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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role of hypertension in
cardiovascular disease
was studied in the hypertensive coarcted monkey during the feeding of an atherogenic and nonatherogenic diet. During the 15-month period of observation, half of the hypertensive coarcted monkeys developed
cardiovascular disease
which included
heart failure
, ischemic heart disease, stroke, and sudden death. There were no cardiovascular complications in the control normotensive monkeys except for one cholesterol-fed animal. The incidence of ischemic heart disease and sudden cardiac death was higher in monkeys with both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia than in those with hypertension or hypercholesterolemia alone. Postmortem studies revealed that the former monkeys had both hypertensive and atherosclerotic heart disease, whereas the monkeys with hypertension or hypercholesterolemia had either hypertensive or atherosclerotic heart disease. Hypertensive heart disease was characterized not only by hypertrophy of the left ventricle but also by focal myocardial degeneration and fibrosis and by focal thickening and narrowing of the small coronary arteries, particularly the sinus node artery and the atrioventricular node artery. The finding of transmural myocardial infarction in two monkeys with patient coronary arteries suggests a possible role of coronary artery spasm in ischemic heart disease in hypertension. The cerebral vascular complications of hypertension included hypertensive encephalopathy, transient "ischemic" attacks, and hemorrhagic stroke. The complications were associated with severe hypertension and with hypertensive vascular disease or hypertensive and atherosclerotic vascular disease of the cerebral arteries.
...
PMID:Role of hypertension in ischemic heart disease and cerebral vascular disease in the cynomolgus monkey with coarctation of the aorta. 14 28
Cardiovascular disease
is the chief cause of death in technologically advanced countries and accounts for more than 50% of all deaths in the USA. For a patient with end-stage
cardiac failure
the only treatment presently available is organ replacement, either by transplantation or by the use of a mechanical heart. Transplantation has demonstrated its value: survival of more than 8 years and restoration of a normal quality of life to patients who were in end-stage cardiac decompensation. However, the prospect of routine clinical application of an artificial heart remains distant. The development of a totally implantable artificial heart still presents a series of challenging engineering problems with regard to strict constraints of size, weight, blood-material compatibility, adaptability of output to demand, efficiency and reliability of the power supply, and safety if nuclear fuel is used. The totally artificial heart is presently not an alternative to the cardiac allograft, but could provide short-term support for patients awaiting cardiac transplantation.
...
PMID:Human technology after cardiac epigenesis. Artificial heart versus cardiac transplantation. 33 21
This report examines prospectively, in the Framingham cohort, the relation of diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance to each of the cardiovascular sequelae, taking into account age, sex, and associated cardiovascular risk factors. The incidence of
cardiovascular disease
, as well as the levels of cardiovascular risk factors, were found to be higher in diabetic than in nondiabetic men and women. The relative impact of diabetes on coronary heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, or stroke incidence was the same in men and women, but for cardiovascular mortality and
cardiac failure
the impact is greater for women. Present evidence suggests that alleviation of associated cardiovascular risk factors is the most promising course in reducing cardiovascular sequelae in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Diabetes and glucose tolerance as risk factors for cardiovascular disease: the Framingham study. 52 Jan 14
A relatively high incidence of
heart failure
is noted among patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) without clearly defined clinical causes. To evaluate left ventricular performance in patients with SLE without evidence of
cardiovascular disease
, noninvasive measurement of the systolic time intervals was carried out. Simultaneous recording of the electrocardiogram, phonocardiogram and carotid arterial pulsation were obtained in 25 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and compared with 22 normal subjects. The patients with SLE had a shorter left ventricular ejection time (P less than 0.05), a longer pre-ejection period (P less than 0.02) and an increased ratio of pre-ejection period/left ventricular ejection time (P less than 0.005). These abnormalities on ventricular function were independent of age, duration of the disease, hypertension, renal involvement, anemia, immunologic activity and corticosteroid treatment. Several etiologic possibilities are discussed and the clinical usefulness of this method to detect and follow-up the cardiac dysfunction in systemic lupus erythematosus is emphasized.
...
PMID:Myocardial involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus. A noninvasive study of left ventricular function. 69 53
A study of the width of the aortic shadow and of the cardiothoracic ratios in 183 chest radiographs, of persons over the age of 35 years, shows that hypertension produces a constant enlargment of the aortic shadow. The study suggests that gross enlargement, in the absence of disease of the aorta or of the aortic valves, is a result of hypertension. The authors suggest that this enlargement is valuable in delineating a sub-group of cases of
myocardial failure
in which the primary cause of failure may be hypertension. Cases with gross aortic arch dilation and no detectable
cardiovascular disease
often have cardiomegaly. The question of the possibility of remission of untreated hypertension is raised.
...
PMID:The significance of the enlargement of the aortic shadow in adult Nigerians. 82 29
Congestive heart failure is a frequent and important manifestation of
cardiovascular disease
, but no uniform clinical criteria are available for use in epidemiologic studies. To develop diagnostic criteria, we related pertinent clinical findings to physiologic measures of left ventricular function in patients with coronary artery disease. When left ventricular end diastolic pressure or arteriovenous oxygen difference was used as the physiologic criterion, the following variables contributed significant (P less than 0.01) information: heart volume, ventricular gallop, heart rate, and blood pressure. The most reliable and valid set of descriptors determined in one group was tested in a second group of 1306 patients who had been followed for 6 to 36 months after initial evaluation. The validity of the descriptors was confirmed, and patients identified as having
heart failure
by these criteria experienced a worse survival rate (P less than 0.001). These criteria characterize patients likely to have impaired left ventricular function and a greater risk of death.
