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

Twenty-four patients presenting an acute stroke with watershed cerebral infarct on CT scan or MRI were included in this retrospective study. Age was 63 +/- 14 years (mean +/- SD), and sex ratio was 2 men for 1 woman. Main clinical features were: in anterior location, lower limb weakness and frontal syndrome with transcortical motor aphasia in left lesions or spatial dyscalculia in right ones; in posterior location, brachiofacial weakness with constant quadranopsia and hypoesthesia, and Gerstmann syndrome in left lesion. There was no distinctive feature for subcortical and multiple infarcts. In bilateral infarcts, there were one pseudobulbar syndrome, and 2 pseudo brainstem syndromes with neuropsychological signs. Aetiologies were severe carotid artery disease in 14 cases, severe cardiopathy in 6, isolated cerebral angiitis in 1, essential thrombocythemia in 1, protein C deficiency with sickle cell disease in 1, and cholesterol emboli in 1 anatomical case. CBF performed in carotid artery occlusions or tight stenoses showed evidence of haemodynamic changes. Microembolic process can be proposed in the case with cholesterol emboli. Preventive treatment is discussed.
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PMID:Watershed cerebral infarcts: retrospective study of 24 cases. 135

Monozygotic twins with Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome who developed infantile spasms were presented. They were the result of the first full-term pregnancy of non-consanguineous parents. They had following abnormalities: marked growth and developmental retardation, congenital heart disease, light brown hair which is rare in Japanese, small dolichocephaly, hypertelorism, anteverted nostrils, micrognathia, hypospadias and shawl scrotum. The cranial MRI showed the delayed myelination of occipital lobe. As far as we could review published reports, we were unable to find other report on monozygotic twins having the Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome.
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PMID:[Infantile spasms in monozygotic twins with Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome type I]. 138 33

An unusual cause of airway obstruction was demonstrated by MRI in two infants with congenital heart disease. The two infants experienced airway obstruction caused by a right aortic arch with right-sided patent ductus arteriosus. The diagnosis was established by MRI prior to surgery; angiography did not demonstrate the critical relationship between the large ductus and the airway. Axial, sagittal, and coronal MRI displayed the right arch, dilated ductus, and the compression of the proximal right bronchus and distal trachea by the ductus. Surgical findings confirmed the MR diagnosis. Thus, MRI can be used to localize the site of airway obstruction and to demonstrate unusual types of vascular anomalies.
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PMID:Airway obstruction by right aortic arch with right-sided patent ductus arteriosus: demonstration by MRI. 143 Apr 36

Accurate anatomic diagnosis presents a dilemma in patients with residual shunt after corrective surgery for congenital heart disease. We describe a patient who, after atrial septal defect repair, developed dyspnea and central cyanosis despite normal pulmonary arterial pressures and right heart chamber size. A role for early MRI is suggested.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging--the evaluation of choice in residual shunt after congenital heart disease surgery? 198 68

MRI has assumed an important role in the noninvasive evaluation of patients with congenital cardiac lesions. In this article, the authors examine basic technical considerations, an approach to analysis of MR images in congenital heart disease patients, and review major applications of MRI as they apply to patients with congenital heart disease.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of congenital heart disease. 218 58

Until now little attention has been paid to the potential of MR imaging in congenital heart disease of the newborn. ECG-gated MRI was therefore performed at 0.5 tesla in 23 newborns (mean age 7.5 days) with suspected congenital heart disease. Two newborns were controlled after surgery (switch, Blalock-Taussig procedure). All had undergone prior evaluation by two-dimensional Doppler echocardiography (2-D DE). MR imaging was of a satisfying quality in all but one newborn. The aim of this study was to assess complementary information provided by MRI in comparison to 2-D DE. Pre-operatively MRI missed some abnormalities shown by 2-D DE: one coartaction, one ductus arteriosus and one pulmonary atresia. MRI demonstrated lesions that echocardiography had either failed to visualize or found inconclusive, including double aortic arch (one patient), muscular ventricular septum defect (two patients) and severe ductus arteriosus (one patient). In one of the two patients with a ventricular septum defect, angiography was avoided and in the other patient it merely confirmed the MRI results. Post-operatively, MRI demonstrated information complementary to that obtained from to 2-D DE: (1) clearly visualizing the reinsertion of the coronary arteries in the 'switched' transposition of the great vessels, (2) appreciating the diameter and patency of the palliative shunt in the Blalock-Taussig procedure.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in congenital heart disease of newborns: preliminary results in 23 patients. 233 93

