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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Atrial was undertaken of assessment of the usefulness and the place of digitalis glycosides in the treatment of chronic congestive cardiac failure, in myocardial infarction and in
mitral stenosis
. There is no consensus of opinions of the effectiveness of digitalis treatment in cases of
cardiac failure
which is due to lack of uniformity of qualification of patients for studies and absence of accepted universally haemodynamic parameters of the effectiveness of the positive inotropic action of these glycosides. The usefulness of these glycosides in patients with
cardiac failure
and paroxysmal or stable atrial fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia is unquestionable. Digitalis is effective in the treatment of mild
cardiac failure
, but is ineffective in its IV stage (NYHA). There is still a controversy on the use of digitalis glycosides in acute myocardial infarction with associated
myocardial failure
. In acute myocardial infarction digitalis glycosided should not be used, with the exception of cases with coexistent supraventricular arrhythmia and ventricular tachycardia. It is still difficult to establish unequivocally the effect of digitalization of patients after acute phase of myocardial infarction and after discharge from hospital on further survival. The future place of digitalis glycosides in the treatment of
cardiac failure
will depend on the results of studies comparing them with new positive inotropic drugs. The place of digitalis glycosides in the treatment of haemodynamic cousegnences of
mitral stenosis
, but they are useful in supraventricular arrhythmias during
mitral stenosis
, and for alleviation of right-ventricular
cardiac failure
.
...
PMID:[Digitalis--selected problems and controversies]. 263 57
A case of
mitral stenosis
with left atrial thrombus which rapidly arose and reduced within a month was reported. A 61-year-old female was admitted to our hospital on November 14, 1986 because of a syncopal attack due to ventricular tachycardia. On admission she had typical auscultatory signs of
mitral stenosis
, mild hepatomegaly and no neurological abnormality. Laboratory findings included coagulation studies were normal, and atrial fibrillation was noted on ECG. Heart catheterization revealed low cardiac output, the mitral orifice area to be 2.4 cm2 and left ventriculography showed mild mitral regurgitation. Ventricular tachycardia was controlled following improvement of
heart failure
. On two-dimensional echocardiography performed on December 24, left atrial thrombus was revealed which was not detected on December 3. Through the continuous administration of warfarin and aspirin to prevent the thrombus' growth, it markedly reduced in size, from 3 x 2 x 4.5 cm on December 24, 1986 to 1.5 x 1 x 2.5 cm on January 30, 1987 without systemic embolism. Then a mitral valve replacement and a left atrial thrombectomy were performed on February 3, with the removal of a red thrombus, partially organized, measuring 1 x 0.7 x 2.5 cm. This case is unique in its clinical outcome and further investigation is necessary for the management of patients as our case.
...
PMID:[A case of mitral stenosis with left atrial thrombus arose and reduced in a short-term]. 266 32
Disorders of the heart frequently cause pulmonary dysfunction because of the close structural and functional association of the heart and lungs. The pulmonary vasculature is very commonly affected by cardiac pathology. The pulmonary vasculature is normally a low-pressure, low-resistance circuit with high compliance and tremendous vascular reserve. Although resting vascular tone is low, there are many identified mediators of pulmonary arterial tone that may help mediate pulmonary blood flow. Alveolar hypoxia is clearly a stimulus for increasing pulmonary vascular resistance although factors that mediate the response to hypoxia are not fully understood. Patients with left-to-right shunting due to congenital heart disease because of elevations in pulmonary artery flow and pressure tend to develop progressive anatomic changes in the pulmonary vasculature. This leads to an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance, irreversible pulmonary hypertension, right heart failure, reversal of shunt flow, and Eisenmenger's syndrome. The degree of anatomic vascular damage due to left-to-right shunting can be graded histologically. Lesser grades of damage are reversible with corrective surgery, whereas more severe grades show no improvement or progression with operation. Chronic left-sided congestive heart failure seen in rheumatic mitral stenosis can cause secondary changes in the pulmonary vasculature. Pulmonary hypertension and increased pulmonary vascular resistance can increase reflexly and form a "second stenosis" that further limits cardiac output. Unlike congenital heart disease, severe grades of pulmonary arterial damage are not seen in left heart failure from
mitral stenosis
or other causes, and consequently with surgical correction pulmonary hypertension reverses. Pulmonary function testing is adversely affected by congestive heart failure. Both restrictive (stiff lungs) and obstructive (cardiac asthma) defects are observed in congestive heart failure. DLCO is abnormally decreased. With treatment of
heart failure
these defects reverse. Both elevated systemic and pulmonary venous pressures affect fluid filtration in the pleural space and cause pleural fluid accumulation. The fluid is transudative with low protein, low lactate dehydrogenase, and low cell counts. Transudative effusions from
heart failure
resolve with treatment. With large effusions and cardiomegaly, pulmonary dysfunction results because of atelectasis from compression and space-occupying effects of the heart and pleural fluid. Following myocardial infarction, cardiac surgery, or other cardiac trauma, the postcardiac injury syndrome can result. The syndrome is characterized by exudative pleural and pericardial effusions along with pulmonary infiltrates, fever, chest pain, leukocytosis, and an elevated ESR. The syndrome must be diagnosed by exclusion of bacterial pneumonia, pulmonary emboli, and congestive heart failure. Treatment is with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents or systemic co
...
