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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective review of 56 patients operated upon for tumours of Oddi was performed in order to determine optimal diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Common presenting symptoms were jaundice (86%) and anemia (21%). Mean size of the tumour was 2.3 cm. Five tumours were benign and 51 were malignant. According to the classification of Martin, five were grade I: 10 grade II; 18 grade III; and 18 grade IV. Forty-seven patients underwent resection of the tumour: three local excisions for small benign tumors, six ampullectomies (followed in three by a Whipples' procedure for recurrence) and 41 Whipples' procedures. The hospital mortality was 5.3%, minor complications appeared in 21%. The overall five years survival was 41%. It was 75% in grade I, 50% in grade II, 40% in grade III and 10% in grade IV. The patients who received ampullectomies were alive with a follow-up of one, two and three years. All patients operated upon for a benign tumour were alive except one who died of cardiac failure. Ultrasonography and duodenoscopy are the most useful tests for the diagnosis of tumours of Oddi. Prognosis depends on the degree of infiltration of the duodenal wall and the presence of positive lymph nodes. Whipples' procedure is best but ampullectomy can be used in elderly or poor risk patients. Malignant tumours of the ampullary region are infrequent and reported to constitute between 0.02 and five percent of all cancers of the digestive tract. With wider application of endoscopic techniques, there has been an increasing interest in this group of tumours during recent years. In the literature tumours of Oddi are usually reported in the group of periampullary tumours, including tumours of the ampulla itself, duodenal wall surrounding the ampulla, the distal part of the common bile duct and head of the pancreas. We have wanted to distinguish specifically the tumours of the ampulla of Vater and have adopted the term tumour of Oddi introduced by Marchal and Hureau.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tumours of Oddi: diagnosis and surgical treatment. 135 39

Nonimmune hydrops fetalis has been described in a large number of pathological conditions, but brain aspect has been poorly explored. We report the neuropathological findings in a series of 38 fetuses and neonates with anasarca of various origin. Fourteen fetal cerebral ultrasonograms were available; 8 presented some abnormalities. On brain examination, 23 cases showed hypoxic-ischemic lesions. The white matter was the main site of damage that consisted in classical leucomalacia or other features such as: astrocytic glial reaction, microcalcifications and microthromboses either as isolated finding or in association. Anoxic neuronal damage was much less frequent. Anemia, hypoprotidemia and cardiac failure with hypotension, which often occur in hydrops fetalis, may account for brain perfusion failure and hypoxic-ischemic changes.
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PMID:Intrauterine brain damage in nonimmune hydrops fetalis. 139 Dec 52

A 46 year old woman presented with fever and normochromic anaemia followed rapidly by severe myocardial failure, unresponsive to maximum inotropic support and broad spectrum antibiotics. There were no classical clinical stigmata of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) but a possible immunological cause was looked for, and on the basis of her immuno-serology a diagnosis of SLE-like disease was made. She responded rapidly to high dose steroids. The importance of considering the possibility of SLE or 'lupus overlap' in an acutely ill 'undiagnosed' patient is emphasized. The relevance of instigating appropriate immuno-serological tests in the course of such an illness is discussed.
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PMID:Sub-clinical systemic lupus erythematosus presenting with acute myocarditis. 143 35

Thirty-one patients with chronic severe anemia of more than 3 months' duration (hemoglobin less than 7 gm/dl) and no underlying heart disease were studied by means of M-mode, two-dimensional, and Doppler echocardiography; an equal number of normal control subjects was also studied. There are conflicting reports regarding the influence of chronic severe anemia on systolic myocardial function, but diastolic function has not been systematically assessed. It is also uncertain whether anemia alone can cause heart failure in a structurally normal heart. We therefore performed a detailed study of echocardiographic indexes of systolic and diastolic left ventricular function in these patients. We found that patients with anemia have significantly faster heart rates and lower diastolic and mean blood pressures than normal subjects. They also have a significantly elevated cardiac output and stroke volume and larger left ventricles. Left ventricular contractility, assessed by the end-systolic stress-dimension relationship, was enhanced. There was no systematic evidence of diastolic dysfunction by Doppler assessment of mitral inflow. There was also no clinical evidence of congestive heart failure. We conclude that chronic severe anemia leads to a hyperdynamic state with systolic hyperfunction and no impairment of diastolic function. Anemia does not lead to congestive heart failure in the absence of underlying heart disease.
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PMID:Noninvasive assessment of systolic and diastolic left ventricular function in patients with chronic severe anemia: a combined M-mode, two-dimensional, and Doppler echocardiographic study. 146 8

