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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In idiopathic
hemochromatosis
, there is progressive deposition of iron in parenchymatous organs owing to a defect in iron absorption the nature of which is not so far known. This can result in cardiomyopathy with
heart failure
and arrhythmia which are refractory to therapy. Nuclear magnetic resonance tomography is a specific imaging technique for early detection of myocardial iron deposits. With quantitative determination of the T2 relaxation time of the myocardium, a progress control under venesection therapy is possible above and beyond diagnostics.
...
PMID:[Cardiomyopathy in idiopathic hemochromatosis. Diagnostic possibilities using proton spin tomography]. 382 47
Restrictive cardiomyopathy is uncommon and in its overt form is associated with
heart failure
, characterized primarily by abnormalities in diastolic function and preserved or nearly preserved systolic function. It may be associated with amyloidosis,
hemochromatosis
or endomyocardial fibrosis. We describe five patients with restrictive cardiomyopathy, ages ranging from 35 to 71 (mean 49), three of whom were men. Fatigue, dyspnea on exertion and chest pain were the most frequent symptoms. Only one patient had overt
heart failure
, and three had normal or near-normal hemodynamics at rest that became greatly abnormal with exercise. Four of the five patients are alive now 9 to 77 (mean 33) months following the onset of symptoms. Despite prior emphasis on specific causes, restrictive cardiomyopathy in this series had no definable cause. Moreover, the presence of a "latent" form of restriction (abnormalities only with exercise) suggests that the incidence of the disease may be higher than previously appreciated.
...
PMID:Clinical, hemodynamic and endomyocardial biopsy findings in idiopathic restrictive cardiomyopathy. 396 91
Amiodarone is a cardiac antiarrhythmic agent now undergoing clinical trials in the United States. Its most important side effect is pulmonary toxicity, which may present radiographically in two forms. One is similar to eosinophilic pneumonia with peripheral alveolar opacities but without any of the laboratory or pathologic findings. A second presentation is as a bilateral interstitial pattern resembling interstitial pulmonary edema. This is often mistaken for
heart failure
in the clinical and radiographic setting. Amiodarone also causes a phospholipidosis of the liver, which is usually asymptomatic but on occasion may present as hepatitis. On abdominal CT the liver will have an abnormally high attenuation (80-140 HU), which appears to be due to accumulation of an amiodarone metabolite in hepatocytes. This appearance is usually distinguishable from the other causes of increased hepatic attenuation by virtue of other CT criteria and clinical history. However, from a radiographic standpoint alone, the combination of acute congestive heart failure and an abnormally dense liver may result in at least an initial misdiagnosis of advanced primary
hemochromatosis
.
...
PMID:Dense liver in a 72-year-old woman with congestive heart failure. 407 46
Up until recently in clinical practice suspected
hemochromatosis
with a pathological iron-screening test (plasma iron, percentage transferrin saturation, serum ferritin, desferrioxamine-induced urinary iron excretion) made a liver biopsy necessary. Today, as a first step, the density of the liver parenchyma can be measured by means of computed tomography. Normal findings obviate the need for laparoscopy. Since the late forties weekly or twice weekly phlebotomy has been the sole form of treatment for manifest idiopathic
hemochromatosis
. In the mid-sixties the hopes placed in chelating substances (desferrioxamine) were not fulfilled, because the plasma half-life (only 7-10 minutes) of this drug was too short. Even with several daily injections only a small amount of iron was removed from the body tissue (10-25 mg daily urinary iron excretion). The introduction of portable infusion pumps in the late seventies offered us a new possibility of administering desferrioxamine by subcutaneous injection (Propper et al., 1976). Until that time such treatment was successfully used only in the field of pediatrics to treat secondary transfusion
hemochromatosis
in thalassemia. In one case of idiopathic
hemochromatosis
with severe organic involvement (right heart failure, repeated esophageal hemorrhage and bronzed diabetes) we had to achieve rapid iron elimination, and for this purpose we used continuous long-term desferrioxamine administration by means of a portable infusion pump (Autosyringe) in addition to phlebotomy. Since, particularly in the critical initial phase of treatment when
heart failure
was always threatening, great care had to be exercised in the use of phlebotomy, iron removal was achieved largely by desferrioxamine administration (daily up to 240 mg iron elimination in urine and stools).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:New diagnostic and therapeutic possibilities in manifest idiopathic hemochromatosis. 651 41
We describe a 31 year old male patient who presented with severe cardiomyopathy caused by primary
hemochromatosis
. After a stormy course, complicated by
heart failure
and severe ventricular arrythmias, improvement in clinical status and myocardial function occurred. Depletion of myocardial iron was documented by the technique of serial endomyocardial biopsy. Myocardial iron stores were not yet depleted when hypoferremia and iron deficiency anemia occurred. This is the first reported study of myocardial morphology in a successfully treated patient with hemochromatotic cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Myocardial involvement in idiopathic hemochromatosis. Morphologic and clinical improvement following venesection. 723 94
33 patients with chronic renal failure were divided into two groups. Group I consisted of 8 non-dialysed patients without any clinical or biochemical sign of liver disturbance nor any iron supplementation. Group II consisted of 25 maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) patients treated from 2 to 13 years. 19 subjects had chronic B hepatitis. Total exogenous iron load parenteral iron and/or blood transfusions) was calculated. Body iron overload (hemosiderosis) was assessed by liver iron concentration (LIC) in needle biopsy specimens according to Barry's method (less than 200 microgram/100 mg dry weight) and serum ferritin levels (less than 360 ng/ml). 4 patients whose serum ferritin was increased with or without hepatic fibrosis and with or without any organ dysfunction due to
hemochromatosis
received i.v. infusions of desferrioxamine in doses of 2 g at each dialysis. Serum ferritin levels were correlated with LIC (p less than 0.001) and iron load (p less than 0.001). Hemosiderosis was noted in 16 MHD patients (group II) and correlated with iron load. Hemochromatosis was noted in 4 patients (group II). 4 hemodialysed patients with iron overload were treated by desferrioxamine from 6 to 18 months. During this therapy, body iron stores fell and organ dysfunction (
heart failure
, hepatic cytolysis, anaemia, diabetes mellitus improved. Long-term chelation therapy by desferrioxamine was effective and the chelated iron was readily removed by dialysis. These data show the importance of precise evaluation of iron stores in MHD patients.
