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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 37-year-old woman with longstanding systemic lupus erythematosus developed
cardiac insufficiency
,
nephrotic syndrome
, and azotemia. The findings at echocardiography and cardiac scintigraphy suggested amyloidosis, which was confirmed by rectal biopsy and fine needle biopsy of subcutaneous abdominal fat. Postmortem examination revealed systemic amyloidosis with massive deposits in the heart, spleen and kidneys. She had persistently increased concentration of serum amyloid A protein during the last 4 years of her life, and her amyloidosis was of the secondary (AA) type, as shown by immunohistochemical studies.
...
PMID:AA amyloidosis in systemic lupus erythematosus. 366 91
Patients with edema not caused by a primary renal inability to excrete sodium show elevated aldosterone levels but to a very variable degree. The low levels can be explained by the absence of hypovolemia resulting from compensatory volume restoration, as in some patients with
heart failure
, or a concomitant renal excretory impairment as in many patients with
nephrotic syndrome
and possibly some early phases of liver cirrhosis. When aldosterone is high it is never the sole factor involved. Ironically, some patients with idiopathic edema seem to be the best examples of volume induced sodium retention in which (inappropriate) aldosterone stimulation is a crucial factor.
...
PMID:[Role of aldosterone in the development of edema]. 408 71
Measurements of total body potassium (T.B.K.) were made by whole-body counting in four groups of patients receiving oral frusemide for one year. Patients in group 1 had essential hypertension and normal renal function and received 40 mg frusemide daily without potassium supplements. Patients in group 2 were similar but received oral potassium supplements for the first four months of treatment. Patients in group 3 had hypertension associated with renal disease and received 120 mg frusemide daily without potassium supplements. Patients in group 4 also had hypertension and renal impairment and in addition to 120 mg frusemide daily they received oral potassium supplements for four months. No evidence of depletion of T.B.K. was found in any of the groups after continuous treatment with frusemide for one year. It is questioned whether potassium supplementation in long term diuretic therapy with frusemide is necessary unless there is evidence of pre-existing potassium depletion or of some other factor such as
cardiac failure
, cirrhosis of the liver, or the
nephrotic syndrome
.
...
PMID:Total body potassium in long-term frusemide therapy: is potassium supplementation necessary? 421 34
On the assumption that increased urinary lysozyme concentration (;lysozymuria') indicates tubular proteinuria and therefore impaired tubular function, urinary lysozyme has been estimated in acute disorders where transient disturbances of renal function might be expected, in cases diagnosed clinically as extrarenal uraemia, and in a few examples of acute renal disease. Reversible lysozymuria occurred with hypokalaemia, postoperative ;collapse', electrolyte depletion, severe extrarenal infection, acute pyelonephritis, the
nephrotic syndrome
, after a few apparently uncomplicated surgical operations, and very transiently after ventricular fibrillation abolished by DC shock. There was no lysozymuria with severe uraemic
heart failure
, aspirin and paracetamol poisoning, or severe jaundice, nor in two cases of acute glomerulonephritis. Although lysozymuria may occasionally be useful in the clinical diagnosis of acutely disordered renal function, the results suggest that its value is limited; on the other hand, they have provided information on renal pathophysiology in acute disease.
...
PMID:Lysozymuria and acute disorders of renal function. 470 97
The evidence that
heart failure
alone may cause a
nephrotic syndrome
is inconclusive. Mercurial diuretics, which have also been implicated as a cause of the
nephrotic syndrome
, had been given in 23 of the 24 well-documented cases.Two cases of heart disease and
nephrotic syndrome
are described. Glomerular lesions were minimal on light microscopy, but thickening of the glomerular tuft basement membrane and partial fusion of the epithelial cell foot processes were apparent on elecronmicroscopy. The response to prednisone was such as to justify a trial of corticosteroid therapy in such cases despite the presence of cardiac disease.
...
