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

Nasal mask ventilation (NMV) has been used successfully in chronic restrictive respiratory failure and more recently in acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This study aimed to evaluate the possible role of NMV in acute respiratory failure (ARF) episodes when mechanical ventilation with endotracheal intubation is questionable. Thirty patients (age, 76 +/- 8.1 years) were treated by NMV during ARF episodes (COPD, 20; other chronic respiratory failure [CRF], 5; chronic heart failure [CHF], 4). All patients were hypoxemic (PaO2, 5.85 +/- 1.62 kPa) and hypercapnic (PaCO2, 8.63 +/- 1.89 kPa) with respiratory acidosis (pH, 7.29 +/- 0.08). In all cases, clinical or physiologic parameters indicated the need for mechanical ventilation, but endotracheal intubation was either not applied because of the age and the physiologic condition of the patients (17 cases) or was postponed (13 cases). NMV was performed using a volume-cycled ventilator and a customized nasal mask. Ventilation was continuous during the first 12 hours and the following nights and was then intermittent during the day. Twenty-one patients improved clinically, within a few hours. Progressive correction of arterial blood gases was observed: PaO2 increased during the first hour, but PaCO2 decreased more slowly. Eighteen patients were able to be successfully weaned from NMV. Twelve patients failed to improve despite NMV: eight of them died and four required endotracheal intubation. There was no difference in the success rate between patients in whom endotracheal ventilation was contraindicated or postponed. Clinical tolerance was satisfactory in 23 patients and poor in seven patients. A return to the respiratory condition was observed in the surviving patients with subsequent discharge from hospital. NMV therefore successfully treated respiratory distress initially in 60 percent of the 30 patients. These results suggest that NMV could be a possible alternative in the treatment of ARF, even in very ill patients, when endotracheal ventilation is controversial or not immediately required.
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PMID:Nasal mask ventilation in acute respiratory failure. Experience in elderly patients. 840 33

Clinical, biochemical, radiological and echo-cardiographic (echo) evaluation was done prospectively in 50 patients of untreated end stage chronic renal failure (CRF). While clinically congestive cardiac failure (CCF) was diagnosed in 24%, low ejection fraction on echo was found in only 16%. Echo in these cases showed evidence of cardiac chamber dilatation in most (mean LVID (D) 54.1 +/- 6.51 and (S) 36.4 +/- 6.9 mm, but parameters of cardiac functions were normal in most. Mitral annular calcification (MAC) was detected on echo in 26%. On comparing patients with MAC (Group I) and those without MAC (Group II), the aetiological factor found more frequently in Group I was diabetes (61.5% vs 35.1%, P less than 0.05). Clinical features such as older age (mean age 54 years vs 45.5 years), severe hypertension, and grade IV and above murmur (15.2% vs none) were more common among group I patients. However, the difference was not statistically significant. Parameters of calcium metabolism were similar in the two groups. Conduction disturbances (30.7% vs 5.4%) were significantly more common in Group I (P = 0.05). The mitral regurgitation due to MAC was of no haemodynamic significance. Complications of MAC syndrome were rare.
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PMID:Mitral annular calcification in untreated chronic renal failure. 162 45

The impact of treatment on prognosis of patients with chronic congestive heart failure depends not only on pharmacological therapy but also on nonpharmacological aspects of patient management. Patient compliance, life style changes, salt and fluid restriction, detailed patient information and measures of self control greatly affect therapeutic efficacy. Reasons for hospitalizations and emergency room visits: In an analysis of 82 admissions of patients for decompensated chronic congestive heart failure we found poor compliance with drug treatments or dietary instructions as causally related factors in 30 patients, uncontrolled hypertension in 22 patients, acute infection in 18 and acute myocardial ischemia in 18 patients. More than half of the patients had weight gain before decompensation, that had not been adequately answered by changes in medication. Inadequate patient information: Inadequate knowledge about necessary life style changes at the time of hospital discharge is often found in patients with chronic heart failure. Less than 50% of these patients remembered correctly the instructions on key issues of necessary life style changes and diet. Drug treatment of heart failure: Recent controlled drug trials have not gained enough weight in therapeutic decisions of physicians treating heart failure patients. While ACE-inhibitors have been shown to improve longevity in congestive heart failure only 6% of patients with heart failure are treated with these drugs, while 5% are treated with calcium antagonists which have not been proven to be of symptomatic or prognostic benefit and may be harmful as well in this disease. Inadequate dosage in patients with chronic renal failure or in elderly patients as well as inadequate choice of drugs lead to side effects in a considerable percentage of patients.
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PMID:[Effects of patient information, compliance and medical control on prognosis in chronic heart failure]. 182 Feb 95

