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

During a 12-year period, when more than 106,000 women were delivered, 28 women with peripartum heart failure of obscure etiology that initially was diagnosed as peripartum cardiomyopathy were studied. None had obvious underlying cardiac disease or iatrogenic fluid overload, and in all an assiduous search for underlying cardiovascular disease was launched. In 21 of these 28 women, heart failure was attributed to chronic underlying disease (chronic hypertension in 14, forme fruste mitral stenosis in four, and morbid obesity in one) or viral myocarditis. Importantly, these women also had multiple compounding cardiovascular factors--preeclampsia, cesarean section, anemia, and infection--which, when superimposed on those of pregnancy, acted in concert to cause heart failure. In seven women, the cause for cardiomegaly and global hypokinesis was not found, and peripartum cardiomyopathy was diagnosed. Compared with women with explicable causes of peripartum heart failure, these women did poorly: six had persistent cardiomegaly and heart failure, and four of these died within four months to eight years. From these observations, the authors conclude that idiopathic peripartum cardiomyopathy is uncommon, and that in most women with peripartum heart failure of obscure etiology, underlying chronic disease will be identified. Heart failure in these women ensues when the cardiovascular demands of normal pregnancy are amplified further by common pregnancy complications superimposed upon these underlying conditions that cause compensated ventricular hypertrophy.
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PMID:Peripartum heart failure: idiopathic cardiomyopathy or compounding cardiovascular events? 293 58

In 30 years of follow-up in the Framingham study, routine biennial ECG examinations revealed 315 subjects with ECG-LVH and 164 with unrecognized ECG-MI without previous cardiac explanation. Among subjects initially free of clinically evident coronary heart disease and both ECG abnormalities, the incidence of ECG-LVH was about double that of ECG-MI. Both events exhibited a male predominance and hypertensive subjects were more vulnerable to each. In subjects with asymptomatic ECG-LVH and ECG-MI, the 10-year, age-adjusted incidence of clinical coronary heart disease was greater than the rate experienced by the general Framingham sample. Rates for ECG-LVH were almost as large as those for ECG-MI. Cardiac failure and stroke also occurred more frequently among subjects with either ECG abnormality, and rates for ECG-LVH exceeded those for ECG-MI. Death from coronary heart disease, and sudden death in particular, was also increased two- to fourfold with similar risks for ECG-LVH and ECG-MI. ECG-LVH carried a significantly greater risk than ECG-MI for cardiovascular deaths in women. These findings suggest that ECG-LVH and ECG-MI are similar subclinical events with respect to predisposing characteristics and prognosis for subsequent overt cardiovascular disease including clinical manifestations of coronary heart disease.
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PMID:A prognostic comparison of asymptomatic left ventricular hypertrophy and unrecognized myocardial infarction: the Framingham Study. 293 30

Since the discovery of the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) an endocrine function has been attributed to the mammalian heart. This function may include definition of optimal conditions for efficient performance of the heart, e.g. by reduction of afterload in hypertension or of preload and afterload in heart failure. Plasma ANF levels were measured in various cardiovascular disease states and compared with those of controls and of patients with liver cirrhosis. Plasma ANF levels in hypertensive patients were sevenfold higher than in controls, and in patients with heart failure 40-fold higher than normal values. Small differences were detected between controls and patients with cirrhosis of the liver, in spite of the impaired renal sodium handling seen in cirrhotics. Plasma ANF levels were significantly correlated with haemodynamic parameters and were inversely related to the cardiac index. Treatment with an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor led to a significant decrease in plasma ANF levels in parallel with the haemodynamic improvement. Preliminary chromatographic analysis suggested differences in the structure of plasma ANF between normotensive and hypertensive subjects.
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PMID:Atrial natriuretic factor in plasma of patients with arterial hypertension, heart failure or cirrhosis of the liver. 294 36

