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

The effects of the Hemopump (HP) on left ventricular (LV) and coronary hemodynamics, with and without myocardial ischemia, were studied in an acute, anesthetized, open-chest dog preparation (n = 6). Coronary blood flow velocity in the left circumflex was assessed with an intracoronary Doppler catheter. Measurements were made at two pump speeds (minimal = HP1 and maximal = HP7) before coronary ligation (control), after ligation of the LAD (ischemia), and after induction of cardiac failure by multiple ligations of the diagonal branches (failure). Changing from HP1 to HP7 resulted in 1) Increased total cardiac output in ischemia and failure; 2) Increased mean aortic pressure and systemic vascular resistance in control, ischemia, and failure; 3) Decreased LV external work (LV systolic pressure X stroke volume) in control, ischemia, and failure; 4) Decreased LV end diastolic pressure in ischemia; 5) Decreased LV systolic pressure and pressure-rate product in failure; and 6) Increased coronary blood flow/O2 demand ratio in failure. Hemopump support reduced O2 demand by LV decompression, and improved blood flow/O2 demand ratio in the nonoccluded coronaries of ischemic, failing hearts.
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PMID:Effects of Hemopump support on left ventricular unloading and coronary blood flow. 175 Nov 87

Thirty-one patients, mean age 54 years, had been on chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) for an average of 38 months. Mean values (mg/dl) for triglycerides (567), total-C (267), LDL-C (133), and Apo-B (154) were elevated, and HDL-C (30) were low. The low values for total-C/Apo-B and LDL-C/Apo-B suggest an increase in the number of low density lipoprotein (LDL) particles, rather than in the amount of cholesterol per LDL particle. Without knowledge of lipids, ischemic heart disease for the 31 patients was categorized into five grades in the following manner. All patients were graded based on history (angina, myocardial infarction, and bypass surgery), electrocardiogram (EKG), and echocardiography. In addition, five patients underwent coronary angiography, the results of which were considered in their grading. The five grades were assigned as follows: Grade I, no evidence (n = 15); Grade II, angina with EKG ischemia (n = 4); Grade III, myocardial infarction (MI) (n = 1); Grade IV, MI with dyskinesia-akinesia on echo (n = 4); Grade V, severe three vessel disease on angiography, or multiple infarcts, or Grade IV with heart failure (n = 7). Only Apo-B (r = 0.56) and total-C/HDL-C (r = 0.57) correlated with severity of grade, with p less than 0.001. When patients with and without detectable ischemic heart disease were compared by stepwise logistic regression, Apo-B was the only variable that independently predicted heart disease (p = 0.001). However, contribution of the lipid changes induced by CAPD has not been established.
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PMID:Ischemic heart disease, serum cholesterol, and apolipoproteins in CAPD. 175 Dec 58

Cardiovascular diseases are a leading cause of death in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) largely as a result of the progressively increasing age of ESRD patients and the broad constellation of uremia-associated factors that can adversely affect cardiac function. Hypertension, one of the leading causes of renal failure, is a major culprit in this process, causing left ventricular hypertrophy, cardiac chamber dilation, increased left ventricular wall stress, redistribution of coronary blood flow, reduced coronary artery vasodilator reserve, ischemia, myocardial fibrosis, heart failure, and arrhythmias. In addition to impairing the coronary microcirculation, hypertension may contribute to the development of atherosclerotic coronary artery disease, particularly in the presence of the many lipid abnormalities observed in ESRD. These patients have reduced high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and increased plasma triglyceride concentrations, and there is a defect in cholesterol transport. Other abnormalities that may contribute to atherosclerotic coronary artery disease in ESRD are reduced high-density lipoprotein cholesterol synthesis and reduced activity of the reverse cholesterol pathway. Treatment with fibric acids, nicotinic acids, and lovastatin may be useful in lowering cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations in some of these patients. The incidence of coronary artery disease in ESRD populations is difficult to determine. About 25 to 30% of ESRD patients with angina have no evidence of significant coronary artery disease, and an undetermined number have silent coronary disease. The presence of resting electrocardiographic abnormalities caused by hypertension or conduction defects makes it difficult to accurately diagnosis coronary artery disease in ESRD populations by noninvasive methods, including exercise testing and thallium scintigraphy with or without the use of dipyridamole. Hypotension is a frequent complication of the dialytic process. Many factors have been implicated, including autonomic neuropathy. There is no consensus on the function of the efferent limb of the sympathetic nervous system. The afferent limb (arterial baroreflex function) is felt to be impaired. Further, there may be defects in the ability of the cardiovascular system to respond to sympathetic nerve activity. Most studies of autonomic function have used indirect measurements. Studies are underway that use techniques to assess sympathetic function directly. Such experiments with microneuropathy suggest greater skeletal sympathetic muscle discharge in uremic patients than in normal patients.
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PMID:Cardiovascular complications in renal failure. 177 85

