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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
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This article reviews cardiac manifestations of AIDS in terms of etiology, pathogenesis, pathoanatomic lesions and heart function. Hypothetically the prevalence of myocarditis and disperse fibrosis of the myocardium are correlated to increasing rates of dilated cardiomyopathy and cardiac insufficiency. Echocardiography has proved to be of value in detecting early abnormalities and should be recommended on broad indications, though aggressive therapy of cardiac abnormalities is of importance to ensure quality of life and surveillance for the patients.
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PMID:[AIDS and heart disease]. 800 84

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) permits noninvasive multiplanar imaging with a large field of view, better soft tissue differentiation than is possible with CT, and assessment of both vascular lumen and wall without administration of contrast media or exposure to x-rays. Patients with renal or cardiac failure or allergy to radiographic contrast agents can be imaged safely. In the critical care setting, MRI is particularly useful in evaluating the major arteries and veins of the trunk, detecting and differentiating masses within skeletal muscle, detecting and characterizing subacute and chronic stroke or intracranial trauma, evaluating the spinal cord, and evaluating suspected CNS infection and CNS complications of AIDS. Limitations of MRI relate to bore size, examination time, and, above all, constraints of a high magnetic field environment.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in the critical care setting. 801 48

The authors report two cases of acute myocarditis due to Staphylococcus aureus in patients with AIDS. There was no history of opportunist infections in either case but the CD4 lymphocyte levels were very low. The myocarditis caused acute cardiac failure and death. Histological examination showed microabscesses filled with Gram positive cocci throughout the myocardium. Bacteriological studies identified the Staphylococcus aureus. Staphylococcus aureus myocarditis without endocardial or pericardial involvement is very rare. It is the result of septic emboli in the cardiac microcirculation. Bacterial myocarditis has rarely been diagnosed in HIV positive patients. Both our cases featured severe cell-mediated immunodeficiency without associated neutropaenia. The decreased bactericidal activity of the neutrophil polynuclears and/or a deficit in the immunity mediated by the B-cell lymphocytes in AIDS could explain the lethal septic complications observed in our two cases.
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PMID:[Acute Staphylococcus aureus myocarditis in AIDS. 2 cases]. 802 79

We studied 124 homosexual men aged 36.7 +/- 7.6 years (range 23-57) using Doppler echocardiography. One hundred and one patients (Group A) had had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome for 1.6 +/- 1.0 years and 23 patients (Group B) had had HIV infection without opportunistic infections for 3.2 +/- 2.3 years. Doppler echocardiography was normal in 31% of Group A patients and in 61% of Group B. Pericardial effusion was found in 44 Group A patients (44%) and two Group B patients (9%). In Group A, left ventricular dilatation and/or dysfunction were found in 20 patients (20%), aortic root dilatation and regurgitation in eight patients (8%) and an intracardiac echogenic mass in seven patients (7%); in Group B one patient (4%) had an intracardiac mass. Forty-four (44%) Group A patients had cardiac presentations, and of these 22 had cardiomegaly with clinical signs of heart failure; 10 patients had tachyarrhythmias compared to only two in Group B. Although the CD4 lymphocyte count (%) was significantly lower in Group A than in Group B (5.4 +/- 6.1 vs 13.3 +/- 7.3, P < 0.001), the presence of pericardial effusion, left ventricular dysfunction, right-sided cardiac enlargement or the duration of HIV infection, did not relate to the CD4 level in either group. Although often not diagnosed clinically, cardiac involvement in patients with AIDS is a clinical reality, with pericardial effusion, cardiomyopathy and left ventricular dysfunction appearing to have a high prevalence in male homosexual patients with AIDS. These clinical and echocardiographic findings are associated with clinically apparent intercurrent opportunistic infections, rather than the HIV virus per se, or the severity of infection as reflected by the CD4 count.
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PMID:Emerging patterns of heart disease in HIV infected homosexual subjects with and without opportunistic infections; a prospective colour flow Doppler echocardiographic study. 817 86

Myocardial involvement in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome is well established on clinical data, echocardiographic studies, macropathological findings and histological studies on autopsy or endomyocardial biopsy specimens. The condition may present with asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction with a low ejection fraction, acute or subacute myocarditis or cardiac failure and dilated cardiomyopathy. A few cases of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with HIV infection have also been reported.
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PMID:[Cardiomyopathies during acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 821 86

