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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We prospectively compared the differences in perioperative cardiac ischemic events in 140 patients undergoing major abdominal (n = 53) versus infrainguinal (n = 87) vascular operations. Preoperative dipyridamole thallium cardiac scintigraphy was performed in a subset of 38 of these patients, with treating physicians blinded to the test results. Myocardial ischemia was measured during operation with use of continuous 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) and transesophageal echocardiography. Continuous two-lead ambulatory ECG (Holter monitoring) was performed before, during, and after operation for 4 days. Outcome events were cardiac death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, unstable angina, ventricular tachycardia, and congestive heart failure. Results of the study indicated that most demographic variables, such as age, hypertension, cigarette smoking, serum cholesterol, were comparable between patients having aortic or infrainguinal arterial operations. However, in the infrainguinal group more patients had
diabetes
, second vascular operations, angina pectoris,
heart failure
, dysrhythmias, and used digitalis. Abnormalities in preoperative Holter monitoring, ECGs, and thallium scan abnormalities were equivalent between groups. During operation, whereas Holter and ECG abnormalities were comparable, more patients undergoing aortic procedures suffered ischemia as determined by transesophageal echocardiography (26% vs 10%, p = 0.019). After operation there were 21 (24%) outcome events in patients having infrainguinal bypasses compared with 15 (28%) patients having aortic procedures (p = NS). Ischemia by Holter monitoring (n = 133) occurred after operation in 46 (57%) patients having infrainguinal operations compared with 16 (31%) patients having aortic reconstructions (p = 0.005). Because preoperative cardiac disease and adverse cardiac outcomes occurred with similar or even greater frequency in both groups of patients, we conclude that the risk for postoperative cardiac ischemic events in lower extremity vascular operations is at least as great as for aortic operations.
...
PMID:Comparison of cardiac morbidity between aortic and infrainguinal operations. Study of Perioperative Ischemia (SPI) Research Group. 173 96
Late complications of
diabetes mellitus
include a variety of clinical pictures, mainly related to the involvement of the arterial wall both of large vessels (macroangiopathy) and small vessels (microangiopathy), and of the peripheral nervous system (neuropathy). Their presence in almost all types of
diabetes
indicates that there is a common pathogenetic mechanism, which can be substantially identified in high blood glucose levels and related alterations. Hyperglycemia, in fact, leads to some metabolic abnormalities, i.e. non-enzymatic glycosylation of proteins and polyol pathway activity; moreover it can negatively affect the pattern of some hormones, especially GH and sex steroids, and normal rheological and clotting properties of blood. These abnormalities, confirmed by experimental models, play a key role in the development of late diabetic complications. However some evidence indicates that a genetic background may predispose to their development or protect from their onset. The two main forms of diabetic retinopathy, non-proliferative and proliferative, show an incidence which increases with age and duration of
diabetes
, reaching 100% when
diabetes
lasts for more than 20 years. The risk of blindness, which is very high for the proliferative form, has been dramatically reduced by laser-photocoagulation. Diabetic nephropathy affects a lesser number of diabetics but, after a silent or preclinical stage, leads to renal failure and subsequent replacement therapy. Strict metabolic control in the silent stage and later rigid anti-hypertensive treatment can prevent or retard the evolution of this complication. A close association has been observed between
diabetes
and hypertension, which can directly affect the onset and evolution of diabetic nephropathy, probably through a common genetic mechanism. Diabetic neuropathy has a wide variety of clinical manifestations, at somatic, autonomic and central levels and can greatly modify the quality and expectancy of life. However, the major cause of death in diabetic subjects is large vessel disease or macroangiopathy, which is similar to non-diabetic atherosclerosis regarding the main histopathological and clinical manifestations but has a much higher prevalence and severity. Finally, a specific cardiomyopathy has also been described in
diabetes mellitus
and can account for the high rate of
heart failure
observed in these patients.
...