PMID:Pulmonary and pleural complications of cardiac disease. 268 66
In a normal man sitting upright, pulmonary perfusion is several times greater in the lower lung zone than in the upper zone. This pattern may sometimes be reversed in patients with cardiac disease. Tc99m-macro-aggregated albumin pulmonary perfusion images were computerized to isocounts area images (digital perfusion images; DPI). DPI were applied to various types of cardiac disease and patterns of DPI were divided into 4 classes according to amount of nonperfused pulmonary vascular bed. C-0; normal perfusion. C-1; decrease of nonperfused pulmonary vascular bed. C-2; disappearance of nonperfused pulmonary vascular bed. C-3; decrease of pulmonary vascular bed. In 71 patients with
mitral stenosis
relationships between pulmonary hemodynamics during exercise and distribution of pulmonary perfusion were studied, i.e. at rest (n = 71, mean pulmonary arterial pressure; 23 mmHg-cardiac index; 2.4 L/m) and during exercise C-0 (n = 13, 41 mmHg-5.4 L/m), C-1 (n = 17, 52 mmHg-5.2 L/m), C-2 (n = 27, 52 mmHg-4.5 L/m) and C-3 (n = 14, 65 mmHg-3.6 L/m) respectively. In patients with congestive heart failure cardiac status was classified to 4 classes according to ejection fraction and DPI. Patients with EF less than 30% and DPI more than C-2 showed high morbidity and mortality (two years mortality 47%; 27/40). Pulmonary venous pressure increases to maintain the cardiac index (Starling's law) in cases of decline in cardiac function or
mitral stenosis
. It was shown that increases in pulmonary venous pressure cause changes in distribution of pulmonary perfusion, which in turn works to depress the cardiac index. A decline in cardiac function and changes in the distribution of pulmonary perfusion coexist, mediated by pulmonary venous pressure and cardiac index. The distribution of pulmonary perfusion reflects the severity of
cardiac failure
itself, so by using DPI the severity of
cardiac failure
can be easily evaluated.
...
PMID:Severity of cardiac failure from the standpoint of pulmonary circulation: studies centered on distribution of pulmonary perfusion. 271 77
Dynamic ergometer exercise in a supine position was applied to 64 patients more than 1 year after valvular heart surgery, and the left ventricular reserve was evaluated echocardiographically. The left ventricular reserve declined in the
mitral stenosis
-mitral valve replacement group, while it was better maintained in the
mitral stenosis
-mitral commissurotomy, aortic regurgitation and aortic stenosis groups. The patients were divided into 3 groups depending on whether the percentage increase during exercise of stroke index, an index of left ventricular pump function, increased, unchanged, or decreased. The percentage increase of mean velocity of circumferential fibre shortening (y) and that of left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (x) during exercise were plotted for each group. The increased group was isolated from the unchanged group by the line of y = -5.02x + 30.1; the unchanged group was isolated from the decreased group by that of y = -5.68x-10.0, and the increased and unchanged groups were clearly isolated from the decreased group by that of y = -6.86x-4.76. We conclude that dynamic ergometer exercise echocardiography is useful for evaluating the left ventricular reserve of postoperative patients with valvular heart disease. It was also thought that the subclinical state of
cardiac failure
can be effectively detected by the present method.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the left ventricular reserve by dynamic exercise echocardiography after surgery for valvular heart diseases. 280 Nov 86
During a 12-year period, when more than 106,000 women were delivered, 28 women with peripartum
heart failure
of obscure etiology that initially was diagnosed as peripartum cardiomyopathy were studied. None had obvious underlying cardiac disease or iatrogenic fluid overload, and in all an assiduous search for underlying cardiovascular disease was launched. In 21 of these 28 women,
heart failure
was attributed to chronic underlying disease (chronic hypertension in 14, forme fruste
mitral stenosis
in four, and morbid obesity in one) or viral myocarditis. Importantly, these women also had multiple compounding cardiovascular factors--preeclampsia, cesarean section, anemia, and infection--which, when superimposed on those of pregnancy, acted in concert to cause
heart failure
. In seven women, the cause for cardiomegaly and global hypokinesis was not found, and peripartum cardiomyopathy was diagnosed. Compared with women with explicable causes of peripartum
heart failure
, these women did poorly: six had persistent cardiomegaly and
heart failure
, and four of these died within four months to eight years. From these observations, the authors conclude that idiopathic peripartum cardiomyopathy is uncommon, and that in most women with peripartum
heart failure
of obscure etiology, underlying chronic disease will be identified.
