demonstrate the existence of a hypothyroid cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Hypothyroid cardiomyopathy: echocardiographic documentation of reversibility. 360 87

Clinical and laboratory features of 99 patients receiving long-term amiodarone therapy were analyzed to determine which individuals may be at a high risk for developing amiodarone-induced thyroid dysfunction. The group of 68 men and 31 women was followed up for an average of 27 months (range 3 to 60). There were no differences in age, sex, dose of amiodarone, type or severity of underlying heart disease or baseline serum thyroxine levels in patients who developed hypothyroidism (n = 32) or hyperthyroidism (n = 5) or remained euthyroid (n = 62). Baseline serum thyrotropin levels were statistically higher in patients who became hypothyroid, but there was considerable overlap with the other patient groups. Serum reverse triiodothyronine (reverse T3), which has been suggested to be a marker of amiodarone efficacy, correlated directly with serum thyroxine levels, and was not an independent variable. There was no pattern to the time course for development of thyroid dysfunction, which occurred in 49% of those followed up and developed as early as 1 month or, in one individual, as late as after 3 years of amiodarone therapy. There are few guidelines for replacement therapy in patients with amiodarone-induced hypothyroidism. L-thyroxine dosage was adjusted cautiously in these high risk individuals to achieve serum thyroxine levels within the reference range of euthyroid individuals taking amiodarone: the mean dosage required was 136 micrograms/day. Normalization of serum thyrotropin (TSH) would have required doses of L-thyroxine that were judged to be excessively high.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Thyroid dysfunction during chronic amiodarone therapy. 379 94

Cardiac, thyroid and pulmonary function were evaluated in 25 patients aged 35 years or under, treated for Hodgkin's disease by mantle radiotherapy 5-16 years previously. No patient had symptoms of heart disease. Although thallium myocardial perfusion scintigraphy was normal in all patients, abnormalities of myocardial function were detected in 6 (24%) patients using gated equilibrium rest and exercise radionuclide ventriculography. Resting left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was abnormal in 1 patient, and in 3 patients there was an abnormal LVEF response to exercise. All 6 patients had right ventricular dilatation. Apical hypokinesia was present in 4 of these patients. A small asymptomatic pericardial effusion was detected by M-Mode echocardiography in only 2 (8%) patients. Twenty-three (92%) patients had evidence of abnormal thyroid function. Two (8%) patients had become clinically hypothyroid. Serum TSH was elevated in 13 (52%) patients and TRH stimulation test was abnormal in a further 10 (40%) patients in whom TSH was normal. Pulmonary function studies showed a moderate decrease in diffusing capacity (72% of predicted) and a minor reduction in lung volume. Although a high incidence of cardiac, thyroid and pulmonary abnormalities was detected, only the 2 patients who had become hypothyroid were symptomatic. Modification of the irradiation technique may reduce the incidence of cardiac abnormalities, but is unlikely to alter significantly the thyroid or pulmonary sequelae.
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PMID:Late cardiac, thyroid, and pulmonary sequelae of mantle radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease. 393 70

A 58-year-old man had symptoms of hyperthyroidism and congestive heart failure. While hyperthyroid, his serum thyrotropin (TSH) level was inappropriately elevated at 6.1 microunits/mL. The molar ratio of alpha subunit to TSH was 2.5, suggesting the presence of a TSH-secreting pituitary tumor. Further evaluation disclosed an enlarged sella turcica with posterior erosion, and an intrasellar mass was visualized on computed tomographic scan. Neither serum TSH nor alpha subunit levels became elevated after administration of thyrotropin-releasing hormone, nor were they suppressed by a dopamine infusion. Serum TSH but not alpha subunit levels rose during antithyroid drug therapy. Estrogens produced a partial reduction in serum alpha subunit concentration (presumably reflecting the nontumorous gonadotroph contribution to circulating alpha subunit). Dexamethasone completely suppressed serum TSH level but had no effect on the alpha subunit level, suggesting a differential feedback of glucocorticoids on TSH and alpha secretion. The patient was treated with pituitary irradiation rather than surgery because of his underlying heart disease.
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PMID:Hyperthyroidism due to a thyrotropin-secreting pituitary adenoma. Studies of thyrotropin and subunit secretion. 681 Jul 81

The effects of Amiodarone (1000-1400 mg/week, for a period ranging from 3 to 24 months) on thyroid gland function were studied in 45 patients with heart disease, using a new method of free thyroid hormone assay. Forty-four untreated patients and 11 normal subjects were used as controls. In treated patients the prevalence of dysthyroidism was 22,2% (15,6% hypothyroidism and 6,6% hyperthyroidism); the onset of dysthyroidism ranged from 20 days to 2 years after the beginning of treatment. In control patients the prevalence of dysthyroidism was 4,4% (2,2% hypothyroidism and 2,2% hyperthyroidism). In patients with hypothyroidism (TSH greater than 7 microunits/ml) T4 levels were generally low, while T3, fT4 and fT3 levels were normal. In treated patients with hyperthyroidism (fT3 greater than 5,3 pg/ml and fT4 greater than 16 pg/ml) T4 values were high, while T3 concentrations were in the normal range. In Amiodarone-treated euthyroid patients, mean T4, fT4 and rT3 values were significantly (p less than 0,01) higher than those of control subjects; TSH levels were normal in all the groups studied. These data suggest that Amiodarone can exert both a direct effect on the thyroid gland and the peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones. The action on the thyroid gland is suggested by the high prevalence of dysthyroidism in Amiodarone-treated patients and by the high levels of T4 and fT4 observed in patients who did not show dysthyroidism. The action on the peripheral hormonal metabolism seems to be proved by the high levels of rT3 and by the prolongation of QTc interval.
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PMID:[Thyroid function in patients chronically treated with amiodarone]. 688 52

Authors examined 10 patients with untreated myxoedema. The disease lasted at least one year in seven cases. The etiology of disease was autoaggressive thyroiditis in 9 cases and was diagnosed by a high titre of antibodies against thyroglobulin. The levels of T4 and T3 were low in all cases, level of TSH was elevated. The mean level of T4 was 0.91 microgram/dl, of T3 43.5 ng/dl. The level of TSH was over 96 microU/ml in 7 cases, in rest over 54 microU/ml. In all cases ECHO examination was done: pericardial effusion was proved in 80%. 5 patients were followed during substitutional therapy. Clinical signs and laboratory test normalised in all 5 cases. ECHO finding improved: left ventricular SEF from 54.4 +/- 7.4% to 67.9 +/- 10.3%, Vcf 0.82 +/- 16 circ/sec to 1.32 +/- 0.37 circ/sec max PWVs from 43.8 +/- 6.8 mm/sec to 63.2 +/- 9.9 mm/sec. The etiology of myxoedema may play a role in the incidence of pericardial effusion either by influence of autoaggressive disease or, which seems more probable, by a complete failure of thyroid gland secretion with low not only T4 but T3, too. T3 receptors are supposed to play an important role in the myxoedema heart disease.
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PMID:The advantage of the use of echocardiographic evaluation in hypothyroid patients. 739 89


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