PMID:The late complications of diabetes mellitus. 174 48
Early results of mitral valve replacement were reviewed in 336 unselected patients, 261 without and 75 with concomitant coronary artery bypass grafting (MVR and MVR + CABG groups). Early (less than 30 days) mortality was 7% in the MVR and 16% in the MVR + CABG group, with
cardiac failure
as the dominant cause. In multivariate analysis, the variables most strongly related to early mortality were congestive heart failure,
diabetes
and previous cardiac surgery in the MVR group and congestive heart failure in MVR + CABG. In the cases with fatal outcome the incidence of peroperative technical complications was 32% at MVR and 17% at MVR + CABG. The incidence of myocardial injury was 21% and 35% in the respective groups, and the early mortality in these cases was 19% vs 23%. Half of all fatal cases showed signs of peroperative myocardial injury. Multivariate analysis showed factors independently related to myocardial injury to be year of surgery and aortic cross-clamp time in MVR and previous cardiac surgery in MVR + CABG. Operation before cardiac reserves are reduced, optimal peroperative myocardial preservation and avoidance of technical errors should improve results of MVR.
...
PMID:Early results of mitral valve replacement. 178 Jul 33
We have studied 130 patients with
diabetes mellitus
and 455 patients without. All the patients were consecutively admitted to our Coronary Care Unit with their first myocardial infarction. We have observed a higher incidence of
heart failure
, in-hospital mortality, atrial fibrillation, conduction abnormalities, and post-infarction angina among diabetics. Nevertheless, diabetic patients do not show evidence of larger infarcts than those without
diabetes
. In our patients the higher mortality among diabetics is related to an increased occurrence of left ventricular failure. Moreover, post-infarction ischemic episodes are more common compared with non diabetics. Since infarcts in diabetics do not seem to be more extensive than in non diabetics, we suggest, in accordance with others, that the poorer outcome among diabetic patients with AMI could be related to an underlying cardiac dysfunction of diabetics in addition to coronary artery diseases.
...
PMID:Clinical correlation between diabetic and non diabetic patients with myocardial infarction. 178 49
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical characteristics and the factors related to early mortality in the acute myocardial infarction of the geriatric population. We studied 814 consecutive patients with their first acute myocardial infarction admitted to the coronary care unit at tha Hospital General de Galicia. 401 patients were older than 65 years (Group A) and 413 were younger (Group B). Group A was found a significantly lower percentage of males (64.7% versus 88.4%; p less than 0.001) and smokers (46.7% versus 72.7%; p less than 0.001; and older patients showed a greater incidence of
diabetes mellitus
(28.1% versus 15.2%; p less than 0.001) and arterial hypertension (45.6% versus 31.7%; p less than 0.01). In the geriatric population, the clinical course of the acute myocardial infarction is characterized by a greater incidence of
heart failure
(35.3% versus 11.1%; p less than 0.001), cardiogenic shock (18% versus 5.7%; p less than 0.001) and post-acute myocardial infarction angina pectoris (18.3% versus 12.2%; p less than 0.05). Early mortality (first month) was significantly higher in elderly patients (22.7% versus 6.3%; p less than 0.001). The multivariate analysis by stepwise logistic regression identified cardiogenic shock, age and
heart failure
as the only independent predictive variables for early mortality. We conclude that early mortality in the acute myocardial infarction is high and related to severe degrees of pump failure and age.
...
PMID:[Clinical and prognostic implications of age in acute myocardial infarct]. 179 10
Fifteen cases of chronic heart block were studied. Eight of them could be designated as idiopathic or primary heart block; the others were associated with hypertension,
diabetes
and ischaemic heart disease, either singly or in various combinations. In six cases, the whole heart was available for histopathological study of the conduction system. In the other 9 cases, only a portion of the heart muscle was available for examination. A V nodal fibrosis extending upto the proximal bundle of His was seen in all the six whole heart autopsy materials. Fibrosis of the adjacent myocardium was seen in five cases. In three cases, conducting system fibrosis was associated with atherosclerotic (1 case) or diabetic changes (3 cases) of the intramural vessels. In the 9 partial autopsy studies, myocardial fibrosis was seen in two cases, diabetic microangiopathy in one and atherosclerotic changes in two including an old thrombus in one. Thus, diabetic microangiopathy was seen in total four cases. These changes may be responsible for the cardiomegaly and
cardiac failure
associated with conduction defects observed in
diabetes
. In the idiopathic group also, heart block could be considered as a significant facet of a primary myocardial degenerative process.
...
