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

In order to characterize the features of peripartum cardiomyopathy, clinical, echocardiographic and right ventricular endomyocardial bioptic data obtained from 6 patients (pts) (age range: 34.1 +/- 5.5. yrs) who fulfilled peripartum cardiomyopathy diagnostic criteria, were analyzed. Five of these pts had clinical and non-invasive studies for a mean period of 41.6 +/- 59.6 months. All but one were multiparous. Five developed heart failure one month before delivery. Three patients had active myocarditis at endomyocardial biopsy and were treated with immunosuppressive therapy. At follow-up, 3 pts improved by two or three grades of the NYHA functional classification. All 3 showed a reduction in the left ventricular end diastolic diameter (from 3.9 +/- 0.4 to 3.4 +/- 0.3 cm/m2) and a normalization of the shortening fraction in 2 (from 15 to 36% and from 13 to 46% respectively) at echocardiography. These two patients had active myocarditis at the first endomyocardial biopsy. At follow-up, all 3 pts with active myocarditis showed histological evidence of healed myocarditis. In conclusion, peripartum cardiomyopathy is characterized by a high incidence of active myocarditis and improvement seems more frequent in this subgroup of pts.
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PMID:[Peripartum cardiomyopathy: clinical, echocardiographic and biopsy aspects]. 227 14

As many as 97 patients with myocardial lesions: congestive and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (CMP), postmyocarditis CMP (PM CMP), myocarditis (MC), alcoholic heart injury (AHI), coronary heart disease (CHD), vegetodysovarian myocardiodystrophy were examined by means of a complex of the virological tests (for Coxsackie B, Epstein-Barr and hepatitis B viruses) and immunoassays (for antibodies to different components of the myocardium, leukocyte migration inhibition test, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity test, measurements of T and B lymphocytes and their subpopulations, and so forth). Virus infection was shown to be of a role for the onset of acute MC (usually reversible) and congestive CMP. At the same time the autoimmune mechanisms of the lesions were conclusively ascertained in MC associated with heart failure and in PM CMP. In patients with congestive CMP and AHI coupled with heart failure, antibodies to nerve fibers of the myocardium could be demonstrated in the presence of T-lymphocyte deficiency and high titers of antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus. This does not allow excluding myocardial denervation leading to refractory heart failure. Some immunological parameters made use of in the study provide an opportunity of an objective evaluation of the effect glucocorticoid treatment produces on patients suffering from MC and PM CMP.
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PMID:[The viral and immunological characteristics of cardiomyopathies and myocarditis]. 227 78

Repeat endomyocardial biopsy was performed in 28 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy of less than or equal to 12 months' duration and either symptomatic heart failure or life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias. Myocarditis was strongly suspected clinically in all cases, yet was unconfirmed on initial right ventricular biopsy. Seventeen patients underwent both right and left ventricular biopsy, seven patients had a repeat right ventricular biopsy and four patients underwent repeat left ventricular biopsy alone. The interval between initial and repeat biopsy averaged 31 +/- 6 days. Myocarditis was confirmed on repeat biopsy in 4 of 6 patients whose initial biopsy revealed "borderline" myocarditis (that is, interstitial inflammation but absence of myocyte necrosis) compared with none of the 22 patients whose initial biopsy showed either myocyte hypertrophy or interstitial fibrosis, or both (p = 0.0007). "Borderline" myocarditis on initial biopsy was the only clinical or histologic finding predictive of myocarditis on subsequent biopsy. Repeat endomyocardial biopsy can identify and potentially modify the treatment of an additional group of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and nondiagnostic initial endomyocardial histologic features. Right ventricular sampling should be repeated in patients whose initial biopsy demonstrates "borderline" myocarditis.
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PMID:"Borderline" myocarditis: an indication for repeat endomyocardial biopsy. 229 70

The purpose of this study was to investigate, if besides the hypocontractility, which is the main finding in Primary Cardiomyopathy (PDC) there was some other mechanism in the development of heart failure and if this fact could influence in it's prognosis. We studied 13 patients with PDC in the hemodynamic cardiac laboratory from January 1982 to January 1988, these with systemic arterial hypertension. Coronary heart disease, myocarditis, primary valvular lesion, infiltrative disease, nephropathy, congenital heart disease, diabetes and alcoholism, were excluded. The control group was formed by 12 healthy subjects, which were studied for another purpose. We analyzed nine variables, including ejection fraction, peripheral vascular resistance, systolic and diastolic circumferential stress, left ventricular mass, left ventricular end diastolic and systolic volumes as well as force-velocity and force-fiber length relationship. The patients were followed up from 8 to 60 months (average 39 months). The cases with PDC were divided in two groups, "compensated" and "decompensated". The last ones with low ejection fraction and significantly increases systolic stress. We investigated which was the mechanism of compensation and decompensation through the force-velocity and force-fiber length relation. We found that compensation is associated with great increase of the after-load forces, the more end systolic volume at the end of the systole is not only controlled by the "force", but the decompensation is developed when the hypocontractility is added to the incompetence to compensate the after load. We found that the three deaths in this study had these hemodynamic characteristics, being the cause of death: the presence of heart failure in two patients and ventricular fibrillation in one.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Prognostic indexes in primary dilated cardiomyopathy]. 234 26