...
PMID:Chronic congestive heart failure in coronary artery disease: clinical criteria. 83 34
Eleven elderly patients with idiopathic pericarditis are reported. All but one were older than 60 yr. Evidence of ischemic
cardiovascular disease
was present in 8 patients. The initial diagnosis was
heart failure
with pulmonary complications in 4 cases and myocardial infarction in 3. Respiratory infection preceded the onset of pericarditis in 5 cases. Presenting symptoms were typical precordial pain, fever and dyspnea. Pericardial friction was found in 7 cases and transient rhythm disturbances in 5. Four patients had ST elevation and 3 had ST depression in their electrocardiograms. Other findings included an increased sedimentation rate, leukocytosis, elevated venous pressure and normal SGOT levels. Antibiotics were of no avail but prednisone had a dramatic effect. Two patients had a relapsing course lasting 2 yr or more. One patient, who died at the age of 75 from bleeding ulcer, had patent coronary arteries and mild perimyocardial fibrosis. The diagnosis of idiopathic pericarditis in the aged is difficult because the disease simulates ischemic heart disease in patients who frequently have evidence of arteriosclerotic cardiovascular involvment.
...
PMID:Acute idiopathic pericarditis in the aged. 114 70
ACE-inhibitors improve symptoms and prognosis in patients with
heart failure
. The V-Heft II trial has demonstrated that the beneficial effect of these agents is superior to unspecific vasodilators. Besides sustained arterial and venous vasodilation the inhibition of the neurohumoral axis is thought to play an important role. Angiotensin II and catecholamines not only exert vasoconstrictor effects, but might also contribute to vascular and myocardial growth. Thus, it may not be surprising that the beneficial effects of ACE inhibitors in
heart failure
only emerge during long-term therapy rather than after short-term administration. It has been shown that these agents improve blood flow to skeletal muscle during exercise after chronic therapy (not acutely), and there is some preliminary evidence that improvement of endothelial function might be involved in this effect, i.e., by reducing the degradation of bradykinin, an endothelial vasodilator. ACE inhibitors reduce LV hypertrophy, an important risk factor for
cardiovascular disease
and prognosis. Moreover, there is experimental evidence that ACE inhibitors can prevent and even reverse interstitial fibrosis in the left ventricle. Although the plasma renin activity may be normal in patients with chronic
heart failure
, recent data using polymerase chain reaction indicate that the tissue cardiac renin angiotensin system is activated in the failing human heart as assessed by measurements of angiotensin converting enzyme mRNA and angiotensinogen mRNA which may be an important target for ACE-inhibition.
...
PMID:[The value of ACE inhibitors in heart failure (mechanism of action)]. 129 Mar 8
Data on the prognostic implications of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in the Framingham Study based on routine ECG, echocardiogram (ECHO) and X-ray determination with 36 years of follow-up indicate that LVH has emerged as a powerful indicator of rapidly evolving lethal atherosclerotic disease, whether determined by ECG, ECHO or X-ray. Cardiovascular morbidity and mortality increase progressively with left ventricular muscle mass from lowest to highest values. The ECG and X-ray versions of LVH each independently contribute to the risk of cardiovascular events; each adds to the risk associated with the other, and those with both are at greater risk than those with either alone. Risk ratios associated with ECG-LVH are substantial and are greatest for
cardiac failure
and stroke, but coronary disease is the commonest and most lethal sequela. LVH is reversible, the anatomical variety more so than ECG-LVH, and reversal of this toward normal appears to confer greater benefit for the anatomical rather than the ECG manifestation of LVH. The risk of
cardiovascular disease
associated with LVH is not uniform, varying widely depending not only on whether there is concomitant ECG and anatomical evidence of hypertrophy but also on the associated hypertension, glucose intolerance, lipid profile and cigarette smoking habit. This suggests that there is much to be gained in correcting those associated risk factors which also promote the development of LVH.
...
PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy and mortality--results from the Framingham Study. 130 Dec 57
Cardiovascular disease
constitutes an expanding problem in the elderly because of the increasing size of the aged population. Atherosclerosis, hypertension, and diabetes are responsible for the predonderance of
cardiovascular disease
, which causes 70% of all deaths beyond age 75. Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most common and most lethal cardiovascular event in both sexes, exacting a large toll in disability and deteriorated quality of life in old age. Unrecognized myocardial infarctions are especially common and are as serious as symptomatic infarctions. beyond age 65, women are as vulnerable to cardiovascular death as men. The predisposing modifiable risk factors for coronary disease, stroke, peripheral arterial disease, and
cardiac failure
are similar in young and old and in men and women. These include hypertension, dyslipidemia, impaired glucose tolerance, physical indolence, and cigarette smoking. An attenuated risk ratio for some risk factors is offset by a greater incidence of cardiovascular events in advanced age so that the attributable risk and the potential benefit of treatment rise with age. Because the major risk factors predict CHD as efficiently in the elderly as in the young, and the decline in cardiovascular mortality has included the elderly, preventive efforts in the elderly may have substantial potential benefit. At advanced age, total cholesterol levels are considerably higher in women than in men. Some 10 million elderly, two-thirds of whom are women, may require investigation and treatment for elevated lipid levels, as determined by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) guidelines. Because of the preponderance of women in the elderly population, trials of the efficacy of correcting risk factors in general, and lipids in particular, should include women.
...
PMID:Demographics of the prevalence, incidence, and management of coronary heart disease in the elderly and in women. 134 64
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