...
PMID:[Iron-overload in patients on maintenance hemodialysis: diagnostic criteria, indications and treatment by desferrioxamine (author's transl)]. 732 1
Secondary
heart failure
induced by organ siderosis is the main cause of death in patients affected by thalassemia major. At present it cannot be predicted whether heart siderosis is correlated with iron overload and little is known about the real cardiac histological pattern of post transfusional
hemochromatosis
in patients with thalassemia major and intermedia. The study aim was to evaluate cardiac iron overload by non invasive and invasive techniques. Fifteen thalassemic patients were investigated and endomyocardial biopsy performed in ten revealed different grades of endomyocardial iron overload with histochemical positivity. Non invasive techniques are not able to furnish an exact picture of the cardiac
hemochromatosis
. There was a significant correlation between serum ferritin and myocardial iron grade. Patients with elevated ferritin levels and poor compliance to chelating therapy are at high risk of severe heart
hemochromatosis
. It was seen that endomyocardial biopsy is a useful tool in studying myocardial iron.
...
PMID:Cardiac iron overload in thalassemic patients: an endomyocardial biopsy study. 754 32
Heart failure
and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism are the most frequent clinical problems encountered in patients with juvenile idiopathic
hemochromatosis
(JIH). In this context, amenorrhea is one of the first symptoms in female patients, and hormone therapy must be added to phlebotomy to restore menstrual cycles. Here we report the case of a woman in childbearing age with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism due to JIH. Following therapy with gonadotropinic hormones the patient had a twin pregnancy with term delivery. The newborns presented a normal iron status. This confirms that early diagnosis and treatment of JIH are important to prevent irreversible organ damage and shows that the female reproductive function can be preserved in adequately treated patients.
...
PMID:Successful pregnancy following gonadotropin therapy in a young female with juvenile idiopathic hemochromatosis and secondary hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. 759 May 3
Idiopathic hemochromatosis, the most frequent inherited disease in Caucasians, is frequently undiagnosed. In this disorder, characterized by a continued inappropriated absorption of dietary iron, the clinical manifestations result from damage to those organ systems in which iron has been pathologically deposited, namely, the heart and the liver. Typically,
hemochromatosis
becomes clinically manifest in later life and in men more frequently than in women. This has been attributed to the extra loss of iron in women through menstruation and pregnancies. Removal of the excess iron by phlebotomy will prevent all of the complications of
hemochromatosis
of when begun early. In this paper, we report a case of a young woman with a eight years evolution of amenorrhea,
cardiac failure
, diabetes mellitus and increased pigmentation of the skin, associated with biochemical markers of iron overload. It is emphasized that
hemochromatosis
most be excluded in all patients with a unexplained
cardiac failure
.
...
PMID:[Refractory heart failure in a 26-year-old woman with idiopathic hemochromatosis]. 783 64
Dilated cardiomyopathy is a frequent and serious complication of idiopathic
hemochromatosis
. The mechanism by which disordered iron metabolism induces
heart failure
is not entirely understood, but myocardial dysfunction appears to be intimately related to the deposition of iron in myocytes. Cardiac function characteristically worsens or improves in proportion to the degree of iron accumulation in cardiac myocytes. The authors report the case of a 47-year-old man with idiopathic
hemochromatosis
and cirrhosis who developed symptoms of congestive heart failure and was found to have dilated cardiomyopathy 7 months after receiving a liver transplant. An initial endomyocardial heart biopsy demonstrated severe iron deposition in myocytes. The patient's
heart failure
worsened in the next 3 years and he eventually required a heart transplant. Examination of the explanted heart revealed dilated cardiomyopathy, but the previously demonstrated iron deposits in the cardiac myocytes were depleted. This "uncoupling" of cardiac function and cardiac iron load suggests that a threshold may be reached at which point the metabolic and ultrastructural derangements of iron deposition are no longer reversible, even with the removal of the inciting agent. Furthermore, displacement of myocyte iron stores after liver transplantation implicates altered hepatic iron metabolism as a primary or contributing mechanism in the pathophysiology of idiopathic
hemochromatosis
.
...
PMID:Progressive hemochromatotic cardiomyopathy despite reversal of iron deposition after liver transplantation. 842 14
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