To evaluate the occurrence of familial cases of dilated cardiomyopathy (DC), 165 consecutive patients were studied. Diagnosis of myocardial disease was based on clinical, hemodynamic, bioptic, postmortem or a combination of these criteria. Twelve patients (7% of cases) showed evidence of myocardial disease in greater than or equal to 1 relative; 27 patients with myocardial disease were detected in the 12 families, but a suspected history of myocardial involvement was present in a further 16 cases. In 6 families proband and relatives were affected by DC (total 14 cases); in 1 of these families the disease began with an atrioventricular block. In 4 families the relatives showed the presence of myocarditis at the endomyocardial biopsy. In 2 families the relatives presented a right ventricular cardiomyopathy. The mode of inheritance was autosomal dominant in 7 families, recessive in 4; X-linked pattern may be hypothesized in 1. Nine patients died under the age of 45 years: 2 of sudden death, 6 of chronic heart failure and 1 of cerebral embolism. Familial transmission is not rare. Different modes of genetic transmission (autosomal dominant, recessive and X-linked) and different forms of myocardial disease suggest that familial DC may be a multifactorial disease.
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PMID:Clinical and pathologic study of familial dilated cardiomyopathy. 235 50

Right ventricular endomyocardial biopsy currently remains the procedure of choice for identifying patients with symptomatic heart failure due to myocarditis from the larger population with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. Despite its specificity, the sensitivity of right ventricular biopsy remains uncertain because of the focal or multifocal nature of the disease. Because myocyte necrosis is an obligate component of myocarditis, the use of indium-111 antimyosin imaging was evaluated in 82 patients with suspected myocarditis. Seventy-four patients had dilated cardiomyopathy of less than 1 year's duration (mean left ventricular ejection fraction 0.30 +/- 0.02); eight patients had normal left ventricular function (mean ejection fraction 0.59 +/- 0.03). Symptoms at presentation included congestive heart failure (92%), chest pain mimicking myocardial infarction (6%) and life-threatening ventricular tachyarrhythmias (2%). All patients underwent planar and single photon emission computed tomographic (SPECT) cardiac imaging after injection of indium-111-labeled antimyosin antibody fragments and right ventricular biopsy within 48 h of imaging. Antimyosin images were interpreted as either abnormal or normal and correlated with biopsy results. On the basis of the right ventricular histologic examination, the sensitivity of antimyosin imaging was 83%, specificity 53% and predictive value of a normal scan 92%. Improvement in left ventricular function occurred within 6 months of treatment in 54% of patients with an abnormal antimyosin scan compared with 18% of those with a normal scan (p less than 0.01). Antimyosin cardiac imaging may be useful for the initial evaluation of patients with dilated and nondilated cardiomyopathy and clinically suspected myocarditis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Antimyosin antibody cardiac imaging: its role in the diagnosis of myocarditis. 235 82

Myocarditis is an enigmatic disease. Lymphocytic myocarditis is most commonly viral in origin. Considerable evidence suggests that myocardial damage is due to an immune-mediated mechanism rather than to direct effects of the virus itself. The presentation is variable, ranging from a clinically inapparent or relatively benign illness to acute progressive heart failure and death. Although examination of the endomyocardial biopsy specimen is the "gold standard" for the diagnosis of myocarditis there are problems with this technique, relating particularly to sampling error and histologic interpretation. Considerable evidence, both animal and human, suggests that a link between viral myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy does exist. There is a rational basis for the use of immunosuppressive therapy in myocarditis. Although many favorable responses have been reported with the use of these agents, the results of more definitive studies are awaited to determine the role of immunosuppressive therapy in myocarditis more clearly. Recommendations for the practical management of patients with myocarditis are made. Whenever possible, patients with this diagnosis should be entered into the ongoing NIH trial.
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PMID:Myocarditis: unresolved issues in diagnosis and treatment. 240 97

The neurologic, psychologic, language, and academic skills were evaluated and compared in children who had had enteroviral meningitis in infancy and their siblings. The study population consisted of 45 children in whom enteroviral meningitis developed between the ages of 4 days and 12 months. Three died of heart failure caused by viral myocarditis. Thirty-three survivors and 31 siblings were comprehensively evaluated with physical and neurologic examinations; hearing, vision, and achievement tests; and tests of cognitive, perceptual-motor, language, memory, and emotional-behavioral functions. The remaining nine survivors of meningitis and eight of their siblings were assessed by telephone interviews and analysis of school and medical records. None of the survivors had major adverse neurologic sequelae. In addition, they performed as well as their siblings on all tests administered. Our study did not demonstrate either overt or covert impairments of neurologic function or development in survivors of infantile enteroviral meningitis.
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PMID:Outcome in children with enteroviral meningitis during the first year of life. 243 77

A pig infected with 2 x 10(5) sporocysts of Sarcocystis miescheriana which had survived the acute phase of the disease from 12 dpi until 17 dpi retarded in growth and finally died at 60 dpi. From gross pathological examination heart failure was assumed as the cause of death. Histopathologically severe Myocarditis eosinophilica fibrosa was diagnosed. The sections through the heart muscle contained numerous degenerating and some intact sarcocysts.
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PMID:[Heart failure in a pig chronically infected with Sarcocystis miescheriana--a case report]. 250 42

The authors report the case of a 21-year old, non-immunocompromised girl who presented with severe acute heart failure associated with Toxoplasma infection. The outcome was favourable: cure without sequelae was obtained in a few months with a symptomatic and specific treatment consisting of spiramycin and methylprednisolone. This case is interesting for several reasons. The occurrence of such an acute heart disease is extremely rare in patients with toxoplasmic myocarditis, and so is the presence of a septal focus suspected on the basis of a predominantly septal hypokinesia at echocardiography and of enzymatic changes. The development of an acute heart failure should suggest a diagnosis of toxoplasmic myocarditis, which is rare but important since a specific treatment is available.
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PMID:[Acute cardiac insufficiency and toxoplasmosis]. 251 80


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