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

Study of four personal cases and of twelve cases reported in the literature makes it possible to describe the characteristics of coronary embolism in mitral stenosis, a rare complication but indicating the presence of a left intra-atrial thrombosis: -- variable clinical picture, dominated by a syndrome combining simultaneously a picture of myocardial infarction and of peripheral arterial emboli of other localizations; -- diagnosis to be discussed within the framework of coronary syndromes in mitral heart disease: embolism requiring to be distinguished from coronary atherosclerosis combined with mitral stenosis, more rarely a functional coronary insufficiency; -- severe course and prognosis: besides the possibility of rapidly lethal cases, coronary embolism seems liable to result in weakening and diminishing of the adaptation possibilities of the left ventricle, responsible for attacks of heart failure after mitral valvulotomy.
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PMID:[Coronary emboli in mitral stenosis]. 81 66

The rate of survival, the evolution of functional cardiac status and the incidence of major complications during a 5 year period were studied in 410 patients with rheumatic mitral or aortic valve disease, of whom 200 were treated medically and 210 by surgery. The 5 year survival rates in patients with various types of rheumatic mitral valve disease were similar (45 percent for those with mitral stenosis and 46 percent for those with mitral insufficiency or mixed mitral insufficiency and stenosis). The survival rate in patients with aortic valve disease was somewhat more favorable (64 percent). Mitral valvulotomy had the most positive influence on mortality. The 85 percent 5 year survival rate of patients who underwent this procedure was significantly higher than that of patients with medically treated mitral stenosis. In patients submitted to mitral and aortic valve replacement, the survival rate was also improved in comparison with data in the corresponding medically treated group, but to a lesser degree (70 percent for aortic valve replacement and 60 percent for mitral valve replacement). In all surgically treated groups, initial operative mortality was the primary determinant of the rate of survival at the end of 5 years. Survivors of all surgical groups had appreciable improvement in cardiac functional classification and a remarkable reduction in the incidence of heart failure and atrial fibrillation. The incidence of infectious endocarditis was significantly reduced after mitral valvulotomy, as compared with the incidence in patients with medically treated mitral stenosis. Mitral and aortic valve replacement did not reduce the incidence of infectious endocarditis. The incidence of thromboembolic phenomena was favorably influenced by mitral valvulotomy and aortic valve replacement, but not by mitral valve replacement.
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PMID:Influence of surgery on the natural history of rheumatic mitral and aortic valve disease. 111 83

Myocardial blood flow was estimated using the technique of selective xenon-133 solution injection into the coronary artery, in 20 patients with mitral stenosis, 8 patients with mitral insufficiency, 8 patients with primary cardiomyopathy, and in 7 healthy subjects. The mean value of myocardial blood flow in mitral stenosis (60.9 +/- 10.5 ml/min/100 g) and in mitral insufficiency (58.5 +/- 7.7) did not differ from the mean value obtained in the control group (66.0 +/- 9.1). On the other hand, myocardial blood flow in primary congestive cardiomyopathy was significantly diminished (54.1 +/- 8.6). Myocardial blood flow was also lowered in patients with class IV of heart failure (48.3 +/- 7.6), as compared to healthy subjects. A positive correlation was found between myocardial blood flow and the left ventricular work index (r = 0.48, p less than 0.05), as well as between myocardial blood flow and the right ventricular work index (r = 0.47, p less than 0.05). A weak correlation was noticed between myocardial blood flow and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (r = 0.38, p less than 0.05), as well as between myocardial blood flow and right ventricular end-diastolic pressure (r = 0.34, p less than 0.05).
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PMID:Myocardial blood flow in mitral valve disease and in primary congestive cardiomyopathy, and its relation to some haemodynamic indices. 126 Dec 75

In experimental models, the characteristics of beta-adrenoceptors in left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) due to pressure overload remain controversial and no data are still available in man. We investigated right auricular (RA) and left ventricular (LV) beta-adrenoceptors characteristics (125 I cyanopindolol binding) in two groups of patients undergoing valve replacement without heart failure (LV ejection fraction > 55%). Height patients with mitral stenosis (mean age: 64 +/- 4 years) and without LVH (LV mass index < 120 g/m2) constituted the control group and 13 patients with aortic stenosis (mean age: 66 +/- 4 years) and LVH (LV mass index > 150 g/m2) the study group. The results are: [table: see text] These results show that, in man, LVH due to pressure overload does not induce variation of total number beta-adrenoceptors, but is associated with a selective decrease in left ventricular beta 1-adrenoceptors.
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PMID:[Myocardial beta-adrenergic receptors and left ventricular hypertrophy induced by pressure overload in man]. 133 54

It is important to determine whether a patient's medical problem is a physiological complication that has resulted from a disease process (such as heart failure that is a complication of calcific aortic valve stenosis) or a structural complication that has resulted from a disease process (such as a stroke due to an embolus from a left atrial thrombus caused by atrial fibrillation in a patient with mitral stenosis). Whereas treatment is available for heart failure and stroke regardless of the cause, the progress of medicine is nullified when treatment is not directed at the etiology of heart failure and stroke. Finally, and most importantly, the identification and treatment of cardiovascular diseases that may cause heart failure and stroke may provide the physician with an opportunity to prevent these serious complications. The New York Heart Association four-part diagnosis (a complete diagnosis) requires the physician to consider all the important aspects of a patient's disease.
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PMID:Etiology: unknown or ignored? 134 27

