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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Unwanted effects of beta-receptor blocking agents can be divided into three categories: 1. Those arising specifically from the pharmacologic, i.e., beta-blocking action. 2. Side effects not directly (or not with certainty) related to beta-blockade. 3. Adverse and potentially specific reactions to individual beta-blocking agents. Category 1 covers the majority of adverse effects (
heart failure
, severe bradycardia and hypotension, arterial insufficiency, increased airways resistance, gastrointestinal symptoms,
hypoglycemia
). These can largely be avoided by proper selection and preparation of patients. Category 2 covers cutaneous reactions (rashes, alopecia, pruritus), purpura (thrombocytopenic and nonthrombocytopenic) etc. as well as side effects attributable to the central nervous system (antianxiety effects, nightmares etc.). In the third category the "oculo-cutaneous syndrome" associated with practolol is discussed.
...
PMID:Side effects and contraindications of beta-receptor blocking agents. 1 66
A 30-year-old patient was admitted to hospital for cholecystectomy with a diagnosis of complete obstruction of the cystic duct. The preoperative clinical and chemical findings were normal. Following cholecystectomy the patient recovered normally from the anaesthetic. Three hours later sudden cardiac arrest occurred. Necropsy revealed glycogen storage disease type I.
Hypoglycaemia
and metabolic acidosis had probably led to hypokalaemia which is considered as the cause of
cardiac failure
.
...
PMID:[Clinically undiagnosed glycogen storage disease type I as cause of postoperative death (author's transl)]. 26 28
A case of chlorpropamide-induced, symptomatic hyponatremia in a diabetic patient is reported. The hyponatremia was associated with loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. These symptoms caused reduced food intake which provoked severe
hypoglycemia
with disturbed consciousness. The hyponatremia developed when the chlorpropamide doses were increased from 400 to 600 mg/day. Withdrawal of chlorpropamide was followed by remission of hyponatremia. Chlorpropamide-induced hyponatremia is a rare complication and is due to an antidiuretic effect of chlorpropamide caused by increased secretion of adiuretin and potentiation of the effect of chlorpropamide caused by increased secretion of adiuretin and potentiation of the effect of adiuretin in the tubuli of the kidney. This case report and the analysis of 18 published cases in the literature show the following characteristics for chlorpropamide-induced hyponatremia: (1) Hyponatremia is a rare complication in the treatment of diabetics with chlorpropamide. The patients typically are female and over sixty. The dosage of chlorpropamide usually was 500 mg daily or even more. (2) Hyponatremia is often unrecognized for a long time because the symptoms are not specific. The characteristic symptoms include loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, confusional state and, rarely, convulsions and coma. Recovery occurs spontaneously after withdrawal of the drug. (3) The incidence of this type of hyponatremia is increased in cases of preexisting tendency to water retention such as
heart failure
and renal failure, and in cases of diuretic therapy. In the light of these findings, the authors believe that chlorpropamide is no longer a drug of choice in the treatment of diabetic women, especially in cases of preexisting tendency to water retention and in diuretic therapy. In such cases, a sulfonylurea without antidiuretic effect is to be preferred.
...
PMID:[Hyponatremia and hypoglycemia after treatment with chlorpropamide. Case histories with review of the literature on 18 cases of chlorpropamide induced hyponatremia]. 66 98
During a six year period twelve patients with insulin dependent diabetes and end-stage renal failure received cadaveric kidney grafts. Eleven of the patients have previous to this been hemodialysed, one patient was transplanted before hemodialysis was necessary. The cumulative two year survival was thirty-seven per cent for the patients, and twenty-nine per cent for the kidney grafts. The average time of observation was eleven months, the motality was fifty per cent. The causes of death were acute myocardial infarction in two cases, sepsis in two cases, severe
hypoglycemia
in one case and unexpected sudden death in one case. The most prominent problems in the treatment of the diabetic patients after the renal transplantation were difficulties in the regulation of the diabetes, rejections, infections,
cardiac failure
and aggravation in pre-existing hypertension.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in patients with insulin requiring diabetes and renal failure. 78 7
Diagnostic separation of infants with signs of
cardiac failure
(
hypoglycemia
, sepsis, myocarditis, hypoxemia) but no congenital cardiocirculatory malformation from those with a large left to right shunt is crucial in newborn management. Echocardiographic studies of 218 infants and children allowed group separation and distinction from normal by the assessment of mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (Vcf) and the ratio of left atrial to aortic root diameter at end-systole (LA/Ao). In normal premature and full-term infants, Vcf (1.51 +/- 0.04 [mean +/- standard error]) was significantly lower than in infants with a large shunt (2.12 +/- 0.08, P less than 0.01) and higher than in infants with nonstructural heart disease (1.18 +/- 0.06, P less than 0.001). LA/Ao ratios were comparable in the groups with a large shunt and nonstructural heart disease (1.14 +/- 0.1 and 1.26 +/- 0.2, respectively) and were significantly higher in both groups than in normal subjects (0.77 +/- 0.01, P less than 0.001). Similar echocardiographic distinctions could be made when 10 older children (aged 2 to 10 years) with cardiomyopathy were compared with 45 normal older children. Serial determination of these variables was of major assistance in patient management.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic detection of large left to right shunts and cardiomyopathies in infants and children. 93 2
Ten infants who had paroxysmal atrial tachycardia in utero or at birth are reported. Because of apparent fetal distress, caesarean section was performed in 4 cases and labour was induced in 1. Birthweight was generally large for gestational age. Severe ascites and hydrops at birth were manifestations of
cardiac failure
. Atrial flutter was recorded in 4 infants and supraventricular tachycardia in 5. The WoLff-Parkinson-White syndrome became evident later in 2. Digoxin was given to all 10 infants, and cardioversion was required and was effective in 4. Known recurrences in childhood have occurred in only 1 patient. Congenital atrial tachyarrhythmias may be commoner than generally believed, and fetal electrocardiography may help to avoid unnecessary termination of pregnancy. Blood sugar determinations are important, since neonatal
hypoglycaemia
was found. Cardioversion should be performed promptly in severely ill infants or if there is no response to digoxin. Care is required to avoid digoxin toxicity.
