Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There is an increasing use and variety of beta-adrenoceptor blocking agents (beta-blockers) available for the treatment of hyperthyroidism. Recent comparative studies suggest that atenolol (200mg daily), metoprolol (200mg daily); acebutolol (400mg daily), oxprenolol ( 160mg daily), nadolol ( 80mg daily) and timolol (20mg daily) produce a beneficial clinical response equal to that seen with propranolol ( 160mg daily). Most beta-blockers reduce resting heart rate by approximately 25 to 30 beats/min, although a lesser reduction is seen with those possessing intrinsic sympathomimetic activity such as oxprenolol and pindolol. While earlier studies employing large doses of intravenous propranolol concluded that beta-blockade reduced myocardial contractility, more recent non-invasive studies suggest that the predominant cardiac effect is on heart rate. In patients with cardiac failure, beta-blockers may, however, produce a profound fall in cardiac output. Nevertheless, in combination with digoxin they may be useful in controlling the atrial fibrillation of thyrocardiac disease. beta-Blockers improve nervousness and tremor (although to a lesser extent with cardioselective agents) and severe myopathy, and they also reduce the frequency of paralysis in patients with thyrotoxic periodic paralysis. There is often subjective improvement in sweating but usually no major effect on eye signs. Recent studies show a 10% reduction in oxygen consumption/basal metabolic rate with long term oral use of selective or nonselective beta-blockers. In addition, many agents (propranolol, metoprolol, nadolol and sotalol but not acebutolol, atenolol or oxprenolol) reduce circulating tri-iodothyronine (T3) concentration by between 10 and 40%, although the clinical significance of this effect (if any) is not established. beta-Blockers may also have endocrinological effects on gastrin, cyclic AMP, catecholamines and other hormone levels. Given in adequate dosage, propranolol has been shown to control thyrotoxic hypercalcaemia. Minor side effects (nausea, headaches, tiredness, etc.) are quite common but overall beta-blockers are well tolerated by the thyrotoxic patient. The major use of these drugs is in symptomatic control while awaiting definitive diagnosis or treatment. As an adjunct to antithyroid drugs or radioactive iodine, beta-blockers will produce a satisfactory clinical response in the weeks to months before these forms of therapy produce a euthyroid state. beta-Blockers are more convenient than antithyroid drugs in the control of patients receiving therapeutic radioiodine, in that continuous therapy and assessment of biochemical response is possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Use of beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs in hyperthyroidism. 614 1

Clinical, biochemical and pathological findings are described in a 23-year-old male with a mitochondrial myopathy who had a high-output circulatory state and cardiomyopathy which resulted in cardiac insufficiency 22 years before presentation of the skeletal myopathy. Venous lactate levels were elevated and severe lactic acidosis developed at one stage of the illness. Electron microscopy of muscle tissue showed various mitochondrial abnormalities and accumulation of neutral lipids which was confirmed histochemically and by thin-layer chromatography. Marked improvement in the myopathy occurred after commencement of prednisone and thiamine and was maintained following withdrawal of these drugs. The metabolic defect in this case has not been defined, but an abnormality in the Kreb's over-production of lactate and lipid accumulation in muscle is postulated.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy with cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis and response to prednisone and thiamine. 693 88

A herd of cattle which produces calves with generalised glycogenosis type II has been established. Seven affected animals have been born and their disease status as indicated by a decreased acid alpha-glucosidase activity and excessive glycogen deposition in muscle, can be detected on the day of birth. Two animals have died of heart failure aged 3 and 5 months and have shown cardiomegally. Five animals were clinically normal until 9 months of age when they failed to maintain weight gain, showed muscle weakness and four were killed aged between 12 and 16 months after showing difficulty in rising. All affected animals had abnormal ECG tracings and had elevated levels of CK, LDH and HBDH in serum. Excessive amounts of glycogen were deposited in voluntary, cardiac and smooth muscle, and in cells of the nervous system. The muscles showed a vacuolar myopathy. Both the infantile and late onset forms of generalised glycogenosis type II are present in this herd of cattle. The condition appears to be controlled by a recessive allele at a single autosomal locus.
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PMID:Infantile and late onset form of generalised glycogenosis type II in cattle. 703 92

