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)

Azimilide hydrochloride (azimilide), an investigational antiarrhythmic drug, has shown variable efficacy in preventing atrial fibrillation (AF). This study was designed to assess its efficacy in maintaining sinus rhythm in patients with paroxysmal AF and heart disease. Patients with symptomatic paroxysmal AF were screened for 1 month by transtelephonic monitoring. After recording 1 episode of AF in the screening period, they were randomized to receive azimilide 125 mg or placebo once daily. Patients were stratified by the presence or absence of congestive heart failure or coronary heart disease (CHF/CHD). A maximum of 220 patients without CHF/CHD were randomized, with the remainder having CHF/CHD. Patients with CHF/CHD were monitored for 3 days during loading. The primary efficacy analysis was the time to the first symptomatic recurrence of AF in the CHF/CHD group. Secondary analyses were the time to the first recurrence in the entire population and the time to the first recurrence in those with significant structural heart disease. The median time to recurrence of AF in the CHF/CHD group was 10 days in the 2 treatment arms. Nonsignificant trends were seen toward efficacy of azimilide in the CHF/CHD group (hazard ratio 1.28, 95% confidence interval 0.97 to 1.70, p=0.087), structural heart disease group (hazard ratio 1.22, 95% confidence interval 0.96 to 1.56, p=0.11), and overall group (hazard ratio 1.22, 95% confidence interval 1.00 to 1.49, p=0.053). No patient died. In conclusion, azimilide showed a nonsignificant trend toward efficacy in maintaining sinus rhythm in patients with AF.
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PMID:Efficacy of azimilide for the maintenance of sinus rhythm in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in the presence and absence of structural heart disease. 1682 95

We assessed heart rate (HR) recovery following peak exercise before and after a 12-week cardiac rehabilitation program in 14 children, 12.1+/-1.8 years of age, with repaired complex congenital heart disease (CHD; 11 with Fontan surgery) and impaired exercise performance. Exercise testing using bicycle ergometry was performed at baseline, after completion of the rehab program and 1.0+/-0.2 years after the baseline test. These data were compared to HR recovery in 15 controls (age, 12.7+/-2.4 years) with CHD (13 with Fontan surgery) with two serial exercise tests at an interval of 1.1+/- 0.3 years. There was no change in peak HR between the two serial tests in either group. Peak VO2 improved in the rehab group (26.3+/-9.6 ml/kg/min at baseline vs 30.9+/-9.6 ml/kg/min after rehab, p=0.01) but remained unchanged in controls on serial testing. One-minute HR recovery (in beats per minute) improved significantly following completion of the rehab program (27+/-15 at baseline vs 40+/-23 after rehab, p=0.01). Partial improvement in 1-minute HR recovery in the rehab group persisted 1 year later (1-minute HR recovery, 35+/-19; p=0.1 compared to baseline). There was no change in 1-minute HR recovery over time in the control group (37+/-16 vs 40+/-13, p = not significant). In conclusion, HR recovery following peak exercise improves in children with CHD after participation in a cardiac rehab program.
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PMID:Cardiac rehabilitation improves heart rate recovery following peak exercise in children with repaired congenital heart disease. 1753 Mar 24

This study evaluated the quality of the visualization of extracardiac thoracic vessels by magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in young infants with congenital heart disease. Echocardiography is often sufficient in evaluating CHD in young infants. Cardiac catheterization is needed in some instances to evaluate extracardiac thoracic vessels. Extracardiac thoracic vessels can be accurately evaluated using MRA in adults and older children, but image quality in small infants may be limited. Twenty-nine magnetic resonance angiographic scans were performed at a single institution on 28 infants aged <3 months (median 6 days, range 1 to 90 days) with complex CHD in whom imaging was inconclusive by echocardiography. A blinded observer at a different institution graded (from 0 to 3) the quality of the visualization of the main, branch, lobar, and second-generation pulmonary arteries; lobar pulmonary veins; aortopulmonary collaterals; vena cavae; thoracic aorta and its branches; patent ductus arteriosus; and visceral sidedness. The results of MRA were compared with those of x-ray angiography and surgical inspection, when available. The mean image quality grade was >2 for all structures except the second-generation pulmonary arterial branches, for which it was 2. The median total scan duration was 9 minutes (range 3 to 46). Findings were concordant with surgical inspection (n = 25) and cardiac catheterization (n = 8) in all subjects. There were no complications. In conclusion, MRA is excellent for the visualization of extracardiac thoracic vessels in young infants with CHD and can be used as an alternative to cardiac catheterization when echocardiography is inconclusive.
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PMID:Usefulness of magnetic resonance angiography in the evaluation of complex congenital heart disease in newborns and infants. 1769 35

