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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The case of a 24-year old patient having suffered a bullet wound was reported. After a
hemopericardium
accompanied by minor signs of tamponade, a continuous murmur gradually appeared due to a fistula between the right coronary artery and the right atrium, which was strictly symptomless: surgical repair was performed eight years after the accident. This satisfactory spontaneous outcome, after surviving the life threatening danger of tamponade and myocardial infarction was also observed in the 21 cases of coronary-cardiac fistulae already published. The fistula, which almost always involves the right heart cavities, only gives rise to a continuous murmur which is often discovered at a later stage. The long term course of traumatic coronary-cardiac fistulae can only be assessed by comparison with congenital coronary-cardiac fistulae, which are much better known, and the consequences of which are on all accounts similar. Four complications are discussed:
heart failure
, coronary insufficiency, infectious endocarditis, and the rupture of the fistulized coronary artery due to aneurysmal dilatation. These risks are statistically small and more theoretical then real, and the justification of systematic repair of traumatic coronary-cardiac fistulae now rests essentially on the relatively low risk of the procedure.
...
PMID:[Traumatic coronary-cardiac fistulas. Apropos of a case]. 12 Jan 52
Epistenocardial pericarditis, usually associated with anterior infarct, was noted in 64/400 myocardial infarct subjects admitted to an intensive care unit. No significant difference was observed with respect to this group in the case of mortality (20.6% as opposed to 26.2% in the controls) or complications of the acute stage, such as
cardiac insufficiency
and arrhythmia, though atrial fibrillation was more frequent (25% as against 15%). In all but one case, anticoagulant management was suspended on the appearance of pericarditis. In spite of the high frequency of atrial fibrillation, thromboembolic complications were not more frequent during brief (48-72 hr) suspension of anticoagulants. Dressler's syndrome was noted in 7 cases (1.7%), with epistenocardial pericarditis (4/7) or ventricular ectasia (3/7).
Haemopericardium
occurred in the case where anticoagulant management was not suspended.
...
PMID:[Pericarditis in recent myocardial infarct]. 13 68
Among 400 patients with myocardial infarction who had been admitted to the intensive care department, pericarditis was observed in 64 cases (16%). It occurred more frequently with anterior wall infarctions. The influence of the pericarditis on the mortality and complications threatening in the acute period were particularly investigated: There was no significant difference with regard to the mortality (20.6% in the group with pericarditis, 26.2% in the control group) or the occurrence of
cardiac insufficiency
or arrhythmias as complications. Atrial flutter, however, is more frequent (25% against 15%). Anticoagulant therapy was discontinued when pericarditis appeared, with one exception. In spite of the high frequency of atrial flutter, embolic complications were not more frequent after discontinuing the anticoagulant therapy. A postmyocardial infarction syndrome was observed seven times (1.7%), it was frequently found in a pericarditis with angina pectoris (4/7) and with ventricular aneurysm (3/7).
Hemopericardium
occurred in one patient in whom anticoagulant therapy had not been discontinued.
...
PMID:[Pericarditis and fresh myocardial infarction (author's transl)]. 82 12
The authors report two cases of left
cardiac failure
occurring three and ten months after aortic valve replacement. Echocardiography established the diagnosis of localized compression of left heart chambers by
hemopericardium
. Surgical drainage dramatically improved patients with a follow-up of 4 years and 18 months. The authors emphasize the interest of left thoracotomy for drainage and discuss the etiology.
...
PMID:[Late cardiac tamponade by localized compression of the left cavities after heart valve surgery. Apropos of 2 cases]. 195 20
A 24-year-old woman with a history of syncope and recurrent
hemopericardium
was urgently hospitalized with signs of severe right-sided
heart failure
. Two-dimensional echocardiography demonstrated a largedechogenic mass that compressed the right ventricle. The patient was referred for emergency surgery. A large angiosarcoma originating in the right atrium was excised, and the patient was treated with chemotherapy. The role of echocardiography in the detection of cardiac tumors is discussed.
...
PMID:Primary angiosarcoma of the heart detected by two-dimensional echocardiography. 357 Jul 36
Acute rupture of the left ventricular free wall was suspected in a 53 year old hypertensive patient at the 12th hour of primary antero-septo-apical myocardial infarction. He developed acute tamponade with severe cardiogenic shock during his transfer to hospital. Cardiac compression due to
hemopericardium
was confirmed by M mode echocardiography (pericardial effusion), right heart catheterisation (adiastole and low cardiac output) and pericardial puncture during which several ccs of blood were aspirated leading to a slight improvement in the patient's condition. At operation under cardiopulmonary bypass 2,5 hours after hospital admission, the surgeon found a
hemopericardium
related to fissuration of an acute apical infarct which was sutured on a Teflon support. The initial postoperative course was complicated by unexplained gastro-intestinal hemorrhage, transient functional renal failure,
cardiac failure
and mediastinitis, but the final outcome was successful with a follow-up of 24 months. This appears to be the 9th reported case of long-term survival after surgical repair of rupture of the heart in the acute phase of myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:[Acute rupture of the left ventricle 12 hours after an anteroseptal myocardial infarct. Successful surgical repair]. 640 36
Two cases of post-infarction anterior left ventricular aneurysm complicated by localised rupture into the pericardium are reported. The clinical features of these cases were severe
cardiac failure
, 10 days or more after initial necrosis posing the problem of
myocardial failure
due to extension of the infarct. The surgical indications were brought by left ventricular angiography performed under intra-aortic balloon pumping: in the first case the diagnosis had already been suggested by the detection of a
hemopericardium
on echocardiography. In both cases, the surgical procedure comprised aneurysmectomy with reinforcement of the ventricular wall with bands of Teflon. The postoperative period was complicated due to the very precarious hemodynamics at the time of surgery. The functional status of both patients is now very satisfactory.