Shortness of breath is a common symptom in thyrotoxicosis and it may have a number of causes. We have studied dyspnoea, skeletal muscle power and respiratory muscle power in eleven patients who had thyrotoxicosis with no evidence of heart failure. Four patients (36.4%) had a marked improvement with treatment in the maximal inspiratory pressure developed at the mouth. All four were breathless and had a proximal myopathy before treatment. This confirms the existence of a group of thyrotoxic patients with a reversible respiratory muscle myopathy which may explain the frequent finding of breathlessness on exertion in such patients.
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PMID:Thyrotoxicosis and dyspnoea. 707 72

A case of fatal familial intrahepatic cholestasis (Byler disease) developed a neuromuscular syndrome similar to that in experimental vitamin E deficiency and abetalipoproteinemia, and died of hepatic and cardiac failure. Serum vitamin E level was extremely low. Autopsy revealed intrahepatic cholestatic cirrhosis without obliterative lesions in the bile duct system and marked splenomegaly with splenoma-like nodules. The other pathological lesions were considered to be due to chronic vitamin E deficiency as follows:1. Mitochondrial changes especially of the hepatocyte and cardiac muscle. 2. Cardiomyopathy. 3. Myopathy. 4. Vasculopathy. 5. Systemic lipofuscinosis. 6. Lesions of the reproductive and endocrine organs. 7. Kyphoscoliosis and pes cavus. 8. Systemic neuroaxonal dystrophy with peripheral neuropathy.
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PMID:Pathology of chronic vitamin E deficiency in fatal familial intrahepatic cholestasis (Byler disease). 713 26

A retrospective study of 112 cases of lupus erythematosus, 103 acute disseminated lupus erythematosus (ADLE) and 9 chronic discoid lupus (CDL), was conducted to determine the incidence of disorders of conduction (DC), and to study their prognosis and discuss their pathogenicity. The mean age of the group was 38 +/- 16 years, and the mean follow-up period after discovery of the DC was 53 months. Cardiac lesions were present in 49.5 p. cent of the 103 patients with ADLE : pericarditis in 27 p. cent, murmur from lupus endocarditis or cardiomyopathy in 23 p. cent, heart failure in 4.8 p. cent, and hypertension in 17 p. cent. Disorders of conduction were present in 18 (17.5 p. cent) of the 112 patients studied. These included 5 partial right bundle-branch blocks (no complete right bundle-branch block), 2 complete and 3 partial left bundle-branch blocks, 5 complete, 2 first degree, and 1 second degree atrioventricular blocks (AVB). The atrioventricular blocks were usually located in the truncal or fascicular regions, but in 2 cases they were nodal in origin. The 5 complete AVB were associated with ADLE in two cases and CDL in the three other cases. The AVB in the ADLE cases appeared 9 to 20 years after the onset of the lupus, these two patients developing pericardiomyocarditis unaccompanied by disorders of conduction. The three complete AVB occurring during CDL were detected 9 to 18 months after the diagnosis. A fatal outcome was noted in 13 (12.5 p. cent) of the ADLE patients and one of the 9 cases of CDL. Ten-year survival curves showed no difference in prognosis for the groups with or without disorders of conduction, but mortality increased in patients with DC after 10 years. As disorders of conduction were more frequently observed in patients with lupus than in a control population, they can be attributed to either a lupus myocarditis or prolonged administration of synthetic antimalarial agents. Disorders of conduction, and particularly complete AVB are, in fact, observed in patients without pericardiomyocardial lesions, and when they exist usually develop a long time after the onset of the cardiac lesion. All patients had been treated with antimalarials, however, and the onset of the DC was associated with a chloroquine myopathy in some of them. Three of the five complete AVB were observed during the course of CDL in patients without cardiac lesions, this being a supplementary argument for implicating synthetic antimalarials.
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PMID:[Disorders of conduction in lupus erythematosus : frequency and incidence in a group of 112 patients (author's transl)]. 730 72

