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The paper is a unique pathological description of a bilateral, symmetric, anterior, temporal ischemic optic neuropathy with the morphological characteristics of cavernous optic atrophy initially described by Schnabel in glaucomatous eyes. The 80-year-old woman had suffered from cardiac insufficiency and diabetes mellitus for many years. She died from sepsis and circulatory collapse due to ischemic colitis, intestinal perforation, and peritonitis. There was widespread arteriosclerosis but no evidence of giant-cell arteritis. Cell loss was demonstrated in both retinas, the chiasm, and in the central lateral geniculate body. These represent a retrograde, descending and ascending optic atrophy, with transsynaptic degeneration in the LGB. A small craniopharyngioma was found by chance in the infundibulum. Neither clinically nor morphologically were there any signs of glaucoma.
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PMID:[Histopathology of the retina, optic fascicle and lateral geniculate body in chronic, bilateral symmetric ischemic Schnabel's cavernous optic atrophy]. 224 78

The purpose of this article was to review the clinical and experimental features of diabetic cardiomyopathy, with particular relevance to the Black population. One hundred thirty-seven studies were identified, of which 57 were selected as references for this article. Diabetes is associated with the development of cardiomyopathy, independent of coronary atherosclerosis. Pathological studies show myocardial hypertrophy and fibrosis; microvascular pathology is also present, but all of these pathological findings have an uncertain relationship to myocardial failure. Hemodynamic findings of both congestive and restrictive cardiomyopathy have been described. Noninvasive studies revealed abnormal systolic and diastolic function in many diabetic subjects, particularly in the presence of diabetic complications and/or hypertension. Experimental studies have focused on the mildly diabetic dog and the severely diabetic rat. One year of diabetes in dogs resulted in decreased left ventricular compliance and increased interstitial connective tissue. Studies in the diabetic rat showed a marked slowing of contraction and relaxation. Chronic insulin therapy reversed the changes in the rat model. Combining hypertension with diabetes in the rat resulted in increased myocardial and coronary microvascular pathology and greater changes in isolated muscle function, electrophysiology, and contractile protein biochemistry. Many hypertensive diabetic rats died spontaneously, showing signs of congestive heart failure. Diabetic cardiomyopathy is a significant cause of heart failure in diabetic subjects and occurs more frequently in those with microvascular complications and/or hypertension. Clinical studies are needed to clarify the natural history of this disorder, focusing on the benefits of tight control of hyperglycemia and treatment of associated hypertension. Experimental studies will clarify the pathophysiology and contribute to improved therapy. The high prevalence of diabetes and hypertension in Blacks makes these considerations especially relevant to this population.
Diabetes Care 1990 Nov
PMID:Diabetic cardiomyopathy. 226 38

A 6-year retrospective study of 341 cases of acute myocardial infarction admitted to JN Medical College Hospital, Aligarh in respect of the incidence, complications and mortality in relation to age, sex, religion, smoking habit occupation and risk factors was made. The incidence was found to be 9 per 1000 hospital admissions. Maximum number of cases was in the age group of 51-60 years and male to female ratio was 7:1. There was no significant difference in incidence and mortality between Hindus and Muslims of both sexes. Highest incidence was noted among sedentary workers and smokers. Hypercholesterolaemia was found in only 17.01% cases, the rest having normal serum cholesterol levels. Hypertension and diabetes mellitus were associated in 24.05% and 12.32% cases respectively. Cardiac complications were noted in 43.4% of patients, the commonest being cardiac failure. Overall in-hospital mortality was observed to be 11.41% of which 79.49% had cardiac complications. Diabetics had significantly (p less than 0.05) higher mortality rate (21.43%) as compared to non-diabetics. Smokers had higher mortality rate compared to non-smokers (p less than 0.01). Although those with hypertension and with hypercholesterolaemia had higher mortality, the results were not statistically significant. The average day of expiry after acute myocardial infarction was 3.82 days during hospital stay.
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PMID:Morbidity and mortality of acute myocardial infarction in and around Aligarh. 226 65