...
PMID:Congenital paroxysmal atrial tachycardia. 96 71
Past studies reported by this laboratory have documented myocardial dysfunction and progressively developing
hypoglycemia
in canine endotoxin shock. The purpose of the present study was to determine the effects of glucose concentrations and insulin infusions on myocardial performance following endotoxin administration. Experiments were carried out on isolated, working canine left ventricular heart preparations exchanging blood with intact dogs. Myocardial function was evaluated following endotoxin and correlated with concentrations of glucose and effects of insulin infusion. Cardiac dysfunction occurred within 2-4 hr postendotoxin and the degree of malfunction was not related to arterial blood glucose concentrations. Maintaining blood glucose at control, preshock, levels by infusion of 50% glucose did not prevent myocardial dysfunction as evidenced by elevations of left ventricular end diastolic pressure, and depressed power. Infusions of insulin reversed
cardiac failure
and maintained normal performance in spite of wide ranges in glucose concentration (5-120 mg%). Findings suggest that myocardial dysfunction is not precipitated or enhanced by the
hypoglycemia
of endotoxin shock. The beneficial actions of infused insulin on cardiac performance appear to be elicited on the basis of mechanisms other than myocardial glucose transport.
...
PMID:Effects of glucose or insulin on myocardial performance in endotoxin shock. 96 82
Acute renal failure occurred in association with cardiac surgery in 20 of 248 infants (8%). Hypotension, poor tissue perfusion, and
hypoglycemia
were the most important factors recognized in the pathogenesis and outcome of the ARF. However, many infants were extremely ill preoperatively. The most frequent operative procedures performed in the 20 patients were open-heart surgery with total correction under deep hypothermia and repair of coarctation of the aorta. Thirteen of the 20 infants with ARF died. The combination of a major operative procedure,
cardiac failure
,
hypoglycemia
, hypotension, and compromised renal function imposes important constraints in the treatment of hyperkalemia,
hypoglycemia
, correction of acid-base distrubances, and the administration of fluids.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure: an important complication of cardiac surgery in infants. 116 17
Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia is now recognized in non-insulin-dependent diabetes, essential hypertension, obesity, atherosclerotic heart disease, dyslipidemia,
heart failure
, and in heavy smokers. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance and its relationship to hypertension; reduced sodium excretion, activation of the sympathetic nervous system, increased activity of the sodium/hydrogen pump, and stimulation of cellular growth. Some of the nonpharmacological methods to control hyperinsulinemia are of benefit in the management of hypertension, most notably weight loss, exercise program, and reduced salt intake. High-fiber and reduced-protein diets also reduce hyperinsulinemia. Thiazide diuretics can result in insulin resistance, and insulin secretion may be inhibited, possibly associated with concomitant hypokalemia. beta-Blockers result in some reduction of glucose tolerance and mask some of the features of
hypoglycemia
. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and alpha-receptor blockers do not effect insulin resistance; probably the same is true for calcium antagonists. Although the effect on risk factors should not be discounted, it is the effect of treatment on hard end points, cerebrovascular accidents, myocardial infarction, or death that is most important. Evidence in hypertension is at present restricted to diuretics and beta-blocking drugs.
...
PMID:Hypertension and insulin resistance. 128 47
An algorithm has been developed to provide predictable control of blood glucose for 48 h following acute myocardial infarction. In 29 diabetic patients intravenous infusion of soluble insulin was started upon admission to hospital and the rate adjusted hourly on the basis of bedside capillary glucose estimations. Insulin infusion rates related to glycaemia were higher in obese patients and those with severe
cardiac failure
. For all patients mean admission glucose levels were reduced from 18.3 +/- 5.9 mmol l-1 to 9.1 +/- 3.3 mmol l-1 at 4 h and to 8.8 +/- 2.5 mmol l-1 at 6 h. Mean glucose concentrations for 48 h after admission were 8.2 +/- 1.3 mmol l-1 for all patients. Admission glucose levels were slightly higher in patients with severe, compared to those without or mild,
cardiac failure
(P less than 0.1), but levels over the following 48 h were similar. Doubling insulin infusion rates before meals did not achieve tighter glycaemic control.
Hypoglycaemia
(glucose less than 3 mmol l-1) occurred on 11 occasions in six patients; only two episodes were symptomatic and only two episodes occurred when the insulin rates were doubled before meals. This algorithm produced tighter glycaemic control than previously published protocols, particularly in patients with severe
cardiac failure
.
Hypoglycaemia
is uncommon and the algorithm easy to administer by nursing staff.
...
PMID:An algorithm for tight glycaemic control in diabetic infarct survivors. 142 42
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