...
PMID:[Rupture of post-infarction left ventricular aneurysm. Apropos of 2 cases treated surgically successfully]. 681 77
Evaluation of pericardial effusion was attempted with computed tomography in 11 patients. The volume and distribution of pericardial fluid were assessed with satisfactory resolution and the nature of the fluid was estimated by the difference in x-ray transparency (CT numbers). The volume of pericardial fluid calculated by tomographic methods ranged from 25 ml. to 585 ml. and agreed well with the surgically drained fluid volume. The CT numbers of the pericardial effusion due to renal or
heart failure
, acute viral pericarditis, hypothyroidism, and
hemopericardium
were +12 to +13, +20, +28 to +30, and +26 to +40, respectively. Therefore the volume and gross nature of the pericardial fluid could be estimated noninvasively with computed tomography.
...
PMID:Evaluation of pericardial effusion with computed tomography. 737 90
The operative approach to constrictive pericarditis still remains a surgical challenge. Subtotal pericardiectomy through median sternotomy was analyzed retrospectively in a series of 84 patients operated on for chronic constrictive pericarditis at our institution between 1979 and 1989. The mean duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis was 20 +/- 6 months (1-264 months). Preoperatively, 72% of patients were in NYHA class III or IV, presented signs of right
cardiac failure
(88%) or anasarca (18%). Chest X-ray showed pericardial calcifications in 40% of the patients. Echocardiography revealed pericardial thickening in 62%. Among 62 patients in whom cardiac catheterization was performed, a characteristic dip-and-plateau was found in 47 patients (76%). A specific etiologic factor was identified in only 37 patients: tuberculosis (12%), recurrent acute pericarditis (9%),
hemopericardium
(9%), radiotherapy (5%), previous cardiac surgery (4%), bacterial infection (2%), myocardial infarction (2%) and connective tissue disease (2%). In 47 patients (55%), the constrictive pericarditis remained idiopathic. In seven patients we performed a redo-operation for previous incomplete pericardiectomy. Subtotal pericardiectomy (from phrenic nerve to phrenic nerve) was performed in 75 patients. A palliative procedure consisting of pericardial "meshing" was performed in nine patients due to an unsatisfactory cleavage plane. Cardiopulmonary bypass was used in four patients for coexistent cardiac lesions. The operative mortality was 2.3% (two patients: septicemia and pulmonary embolism). Seven patients (8.2%) developed early on-lethal complications. The probability of survival for patients discharged for the hospital was 94% at 3 years and 87% at 7 years. There were four late deaths and no reoperation for recurrent constriction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Results of subtotal pericardiectomy for constrictive pericarditis. 851 53
Rupture of the left-ventricular free wall may not always result in immediate irreversible hemodynamic collapse. We report a series of five patients (4 male, 1 female; age 59-79 years) successfully operated for postinfarction free-wall rupture with good long-term results. Two patients presented with syncopy and acute tamponade three days after an acute myocardial infarction. In two patients with atypical chest pain and congestive heart failure, a large pericardial effusion and an extreme localized thinning of a myocardial scar region was seen several weeks after an uncomplicated myocardial infarct. In one patient a pseudoaneurysm was detected, which developed asymptomatically within three weeks after a posterior myocardial infarct. In all cases myocardial rupture was suspected after an echocardiographic examination. At surgery a
hemopericardium
and a localized rupture site were found. The surgical procedure included closure of the defect by direct suture or patch, CABG in 3 cases, and mitral valve replacement in one patient. The postoperative course was uneventful, only one patient needed IABP for 24 hours. Three patients returned to NYHA functional class I, one patient to class II, and one patient to class III. The latter patient died of
heart failure
17 months postoperatively, and the other patients are still alive 4,18,24, and 26 months postoperatively. Thus clinical representation of left-ventricular free-wall rupture after myocardial infarction can be highly variable. But close cooperation between experienced echocardiographers and surgeons may allow successful corrections with good long term-results.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of rupture of the left-ventricular free wall after myocardial infarction: report of five cases with successful surgical repair. 878 31
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