Heart failure
in these women ensues when the cardiovascular demands of normal pregnancy are amplified further by common pregnancy complications superimposed upon these underlying conditions that cause compensated ventricular hypertrophy.
...
PMID:Peripartum heart failure: idiopathic cardiomyopathy or compounding cardiovascular events? 293 58
To evaluate the influence of volume overload by pregnancy on heart diseases, the relations between cardiac status before pregnancy and clinical courses during pregnancy were studied, especially from the viewpoint of pulmonary circulation. In 206 pregnant cardiac patients whose prepregnancy laboratory data were known, the deterioration (appearance or advance of
heart failure
) during pregnancy was prospectively related to: pulmonary congestion (p less than 0.05), enlarged left atrium (p less than 0.05), atrial fibrillation (p less than 0.01) and right ventricular hypertrophy (p less than 0.005) in
mitral stenosis
; cardiomegaly (p less than 0.05) and atrial fibrillation (p less than 0.005) in mitral regurgitation; cardiomegaly (p less than 0.005) in congenital heart diseases; and to previous congestive heart failure (p less than 0.005) in total cases. All of the cases with systolic pulmonary artery pressure higher than 50 mmHg deteriorated during pregnancy. Some cases with no deteriorating laboratory findings showed dyspnea suddenly at the end of pregnancy. In 1033 cardiac patients who had experienced pregnancy, deterioration during pregnancy was seen more frequently in cases with mitral valvular diseases that in those with aortic valvular diseases. No deterioration was seen in pulmonary stenosis patients. Abnormal status of pulmonary circulation may be one of the important determining factors of deterioration by pregnancy in cardiac patients. The criteria for permitting pregnancy in cardiac patients are proposed.
...
PMID:Pregnancy in cardiac patients: possible influence of volume overload by pregnancy on pulmonary circulation. 294 8
A total of 11085 patients have been operated on for rheumatic heart diseases over thirty years, 85.4% of those, for
mitral stenosis
or its relapse, using the "closed" method (total mortality was 2.7%). In recent years, the mortality rate has dropped to 1.5% in that group of patients. Prevention of
heart failure
and thromboembolic complications still are the principal problem of mitral commissurotomy. Traumatic regurgitation was seen in 2%. The operation was performed under extracorporeal circulation in 6.2% of patients. Mortality, associated with mitral prosthesis implantation, has decreased threefold (to 10.8%) over 15 years. A total of 131 patients have been operated on for constrictive pericarditis, the mortality rate was 10.7%. Primary implantation of electric pacemaker for complete transverse heart block has been performed in 196 patients, and the generator was replaced in 143 patients.
...
PMID:[Results of 30 years' surgical treatment of acquired defects and diseases of the heart]. 296 20
A study of myocardium of patients with
mitral stenosis
was performed using ultrahistochemical methods at different stages of disease and in the course of valve replacement operation. A quantitative analysis of degenerative changes was introduced, the results of which correlated with the severity of
heart failure
. A pronounced heterogeneity in mitochondrial enzyme activity has been detected cytochemically. In some apparently "unaffected" cardiomyocytes an active alterative process was expressed in an increase of sarcolemma permeability for electron-microscopic tracers. An elevated fenestration of membrane barriers was noted at the stages of anoxic heart arrest. Using tannic acid it was possible to demonstrate a penetration of plasma protein-polysaccharide complexes into cell sarcoplasma. There were observed topographic variations in the distribution of acid phosphatase activity.
...
PMID:[Ultrahistochemistry of cardiomyocytes in acquired mitral lesions of the heart]. 301 Sep 14
Percutaneous mitral balloon valvotomy (PMV) was performed successfully in a 41-year-old pregnant patient with severe
mitral stenosis
. The patient had a 21-week gestation and was severely limited by symptoms resulting from critical
mitral stenosis
. PMV resulted in a decrease in the diastolic mitral gradient from 26 to 2 mm Hg and an increase in both cardiac output (from 4.2 to 5.7 l/min) and mitral valve area (from 0.7 to 3.7 cm2). She had marked symptomatic improvement, no further
heart failure
, and a full-term, normal delivery. This case report indicates that PMV may be the treatment of choice in the management of pregnant patients with incapacitating symptoms caused by severe
mitral stenosis
.
...
PMID:Percutaneous mitral balloon valvotomy during pregnancy in a patient with severe mitral stenosis. 318 Feb 4
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