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

In 50 patients with encephalomalacia and 50 patients with a transient cerebral ischemic attack (TIA) the risk factors and viscosity of the whole blood as well as the hematocrit were determined before the start of treatment. Compared to a control group, the blood viscosity in patients with encephalomalacia was significantly increased (p less than 0.001) in all ranges of shearing velocity tested, in patients with TIA only at that shearing velocity which may be assumed for the area of microcirculation. This increase was related to the presence of arterial hypertension, hyperlipemia, heart failure, diabetes mellitus, hyperfibrinogenemia and increased tendency of thrombocytes and erythrocytes to aggregate. From the results obtained it was concluded that increased blood viscosity in the cerebral area of microcirculation with insufficient cerebral collateral circulation may decisively favor the development of encephalomalacia.
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PMID:[Clinical significance of changes in blood viscosity in cerebrovascular insufficiency (author's transl)]. 81 Jun 86

Eleven percent of 905 consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction admitted to the coronary care unit at Duke University Medical Center experienced cardiac arrest. Subgroups of patients at high and low risk for cardiac arrest were identified. Cardiac arrest was experienced by 17 percent of patients with signs of heart failure on admission but by only 3 percent of patients without diabetes mellitus, prior myocardial infarction or heart failure by history or on admission. Only 59 percent of patients with cardiac arrest survived hospitalization compared with 88 percent of those without cardiac arrest. Long-term survival for the 765 hospital survivors was significantly greater in the group without than in the group with arrest at each yearly interval from 1 through 5 years; the 2 year survival rate was 50 and 77 percent, respectively, in these two groups. Many of the deaths among the hospital survivors occurred in patients with signs of heart failure during hospitalization. Among 668 hospital survivors who had mild or no heart failure during hospitalization, cardiac arrest continued to be a significant predictor of mortality. The mode of death among hospital survivors did not differ in the groups with and without cardiac arrest; for example, the incidence rate of sudden death in the two groups was 44 and 37 per cent, respectively. In light of recent reports suggesting that the prophylactic use of antiarrhythmic agents can virtually eliminate virtually fibrillation during the hospital phase of acute myocardial infarction, we contend that such use may substantially reduce both long-term and hospital mortality after acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Cardiac arrest complicating acute myocardial infarction: predictability and prognosis. 83 30

1463 patients with acute myocardial infarction were treated in 26 hospitals in Northern Germany from June 1972 till August 1973. The time elapsed between onset of symptoms and admission to the regional hospital was similar in rural patients and those living in cities. 39% were admitted later than 12 hours after onset of symptoms. Having survived the prehospital phase the age of infarction did not influence the mortality. The treatment in the different hospitals was in no way standardized, except the treatment with streptokinase. Regarding this procedure, the following results can be presented. The overall mortality was 25.8%. Mortality was higher in cases of high age, preexisting myocardial failure, diabetes mellitus and in cases of shock and/or arrhythmia. Anterior wall infarction showed a higher mortality than posterior wall infarction. In this study the average results of treating 1463 patients with acute myocardial infarction treated in Northern Germany were presented.
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PMID:[Investigations of the clinical course of acute myocardial infarction. II. Epidemiological facts (author's transl)]. 84 Jan 18

The early diagnosis of heart disease during or better before pregnancy is one of the most important problems, as cardiac diseases are the most common cause for maternal deaths throughout the world. The knowledge of hemodynamic alterations in circulatory and respiratory physiology during pregnancy complicated by heart disease is a prerequisite for their management. The following indications for therapeutic abortion of pregnancy complicated by heart disease can be concluded according to our own observations: 1. history of significant heart failure (more than grade IV according to the classification of the New York Heart Association), frequent attacks of angina pectoris and longstanding cyanosis: 2. in spite of the most careful heart treatment with digitalis, diuretics and salftree diet cardiac-thorax-rate of more than 55% in congenital heart disease, cardiac-thorax-rate of more than 60% in acquired heart disease, significant signs of heart failure, namely more severe than grade III, tachycardic atrial fibrillation, pulse deficit of more than 30/min, active inflammatory processes of the heart (rheumatic fever, subacute bacterial endocarditis, Takayasu's disease); 3. especially severe metabolic disorders, i.e. diabetes mellitus, malignant hypertension, kidney diseases; 4. primiparae of an age of more than 35 years with any heart disease. Commissurotomy can be accomplished during pregnancy if it is too late for therapeutic abortion. Pregnancy in case of artificial valves is not recommended in general because of impending hemorrhagic diathesis.
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PMID:[Indication for pregnancy interruption in patients with heart diseases]. 85 89

Idiopathic hemochromatosis is an iron-storage disease more common in men than in women. It is characterized clinically by diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis of the liver, pigmentation of the skin and cardiac failure. The diagnosis may be overlooked when the presenting symptoms do not follow the pattern. A case is reported which was diagnosed after an onset that featured neurologic symptoms.
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PMID:Idiopathic hemochromatosis: case report of a patient presenting with neurologic symptoms. 86 79