A 60-year-old man was admitted with general fatigue and jaundice of one year's duration in February, 1981. The hemoglobin (Hb) was 11.4 g/dl and reticulocytes were 1.7%. A diagnosis of chronic cold agglutinin disease (CCAD) was made from the presence of cold agglutinin (CA) 1:2,048, increased serum IgM 267 mg/dl and indirect bilirubin 1.4 mg/dl. His Hb was approximately 11 g/dl in summer and 9 g/dl in winter for the subsequent ten years without therapy. In July, 1990, he was readmitted because of exacerbation of anemia and hepatosplenomegaly. The Hb was 4.6 g/dl, indirect bilirubin 3. 1 mg/dl, CA titer 1:232,144 and reticulocytes were 20%. Serum IgM was 1,065 mg/dl, and immunoelectrophoresis showed IgM-kappa M-protein. Peripheral blood lymphoid cells expressed surface membrane immunoglobulin (SmIg) M and kappa. The bone marrow showed an increased number of lymphoid cells which also expressed SmIg M and kappa. These findings were compatible with those of the features of primary macroglobulinemia (PMG). The M-2 protocol resulted in decrease in serum IgM and CA, but he died of heart failure in February, 1991. The relationship between CCAD and PMG in relation to the pathogenesis was discussed.
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PMID:[Chronic cold agglutinin disease terminating in primary macroglobulinemia after a 10 year history]. 146 90

The cardiorespiratory responses to maximal treadmill exercise were compared in matched groups of patients with chronic renal anaemia or treated chronic heart failure, and in normal controls. Exercise capacity was similarly reduced in both patient groups compared to normal controls, the raised respiratory exchange ratio at peak exercise implying anaerobic metabolism due to limited oxygen delivery in heart failure and limited oxygen carrying capacity in anaemia. Minute ventilation (VE) was related linearly to minute CO2 production (VCO2) in all subjects (each r > 0.92) from all three groups. The slope of the VE/VCO2 relationship was normal in anaemia but steeper in heart failure, reflecting ventilation/perfusion mismatching in chronic heart failure.
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PMID:The ventilatory cost of exercise compared in chronic heart failure and chronic renal anaemia. 148 29

Incidence and type of postoperative complications were prospectively analyzed in 2280 patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery. 6.6% had one or more pulmonary complications requiring therapeutic intervention (2.3% pneumonia, 1.6% drained pleural effusions, 1.2% atelectases). Based on univariate and logistic regression analyses, the following parameters constitute high-risk patients with regard to pulmonary complications: Elective surgery (4.3%, 61/1428): anemia (7.2% pulmonary complications), pathological blood gas analysis (9.8%), preoperative hospitalization greater than 1 week (6.3%), blood loss under operations greater than 1000 ml (10.5%), length of the operation greater than 3 h (9.7%); emergency surgery (10.4%, 89/852): upper gastrointestinal operation (16.2%), age greater than 75 (19.9%), ASA IV/V (28%), anemia (19.6%), chronic bronchitis (19%), pathological blood gas analysis (26.6%), diabetes (16.5%), heart failure (18.2%), blood loss under operation greater than 1000 ml (24.3%), length of the operation greater than 2 h (15.4%). These results allow to distinguish between different levels of pulmonary risk.
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PMID:[Pulmonary complications following surgical abdominal interventions. Identification of various risk groups]. 150 62

Physicians analyzed December 1982-November 1989 data on 48 2-60 month old children with empyema thoracis at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital in southeastern Nigeria to determine the incidence and etiology of empyema thoracis in this region. The incidence rate stood at 2/1000 pediatric admissions. 3 children died (6.3%), all of heart failure. 47 children suffered from fever, cough, and breathlessness, the symptoms for pneumonia. Even though bronchopneumonia is a common complication of measles which occurs frequently in Calabar, only 3 children (6.25%) also had measles. The most frequent complication of this accumulation of pus in the thoracic cavity was congestive heart failure (16 cases). 47 patients suffered from anemia (hemoglobin levels 11 gm/dl). Hemoglobin levels of 54% of all patients decreased over time to 8 gm/dl. In fact, 2 children had hemoglobin levels of 4.4 gm/dl and they experienced cardiac failure. Laboratory personnel were only able to examine pleural aspirates from 37 patients. They did not detect any organisms in 27% of these aspirates. This may have been due to parent's widespread practice of giving medication to all the children before coming to the hospital. 45.9% of the aspirates only grew Staphylococcus aureus while another 8.1% grew it and other pathogens. About 90% of the pathogens were resistant to ampicillin and penicillin and almost 90% were sensitive to cloxacillin, gentamicin, and erythromycin. Cloxacillin was very expensive and parenteral erythromycin was unavailable. Nevertheless the pediatricians used parenteral gentamicin and cloxacillin. The parents were responsible for buying the antibiotics which tended to be costly. All the patients required emergency closed tube thoracostomy drainage within 24 hours of admission. 83.3% remained in the hospital for 2 weeks and 33.3% for 1 month. Despite the rarity of empyema, long hospitalization and expensive drugs make it an important disease in Calabar.
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PMID:Clinical and bacteriological study on childhood empyema in south eastern Nigeria. 150 92