To elucidate the nature of lipid defects in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) concurrent with acute myocardial infarction (MI), the study was undertaken to examine the serum concentrations of total cholesterol, triglycerides, alpha- and beta-lipoproteins with DM in the presence of acute MI. 40 non-diabetic patients with acute MI, 23 diabetics with postinfarct cardiosclerosis, and 17 non-insulin-dependent diabetics without signs of coronary atherosclerosis. Urinary epinephrine and norepinephrine excretion was additionally determined in the acute period and 3-4 weeks after therapy. Homogeneous lipid metabolic parameters were found in CHD patients with and without DM and when transient hyperglycemia developed. The patients with acute MI exhibited some increase in lipid consumption to satisfy the energy need for the cardiovascular system, this being true for triglycerides in DM patients. The DM patients who showed low triglyceride levels had more frequently transmural MI and MI complicated with heart failure. Obesity and familial histories of DM and CHD in DM patients with acute MI were ascertained to be accompanied by reduced serum alpha-lipoprotein concentrations.
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PMID:[The nature of changes in lipid metabolism in patients with diabetes mellitus associated with ischemic heart disease]. 227 41

Patients with staphylococcus endocarditis hospitalized at the Cantonal Hospital Lucerne from 1971 to 1988 are reviewed. A total of 50 patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria (in 60% of the cases the diagnosis was definite, in 26% probable, and in 14% possible). These 50 patients with staphylococcus infection account for 29% of all patients with infective endocarditis seen during this time interval. Staphylococcus endocarditis affected the mitral valve in 48%, the aortic valve in 36% and--unexpectedly often--the tricuspid valve in 30%. In 54% previously normal valves were infected. Diminished host defence (predominantly intravenous drug addiction and diabetes) was a predisposing feature in 52% of the patients. The average duration of symptoms before diagnosis was 11 days, and in patients with right heart endocarditis it was 21 days. In 20% the condition was not diagnosed before autopsy. The clinical picture was relatively nonspecific: 50% of patients had no diagnostic heart murmur and 10% had no fever. The dominant--often misleading--symptoms were due to embolic complications. Two thirds of the cases with right heart endocarditis had pulmonary emboli. In 38% of the patients endocarditis resulted in heart failure. Overall mortality was 51% and correlated with age and the presence of heart failure, uncontrolled infection or cerebral embolism. In contrast to the high mortality in patients with mitral valve infection (61%), only one of the 11 patients with isolated right heart endocarditis died.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects of staphylococcal endocarditis]. 229 7

To examine the impact of gender on survival after myocardial infarction, we performed a retrospective cohort study of 332 women and 790 men. Women who had a myocardial infarction were older and more often had hypertension, diabetes, previous heart failure, and impaired left ventricular function on admission. Cumulative 3-year mortality and in-hospital mortality rates were significantly higher in women than men, but mortality among hospital survivors was similar. After multivariate adjustment for baseline differences, mortality rates were not significantly different between women and men for in-hospital deaths, and mortality at 3 years among hospital survivors tended to be lower among women. We conclude that higher observed mortality rates following a myocardial infarction in women are related to differences in known risk factors for subsequent mortality and that gender should not be considered an independent risk factor for mortality after myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Differences between women and men in survival after myocardial infarction. Biology or methodology? 229 81

We analyzed the spectral components of RR interval variability under controlled respiration (15 breaths/min) in 56 patients (age range, 35-73 years) referred for coronary angiography; 14 patients had multivessel disease (group M), 21 had one-vessel disease (group S), and 21 had nonsignificant disease or normal coronary artery (group N). There were 43 healthy controls (age range, 36-71 years) (group C). The patients had no clinical evidence of heart failure, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, or acute stage of infarction and had taken no medication for 3 days. The autoregressive power spectral density of RR interval variability contains two major components, respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) (0.25 Hz) and Mayer wave-like sinus arrhythmia (MWSA) (0.04-0.15 Hz), which have magnitudes that are quantitative markers of cardiac vagal activity and sympathetic activity with vagal modulation, respectively. We represented the magnitudes by the coefficient of component variance (CCV), which provided the amplitude relative to the mean RR interval. The age- and sex-adjusted mean of CCVRSA significantly decreased with advancing angiographic severity (1.64 +/- 0.09%, 1.66 +/- 0.12%, 1.22 +/- 0.13%, and 0.81 +/- 0.16% for groups C, N, S, and M, respectively) (p = 0.0001). The CCVRSA was unrelated to left ventricular function, previous myocardial infarction, or stenosis of any specific artery including the sinoatrial and atrioventricular node arteries. The CCVMWSA decreased only in group M (p = 0.0462). These results indicate that coronary artery disease is associated with vagal dominant impairment in autonomic cardiac function and that reduction in the vagal cardiac function correlates with the angiographic severity.
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PMID:Decreased magnitude of heart rate spectral components in coronary artery disease. Its relation to angiographic severity. 231 4