Plasma levels of ANF were determined and chromatographically analysed in normotensive controls, cirrhotic patients with and without ascites, hypertensive patients, patients with congestive heart failure and heart transplant recipients. A comparison of baseline plasma levels allowed for the conclusion that cirrhotic patients do not differ in this regard from control subjects (9.0 +/- 1.3, n = 41 vs. 9.6 +/- 1,0 fmol/ml, n = 51). Cirrhotic patients with ascites do not have lower plasma levels than cirrhotic patients without ascites (8.8 +/- 1.4, n = 8 vs 8.6 +/- 1.5 fmol/ml, n = 10). Stimulation of the ANF-system by head-out water immersion, however, revealed an impaired increase in ANF release in cirrhotic patients with ascites (146 +/- 18% vs 204 +/- 16%). Patients with cardiovascular disease display tonically-elevated ANF plasma levels. Heart failure patients displayed the highest plasma concentration (81.5 +/- 32.7 fmol/ml, n = 17), whereas plasma levels in hypertensive patients ranged from normal to greatly elevated (61.7 +/- 13.2 fmol/ml, n = 36). Heart transplant recipients also had significantly elevated plasma levels as compared to control subjects (31.2 +/- 7.9 fmol/ml, n = 14) but levels were lower than in hypertensive patients in spite of a comparable arterial pressure. Short term ventricular pacing (f = 150/min for 5 min) revealed an impaired phasic activity of the ANF system in heart failure patients and heart transplant recipients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Baseline and stimulated ANF plasma levels: is an impaired stimulus-response coupling diagnostically meaningful? 295 60

Left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy on the electrocardiogram is an ominous harbinger of cardiovascular disease in the general population markedly increasing the risk of coronary heart disease, cardiac failure, stroke and peripheral arterial disease. This contribution to risk exceeds that of the often accompanying hypertension. Once overt coronary disease occurs, electrocardiographic LV hypertrophy also further escalates risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The risk associated with electrocardiographic LV hypertrophy is particularly great when repolarization abnormality is present. Electrocardiographic LV hypertrophy and silent electrocardiographic myocardial infarction are similar in evolution and prognosis. LV hypertrophy is an important predictor of risk of cardiac failure; the electrocardiographic manifestation of LV hypertrophy predisposes to cardiac failure more than x-ray cardiac enlargement. Electrocardiographic LV hypertrophy heralds the onset of serious cardiovascular disease and premature mortality despite lack of associated symptoms. The serious prognosis of this abnormality warrants vigorous preventive management. More prospective data are needed comparing the prognosis of echocardiographic anatomical hypertrophy with that diagnosed by electrocardiography.
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PMID:Population implications of electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy. 296 Dec 50

The benefits of the treatment of hypertension currently consist of a substantially reduced incidence of premature stroke, left ventricular failure and malignant hypertension. The benefits for the individual are most clearcut in those who have already had severe or symptomatic hypertension. Older subjects who have a higher risk of stroke and heart failure also show more immediate benefits in terms of stroke and heart failure reduction. However, in the community as a whole, mild hypertensives account for over half the cardiovascular deaths attributable to high blood pressure. In such patients a more systematic approach to the use of non-pharmacological measures for both control of blood pressure and coronary heart disease, coupled where necessary with the judicious use of existing and new antihypertensive and lipid lowering drugs, offers the prospect for a new era of prevention in relation to hypertensive cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Value of non-drug treatment and drug treatment in hypertension. 307 10