Surface and other specialty coil devices and gating techniques are used in conjunction with MRI procedures to enhance image quality. Surface coils improve image quality by virtue of the improved signal-to-noise ratio, which results in better anatomic detail and tissue contrast. These coils may be advantageous for many kinds of imaging procedures, particularly for small structures that require greater spatial resolution. Although safety is not considered an issue, certain precautions must be taken to avoid skin burns. Gating techniques have been used to eliminate movement artifacts and associated image blurring. Cardiac-gated imaging has enabled the acquisition of high resolution diagnostic quality cardiac images with conventional MRI. Studies of gated cardiac imaging have demonstrated the technical capacity of MR scanning for evaluating ischemic heart disease, cardiomyopathy, pericardial diseases, intracardiac and paracardiac masses, thoracic-aortic diseases, and congenital heart disease. Cardiac imaging also has been found valuable in reducing motion artifacts in MRI of the chest, brain, spine, and liver. Gated imaging studies demonstrated that MRI respiratory gating improves thoracic and abdominal imaging; however, inherent time delays limit its usefulness. No patient-related risks appear to be involved when gating procedures are used appropriately. The use of gating techniques may add substantial time to the imaging procedure. Surface coil and gated MRI techniques have been found to be better than the conventional MRI studies when they improve the quality of the exam and its diagnostic capabilities.
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PMID:Surface/specialty coil devices and gating techniques in magnetic resonance imaging. 236 Oct 64

A case of carcinoid cardiopathy (C.C.) of the right heart, related to liver metastases secondary to a bronchial tumor, is reported. Non-invasive investigative methods have enabled an easy diagnosis of C.C.: liver metastases by scan and abdominal sonogram, restrictive myocardiopathy with typical tricuspid lesions by echocardiography and MRI, magnitude of the tricuspid regurgitation by cardiac Doppler. These extremely performing methods must allow an early diagnosis at a stage when the patient may be still operable, since C.C. is the most frequent cause of death in patients with carcinoid tumors.
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PMID:[Carcinoid cardiopathy: value of ultrasonography and MRI. Apropos of a case related to bronchial tumor. Review of the literature]. 265 Jun 11

In a female patient suffering from renal insufficiency in whom angiography could not be performed, it was possible to confirm the diagnosis of a ductus arteriosus (Botallo's duct) by magnetic resonance imaging. The present case report shows that it is possible to visualise this congenital heart disease by MRI. This can be of importance especially if angiography cannot be performed (as in this case) because of renal insufficiency or because of contrast medium allergy.
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PMID:[Magnetic resonance tomography imaging of Botallo's duct--a case report]. 270 86

MRI has shown promise for the evaluation of various congenital heart lesions. The current study was designed to assess the sensitivity and specificity of the technique for the evaluation of all major anatomic elements of the heart affected in simple and complex congenital heart disease. MR images of 51 patients (31 males and 20 females, ages 3 to 69 years) with a total of 110 congenital heart lesions were reviewed by a panel of two cardiac radiologists and one pediatric cardiologist, who assessed the cardiac pathoanatomy without knowledge of clinical details and assigned a confidence level to each diagnosis. The true diagnosis was established independently by the findings of angiocardiography and catheterization as well as by surgery, where applicable. ROC curves were generated from the responses, and the sensitivity at a specificity level of 90% was determined. MRI was shown to have a high sensitivity in evaluating great vessel relationships (100%), thoracic aorta abnormalities (94%), ASDs (91%) and VSDs (100%), visceroatrial situs (100%), and loop (100%). Three of five anomalies of the pulmonary and systemic veins were diagnosed by MRI. Right ventricular outflow obstructions (95%) were detected with a much higher sensitivity than lesions of the other valves (aortic valve 52%, mitral valve 62%, tricuspid valve 76%). Spin-echo MRI is a sensitive and specific method for the noninvasive assessment of congenital heart disease, with limitations in the evaluation of some valvular anomalies.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of congenital heart disease: sensitivity and specificity using receiver operating characteristic curve analysis. 274 81


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