Common intracranial complications following head injury are meningitis, usually associated with a basilar skull fracture or open-depressed skull fracture; delayed hematoma; hydrocephalus; and vascular injuries. Prophylactic antibiotics are not recommended for the management of basilar skull fractures. The best means of preventing infection from open-depressed skull fractures is operative debridement and thorough irrigation, though recent evidence suggests that select cases can be safely managed without operation. Serial CT scans should be obtained in severely head-injured patients to identify delayed hematomas. CT and MRI scans obtained several weeks or months after severe head injury frequently reveal enlarged ventricles, though only a small percentage of these patients have clinical hydrocephalus. Those that do, often benefit from a shunt. Vascular injuries frequently are not detected until ischemic symptoms develop hours or days after the injury. Recommended treatment for intimal tears or dissection is full anticoagulation, but in those with cerebral contusions or other intracranial lesions, this may present an unacceptable risk for intracranial hemorrhage. Pulmonary infections frequently occur following head injury, and can be associated with admission to the ICU and intubation. A large percentage of these infections are caused by enteric gram-negative organisms, and aggressive treatment with appropriate antibiotics is necessary. Aspiration of gastric contents is common in head-injured patients and is frequently complicated by bacterial superinfection. The routine use of antacids and H2 blocking agents leads to bacterial colonization of the stomach with anaerobes and gram-negative aerobes. Thus, empiric therapy for aspiration pneumonia should include clindamycin. Sinusitis is a frequent cause of fever and leukocytosis in patients with nasotracheal or nasogastric tubes in place for several days and often subsides spontaneously with removal of the tubes. Pulmonary edema is often caused by excessive fluid administration during resuscitation of these patients, and can be avoided by monitoring central venous pressures. Pulmonary edema may also be caused by ARDS, excessive catecholamine release, or primary cardiac failure. Most of these patients will benefit from early intubation and PEEP. Pulmonary emboli most often originate from deep venous thrombi, and there is increasing evidence that prophylaxis with low-dose heparin and pulsating boots can significantly reduce the incidence of both complications. Erosive gastritis is found in the majority of severely head-injured patients and may be due to ischemia of the gastric mucosa as well as gastric hyperacidity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Complications of head injury and their therapy. 182 50

In essential hypertension, ventricular function is determined primarily by the degree of hypertrophy (myocardial factor) and by organic complications in the coronary artery (coronary factor). Ventricular function is inversely correlated with ventricular size and systolic wall stress, inasmuch as ventricular function diminishes when these two variables increase. Even the young hypertensive heart of normal size with no angiographic abnormalities appears to be prone to ischemia, because the coronary reserve is seriously limited even in the absence of coronary stenosis. Unlike ventricular distensibility, myocardial compliance may be normal, even in the presence of pronounced myocardial hypertrophy. As myocardial compliance decreases, systolic wall stress increases and ventricular function is reduced. The hypertensive heart, the most common form of an irregular hypertrophy of the ventricular wall, is found in 14% of such cases. Analysis of the degree of hypertrophy shows that the hypertrophy can be inappropriately high (high mass-to-volume ratio, reduced wall stress), appropriate, or inappropriately low (normal mass-to-volume ratio, increased wall stress). One of the profound mechanisms influencing both myocardial and coronary function in hypertensive heart disease is the pressure-dependent development of smooth vascular hypertrophy (media) or coronary resistance vessels. Consequently, the oxygen supply to the myocardium is impaired and secondary lesions occur such as fibrosis, increased myocardial and perivascular collagen content and scars within the heart muscle. Diastolic dysfunction develops, as well as an increase in myocardial stiffness, thus promoting the transition from the concentric (compensated) to the eccentric or dilated (decompensated) state, with the consequence of the occurrence of cardiac failure. On the basis of both functional and morphological criteria, evidence is presented in this report that coronary small vessel disease is one of the underlying mechanism for the development of cardiac failure in hypertensive heart disease.
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PMID:Development of cardiac failure by coronary small vessel disease in hypertensive heart disease? 183 64

Sixteen newborn infants with severe asphyxia were prospectively studied for evidence of secondary myocardial damage and, in that case, their clinical findings. Myocardial damage was diagnosed in three term newborn infants of adequate weight for gestational age (18.7%) by means of serial electrocardiograms taken in the first 72 hours of life. Two of them showed evidence of diffuse subendocardial ischemia and a third one showed electrocardiographic signs suggesting necrosis of the left ventricular posteroinferior wall. Neither creatine-phosphokinase serum activity nor its muscle brain MB isoenzyme were useful in the identification of myocardial damage. All three affected neonates developed respiratory distress syndrome without signs of cardiac failure and one of them died. The histopathological study of this late one showed localized hemorrhage of the papillary muscles and interventricular septum. These finding underscore the need for serial electrocardiographic recordings in newborns with severe asphyxia, since cardiac dysfunction may inadvertently occur under the appearance of respiratory distress syndrome.
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PMID:[Myocardial damage following neonatal severe asphyxia]. 184 22

