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

We studied plasma levels of atrial and brain natriuretic peptides at rest and after exercise before and after intracardiac surgery with and without the maze procedure in patients with chronic heart failure secondary to valvular heart disease. The present study found that an increased response of both cardiac natriuretic peptides is attenuated with resulting water retention after the maze procedure.
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PMID:Effect of the maze procedure for atrial fibrillation on atrial and brain natriuretic peptide. 910 15

Hypertension is regarded as the most common cause of heart failure in Nigeria and other Black African countries. A few reports suggest that heart failure due to hypertension hardly occurs without the presence of an extra burden on the heart from the presence of other cardiac risk factors. This study assesses the occurrence of other potential causes of heart failure in 55 consecutive admitted cases of hypertensive heart failure. All but six cases (88%) were associated with the presence of one or other significant cardiac risk factors while 56.2% were associated with multiple heart failure risk factors. Five of the six were poor drug compliers. Of the six, only one was completely free of cardiac risk factors and he was unaware of his hypertension and so had never had therapy. The others either consumed alcohol moderately, had mild renal impairment or were grossly obese. The factors found were anaemia, renal dysfunction, abnormal glucose tolerance, alcoholic ingestion and co-existing valvular heart disease. The finding shows that among Nigerian patients hospitalised for hypertensive heart failure, heart failure was rare in those hypertensive patients who had no extra cardiac burden, and therefore control of these factors will help prevent the development of heart failure in hypertension with its dismal prognosis.
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PMID:How common is heart failure due to systemic hypertension alone in hospitalised Nigerians? 914 Jul 85

Doppler echocardiography has become the major diagnostic tool of evaluation of valvular heart disease and the cardiomyopathies because of its ability to provide valuable haemodynamic information accurately and non-invasively. It is therefore ideally suited for haemodynamic stress testing in these patients. In aortic stenosis, dobutamine echocardiography can distinguish severe from non-severe stenosis in patients with depressed left ventricular function, low transvalvular gradients, and a relatively small (flow-related) valve area at baseline. Patients with non-severe aortic stenosis increase cardiac output and valve area with dobutamine infusion while the transvalvular gradient does not change significantly. In severe aortic stenosis, the pressure gradient increases significantly with stroke volume, but valve area does not. In patients who fail to increase stroke volume (absent contractile reserve) and therefore do not show a change in haemodynamics, the severity of the lesion is 'indeterminate'; these patients are characterized by a very poor prognosis. In mitral stenosis, patients can be identified who increase valve area during exercise, which is the fundamental mechanism by which stroke volume can be increased in mitral stenosis. The increase in pulmonary artery pressure during exercise (assessed from tricuspid regurgitant signal) can be dramatically different in patients with comparable resting haemodynamics; therefore exercise echocardiography provides information which cannot be obtained from resting measurements alone and can help to guide medical and surgical therapy. Whether stress echocardiography may be similarly helpful in patients with regurgitant lesions is still a subject of investigation. Exercise Doppler echocardiographic studies following aortic valve replacement (small valves) can identify impairment of systolic and diastolic function indicative of 'valve prosthesis-patient mismatch'. In hypertrophic cardiomyopathy the dynamics of outflow obstruction can be assessed following exercise or pharmacological intervention. In dilative cardiomyopathy, contractile reserve can be assessed by dobutamine echocardiography which may help in evaluating prognosis, guiding heart failure therapy, and monitoring therapy with cardiotoxic chemotherapeutic agents.
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PMID:Stress echocardiography beyond coronary artery disease. 918 22