Leukaemia and its associated therapy result in pathophysiological peculiarities relevant to anaesthesia. Leukaemic patients suffer from anaemia, coagulation disorders, and the consequences of immunosuppression. In addition, some patients show infiltrations of the oropharynx, potentially resulting in difficult intubation and/or pharyngeal haemorrhage. Mediastinal masses can induce complete airway obstruction during general anaesthesia. Patients with a white blood cell count (WBC) greater than 100,000/mm3 (hyperleukocytosis) can suffer from the leukostasis syndrome with acute respiratory failure as well as cerebral vascular occlusions and bleeding due to increased blood viscosity and disturbed microvascular perfusion. Since this syndrome may be triggered by surgery, the WBC should be reduced prior to general anaesthesia in patients with hyperleukocytosis. To avoid development of the leukostasis syndrome, transfusion of packed red cells should be restricted in these patients. Hyperleukocytosis can simulate in-vitro hypoxaemia due to the excessive oxygen consumption of the mass of leukaemic blood cells during routine blood gas analysis. Therapy of leukaemia can lead to the tumor-lysis syndrome with hyperuricaemia, hyperphosphataemia, hyperkalaemia, hypocalcaemia, and hypoglycaemia, and may induce acute renal failure. Since drug interactions have only been evaluated for the combination of two or three drugs, interactions of cytotoxic agents with anaesthetics can hardly be predicted because of the large number of drugs simultaneously administered to leukaemic patients. The heart and lungs are target organs for the acute or chronic side effects of cytotoxic drugs, resulting in non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema (e.g., cytosine-arabinoside), lung fibrosis (e.g., bleomycin), or arrhythmias and cardiac failure (e.g., adriamycin). The severity of these side effects depends on pre-existing organ disease and only in part on drug dosage. Only HLA- and CMV-compatible blood components should be administered to leukaemic patients. Hyperleukocytosis and the first days of cytotoxic treatment represent relative contraindications to general anaesthesia.
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PMID:[Pathophysiologic and anesthesiologic characteristics of patients with leukemia]. 152 54

The clinical features of congestive heart failure in the elderly were investigated in 104 patients (57 males, 47 females, mean age of 79.2). Patients were divided into two subgroups, the readmission group, 33 patients who were readmitted within 6 months after discharge, and the non-readmission group. Chief complaints were dyspnea, edema, chest pain, loss of appetite, chest compression, and palpitation. Heart failure was caused by infection, myocardial ischemia, arrhythmia, inappropriate drug usage including poor drug compliance, the use of beta-blockers, excessive intake of sodium, and anemia. Careful use of drug was essential especially in the readmission group. Major underlying heart disease were ischemic heart disease (39.4%), valvular disease (26.9%), hypertensive heart disease (9.6%), with cardiomyopathy, congenital heart disease seen in the minority. There was no statistically significant difference in underlying heart diseases between the two groups. Supraventricular arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillations, paroxysmal atrial fibrillations, paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias, and premature atrial contractions were noted in 85.3% of the cases. Drugs for treatment were diuretics, digitalis, isosorbide dinitrate, calcium antagonists. ACE inhibitors and alpha-blockers were also used, showing that vasodilators were more extensively used than before. The major complications were hypertension (39.4%), renal dysfunction (27.9%), cerebrovascular disease (26.9%), diabetes mellitus (16.5%), arteriosclerosis obliterans (7.7%). Renal dysfunction, arteriosclerosis obliterans was seen significantly more frequently in the readmission group. The prognosis at one year after admission was significantly worse in the readmission group. In summary, the major underlying diseases were ischemic heart disease, valvular disease, and hypertensive heart disease. Ischemic heart disease was seen more frequently than in previous investigations at our hospital.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Congestive heart failure in elderly readmitted patients]. 152 7


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