Coronary artery disease is a common and particularly severe complication of cardiac transplantation because it may cause progressive destruction of the graft by acute or chronic ischemia. The ischemia is usually silent because of cardiac denervation. Cardiac failure related to graft dysfunction, asymptomatic infarction on the ECG, or sudden death, are sometimes the only signs of severe coronary disease. The prevalence of coronary lesions has been evaluated by coronary angiography at nearly 25% at 2 years and 50% at 5 years. The distribution and morphology of the lesions are characteristic: diffuse concentric, irregular and occlusive, predominantly distal stenoses, without a distal and usually without a collateral circulation. The histological features are variable: the association of medial necrosis, severe endothelial lesions and intense parietal inflammation are suggestive of acute arteriolitis, often present during acute rejection, may be related to a common pathological process. Diffuse obliterative arteriolar lesions with concentric proliferation of medial smooth muscle are the usual appearances in transplant patients who have died or been retransplanted. There is no non-invasive diagnostic method sufficiently sensitive of specific which justifies the practice of many groups of systematic annual coronary angiography in transplanted patients. The pathogenesis is poorly understood and probably multifactorial: disorders of lipid metabolism, immunological factors, the atherogenic role of Cytomegalovirus infection. The absence of an identifiable risk factor makes preventive measures difficult. The evolutive risk justifies retransplantation in selected patients, the results of which are less satisfactory but which reduces the risk of acute coronary events and sudden death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Coronary disease in patient following heart transplantation]. 185 May 86

The primary factor limiting the number of heart transplantation performed is the lack of adequate donor hearts. One of the main factors contributing to this is the relatively short period a donor heart can be preserved. Clinical studies demonstrate that ischemic times over five hours lead to early heart failure after transplantation. A considerable increase in preservation time would be necessary to enlarge the donor pool. In spite of intensive research, it is not yet possible to increase the preservation period above four hours, which was achieved in 1978. An increase of the cold ischemia period to more than four hours without the risk of transplanted heart damage may only be achieved by improving cardioplegic management.
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PMID:Basic principles of cardioplegic management in donor heart preservation. 186 44

The incidence of ventricular arrhythmias occurring during acute myocardial ischemia and reperfusion was studied in anesthetized rabbits with chronic heart failure. Cardiac failure was induced by volume and pressure overload and was characterized by marked hypertrophy (84%) and lower systolic aortic blood pressure (112 +/- 3 mmHg) than in controls (124 +/- 2 mmHg, P less than 0.01). During the first 20 min postcoronary artery ligation, the incidence and duration of ventricular fibrillation were greater in the heart failure group (76% and 485 +/- 77 s, respectively) compared with the control group (27% and 86 +/- 37 s, respectively, P less than 0.01). Reperfusion-induced arrhythmias after various ischemic durations were also more frequent in the heart failure group than in the control group. Papillary muscles taken from rabbits with heart failure showed a reduced diastolic potential and a prolonged action potential duration (APD90) compared with the control group (by 7 and 46%, respectively), but there was no change in maximum upstroke velocity. The present study established that rabbits with pronounced morphological signs of chronic heart failure have an enhanced susceptibility to ischemia and reperfusion-induced arrhythmias. As already described in situations of uncomplicated cardiac hypertrophy, a delay in the repolarization process could represent an arrhythmogenic mechanism in this model.
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PMID:Ischemia and reperfusion-induced arrhythmias in rabbits with chronic heart failure. 187 58

It was demonstrated recently that a local renin-angiotensin system (RAS) exists in the heart and coronary vessels, and the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors can protect the heart from ischemia. Eight patients with NYHA class II-IV subjected to valve replacement were studied in protecting the heart from global ischemia with captopril during open heart surgery. After the ascending aorta was clamped, 500-1000 ml 4 degrees C modified St. Thomas No 1 cardioplegic solution containing 0.058-0.23 mmol/L captopril was perfused into coronary arteries under pressure until the electrocardiogram showed disappearance of myocardial electroactivity. The cardioplegic perfusion was repeated every 30 minutes thereafter during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). All the hearts rebeat after reperfusion either spontaneously or from defibrillation without any trouble. Three patients developed an A-V dissociation which returned to sinus rhythm or atrial fibrillation after a tiny dose of dopamine or isoprenaline intravenously. All the patients weaned from the CPB easily with a stable heart rate and a reasonable MAP. None of them needed inotropic support, even those with severe heart failure before operation did not either, and all recovered uneventfully.
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PMID:Captopril as a component of cardioplegia in protecting the myocardium from global ischemia during open heart surgery. A preliminary clinical report. 187 3


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