Balloon valvotomy by means of the Inoue technique was attempted in seven pregnant (5 to 9 months) patients with severe mitral stenosis; the mean age of the patients was 32 +/- 8 years, and all had a two-dimensional echocardiographic mitral valve score of < 8. Indications for Inoue balloon valvotomy included severe symptomatic mitral stenosis with a Doppler mitral valve area < or = 1 cm2 and heart failure refractory to medical therapy, or absolute contraindications for the use of beta-blockade; Inoue valvotomy was also indicated for patients who lived a long distance from the hospital. Inoue balloon valvotomy was performed with no angiography and total pelvic and abdominal shielding; the balloon catheter was introduced into the right atrium without the aid of fluoroscopy, which was used for the transseptal puncture. Stepwise two-dimensional echocardiographic Doppler mitral valve dilatation was done. After Inoue balloon valvotomy the mean Doppler mitral valve area increased from 0.8 +/- 0.1 to 2.0 +/- 0.3 cm2 (p < 0.01) and by two-dimensional echocardiography from 0.8 +/- 0.2 to 1.9 +/- 0.3 cm2 (p < 0.01), with no significant Doppler residual stenosis (defined as mitral valve area < or = 1.5 cm2). The mean total fluoroscopy time was 16 +/- 7 minutes. The degree of mitral regurgitation increased in two patients from grade 1+/4+ to grade 2+/4+ and from grade 0+/4+ to grade 2+/4+, respectively. There was no mortality or significant morbidity. Pregnancy was uneventful in all patients, and all were delivered of normal babies without complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Balloon valvotomy for pregnant patients with severe pliable mitral stenosis using the Inoue technique with total abdominal and pelvic shielding. 146 14

Left atrial myocardial excursions were intraoperatively recorded in patients with mitral valvular disease (33 patients with mitral stenosis and 17 with mitral regurgitations). Three types of atrial myocardial excursions were identified. There was a high correlation between the types of myocardial excursions and the incidence of heart failure. The patients with Types I and II myocardial excursions had no virtually heart failure, those with Type III showed the highest (70%) incidence of heart failure. It is concluded that intraoperative assessment of left atrial myocardial excursions is of great significance in patients with mitral valvular disease.
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PMID:[Clinical and functional correlations of left atrial excursion characteristics in patients with mitral valve diseases. Part II]. 152 42

Pulmonary edema is a serious complication of heart failure, but often patients with chronic heart failure resist pulmonary edema despite elevated pulmonary venous pressures. This protection might be a result of decreased pulmonary microvascular permeability. Double-isotope scintigraphy with 113mindium-labeled transferrin and 99mtechnetium-labeled erythrocytes allows noninvasive estimation of pulmonary microvascular permeability; an index of transferrin accumulation is calculated that reflects microvascular permeability. Fourteen patients with severe chronic left ventricular dysfunction were compared with a control group of 15 patients with mild coronary artery disease. In the control group the transferrin accumulation index was 0.35 (range -0.3 to 1.0) x 10(-3)/min, and in patients with heart failure the index was 0.0 (range -1.0 to 0.7) x 10(-3)/min, which was significantly lower (p less than 0.01). The reduction in the transferrin accumulation index correlated weakly with the duration of heart failure (R = -0.5, p less than 0.02). These data indicate reduced protein efflux consistent with a decrease in pulmonary microvascular permeability in patients with severe chronic heart failure. Similar changes have been observed in severe mitral stenosis and may reflect a generalized adaptation to chronic pulmonary venous hypertension.
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PMID:Reduced pulmonary microvascular permeability in severe chronic left heart failure. 161 97

A case of aortic dissection ("DeBakey type III") in an asymptomatic 78-year-old woman is described. The patient underwent a mitral valve replacement (bioprosthesis Sorin) in June 1990 for severe mitral stenosis; in October 1990 she was admitted to our hospital for severe dyspnea and cardiac failure with good response to medical treatment. The routine echo color Doppler examination showed only a hint of paraprosthetic leak, which required further investigation by transesophageal echocardiography. This approach revealed the presence of a regurgitant jet extending from the prosthetic mitral valve toward the atrial septum. The examination of the thoracic aorta revealed the presence of a dissection flap; the color Doppler technique showed a bidirectional flow through the site of communication between the two lumina. The extension of the dissection from the aortic arch to the origin of the renal branches was confirmed by computerized axial tomography. We emphasize the importance of the transesophageal approach in elderly patients with aortic dissection, often asymptomatic.
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PMID:[Asymptomatic aortic dissection associated with a mitral prosthetic leak: a clinical case report]. 162 68

Six hundred and forty-nine patients with proven chronic atrial fibrillation were followed for a total of 1,436 patient-years without anticoagulation. The patient were divided into 7 disease groups with each having an average age ranging from 39 to 69 years. Eleven per cent of the patients had systemic embolism prior to being registered for the follow-up. The diseases which had the highest incidence of embolism prior to being followed were the same as those producing the highest rate of systemic embolism while under observation. The disease groups were rheumatic valvular (predominantly mitral stenosis) and ischemic heart diseases. Their embolic rate were 3.9 to 5.1 emboli per 100 pt-yr. Other disease groups with lower embolic rates of 0 to 0.9 per 100 pt-yr were heart failure, non-rheumatic mitral regurgitation, atrial septal defect and thyrotoxicosis. Since the incidence of systemic embolism varied according to the primary disease, and since the hemorrhagic complication of anticoagulant therapy is finite, it is advised that low risk group may not benefit greatly from anticoagulation. However, the true low risk group has still to be properly determined.
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PMID:Embolism and atrial fibrillation. A longitudinal follow-up. 164 52


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