The present study investigated the immunohistochemical distributions and mRNA expressions of myocardial hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1 alpha and its downstream factors, erythropoietin (Epo) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in cardiac deaths. Medico-legal autopsy cases (n=114, within 48-h postmortem) of cardiac deaths (n=58) and control cases (n=56) were examined. Immunohistochemical positivities of HIF-1 alpha, Epo and VEGF were patchily observed in cardiomyocytes in the acute ischemic lesions of myocardial infarction (n=37), showing a relationship to morphological cardiomyocyte damage: the staining was intense in the regions with early ischemic changes and weak in the necrotic regions. Immunopositivities were sporadically detected in cardiomyocytes in some cases of sudden cardiac death without infarction (SCD, n=13). In chronic congestive heart disease (CHD, n=8), weak positivities were diffusely observed in the cardiomyocytes. However, there were no such findings in cases of mechanical asphyxiation (n=16) or drowning (n=18). HIF-1 alpha, Epo and VEGF mRNA expressions, as measured by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), showed localized elevations related to acute myocardial infarction (AMI) lesions, whereas such findings were mild in recurrent myocardial infarction (RMI) and SCD cases. CHD showed significant elevations of these mRNAs irrespective of the sampling site. The mRNA expressions were significantly lower in cases of drowning. These findings suggest that focal immunopositivities and increased mRNAs of these factors are indicative of short and substantial duration of myocardial ischemia, respectively. The combined analyses may not only be useful for investigating the site, phase and severity of acute myocardial ischemia and the severity of chronic ischemic stress, but also contribute to differentiating cardiac deaths from asphyxiation and drowning or interpreting the possible contribution of cardiac disease in traumatic death.
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PMID:Forensic pathological investigation of myocardial hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha, erythropoietin and vascular endothelial growth factor in cardiac death. 1769 91

The role of flavonoids in CVD, especially in strokes, is unclear. Our aim was to study the role of flavonoids in CVD. We studied the association between the intakes of five subclasses (flavonols, flavones, flavanones, flavan-3-ols and anthocyanidins), a total of twenty-six flavonoids, on the risk of ischaemic stroke and CVD mortality. The study population consisted of 1950 eastern Finnish men aged 42-60 years free of prior CHD or stroke as part of the prospective population-based Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. During an average follow-up time of 15.2 years, 102 ischaemic strokes and 153 CVD deaths occurred. In the Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for age and examination years, BMI,systolic blood pressure, hypertension medication, serum HDL- and LDL-cholesterol, serum TAG, maximal oxygen uptake, smoking, family history of CVD, diabetes, alcohol intake, energy-adjusted intake of folate, vitamin E, total fat and saturated fat intake (percentage of energy), men in the highest quartile of flavonol and flavan-3-ol intakes had a relative risk of 0.55 (95% CI 0.31, 0.99) and 0.59 (95% CI 0.30, 1.14) for ischaemic stroke, respectively, as compared with the lowest quartile. After multivariate adjustment, the relative risk for CVD death in the highest quartile of flavanone and flavone intakes were 0.54 (95% CI 0.32, 0.92) and 0.65 (95% CI 0.40, 1.05), respectively. The present results suggest that high intakes of flavonoids may be associated with decreased risk of ischaemic stroke and possibly with reduced CVD mortality.
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PMID:Flavonoid intake and the risk of ischaemic stroke and CVD mortality in middle-aged Finnish men: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. 1839 14

The present investigation was aimed at assessing the effect of home-based training on cardiorespiratory responses in children surgically corrected for congenital heart impairment using dyspnea threshold (DT) as training intensity. A group of 23 children aged 15 +/- 1.4 years who had undergone surgical correction for congenital heart disease (CHD group) and 12 healthy children used as a control group performed an exercise protocol during which aerobic capacity, ventilatory threshold (VT), and DT were assessed. Afterwards, the CHD group was divided into two subgroups: trained and untrained subjects. Training sessions over a period of 2 months were performed at an intensity corresponding to DT by the CHD trained group. Dyspnea was scored according to a visual analog scale during the warm up, at each exercise stage, and during the recovery period. DT was located on the oxygen uptake/dyspnea curve when a sudden increase in the dyspnea score occured, while VT was defined according to the methodology previously employed by Beaver and colleagues. The results showed that children who had undergone surgery for CHD had reduced aerobic capacity. No significant difference was observed between VT and DT in children corrected for CHD. These two thresholds were highly related. Home-based training at DT did not strongly improve aerobic capacity nor did it influence the relationship between VT and DT. Further studies should be conducted to confirm these preliminary findings, particularly when aerobic capacity is improved by training.
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PMID:Effects of home-based training at dyspnea threshold in children surgically repaired for congenital heart disease. 1855 82

