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

Sixteen patients with metastatic carcinoid tumors of ileal or cecal origin were studied in order to evaluate the frequency and degree of cardiac involvement in a nonselected patient group. We have also studied the correlation between plasma hormone levels (e.g., 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and substance P) and the degree of cardiac involvement. The patients underwent physical examinations, electrocardiograms, chest x-rays, cardiac catheterization, and echocardiography. Plasma levels of 5-HT and substance P were analyzed. Carcinoid heart involvement was found in 3 of 16 patients (19%) but no patient had subjective symptoms associated with heart disease. Four patients (25%) had slight pulmonary hypertension. No left-sided heart lesions were seen. No correlation between blood levels of 5-HT or substance P and heart involvement was found. Eight patients died during the follow-up period, but in none of these was the cause of death cardiac failure. Carcinoid heart disease is not as common in our patients as in patients selected on a cardiological basis described in earlier studies. Echocardiography appears to be the most efficient technique for detection of even subclinical heart involvement and a useful tool for following its progress.
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PMID:Heart involvement in metastatic carcinoid disease. 394 30

Carcinoid heart disease is a rare entity and has always been hallmarked by its late appearance in the malignant carcinoid syndrome. Most cases are discovered when patients complain of typical symptoms, including flushing and diarrhea, with subsequent heart failure and valvulopathy developing years later. Only a few case reports of successful valve replacements have appeared in the literature, and the cause of the valvulopathy in those patients was known at surgery. I discuss herein a unique case of carcinoid heart disease that was diagnosed postoperatively.
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PMID:Carcinoid heart disease. A unique case of postvalvotomy diagnosis. 687 Apr 45

Carcinoid heart disease is a complication of a neuroendocrine carcinoid tumor. Morphologically, it is characterized by the formation of fibrotic plaques with deposition of extracellular matrix in the subendocardium, frequently causing heart valve dysfunction and cardiac failure. Because members of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) family are known to stimulate fibroblasts in their production of extracellular matrix, we investigated the expression of the three isoforms of TGF-beta and the binding protein for latent TGF-beta 1 (LTBP) in carcinoid plaques of the right side of the heart, as well as from control tissue, using immunohistochemistry. Tissue specimens were obtained intraoperatively from nine consecutive patients undergoing valve replacement surgery. TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 3 were detected in the fibroblasts of all plaques analyzed, whereas TGF-beta 2 was only rarely expressed. The localization of LTBP was partly concordant with that of TGF-beta 1, but the positive staining for LTBP was extracellular. Sections from unaffected heart tissue contained few fibroblasts in the subendocardium, showing only weak or no immunostaining for TGF-beta 1, -beta 2, and -beta 3 and no staining for LTBP. These results suggest that TGF-beta may play a role in the proliferation of fibroblasts and their matrix production in carcinoid heart lesions.
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PMID:Involvement of transforming growth factor-beta in the formation of fibrotic lesions in carcinoid heart disease. 842 67

Carcinoid heart disease occurs in about one third of patients with carcinoid syndrome, especially in those with ileal carcinoid and hepatic metastases. Patients with primary ovarian carcinoid tumor are extremely rare. In these circumstances, typical carcinoid cardiac lesions may develop unassociated with hepatic metastases, due to the venous drainage from the ovaries into the inferior vena cava of vasoactive released substances such as serotonin. The present report describes a woman with unrecognized primary ovarian carcinoid tumor, unexpectedly exhibiting heart failure. Diagnosis was performed on the basis of echocardiographic findings, occurrence of diarrhea and increased levels of 5-hydroxy-indoleacetic acid (5-HIAA). After complete surgical removal of the tumor, the patient was maintained under therapy with ACE-inhibitors and diuretics. Levels of 5-HIAA are still within normal range, there is regression of heart failure and echocardiographic findings are stabilized. These data confirm the importance of prompt diagnosis for a favorable prognosis of carcinoid heart disease.
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PMID:[Carcinoid heart disease and primary ovarian tumor]. 1202 91

Carcinoid tumors are associated with the production of a number of bioactive substances that might deposit on the endocardium (endocardial fibroelastosis) and produce cardiac failure. Carcinoid heart disease usually presents as right-sided valvular heart disease. Even if the diagnosis is frequently made by transthoracic echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging adds valuable information when evaluating cardiac structures that might be difficult to analyze on echocardiography.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging diagnosis of carcinoid heart disease. 1627 47

