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

Treatment of male rabbits with adriamycin at a cardiotoxic dose (1 mg/kg intravenously, i.v., twice a week for 9 weeks) caused cardiovascular disturbances characteristic of chronic heart failure. The severity of symptoms varied, indicating differences in the individual sensitivity of the animals to adriamycin. Thus, cardiac output (CO) was decreased by greater than 40% in only 4 of the 7 animals in which it was measurable at 9 weeks. Elevated levels of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and plasma renin activity (PRA), as well as pulmonary congestion, hydrothorax, and ascites were also evident. The baroreflex response to sodium nitroprusside (NPS) was blunted. The response to the inotropic drug dobutamine was depressed by 50% as compared with the control animals. Right ventricular beta-adrenoceptor density was significantly reduced in these animals (22.9 +/- 3.1 as compared with 31.8 +/- 1.0 fmol/mg protein in control animals) owing to a selective downregulation of the beta 1-adrenoceptor population. The loss of beta-adrenoceptors was highly correlated with severity of heart failure symptoms: i.e., baroreflex dysfunction as indicated by the NPS slope (r = 0.91), decrease in CO during the previous weeks (r = 0.88), and plasma norepinephrine (NE) levels (r = 0.96). However, when all adriamycin-treated animals were compared collectively regardless of the severity of heart failure, with the controls, no difference in the beta-adrenoceptor density was detectable, a finding in agreement with previous observations in this model. Chronic treatment of rabbits with adriamycin thus causes low-output failure, reflecting some of the findings reported for the human disease; however, individual sensitivity to adriamycin varies considerably between rabbits.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Chronic adriamycin treatment and its effect on the cardiac beta-adrenergic system in the rabbit. 138 76

Myocardial fibrosis and degeneration of unknown etiology is described in two adult, female goats of the Saanen and Pfauen breeds. Both animals presented with clinical signs of cardiac failure with subcutaneous edema, hydrothorax and ascites. The pathological lesions were characterized by cardiomegaly with ventricular and auricular dilatation and hypertrophy, massive subcutaneous edema and body cavity edema. The first goat additionally showed chronic liver congestion due to cardiac failure. Histologically, the most prominent changes were focally extensive cardiomyocyte degeneration and cardiac fibrosis. The clinical history and pathologic lesions are comparable to those of dilatative cardiomyopathy in SixRH cattle.
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PMID:[Myocardial fibrosis and degeneration with heart failure (cardiomyopathy) in two goats]. 141 28

This is an autopsy report of multiple primary cancers observed in a patient who had clinically been diagnosed as chronic arsenic poisoning. An 88-year-old man, non-smoker, had worked in an arsenic mine for 6 years from the age of 47. He had undergone operations for Bowen's disease and gastric cancer at ages 80 and 86, respectively. At autopsy, squamous cell carcinoma of the lung and a polypoid lesion in the piriform recess were found. Furthermore, microscopic examination revealed latent prostatic adenocarcinoma and oncocytoma in the kidney. The polypoid lesion of the piriform recess appeared to originate from the duct of the minor salivary gland in the pharynx, showing an adenoid cystic carcinoma-like pattern with squamous cell carcinoma in part. The cause of death was thought to be respiratory failure due to bronchopneumonia and pulmonary edema as well as hydrothorax, and chronic heart failure following ischemic heart disease. Bowen's disease was followed by four internal malignant tumors, even though the etiological relation between these cancers and arsenic is not clear.
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PMID:Multiple primary cancers in a case of chronic arsenic poisoning--an autopsy report. 233 47

Approximately 32% of the rats used as animal models showed an elevated heart weight/body weight ratio (0.432[SEM 0.022] g.100 g-1 compared to 0.293[0.009] g.100 g-1 for sham-operated rats), a hydrothorax, pulmonary and liver congestion, and specific histological changes 82-93 weeks after surgically induced aortic constriction. The histological changes were comparable to those observed in hearts of people suffering from long term hypertension. Cardiac failure was also confirmed by depressed contractility as measured by maximum and minimum dP/dt (first derivative of left ventricular pressure), which were 4604(346) and 3627(526) mm Hg.sec-1, respectively, compared with 9165(745) and 5835(268) mm Hg.sec-1 respectively in rats that did not develop left ventricular hypertrophy and failure (CLIP rats). Systolic and left ventricular blood pressures measured under anaesthesia were also decreased: 71.6(5.0) and 88.1(6.3) mm Hg respectively in rats with congestive heart failure, compared with 83.6(2.4) and 109.5(3.6) mm Hg in CLIP rats. Except for a prolonged mean PQ interval associated with a lower heart rate and for a slightly shorter QRS interval in the conscious state, the electrocardiograms of rats with congestive heart failure did not show any major abnormalities specific to ventricular hypertrophy and/or failure. This model could be useful for studying the pathology and adaptative mechanisms in compensated pressure overload induced congestive heart failure as well as in studies comparing pathological changes and means of treatment of congestive heart failure with different aetiologies encountered in the human population.
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PMID:A pressure overload model of congestive heart failure in rats. 259 Sep 29

A 4% mortality in 5-to-11-day-old turkey poults was attributed to 1.85% sodium chloride in the feed. The syndrome included peracute respiratory distress, ascites, and sudden death that resembled peracute heart failure. Clinical signs were observed only in the final phase of the toxicity, but progressive histologic lesions were found. Live, apparently unaffected poults showed increases in intracellular glycogen and cytoplasmic granularity, loss of striation, and early mild intercellular myocardial edema; similar but more severe histologic lesions were seen in live, ascites-affected poults. The ascites-affected poults had hydropericardium and hydrothorax which seemed to develop just minutes before death. Ultrastructurally, focal areas of myocardial cells exhibited myofibrillar disarray, lysis of myofilaments, widened Z-bands, and dilation of sarcoplasmic reticulum.
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PMID:Salt poisoning in turkey poults. 381 24

