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

A nearly 72-old black male with sickle cell anemia suffered from heart failure, hypertension, chronic impaired kidney function with hyperuricemia and gout. Anoxemia due to refractory anemia of the sideroachrestic type most probably precipitated the sudden heart failure.
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PMID:Long survival in sickle cell anemia. 113 54

One hundred and sixty four (164) patients were evaluated. Sixty (60) with Sickle cell disease (SSHg.) and ninety seven (97) with Trait (ASHg.); seventeen (17) were normal control group. The study confirmed that the incidence of cardiomyopathy in Trait (ASHg.) is greater than reported by other clinical investigations. Cardiac arrhythmia, atrial fibrillation, premature ventricular contractions, bundle branch blocks, and T and ST modifications with sub epicardial isquemia were most significant electrocardiographics changes. The possibility of myocardial infarction in SS patients with low or normal hemoglobin is significant. M-Mode and 2-D echo, demonstrated similar end diastolic volumes in AS and SS patients in which cardiomyopathy were diagnosticated. Patients with cardiac failure, treated with cardiotonics, diuretics and ACE were compensated most frequently. To prevent hemosiderosis, antioxydant (alfatocoferol and Ubiquinones) were used with satisfactory response.
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PMID:[Echocardiographic assessment of patients with sickle cell anemia]. 192 6

To determine whether left ventricular diastolic abnormalities are an early feature of sickle cell anemia, indexes of diastolic filling were obtained with pulsed Doppler echocardiography in 30 consecutive patients with this disease (mean age 29 years; range 19 to 39) who had not experienced symptoms of heart failure and had normal left ventricular systolic function. Data were compared with those in 30 normal control subjects of similar ages. Seventeen (57%) of the 30 patients with sickle cell anemia had evidence of abnormal left ventricular diastolic filling. Six of these 17 patients had a Doppler pattern consistent with "restrictive" filling, characterized by reduced early diastolic deceleration time (less than 110 ms) or an increased rate of decline of early flow velocity (EF slope greater than 7.4 m/s2), or both, as well as decreased late diastolic velocity-time integral (2.6 +/- 0.7 vs. 3.4 +/- 0.8 cm in normal subjects; p less than 0.05). Another 11 patients showed a Doppler waveform consistent with impaired relaxation, characterized by prolonged deceleration time (greater than 166 ms) or reduced EF slope (less than 3.8 m/s2), as well as increased late diastolic velocity-time integral (4.0 +/- 0.5 vs. 3.4 +/- 0.8 cm in normal subjects; p = 0.03). This Doppler echocardiographic analysis demonstrates that left ventricular diastolic filling patterns are altered in patients with sickle cell anemia and that these diastolic abnormalities may be present in the absence of symptoms of heart failure. These abnormal patterns suggest an intrinsic myocardial abnormality in patients with sickle anemia and may prove to be early markers of cardiac disease.
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PMID:Left ventricular diastolic filling abnormalities identified by Doppler echocardiography in asymptomatic patients with sickle cell anemia. 203 79

The case of a sixty-year-old Nigerian with sickle cell anaemia is presented. His steady state haematocrit is 0.26 L/L. Haemoglobin F. and HbA2 measured 7.00% and 2.9% respectively. Bone pain crisis occurred very infrequently (one or less per year) but jaundice is always present. A right nephrectomy for haematuria was carried out in Dublin, Ireland, in 1954 when he had his first ever blood transfusion. He was hospitalised for the first time in Nigeria on 21/7/83 in anaemic cardiac failure with haematocrit of 0.14 L/L during which he had the second blood transfusion. Chronic leg ulcer, avascular necrosis of the femoral head and cholelithiasis were absent. He had led a fairly active life and recently retired (1986) as a bursar from a secondary school.
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PMID:Sickle cell anaemia in a 60 year old Nigerian. 248 86

Iron chelation therapy must be associated with the regular blood transfusions required for thalassaemia and other chronic anemias. We report here a study concerning 4 groups of patients, aged 6 to 28, regularly transfused at Necker Enfants-Malades hospital: a) 20 with thalassaemia major; b) 6 with thalassaemia intermedia; c) 2 with sickle cell disease and d) 2 with Blackfan-Diamond syndrome. The transfusion regimen consisting of monthly or quarterly transfusions varied as a function of the groups. Desferal was used in all patients. The dosage and the route of administration (IV, IM, SC) were adapted to the amount of iron transfused and to the nature of the disease. The serum ferritin level was considered as the indicator of the iron overload. Comparisons were established between the quantities of iron transfused, ferritin levels, and parameters such as dosage, route of administration and compliance to Desferal. During the period of study 3 patients died from cardiac failure due to transfusional hemosiderosis. Endocrine complications (diabetes 2 cases, hypocalcemia 3 cases, hypothyroidism 1 case and delayed puberty 7 cases) were observed. This high incidence of complications induced by post-transfusional iron overload has recently prompted us to improve the quality of chelation therapy through the use of the services of a specialized center where patients as well as their families can be trained more adequately in home care and self-treatment.
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PMID:[Treatment of post-transfusion iron overload by deferoxamine]. 273 4