Carcinoid heart disease (CHD) develops in serotonin-producing neuroendocrine tumours (NET) due to fibrotic endocardial plaques with associated valve dysfunction leading most often to right-sided heart failure. The classical carcinoid syndrome usually occurs when serotonin-producing NET metastasize to the liver. Up to 50% of those patients will exhibit carcinoid heart disease. The pathophysiological process is not yet completely understood: serotonin is considered to be a major initiator of the fibrotic process, but other tumour secreted factors may contribute to the pathogenesis. Histopathology reveals intact valvular cusps with superimposed fibrotic plaques, leading to thickening and retraction of the valves, causing valvular dysfunction. A high index of clinical suspicion to diagnose CHD is needed since symptoms can be rather non-specific. Transthoracic echocardiography is the gold standard for diagnosis and should probably be performed at the time of diagnosing serotonin-producing NET and then repeated annually. On the other hand, when diagnosing right-heart failure, the presence of CHD and underlying serotonin-producing NET should be taken into account. Therapeutic options include pharmacotherapy for heart failure, control of the systemic carcinoid disease and in selected individuals cardiac valve replacement. The elucidation of the pathologic process is necessary to develop targeted antifibrotic therapeutic agents since CHD seems to be irreversible and associated with poor prognosis.
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PMID:Carcinoid heart disease--a hidden complication of neuroendocrine tumours. 1940 69

We present the case of a 69-year-old woman with a metastatic neuroendocrine tumour of the ileum and severe tricuspid valve regurgitation due to carcinoid valvulopathy. Carcinoid heart disease arises in the context of metastatic serotonin-producing neuroendocrine tumours and typically presents as structural and functional abnormalities of tricuspid (TV) or pulmonary valve (PV). Carcinoid heart disease arises from a low-grade neuroendocrine tumour derived from serotonin-producing enterochromaffin cells that reduces the mobility of the leaflets. Following the development of this type of heart failure, the prognosis is unfavourable and patients usually die as a result of heart failure and not because of the metastatic disease. Our patient was not considered a candidate for valvular surgery because of the progressive nature of the malignancy. However, surgical valve replacement is a therapeutic option that, although it has a significant mortality, needs to be considered in selected patients and leads to improvement in functional capacity and survival.
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PMID:Carcinoid heart disease: case and literature review. 2045 39

Carcinoid heart disease is a rare cause of heart failure with or without right valvular heart impairments. In this study, we showed a case of carcinoid tumour with hepatic metastases inducing carcinoid heart disease. Neuroendocrine heart involvement happens for severe tricuspid valve insufficiency and plaques on right ventricular (RV) walls produced by a release of serotonin (5-HT). A patient affected by primitive ileal tumour with 5-HT-secernent hepatic metastases inducing tricuspid insufficiency is showed. Transthoracic 2-D echocardiography showed tricuspid valve regurgitation and both right atrium, RV-walls plaques and RV dilation. Continue-wave Doppler showed a characteristic "dagger shaped" spectrum of tricuspid systolic flow. RV function was evaluated with 3-D transthoracic echocardiography. In particular, RV volumes, RV ejection fraction and stroke volume were defined by this technique. 2, 3-D echocardiography and Doppler method are useful techniques to show heart valves' derangements and RV function to non-invasively detect RV impairments in carcinoid heart disease.
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PMID:Carcinoid Heart Disease: A Rare Cause of Right Ventricular Dysfunction Evaluation by Transthoracic 2D, Doppler and 3-D Echocardiography. 2186 Jul 26

Carcinoid heart disease typically presents with pulmonary stenosis and tricuspid regurgitation. Management is intended for symptomatic relief, and valvular intervention is indicated in refractory heart failure. Balloon valvuloplasty is an option for patients not suitable for surgery. We report the case of a patient with a carcinoid tumour, who developed postoperative refractory hypoxemia. Transthoracic echocardiogram revealed carcinoid pulmonary and tricuspid valve disease, with severe pulmonary stenosis. Balloon valvuloplasty was performed with major clinical improvement.
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PMID:Carcinoid heart disease: outcome after balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty. 2322 89

Ileal neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) often progress slowly, but because of their generally nonspecific symptoms, they have often metastasized to local lymph nodes and to the liver by the time the patient presents. Biochemically, most of these patients have increased levels of whole blood serotonin, urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, and chromogranin A. Imaging work-up generally comprises computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging and somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, or in recent years positron emission tomography with 68Ga-labeled somatostatin analogs, allowing for detection of even sub-cm lesions. Carcinoid heart disease with affected leaflets, mainly to the right side of the heart, is a well-known complication and patients routinely undergo echocardiography to diagnose and monitor this. Multitasking surgery is currently recognized as first-line treatment for ileal NETs with metastases and carcinoid heart disease. Open heart surgery and valve replacement are advocated in patients with valvular disease and progressive heart failure. When valvulopathy in the tricuspid valve results in right-sided heart failure, a sequential approach, performing valve replacement first before intra-abdominal tumor-reductive procedures are conducted, reduces the risk of bleeding. Metastases to the myocardium from ileal NETs are seen in <1-4.3% of patients, depending partly on the imaging technique used, and are generally discovered in those affected with widespread disease. Systemic treatment with somatostatin analogs, and sometimes alpha interferon, is first-line medical therapy in metastatic disease to relieve hormonal symptoms and stabilize the tumor. This treatment is also indicated when heart metastases are detected, with the addition of diuretics and fluid restriction in cases of heart failure. Myocardial metastases are rarely treated by surgical resection.
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PMID:Ileal neuroendocrine tumors and heart: not only valvular consequences. 2531 77


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