The aim of the study was to determine the relations of 24-h blood pressure (BP) and its different phases with left atrial size. A total of 130 subjects (mean age 46 years) not taking cardiac drugs were studied by M-mode and Doppler echocardiography and ambulatory BP recording. Subjects (excluding those with coronary artery or valvular heart disease, heart failure, or diabetes) were classified into two groups: 25 normotensives and 105 hypertensives (history of antihypertensive treatment and office diastolic BP > 90 mm Hg). The two groups were comparable in terms of sex, age, and heart rate, whereas body mass index, (P < .01), office BP, average 24-h BP, and average daytime and nighttime BP (all P < .00001) were higher in hypertensives. Hypertensives also had increased left atrial dimension, left atrial dimension/aortic root ratio (both P < .001), and left ventricular mass (LV) indexed for height (P < .0001). Positive correlations of left atrial dimension were found with office BP, average 24-h, average daytime and nighttime systolic and diastolic BP, LV mass index, and Doppler-derived E/A ratio. In a multivariate model that included potentially confounding factors, only body mass index (standardized beta coefficient = 0.41, P < .00001), average nighttime diastolic BP (beta = 0.33, P < .00001), and male sex (beta = 0.18, P < .01) were independent predictors of left atrial size in the pooled population. In conclusion, left atrial size is more closely related to ambulatory, rather than office, BP measurements, and high average nighttime BP is a powerful marker of left atrial enlargement in arterial hypertension.
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PMID:Influence of nighttime blood pressure on left atrial size in uncomplicated arterial systemic hypertension. 927 77

In the previous 2 decades, there have been many advances in the treatment of coronary and valvular heart disease. However, these treatments remain imperfect, and more patients are surviving only to have congestive heart failure develop later in life. During the same 2 decades, advances in surgical techniques and immunosuppression made cardiac transplantation the treatment of choice for severe, end-stage heart failure. Despite concomitant legislation designed to promote organ donation, there remains a severe shortfall in the number of organ donors compared with the number of potential recipients. This article discusses identification of the potential organ donor, assessment of the heart for donation, medical management of the brain-dead organ donor from pronouncement to procurement, and finally, some of the ethical issues raised in the wake of further efforts to increase the potential donor pool.
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PMID:The cardiac transplant donor: identification, assessment, and management. 929 41

As the use of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) increases, the chance of a practitioner's encountering a patient with significant heart failure, ventricular dysfunction, or valvular heart disease also increases. This article reviews the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and available data on the risk of ECT in these patients. Recommendations are made regarding evaluation and treatment of such patients. Some special situations are identified that may require a modification of routine procedures. Overall, ECT can be performed safely in most patients with underlying cardiac conditions, as long as appropriate precautions are taken to identify these patients ahead of time.
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PMID:Electroconvulsive therapy in patients with heart failure or valvular heart disease. 934 30

Mitral regurgitation is a common valvular heart disease, particularly in the elderly population. The timing of surgical repair is controversial, but recent literature suggests a new clinical perspective on the management of this disease. Despite receiving medical treatment and having few initial symptoms, patients with mitral regurgitation due to flail leaflets have an excess mortality rate (6.3% per year) and high morbidity. Ten years after mitral regurgitation has been diagnosed, 90% of the patients have either died or undergone an operation. After surgical correction of mitral regurgitation, left ventricular dysfunction is a frequent complication and is the cause of excess heart failure and mortality. This complication is due to preoperative left ventricular dysfunction but is incompletely predictable with use of current methods. Conversely, considerable progress in surgery has resulted in an extremely low operative mortality rate (about 1% in patients younger than 75 years of age) and high feasibility of valve repair, even in patients with anterior leaflet prolapse. These facts have led to the new perspective that early surgical correction (before occurrence of overt symptoms or left ventricular dysfunction) should be considered when patients are diagnosed with severe mitral regurgitation.
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PMID:Mitral regurgitation: a new clinical perspective. 937 77