Recent epidemiologic studies have suggested that cardiac disease in common in diabetics and may often have a noncoronary basis. To examine the status of the left ventricle, 17 adult-onset diabetics of familial type without hypertension or obesity underwent hemodynamic study and were compared to 9 controls of similar age. Of the 17, 12 subjects had no significant occlusive lesions by coronary angiography. From this group eight without heart failure had a modest, but significant, elevation of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. End-diastolic and stroke volumes were reduced, but ejection fraction and mean rate of fiber shortening were within normal limits. The left ventricular end-diastolic pressure/volume ratio was significantly higher than controls. Afterload increments effected a significant increase of filling pressure compared to normals without a stroke volume response, consistent with a preclinical cardiomyopathy. Four patients with prior heart failure had similar but more extensive abnormalities. None had local dyskinesia by angiography, and lactate production was not observed during pacing-induced tachycardia. Left ventricular biopsy in two patients without ventricular decompensation showed interstitial collagen deposition with relatively normal muscle cells. These findings suggest a myopathic process without ischemia. Postmortem studies were performed in 11 uncomplicated diabetics. Nine were without significant obstructive disease of the proximal coronary arteries, and the majority succumbed with cardiac failure. On left ventricular sections, none had evident luminal narrowing of the intramural vessels. All nine exhibited periodic acid-Schiff-positive material in the interstitium. Collagen accumulation was present in perivascular loci, between myofibers, or as replacement fibrosis. Multiple samples of left ventricle and septum revealed enhanced triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations, as compared to controls. Thus, a diffuse extravascular abnormality may be a basis for cardiomyopathic features in diabetes.
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PMID:Evidence for cardiomyopathy in familial diabetes mellitus. 89 79

Chronic diabetes mellitus can alter left ventricular function independent of vascular effects. On the basis of available morphologic data in human and canine diabetics, alterations of myocardial interstitium may be the basis for this preclinical abnormality. The abnormal function is independent of apparent duration and treatment by diet, insulin, or hypoglycemic agents. It occurs in both sexes and is independent of age. Whether the observed functional abnormality progresses to clinical heart failure may depend on intensification of the underlying pathophysiology of the myocardium or superimposition of complications such as hypertension, obesity, and obstructive disease of the coronary vessels.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus and left ventricular function. 97 64

Exercise electrocardiograms were done on one thousand patients referred to the laboratory of exercise tests for: suggestive symptoms of acute heart failure, old miocardial infarction abnormal resting ECG, or evaluation of coronary reserve. The average value of cardiac rate reached for the group, was close to 80%. The maximum exercise loads managed by the men were superior to those of the women, and in general those managed in the negative test were superior in relation to the positive tests. Of the one thousand cases, 20.2% had positive exercise ECG's. There was no difference inthe percentages of positivity between the two sexes, 20.75% and 19.11% for men and women respecitvely. The percentages of positivity are greater in those subjects sent to the laboratory for suspicion of angina pectoris, old MI, or abnormal resting ECG, than in those referred for detection of ischemic heart disease. The groups of patients with diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, old MI, and abnormal resting ECG had the highest incidence of positive tests: 41%, 37.5%, 30.6%, and 28.2% respectively. The most frequent localization of the ST segment alterations was the anterior portion, with percentages of 85.1% similar to those mentioned in the literature. The frequency of arrithmias, of 12.4% in this group, is a little less than that described in similar groups, but it corroborates the predominance of non-lethal ventricular arrithmias. The mortality in the tests performed was null.
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PMID:[Results of 1000 electrocardiographic exercise tests. Their correlation with previous ischemic cardiopathy and arteriosclerotic risk factors]. 102 33

Patients in the coronary care unit with acute pulmonary edema, heart failure, and other organic heart disease were studied. Blood and urine samples were taken on admission prior to any treatment and later at prescribed intervals. All the patients with APE were found to have elevated plasma osmolalities and hyperglycemia on admission which decreased with treatment. This was in contrast to the other two groups excluding those factors such as ethyl alcohol and diabetes which can raise plasma osmolality or blood glucose. A discussion of this mild hyperosmolal state in APE follows including possible causes as well as cellular effects of hyperosmolality on humans.
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PMID:Acute pulmonary edema and hyperosmolality: a clinical study. 106 77

A girl of 10-5/12 years is described, who had diabetes mellitus from the age of 5 years on and who developed bilateral ptosis, pigment degeneration of the retina and bilateral impairment of hearing at the age of nine years. A few weeks before death she suffered from an acute gastrointestinal infection which was successfully treated by a hydroxyquinoline derivative. In the days following a severe encephalopathy and signs of cardiac involvement appeared. A month later the girl died of bulbar paralysis and acute heart failure. Histology showed remnants of a granulomatous inflammation in the heart, the kidneys, the pancreas and the skeletal muscles. Furthermore there was a widespread spongiosis in the white substance of the brain, with large astrocytes, and partly also in the basal ganglia, the brain stem and the cerebellum. Foci of sudanophilic tissue necrosis resembling Wernicke's Encephalopathy were found in the medulla oblongata and the spinal cord. The peripheral nerves appeared partially demyelinated and showed axonal lesions. This case is classified as a Juvenile Type of so-called Canavan's Disease. It shows some resemblence to the "Progressive Chronic Ophthalmoplegia with Spongiform Encephalopathy described by Daroff, Kearn and Sayre. The possible neurotoxical effects of the hydroxyquinoline therapy are discussed.
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PMID:[Juvenile spongy dystrophy of CNS with necrosis of the medulla. A. complication of hydroxyquinoline therapy (author's transl)]. 124 13


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