Endocarditis is not usually considered a complication of AIDS. Because salmonellal bacteremia is common in HIV-infected patients and because salmonellae have a propensity to adhere to endothelial cells, these patients are at risk of endocarditis and endarteritis. We report two cases of endocarditis due to Salmonella enteritidis and review three previously reported cases. All five patients had underlying heart valve disease and developed fever, breakthrough or relapsing bacteremia, heart murmurs, and cardiac failure; four of five patients were older than 45 years. One patient died, but the other four were successfully treated with beta-lactam agents alone or in combination with aminoglycosides or with ofloxacin (valve replacement was not required). As AIDS patients get older, the number of cases of endocarditis or endarteritis due to Salmonella species may increase, particularly in geographic areas where Salmonella species are prevalent.
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PMID:Infectious endocarditis due to non-typhi Salmonella in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus: report of two cases and review. 872 47

Due to our dissatisfaction with the mutilation caused by the skin-lined open thoracostomy, we have developed a dedicated prosthesis that is expected to avoid or to substitute for the classic operation. The prosthesis is a corrugated silicone tube with an oval flange at one end (to fix it internally) and a mobile ring on the other (to fix it externally). It is inserted at the bottom of the empyematic cavity after 3 cm of a rib is removed. We have used it in 20 patients whose empyema was secondary to pneumonia (12) or complications of pneumonectomy (4), lobectomy (2), decortication (1), or pleuroscopy (1). Six of those patients have already been cured and their prosthesis removed after 54 to 305 days. In 1 with a persistent postpneumonectomy bronchopleural fistula the device was removed after 299 days and the patient was submitted to a limited thoracoplasty. Six other patients still have unresolved cavities and have been using the prosthesis for 63 to 302 days. Seven patients died of their underlying disease (bilateral pneumonia, 2; acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, 2; mesothelioma, 1; heart failure and pulmonary embolism, 1; unknown, 1) after using the prosthesis for 11 to 160 days. In those patients from whom the prosthesis already has been removed, the scar looks like those commonly seen after removal of an ordinary chest tube. Based on these early favorable results we feel most encouraged to persist in this research. Nevertheless, we are aware that a larger number of patients and a longer follow-up will be necessary before we may make definitive recommendations.
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PMID:A dedicated prosthesis for open thoracostomy. 914 62

A 36-old-woman was admitted with an infectious syndrome, respiratory insufficiency and vasculitis. There was a history of chronic intravenous drug abuse, sexual promiscuity and rheumatic heart disease. She had HIV positive tests. The vasculitis and heart failure worsened and the patient died of stroke. At autopsy it was found histologic evidence of AIDS, rheumatic heart disease with Aschoff nodes, infective endocarditis with cerebral abscesses and thalamic infarction.
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PMID:[Rheumatic heart disease and infective endocarditis in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 918 24

Cardiac-related death of HIV-positive patients is not rare. The etiology of AIDS-associated dilated cardiomyopathies often remains unknown, even at autopsy. We report an observation associated to a severe deficit in selenium. The patient had been diagnosed as HIV-positive 2 years before. He presented Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia then Cryptococcus meningitis. Two months later he was hospitalized for pancreatitis and cachexia. He presented global heart failure that lead to death. No microorganism was found in myocardium at autopsy but plasma selenium was dramatically decreased (24 micrograms/L). The deficit in selenium has been associated to a dilated cardiomyopathy in non-AIDS patients. HIV-positive patients have an early decrease in plasma selenium, this concentration is dramatically decreased in malnourished patients. Selenium deficit might be the cause of some of the AIDS-related dilated cardiomyopathies and selenium supplementation might be useful in these patients.
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PMID:[Dilated cardiomyopathy and selenium deficiency in AIDS. Apropos of a case]. 936 39

A great variety of cardiac disorders have been reported in HIV-infected patients: pericarditis, myocarditis, cardiomyopathies, endocarditis, cardiac involvement through malignancies, pulmonary hypertension, arrhythmias and thromboembolic disease. In general, these disorders are asymptomatic and often diagnosed in echocardiographic studies or autopsies. Pericardial involvement is the most common disorder. Pericardial effusions are asymptomatic and non-specific in a great proportion, but in some instances opportunistic infections or malignancies may lead to cardiac tamponade and are associated with an increased risk of mortality. The etiopathogenesis of myocarditis and cardiomyopathies is uncertain. There is controversy about the role of HIV as the primary etiologic agent. Opportunistic infections, cardiotoxic substances, nutritional deficiencies and autoimmune reactions have also been implicated as etiologic agents of myocardial damage. Short-term prognosis worsens as clinical manifestations of heart failure appear. Valvular involvement usually presents as marantic or infectious endocarditis, the latter most frequently in IVDU. This article reviews the main cardiovascular manifestations in AIDS.
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PMID:[Heart pathology of extracardiac origin (I). Cardiac involvement in AIDS]. 941 63


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