PMID:Cardiac changes implicated in chronic heart block. 181 5
Enoximone, a new phosphodiesterase-inhibitor with positive inotropic and vasodilating activities is available for intravenous use in patients with severe
heart failure
. A review of the current knowledge regarding the adverse effects of this substance reveals that they are characterized by cardiovascular, central nervous, and gastrointestinal side effects. Adverse effects occurred in 20% of patients and were mostly due to the pharmacological properties of enoximone. Cardiovascular side effects (10%) were the most frequent; ventricular and supraventricular arrhythmias were most common. Two to three percent of the patients experienced hypotension due to the vasodilator activity of enoximone. Headache, insomnia, and anxiety were the most frequent adverse effects on the central nervous system. Three percent of the patients treated experienced vomiting, nausea, abdominal pain, and diarrhea. An increase of liver enzymes and serum glucose could be observed, mostly in patients with previous liver disease or
diabetes
. Pharmacokinetic drug interactions are not known; possible pharmacodynamic interactions result from the pharmacological properties of the drugs. Intravenous therapy with enoximone causes a few serious side effects that can only be controlled by careful observation of the patients treated.
...
PMID:[Tolerance of enoximone in patients with heart failure]. 183 4
We present preliminary data of a study comparing captopril, a short acting, with lisinopril, a long acting ACE-inhibitor in 8 of 12 projected patients with severe chronic
heart failure
(NYHA III-IV) and one additional risk factor (e.g.
diabetes mellitus
, renal failure). The 8 patients were treated in a cross over design for 12 weeks with either drug. While lisinopril improved NYHA-class in all patients, captopril reached this goal in only 3. Renal function was stable in all patients. Captopril influenced hormones (renin, aldosterone, norepinephrine, epinephrine) and microalbuminuria less than lisinopril. The number of adverse reactions was smaller in lisinopril treated patients. These preliminary data demonstrate at least an equal efficacy of lisinopril compared to captopril in high risk patients with severe chronic
heart failure
.
...
PMID:[Comparison of lisinopril and captopril in treatment of severe heart failure (NYHA III-IV) in high risk patients. Preliminary results of the trial]. 185 Sep 42
The clinical characteristics and long-term survival of 284 patients from the Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS) registry data base who had moderate to severe congestive heart failure symptoms and a left ventricular ejection fraction greater than or equal to 0.45 were studied. A control group consisting of registry patients with an ejection fraction greater than or equal to 0.45 who did not have
heart failure
was used for comparison. Patients who had
heart failure
were older and more likely to be female and to have a higher incidence of hypertension,
diabetes
and chronic lung disease than registry patients who did not have
heart failure
. As a group, patients with
heart failure
had more severe angina and were more likely to have had a prior myocardial infarction than were registry patients without
heart failure
. At 6 year follow-up, 82% of patients in the
heart failure
group survived compared with 91% of patients in the control group (p less than 0.0001). Multivariate analysis using the Cox proportional hazards model identified the following independent predictors of mortality: regional ventricular systolic dysfunction, number of diseased coronary arteries, advanced age, hypertension, lung disease,
diabetes
, increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and
heart failure
symptoms. Among patients with
heart failure
, the 6-year survival rate of those who had three-vessel coronary artery disease was 68% compared with 92% for the group without coronary artery disease. However, the 6-year survival rate for patients with
heart failure
who underwent surgical revascularization of diseased coronary arteries was not significantly improved compared with that of patients treated medically.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Congestive heart failure symptoms in patients with preserved left ventricular systolic function: analysis of the CASS registry. 185 5
The influence of type II
diabetes
on the success rate of arterial bypass operations in the leg was assessed in a prospective study, since 1984, of long-term results of infrainguinal arterial reconstruction in 67 type II diabetics (41 men and 26 women; mean age 71.2 [47-90] years) and compared with 133 nondiabetics (90 men and 43 women; mean age 71.5 [45-91] years). All had a bypass for chronic critical ischaemia of the legs. Graft patency, leg preservation and survival rate were calculated and compared by the actuarial method. Coronary heart diseases and cerebral ischaemia were a little more common in the diabetic group, but the incidence of
heart failure
was the same (20%). A venous bypass was used in 73% of diabetics, polytetrafluoroethylene grafts in 27% (nondiabetics: 79% and 21%). Bypass occlusions occurred in 9 diabetics and in 24 nondiabetics (not significant). During the observation period of 5 years 37 diabetics (55%) and 39 nondiabetics (29%) died (P less than 0.001). These data indicate that the results of infrainguinal arterial bypass operations are equally good in diabetics and nondiabetics. Amputation was avoided in 80% of legs at risk in both groups. Primary amputation is indicated only in exceptional circumstances.
...
PMID:[Long-term results after infrainguinal arterial reconstruction in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and without diabetes mellitus]. 186 Apr 20
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