The authors report their experience of dual chamber pacing in 29 men and 21 women of mean age 71 +/- 4 years. 35 had sinus node dysfunction associated with node-His bundle conduction disorders; 31 presented with neurological symptoms and 4 with heart failure (due to pacemaker syndrome in 1 case). Sinus node dysfunction was diagnosed by surface ECG in 25 cases and after electrophysiological studied in only 10 cases. Fifteen patients had atrioventricular block without sinus node dysfunction: 2 of them were young subjects, 1 had pacemaker syndrome and 12 were actual or potential heart failure patients for whom preservation of the atrial systole was justified. Nine patients presented with neurological symptoms. 43 (86%) had cardiac or arterial disease associated with cardiac rhythm and conduction disorders. The percutaneous single subclavian vein approach was used in 36 cases (78%). 41 active and 9 passive fixation electrodes were utilized. The mean follow-up period was 25 months (12 to 70 months), with a cumulative figure of 1,253 months/patients. Two late re-operations for displacement of the atrial electrode were performed. Dual chamber pacing was abandoned, 14 months on average after implantation, in 9 patients (18%), on account of arrhythmias in 4 of them. Three cases of tachycardia from "electronic re-entry" and 6 cases of supraventricular arrhythmia transferred to the ventricle by the pacemaker were observed. Sixteen patients (32%) died 12 +/- 4 months on average after surgery: 12 (33%) had sinus node dysfunction and 4 (26%) had AV block. Death was caused by a cardiovascular disease in 12 cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical study of double-chamber stimulation. Apropos of 50 cases followed-up for 1 to 5 years]. 310

The long-term results of carotid endarterectomy were analysed in 119 patients, operated on between January 1979 and December 1980 (135 endarterectomies; preoperative data analysed retrospectively). 43 patients had been in stage I, 39 in stage IIa, 13 in stage IIb, 4 in stage III, and 20 in stage IV. Perioperative mortality was 0.8%, while hospital mortality was 2.5%. Transitory perioperative neurological deficits occurred in 4.2% of all patients, but no permanent ones. Five years postoperatively 44.5% had died, nearly half (43.4%) of cardiovascular disease. Cerebrovascular disease and tumour each caused 15% of deaths. During the five-year follow-up period 12% of all patients had had transitory ischaemic attacks; 16% had suffered a stroke (in 63% on the operated side). With a high prevalence of risk factors, only the quality of diabetic control (mortality rate of well controlled diabetes 38%, of poorly controlled 70%) and the risk factors heart failure and vascular occlusive disease had a significant influence on the mortality rate. But the mortality rate was significantly lowered with the use of platelet aggregation inhibitors (41.6% vs 72.7%).
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PMID:[5-year follow-up after endarterectomy of carotid artery thrombosis]. 320 18

We reviewed the cardiac emergencies that occurred during or soon after pregnancy and required admission in an intensive care unit. The study sample consisted of 22248 pregnant women representing the whole obstetrical population collected from 3 hospitals over a ten-year period. Among the 88 patients admitted to our ICU during this decade, only 5 suffered from a specific cardiac disorder. Acute pulmonary edema was the common clinical presentation in the 4 cases reported. Despite the severity of cardiac involvement on admission none had previous evidence of heart disease that could have heralded acute left ventricular failure. From these observations it can be concluded that preexisting cardiovascular disease and circulatory changes related to pregnancy should no longer be regarded as the unique contributors to the development of severe heart failure during pregnancy.
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PMID:Acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema and pregnancy: a ten-year experience. 323 Jan 98

Persons older than 85 years of age will constitute the fastest growing segment of the US population in the next decade, and despite the recent decline in mortality from heart disease, cardiovascular disease remains the single greatest cause of death in these elderly persons. We studied the pathologic changes in the hearts of 237 patients (93 men and 144 women) who had lived to the age of 90 years or older. The degree and extent of coronary atherosclerosis in these senescent hearts were similar to findings reported in younger patients who died of coronary heart disease, but calcification of the coronary arteries, mitral annulus, and aortic valve was more prevalent, as was cardiac amyloidosis. Multiple cardiac disorders were common in these very elderly hearts, but they seemed to play a lesser role in precipitating heart failure or shortening the life-span of the patients. Important factors in attaining longevity seem to be protection from the development of severe coronary artery disease by an unexplained mechanism and an innate resistance to cardiac dysfunction from a multitude of structural changes that occur with advancing age.
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PMID:Pathology of the senescent heart: anatomic observations on 237 autopsy studies of patients 90 to 105 years old. 337 72


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