Adults with congenital heart diseases are an increasing patient population. Since the first successful palliative procedure in 1945 (Blalock and Tausing, JAMA 128: 189-194, 1945) and first corrective operation in 1955 (Lillehei et al., Ann Surg 142: 418, 1955) patients with Tetralogy of Fallot, which is the most common cyanotic CHD, have had excellent long term results and good quality of life. Over the long term, these patients are under risk of sudden death because of arrhythmias and congestive heart disease caused by tricuspid regurgitation, pulmonary regurgitation, ventricular septal defect, right ventricular outflow tract obstruction.
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PMID:Reoperations in adults after correction of tetralogy of Fallot. 1881 55

Wine polyphenols are considered to have beneficial effects on CHD and atherosclerosis. The consumption of red wine is high in Italy and France, approximately four times greater than that in the UK. This disparity in red wine consumption is thought to be the reason for the 'French paradox', where France was shown to have a coronary mortality rate close to that of China or Japan despite saturated fat intakes and cholesterol levels similar to the UK and USA. In the present review, we discuss the effects of wine and some of its polyphenol constituents on early pathological indicators of CHD such as plasma lipids, the endothelium and vasculature, platelets and serum antioxidant activity. The review also examines whether the polyphenols or the alcohol in wine is responsible for the effects on markers of heart disease. The present review concludes that red wine polyphenols have little effect on plasma lipid concentrations but wine consumption appears to reduce the susceptibility of LDL to oxidation and increase serum antioxidant capacity. However, these effects do depend on the amount of wine and period of supplementation. Authors who have examined specific polyphenols suggest that some phenolics appear to have endothelium-dependent vaso-relaxing abilities and some a positive effect on NO concentrations. Red wine phenolics also have an inhibitory effect on platelet aggregation, and individual phenolics also have a similar effect in vitro, although it should be noted that there are often discrepancies as large as ten-fold between the concentrations of polyphenolics tested in vitro and their measured levels in vivo. Evidence suggests that alcohol has a positive synergistic effect with wine polyphenols on some atherosclerotic risk factors. Thus evidence that wine drinking is beneficial for cardiac health continues to accumulate but more research is required to understand fully and exactly the functions of red wine polyphenols.
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PMID:Wine polyphenols and promotion of cardiac health. 1907 20

Extracardiac or genetic abnormalities (EGA) represent a factor in the morbidity of patients with congenital heart disease. We evaluated the way neonates with CHD are screened at our institution and determined the yield for the screening tests. We reviewed the charts of 223 neonates with structural CHD. Subjects were categorized into 6 groups: univentricular, left-sided obstructive lesions, right-sided obstructive lesions, septal defects, conotruncal defects (CTD), and other. We reviewed which patients underwent cranial ultrasonogram (CUS), abdominal ultrasonogram (AUS), and/or genetic studies (GS) as well as their results. There was a high prevalence of EGA in each group by CUS (32% to 42%), AUS (32% to 69%), and GS (10% to 60%). There was considerable variability in the proportion within each group that underwent screening tests, and the consistency of screening often was not congruent with the likelihood of abnormal results. Approximately 50% of our patients had >/=1 EGA identified, resulting in a cost-yield ratio of $4,508/patient with EGA. Screening for EGA at our institution is not uniform and is often at odds with the prevalence of such patients. Given the high prevalence of EGA, we advocate for a universal screening program for neonates with CHD using cranial/abdominal ultrasonography and genetic testing.
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PMID:Universal screening for extracardiac abnormalities in neonates with congenital heart disease. 1908 49

Certain dietary antioxidants such as vitamin E and vitamin C are important for maintaining optimum health. There is now much interest in polyphenolic products of the plant phenylpropanoid pathway as they have considerable antioxidant activity in vitro and are ubiquitous in our diet. Rich sources include tea, wine, fruits and vegetables although levels are affected by species, light, degree of ripeness, processing and storage. This confounds the formulation of databases for the estimation of dietary intakes. Most attention to date has focused on the flavonoids, a generic term which includes chalcones, flavones, flavanones, flavanols and anthocyanins. There is little convincing epidemiological evidence that intakes of polyphenols are inversely related to the incidence of cancer whereas a number of studies suggest that high intakes of flavonoids may be protective against CHD. In contrast, numerous cell culture and animal models indicate potent anticarcinogenic activity by certain polyphenols mediated through a range of mechanisms including antioxidant activity, enzyme modulation, gene expression, apoptosis, upregulation of gap junction communication and P-glycoprotein activation. Possible protective effects against heart disease may be due to the ability of some polyphenols to prevent the oxidation of LDL to an atherogenic form although anti-platelet aggregation activity and vasodilatory properties are also reported. However, some polyphenols are toxic in mammalian cells. Thus, until more is known about their bioavailability, metabolism and intracellular location, increasing intakes of polyphenols by supplements or food fortification may be unwise.
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PMID:Plant polyphenols in cancer and heart disease: implications as nutritional antioxidants. 1908 34


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