Hyperthyroidism is reportedly uncommon in the indigenous populations of Africa. The presenting symptoms volunteered, the symptoms elicited by direct questioning, and the results of physical examination were therefore prospectively compared in 60 Black and 56 White patients with thyrotoxicosis attending a single thyroid clinic. Fewer Blacks than Whites volunteered information about weight loss, while more Blacks complained only of the presence of a goitre. A 'change' diagnosis of hyperthyroidism was made more frequently in Blacks. Symptomatology elicited by direct questioning and findings on physical examination were generally similar in each group, except that Blacks presented more frequently with complicated disease (cardiac failure and overt myopathy) and infiltrative ophthalmopathy. The frequency with which hyperthyroidism presents 'atypically' in Black compared with White patients may reflect educational, socio-economic and Cultural differences in the Black and White populations, and may partly explain the infrequency with which this disease is diagnosed in Blacks.
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PMID:Atypical features of hyperthyroidism in blacks. 740

Polyglucosan body diseases in adults, contrary to infantile cases (Andersen's disease or type IV glycogenosis or amylopectinosis), are usually not associated with a significant deficiency of the branching enzyme (= amylo-1,4-1,6 transglucosidase). We, therefore, report on a 19-year-old male with complete branching enzyme deficiency presenting with severe myopathy, dilative cardiomyopathy, heart failure, dysmorphic features, and subclinical neuropathy. His 14-year-old brother had similar symptoms and was erroneously classified by a previous muscle biopsy as having central core disease but could later be identified as also having polyglucosan body myopathy. The skeletal muscle, endomyocardiac, and sural nerve biopsies as well as the autopsy revealed extraordinarily severe deposits of polyglucosan bodies not only in striated and smooth muscle fibers, but also in histiocytes, fibroblasts, perineurial cells, axons and astrocytes. Occasional paracrystalline mitochondrial inclusions were also noted. Thus, this patient represents to our knowledge the first juvenile, familial case of polyglucosan body disease with total branching enzyme deficiency and extensive polyglucosan body storage.
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PMID:Juvenile hereditary polyglucosan body disease with complete branching enzyme deficiency (type IV glycogenosis). 768 69

The authors present the clinical history of a 70-year-old male with arterial hypertension who sought medical advice because of dyspnea on exertion, orthopnea and episodes of paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea. The electrocardiogram showed left arterial hemiblock and abnormalities of ventricular repolarization compatible with a left lateral endocardiac lesion. Echocardiography revealed a hypertrophied left ventricle with a small ventricular cavity, compatible with an infiltrative-restrictive myopathy. Blood chemistry showed creatinine 4.9 mg/dl, BUN 133 mg/dl and alkaline phosphatase 204 i.v. The patient expired because of intractable heart failure. The histopathological examination of a piece of myocardium (authorized by the family) stained with Congo red confirmed the presence of abundant, diffuse deposits of amyloid, as had been suspected because of the echocardiographic findings.
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PMID:[Cardiac amyloidosis secondary to multiple myeloma detected by echocardiography]. 774 97

A patient with cytoplasmic body myopathy presented muscle hypotonia from birth and developed progressive muscular atrophy and weakness, scoliosis, contracture of joints and cardiorespiratory failure. At the age of 17, he died of heart failure. Post mortem examination revealed severe hypertrophy of cardiac walls and generalized muscular atrophy. Microscopic examination showed many cytoplasmic bodies in skeletal muscle fibers and myofiber disarray in myocardium. No cases of cytoplasmic body myopathy with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy have been reported previously. It is suggested that the Z-line component is related to the formation of the cytoplasmic body in skeletal muscle and disarray in the cardiac muscle.
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PMID:Cytoplasmic body myopathy with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. 778 21


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