There were 37 maternal deaths among the 109,221 livebirths registered during the period 1977-86 in Bahrain, Arabian Gulf. The maternal mortality rate was 33.9/100,000 for the 10-year study period; however, disaggregation reveals a decline in this rate from 42.3/100,000 in 1977-81 to 26.9/100,000 in 1982-86. This decline presumably reflects streamlining of the Ministry of Health's maternity services, including a central maternity hospital with all modern facilities that serves as a referral center for all of Bahrain, 2 peripheral hospitals with provision for blood transfusion and surgical deliveries, and 3 maternity units managed by fully qualified midwives. About 80% of deliveries are covered by these maternity services; only 2.5% of deliveries occur in the home. Despite this highly developed maternity care system, 18 of the maternal deaths were due to direct obstetric cause: hemorrhage, 7; pre-eclampsia and eclampsia, 5; abortion septicemia, 2; bowel perforation during cesarean section, 1; thromboembolism, 2; and amniotic fluid embolism, 1. The causes of the 19 indirect maternal deaths were: pulmonary embolism, 5; infection, 7; cardiac failure, 2; cerebrovascular accident, 2; pulmonary hypertension, 1; and uncertain, 2. Of interest is the finding that sickle cell disease was the underlying cause of maternal death in 12 of the 37 deaths in this series. Sickle cell disease was implicated in 3 of the deaths from hemorrhage, all 5 deaths from pulmonary embolism, 2 deaths from septicemia, and the 2 cases of cardiac failure. In this series, 50% of the patients with sickle cell disease had thromboembolic crises following treatment of anemia with packed cell transfusion. Blood transfusion, especially of packed cells, should be given with caution to these patients since it may precipitate vaso-occlusive crisis by increasing blood viscosity. Since sickle cell disease represents a high risk during pregnancy in this Arab population, such patients should have frequent prenatal check-ups and deliver in a well-equipped hospital.
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PMID:Maternal mortality in Bahrain with special reference to sickle cell disease. 321 81

20 Zambians with sickle cell anemia presented with generalized lymphadenopathy and other signs suggestive of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome or the AIDS-related complex at the Arthur Davison Children's Hospital and the Ndola Central Hospital in Ndola, Zambia. All were found to have anti-HIV antibodies. 3 are known to have died within 10 months of diagnosis. Patients with this sickle cell anemia form a major group at risk for HIV infection through transfusion. The 1st step in prevention is to maintain the health of the patients, so avoiding the need to transfuse blood, and a call is make for the development of Sickle Cell Clinics. Secondly, blood transfusion should be confined to only those patients in danger of dying of anemic heart failure. These 2 steps should be taken, even when blood donors are screened for HIV.
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PMID:AIDS and AIDS-related complex in twenty Zambians with sickle cell anemia. 324

A 30-year-old black man with proven sickle cell anemia died after five years of progressive heart failure and three clinically distinct episodes of myocardial infarction. Autopsy revealed massive ventricular myocardial fibrosis, a large left ventricular aneurysm, and an organized nonatherosclerotic thrombosis of the left coronary artery. Myocardial infarction, unassociated with atherosclerosis, has very rarely been reported in sickle cell anemia. A toxic/lethal level of amitriptyline was found at autopsy.
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PMID:Massive nonatherosclerotic myocardial infarction in sickle cell anemia. 338 95

Several episodes of acute hepatic enlargement associated with a dramatic fall in haemoglobin concentration were observed in two patients with sickle cell anaemia. No appreciable disturbances of liver function or signs of cardiac failure were evident. The most likely mechanism was sequestration of sickled erythrocytes in the liver. This complication, which may have a basis similar to that of splenic sequestration and the sickle lung syndrome, may be easily overlooked unless the size of the liver is regularly monitored in patients with sickle cell crisis.
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PMID:Hepatic sequestration in sickle cell anaemia. 391 37

Serious defects in the living conditions of the vast majority of people in the tropics, rather than racial factors, are the underlying reasons why anaemia is common, why malaria is rampant and why the complications of sickle cell disease are so serious. Mass illiteracy, poor environmental hygiene and widespread poverty with all their implications explain why malaria eradication programmes have so far failed in tropical Africa and why basic health-care schemes have been difficult to establish. Pregnant women are very vulnerable to the effects of anaemia, malaria and sickle cell disease. However, appropriate use of folic acid and iron supplements as well as malarial chemosuppression succeeds in maintaining haemoglobin concentrations at reasonable levels during pregnancy. If, for whatever reason, the haemoglobin level falls to under 4.4 g/dl or the haematocrit value is 0.14 or less, anaemia becomes an obstetric emergency. Both maternal and fetal mortality rise sharply, maternal death being due to anaemic heart failure, fulminating bacterial infection and shock from even small loss at delivery or abortion. With the haemoglobin concentration as low as 4.4 g/dl, blood transfusion greatly improves maternal but not necessarily fetal prognosis. Additional cause of morbidity in sickle cell disease is painful crises, the control of which remains largely unsatisfactory. Now that sickle cell disease can be diagnosed early in intrauterine life the idea of aborting the affected fetuses as a means of controlling or reducing sickle cell disease is well within the means of developed countries, but it is a line of approach which developing countries cannot afford at present.
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PMID:Anaemia, malaria and sickle cell disease. 675 46


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