Improvements in the identification and control of hypertension have helped define populations at risk for hypertension and delineated the role of hypertension as a risk factor in ischemic heart disease and heart failure. Epidemiologic data document the high prevalence of hypertension among the elderly and black populations. Beginning in the 1970s, a new perspective on the identification and treatment of hypertension began to emerge with greater emphasis on blood pressure control, particularly among these high-risk groups. By the early 1990s, most hypertensive individuals were being treated and blood pressure was under control in 55% of hypertensive persons overall. Although the importance of elevated diastolic pressure has traditionally been emphasized, in recent years the clinical implications of isolated systolic hypertension and the benefit of treating elevated systolic pressure have been recognized. Coronary heart disease is associated with definite hypertension (> or =160/95); however, the presence of other risk factors such as elevated plasma levels of cholesterol and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, cigarette smoking, and diabetes mellitus create a synergy with even mild hypertension (140-159/90-94 mm Hg) to increase coronary risk. A different situation is present for cardiac failure. Data from the Framingham Heart Study demonstrate that hypertension, myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, diabetes mellitus, left ventricular hypertrophy, and valvular heart disease were associated with an increased relative risk for cardiac failure. The relative risk for cardiac failure was greatest for persons with a previous myocardial infarction, and hypertension and previously diagnosed coronary heart disease were important precursors of cardiac failure.
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PMID:An epidemiologic perspective of systemic hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and heart failure. 937 42

A 77-year-old woman with severe valvular heart disease and chronic renal failure was admitted to hospital for control of her heart condition and to improve her ability to perform activities of daily living. In the past 2 years, she had been admitted to hospital four times due to severe congestive heart failure, and she was bedridden because of muscle weakness. A multidisciplinary approach was taken. A cardiologist reassessed her medications and determined an exercise level in co-operation with a physical therapist. After 40 days of rehabilitation, the patient was able to walk 200 m without the help of a cane. With an increase in the exercise level, her cardiothoracic ratio increased from 68 to 74%. The furosemid was then increased from 40 to 60 mg per day and 20 mg of denopamine was added, which resulted in a decrease of the cardiothoracic ratio to 66%. Dietary assessment revealed her usual salt intake was more than 10 g per day, and the dietitian advised the patient that her daily salt intake should be lower than 7 g and water intake less than 800 ml per day. Consultations with social-service personnel made revealed problems in her family and living environment, and she was advised of available social services. For good compliance, the patient had her medication explained by a pharmacist. Assessment of activities of her daily living and intensive education about congestive heart failure were performed by the nurse in charge. After discharge, a nurse team visited her home every two weeks and watched for signs of heart failure. This comprehensive intervention prevented an exacerbation of heart failure and readmission for nine months.
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PMID:[Multidisciplinary approach to an elderly patient with severe congestive heart failure]. 949 70

A retrospective multicenter survey of the 230 chronic dialysis centers in metropolitan France, conducted between January 1 1998 and December 31 1992, to assess the incidence, causes and features of severe valvular heart disease among chronic dialysis patients, identified 98 patients. The annual incidence was estimated to be 15 to 19 cases per 10,000 dialysed patients. The most common etiologies were calcific valvular disease (69%) and endocarditis (19%). Calcific valvular disease led mostly to aortic stenosis, whereas endocarditis primarily caused mitral insufficiency. Two valves were damaged in 32% of the endocarditis patients versus 9% of those with calcific valvular disease. Sixty-one patients underwent surgery. Median overall survival after surgery was 25 +/- 3.0 months. Patients who underwent surgery for calcific valvulopathy, aortic stenosis or only aortic valve replacement had a median survival of 36 months. Patients who underwent surgery for endocarditis or replacement of 2 valves had a median survival of < 12 months. Actuarial survival of surgical patients differed significantly between: i) the patients for whom presurgical evaluation showed a single valvular lesion and those with multiple valvular lesions (p = 0.002), ii) the patients who had surgery to replace a single heart valve and those who had another type of surgery (p = 0.001), and iii) the patients who had surgery to insert a single aortic prosthetic heart valve and those who had another type of surgery (p = 0.004). Multivariate analysis (including etiologies, number of valvular lesions and type of surgery) showed that survival was significantly dependent only on the number of severe valvular lesions (p = 0.002). Five patients with severe calcific aortic stenosis died before scheduled surgery could be performed. These data suggest that, for patients on chronic dialysis, calcific aortic stenosis is the most frequent form of severe valvular disease. Because aortic stenosis progresses rapidly in these patients and thus quickly leads to irreversible cardiac failure, the operative risk, although high in this population, seems acceptable when only one valve is affected.
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PMID:Severe valvular heart disease in patients on chronic dialysis. A five-year multicenter French survey. 953 97


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