An echocardiographic study of 50 patients with multiple myeloma was carried out. Disorders of the contractile and pumping function of the left ventricle myocardium, changes of the central hemodynamics were revealed. It was shown that at stage I the main functions of the heart are maintained due to myocardial hypertrophy. Progression of the disease, development of chronic renal failure and concomitant pathology of the cardiovascular system, the contractile function of the myocardium is essentially reduced, the left ventricle and left atrium is dilated. It is concluded that echocardiography allows to reveal early sings of cardiac lesions and predict development of cardiac insufficiency.
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PMID:[Heart involvement in patients with multiple myeloma based on echocardiographic data]. 183 40

If ACE-inhibitors are considered for therapy in patients with heart failure, the actual renal function has to be taken into account. In patients with reduced intravascular volume, e.g. during therapy with diuretics, the renin-angiotensin system is activated. In this situation, the renin-angiotensin-system contributes to the maintenance of arterial blood pressure and glomerular filtration rate by angiotensin II mediated vasoconstriction in vas efferens and systemic circulation. A sudden complete inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system therefore may cause a pronounced decrease in blood pressure and a reduction in glomerular filtration rate (impaired renal excretory function). In patients with heart failure concomitant chronic renal failure, the use of ACE-inhibitors is without major risk; however, the clinical efficacy may be limited. This does not apply to patients with diabetes, where the risk for impairment of renal function is increased. The potential advantage of short acting ACE-inhibitors such as captopril may clinically be relevant only in patients with very advanced severe heart failure and low arterial pressure. In any case, it is recommended to start ACE-inhibitors with a low dose and withdraw diuretics one or two days before in order to restore the intravascular volume.
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PMID:[ACE inhibition in heart failure and compromised kidney function]. 186 34

The article deals with the comparative analysis of certain values of homeostasis and hemodynamics in 25 patients with chronic renal failure who were subjected to systematic bicarbonate and acetate hemodialysis. Comparative study of some values of homeostasis, hemodynamics and myocardial contractility in patients with chronic renal failure during hemodialysis with acetate and bicarbonate solutions showed the advantages of bicarbonate hemodialysis. During bicarbonate hemodialysis, in addition to the patients' good tolerance to the procedure, the correction of the disturbed homeostasis was more physiological on the one hand, and positive shifts occurred in the activity of the blood circulatory system on the other. The study showed the expediency of using bicarbonate hemodialysis in patients with chronic renal failure with individual intolerance to acetate solution, and with severe heart failure and metabolic acidosis.
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PMID:[A comparative assessment of homeostasis and hemodynamics during the performance of bicarbonate and acetate hemodialysis]. 187 24

Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are well established in the treatment of hypertension and cardiac failure. Experimental studies in rats have suggested that these agents may protect renal function in chronic nephropathy by a mechanism other than simply lowering the systemic blood pressure. In human studies of incipient diabetic nephropathy, worsening of microalbuminuria was prevented during 3 years of ACE inhibition. ACE inhibitors reduce arterial blood pressure in chronic nephropathy, and may cause a fall in glomerular filtration rate. In diabetic nephropathy, proteinuria was reduced by 2 months' treatment with enalapril to less than half of the values obtained in a control group treated with metoprolol. Nonrandomised trials have suggested that ACE inhibitors may slow the deterioration of renal function, but no comparisons with other antihypertensive agents in prospective studies have been published to date. In chronic renal failure, ACE inhibitors may worsen anaemia and hyperkalaemia. Renovascular hypertension can be treated with ACE inhibitors, but the treatment may lead to a compromised renal function. The dosage of these drugs should be reduced in renal failure and therapy should be started cautiously in this setting, with close monitoring of blood pressure, renal function and plasma potassium.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and renal function. A review of the current status. 193 Jul 42