Suspected monensin toxicosis was seen in feedlot cattle aged 6 to 9 months. Twenty cattle died following inclusion of monensin in the feed at 400g/tonne, which was 13 times the recommended level. The deaths occurred over 2 weeks. Clinical signs were inappetance, respiratory distress and sudden death. Post-mortem features were those of right-sided heart failure and included dependent subcutaneous oedema, ascites, hydrothorax, and periancinar hepatocyte congestion and necrosis. However, in contrast to previous reports no myocardial necrosis was found, but focal skeletal muscle necrosis was observed. Additional findings were marked pulmonary oedema accompanied by fibrin and erythrocyte exudation into alveoli and interlobular lymphatics. From these findings it appears that monensin, as well as affecting both cardiac and skeletal muscle, has a primary effect on lung vasculature.
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PMID:Suspected monensin toxicosis in feedlot cattle. 402 19

This is a case report of a six-year-old female White Alpine sheep with a cardiac fibrosarcoma in the right atrium. Clinically, the sheep had right-sided cardiac insufficiency with tachycardia, engorgement of the jugular veins, brisket edema, and ascites. Chronic congestion of the liver resulted in increased hepatic enzyme activity. Based on clinical findings, a tentative diagnosis of endocarditis or pericarditis was made. Radiography of the thorax revealed hydrothorax. An echogenic mass was observed in the right atrium via echocardiography; it was interpreted as a tumor or thrombus. Ultrasonography of the abdomen revealed severe ascites and chronic congestion of the liver attributable to right-sided cardiac insufficiency. The clinical and sonographic findings were verified at post mortem. The mass in the right atrium was a pedunculated fibrosarcoma.
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PMID:Echocardiographic diagnosis of a cardiac fibrosarcoma in the right atrium of a sheep. 756 42

The Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen-leader protein (EBNA-LP) is required for high efficiency B lymphocyte growth transformation by the virus. To test the potential contribution of EBNA-LP to tumorigenesis in vivo, we produced transgenic mice carrying an EBNA-LP cDNA construct, using the widely expressed metallothionein promoter. Expression of EBNA-LP was detected in liver, kidney, heart, lung and spleen. There were no apparent oncogenic consequences of EBNA-LP expression. Unexpectedly however, at ages ranging from about 4 months to over a year, transgenic mice developed symptoms of congestive heart failure, including left ventricular dilatation, right ventricular hypertrophy, left atrial thrombosis, pulmonary oedema and hydrothorax. Fibrillation was not apparent in the electrocardiograph; however a reduction in T-wave amplitude suggested that the development of an abnormality of ventricular repolarization may precede the manifestation of overt symptoms. The highly predictable development of dilated heart failure in these transgenic mice suggests they may be a useful model for the pathophysiological changes associated with human dilated cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Dilated heart failure in transgenic mice expressing the Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen-leader protein. 839 79

The clinical signs and pathology in an outbreak of toxicity in feedlot cattle attributed to the ingestion of toxic levels of the ionophore antibiotic salinomycin over an extended period of 11 weeks are described. Thirty-nine out of 380 cattle developed signs consistent with cardiac failure and 8 of these died. Clinical signs included dyspnoea, tachypnoea, tachycardia and exercise intolerance. Two cattle were necropsied and in one there were macroscopic lesions suggestive of congestive heart failure, namely pulmonary oedema, hydrothorax and hepatomegaly. Histopathology revealed a chronic cardiomyopathy characterised principally by extensive myocardial fibre atrophy with multifocal hypertrophy and interstitial and replacement fibrosis. Hepatic and pulmonary lesions were consistent with those of congestive cardiac failure. The myocardial lesions in this outbreak were similar to those encountered in cases of a chronic toxicity associated with the ingestion of litter derived from poultry rations containing ionophores (ionophore-associated poultry litter toxicity). Hence, the clinical and pathological findings in this outbreak indicate that in cattle, the prolonged ingestion of ionophores over several weeks may result in the development of chronic myocardial lesions comparable to those of IAPLT but significantly different from those encountered in the more traditional acute outbreaks of ionophore toxicity as described in the literature.
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PMID:A chronic cardiomyopathy in feedlot cattle attributed to toxic levels of salinomycin in the feed. 878 18

Exophthalmos and clinical signs of heart failure occurred sporadically in 3- to 12-month-old cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus) in a colony originally derived from three male and four female littermates. Macroscopic lesions in severely affected animals included subcutaneous edema, hydrothorax, right ventricular dilatation, unilateral or bilateral atrial thrombosis, and exophthalmos. Hearts from 17 cotton rats that were found dead or were euthanatized because of exophthalmos or dyspnea and 33 control cotton rats were examined microscopically. Myocardial lesions were present in 46 of 46 cotton rats > or = 1 month of age and consisted of multifocal cardiac myocyte necrosis, mineralization, and mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltration. Cotton rats > 5 months of age also had foci of interstitial fibrosis and myocyte atrophy. Twelve of 24 (50%) necropsied cotton rats had chronic pulmonary congestion, and livers from eight of 24 (33%) had chronic periacinar congestion and atrophy. Thrombi were present in one or both cardiac atria in nine of 50 (18%) hearts, and in at least one orbital venous sinus in 14 of 24 (58%) necropsied cotton rats and in 12 of 14 (86%) with exophthalmos. Exophthalmos in this colony of cotton rats appears to have resulted predominantly from orbital venous sinus thrombosis caused by stasis of venous blood secondary to right heart failure associated with a heritable cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Spontaneous cardiomyopathy and exophthalmos in cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus). 881 34


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