The purpose of this study was to investigate, if besides the hypocontractility, which is the main finding in Primary Cardiomyopathy (PDC) there was some other mechanism in the development of heart failure and if this fact could influence in it's prognosis. We studied 13 patients with PDC in the hemodynamic cardiac laboratory from January 1982 to January 1988, these with systemic arterial hypertension. Coronary heart disease, myocarditis, primary valvular lesion, infiltrative disease, nephropathy, congenital heart disease, diabetes and alcoholism, were excluded. The control group was formed by 12 healthy subjects, which were studied for another purpose. We analyzed nine variables, including ejection fraction, peripheral vascular resistance, systolic and diastolic circumferential stress, left ventricular mass, left ventricular end diastolic and systolic volumes as well as force-velocity and force-fiber length relationship. The patients were followed up from 8 to 60 months (average 39 months). The cases with PDC were divided in two groups, "compensated" and "decompensated". The last ones with low ejection fraction and significantly increases systolic stress. We investigated which was the mechanism of compensation and decompensation through the force-velocity and force-fiber length relation. We found that compensation is associated with great increase of the after-load forces, the more end systolic volume at the end of the systole is not only controlled by the "force", but the decompensation is developed when the hypocontractility is added to the incompetence to compensate the after load. We found that the three deaths in this study had these hemodynamic characteristics, being the cause of death: the presence of heart failure in two patients and ventricular fibrillation in one.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Prognostic indexes in primary dilated cardiomyopathy]. 234 26

The prognostic evaluation of the patient with an acute myocardial infarction is one of the most interesting unanswered problems. This is both because of its complexity and its implications in terms of secondary prevention. Several clinical studies have emphasized the reliability of the prognostic evaluation based on data collected during the first 24 hours. We therefore evaluated the prognostic relevance of 26 variables measured in the coronary care unit in 1914 patients admitted to our Unit as a result of acute myocardial infarction during the past 10 years. Twenty-four patients were lost to follow-up so that the evaluation refers to 1,890 patients, 1,506 of whom are males aged between 22 and 99 years (mean 58.1) and 384 are females aged between 29 and 88 years (mean 67.1); thus there is a greater prevalence of males. The sex-related difference in the age distribution is statistically significant. In-hospital mortality was analyzed using univariate and multivariate statistical methods (chi-squared test, multiple logistic regression analysis). The prognostic relevance of the considered variables in relation to the survival was analysed using the logrank test and using Cox's model. The variables associated with a greater risk of in-hospital death were found to be: age, presence of diabetes, anterior location of the infarct, arterial hypotension at admission, Killip class III and IV and the presence of ventricular tachyarrhithmias. In contrast, smokers had a lower in-hospital death risk. As to mortality during the follow-up, there was an association with age, female sex, pre-existent coronary disease, presence of high heart rate on admission, low peripheral tissue perfusion, x-ray documented pulmonary congestion, supraventricular tachiarrhythmias and intraventricular block. In contrast, the presence of obesity was associated with a reduced death risk during the follow-up. During the follow-up the most frequent cause of death was re-infarction, followed by sudden death, death from non-cardiac causes and heart failure.
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PMID:[Early and late prognosis in acute myocardial infarct. A retrospective study in patients admitted to the coronary care unit in the past 10 years]. 234 99

Cohorts of diabetic (n = 121) and non-diabetic (n = 584) patients were prospectively followed for up to ten years after having suffered from a stroke. All but six of the diabetic patients had Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. The diabetic patients had more risk factors associated with stroke: heart failure (p less than 0.001) and angina pectoris (p less than 0.001), than the non-diabetic patients. Neither body mass index nor blood pressure levels differed between the groups at admission. Haematocrit levels were higher in the diabetic group (p less than 0.01). The diabetic patients were more commonly afflicted by cerebral embolism and to a lesser extent by transient ischaemic attacks than the non-diabetic patients. When calculated by log-rank tests, the diabetic group had an increased risk of death (p less than 0.001), recurrent stroke (p = 0.001), and of myocardial infarction (p = 0.001) after the initial stroke. Autopsy-verified causes of death between the groups did not differ significantly, although half of all deaths during the period one to six months after stroke were caused by pulmonary embolism in the diabetic group. Thus, diabetes increases the risk of death after a stroke, and it also increases among stroke survivors the risk of recurrent stroke and myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Prognosis after stroke in diabetic patients. A controlled prospective study. 234 37


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