Between 1977 and 1989, 24 patients (19 women and 5 men) with Takayasu's disease underwent renal artery restoration. Mean age was 32.9 years (range 15 to 60 years). All patients were hypertensive and three had moderate, chronic renal failure. Renal artery lesions were unilateral in two patients (8%), bilateral in 17 patients (71%), and unilateral in a solitary kidney in five (21%). Associated lesions of the thoracic or abdominal aorta or both were found in 22 patients (92%). Lesions of the visceral arteries found located in 21 patients (87%) and of the supraaortic trunks in 16 (67%). Initial revascularization of the supraaortic trunks was performed in four patients (17%). Renal artery revascularization was unilateral in 11 patients (46%) and bilateral in 13 (54%). Concomitant aortic reconstruction was performed in 21 patients (87%), visceral artery reconstruction in 17 patients (71%), and supraaortic surgery in seven (29%). One patient who underwent combined aortic and renal artery restoration, and in whom visceral artery involvement had been neglected, died postoperatively of heart failure and intestinal infarction. Three patients were lost to follow-up. Twenty patients have been followed for a mean of 61.3 months (range 4 to 124 months). One patient died at 89 months of intestinal infarction secondary to embolization originating from a false aortic aneurysm. Five repeat renal revascularizations were required in four patients. Hypertension is presently cured in 12 patients (63%), improved in six (31%), and unchanged in one (6%). Even though surgical treatment of arterial lesions in Takayasu's disease often includes complex and repeat revascularization procedures, satisfactory long-term results suggest the use of renal artery reconstruction in this affliction.
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PMID:Reconstructive surgery of the renal arteries in Takayasu's disease. 196 59

There have been only a few investigations that have considered renal disease or any disturbance of renal function in the calculation of risk in cardiac surgery. Risks of cardiac surgery have to be considered for renal disease without direct connection to heart disease (e.g., infections of the kidney and of the urinary tract, primary and secondary glomerulonephritis, parenchymal renal disease, and impaired renal function of unknown origin), as well as in renal disease with concomitant influence on heart and kidney (e.g., infective endocarditis, arterial hypertension, systemic disease of heart and kidney such as with diabetes mellitus, disturbance of kidney function or electrolyte balance due to heart failure). In most cases, the problem is solved by therapeutic intervention and postponement of cardiac surgery. A limited or negative operative indication is found with untreatable infection of the kidney or urinary tract, with untreatable nephrotic syndrome, in advanced renal disease with heart transplantation, as well as in case of severe arterial hypertension with possible organ complications, and in advanced diabetes mellitus with ESRD and multiorgan involvement. After cardiac surgery, acute renal failure represents a critically important complication. Primary therapeutic procedures must include prophylaxis of hemodynamic unstable situations, as well as prophylaxis of infectious complications. Cardiac surgery in dialysis patients and post-transplant patients is basically possible and only has a slightly increased risk compared to patients with normal renal function. Seventy-seven dialysis patients were operated (49 aorto-coronary bypass operations, 19 single-valve and multiple-valve replacements, five patients with valve replacement and aorto-coronary bypass, and four other cardiac surgical operations). Only in valve replacement, was mortality significantly higher than in renal healthy persons, the main causes of death being cerebrovascular complications and septicemia.
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PMID:[Extracardiac risk factors in heart surgery--the kidney]. 208 10

The overall cardiovascular mortality in patients with chronic renal failure is about 30 per cent of which 10 per cent is attributed to myocardial infarction. This prevalence led some workers to propose a hypothesis of "accelerated atherosclerosis" due to the hyperlipidaemia observed in 30 to 70 per cent of patients. However, the concept of accelerated atherosclerosis, which was based essentially on clinical studies, has been questioned. Pericardial effusion is a common complication of chronic renal failure and has been reported in over 62 per cent of patients in echocardiographic studies. There are many causes and symptoms are often mild; systematic echocardiographic examination of patients with renal failure undergoing haemodialysis has shown 32 per cent of pericardial effusions to be asymptomatic. There are two potential complications: cardiac tamponade and, lesser frequently, constrictive pericarditis. Cardiac failure is a common cause of death in patients undergoing long-term dialysis. The myocardial histological appearances are those of fibrosis, the etiology of which is not fully understood although the dialysis membranes and hypotensive episodes occurring during haemodialysis have been thought to play a role. Left ventricular hypertrophy and fibrosis may give rise to ventricular arrhythmias which could explain some of the cases of sudden death observed in patients with renal failure and often wrongly attributed to ischemic heart disease. Another form of myocardial disease which is observed later is characterised by an alteration of systolic function with left ventricular dilatation and hypokinesia and increased end diastolic pressures without an increase in left ventricular wall thickness. Valvular heart disease may also result from renal failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[So-called uremic heart diseases]. 210 35


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