PMID:Nephrotic syndrom with heart disease: a reappraisal. 566 91
Edema is a collection of fluid within the body's interstitial space which occurs when there is an alteration of the Starling forces which control transfer of fluid from the vascular compartment to surrounding tissue spaces. Generalized edema results when altered Starling forces affect all capillary beds, such as occurs in
cardiac failure
, cirrhosis, and
nephrotic syndrome
. Common to these conditions is the development of increased total body sodium and water content. The kidneys play an essential role in the retention of this sodium and water. In this article we shall discuss the signals the kidneys receive for sodium and water retention in these edematous disorders (afferent mechanisms). We shall also examine the means by which the kidney responds to these signals and retains sodium and water (efferent mechanisms). As shall become apparent these edematous states may share many of the same afferent and efferent mechanisms for sodium and water retention.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of sodium and water retention in edematous disorders. 675 Oct 72
Continuous oral dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) treatment (7-15 g/day) was given to 3 patients with amyloidosis of familial Mediterranean fever (FMF), 3 patients with idiopathic amyloidosis, and 7 patients with secondary amyloidosis. The
nephrotic syndrome
and various degrees of renal insufficiency were the major clinical manifestation in all case. Renal function was used as the main parameter for evaluation of therapy. DMSO treatment for 7-16 months produced no effect in the FMF patients and in the patient with idiopathic amyloidosis; they all ran the predictable clinical course of their disease and either died of
cardiac failure
or have been maintained on chronic haemodialysis. In the 7 patients with secondary amyloidosis an unequivocal improvement of renal function was observed following 3-6 months of DMSO treatment. It was shown by a 30-100% rise of creatinine clearance and a decline in proteinuria. This new equilibrium has been maintained as long as DMSO was administered. No serious side effects of DMSO wee encountered. Mild nausea and an unpleasant breath odour were the patients' main concern. We conclude that a therapeutic trial with oral DMSO is warranted in all patients with secondary amyloidosis. This treatment is unpleasant but bears no exceptional risks. It may significantly prolong life, though its effect on amyloid deposits themselves is doubtful.
...
PMID:Prolonged dimethylsulphoxide treatment in 13 patients with systemic amyloidosis. 714 95
Lymphedema is still a difficult clinical problem, poorly investigated and new methods of evaluation are needed to improve the understanding of its pathophysiology. Lymphoscintigraphy is diagnostic but cannot be repeated frequently in the follow-up. In this study we have evaluated four new methods of evaluation of lymphedema which may be used to quantify the problem and to follow-up patients. These methods are: A. the evaluation of the ratio between the concentration of lymphatic fluid proteins and plasma proteins concentration (CL/CP); B. the test of the spontaneous clearance of a haematoma; C. high-resolution ultrasound imaging of low density spaces (SBD) in the subcutaneous tissue, possibly corresponding to dilated lymphatic spaces; D. the combination of imaging and CL/CP ratio. Comparable groups of normal subjects, patients with primary lymphedema diagnosed with lymphoscintigraphy and patients with chronic venous insufficiency have been evaluated. The four methods appeared useful to differentiate normal subjects from those with lymphedema. However the separation between lymphedema and chronic venous insufficiency was less evident. Edema due to systemic causes (
cardiac failure
,
nephrotic syndrome
or chronic venous insufficiency) is also differentiated from lymphedema. In conclusion these tests may be useful to evaluate lymphedema (particularly in the early phases, when the clinical presentation is unclear), to follow-up its evolution and possibly to evaluate the effects of treatments.
...
PMID:[Lymphedema. New non-invasive methods for diagnosis and follow up]. 747 45
During 1984 to 1991, 54 out of 569 lupus nephritis patients at Siriraj Hospital were male (F:M sex ratio = 10:1). Mean age of the males was 29.8 +/- 14.6 years, range 12 to 69. The three most common extrarenal manifestations were anemia, cutaneous, and musculoskeletal involvement (74.5, 51.1, and 43.9%, respectively). The major renal manifestations were edema (75.9%) with heavy proteinuria over 3.5 g/day in 62.2% and nephrotic/nephritic findings in 51.9% of cases. Hypertension was found in 35.2%. Mean serum creatinine was 2.0 +/- 1.4 mg/dl while 60.5% of cases had creatinine clearance below 50 ml/minute. Mean serum albumin was 2.6 +/- 0.8 g/dl, cholesterol 262.8 +/- 129.5 and triglycerides 343.2 +/- 244.6 mg/dl. Interestingly, hypercholesterolemia (> 250 mg/dl) was found only in 44.8% of cases with
nephrotic syndrome
. Antinuclear antibody was demonstrated in 91.5%, anti-dDNA antibody in 64.4% and LE cells in 40.4% of cases. Renal biopsy was done in 45 patients and 30 cases (66.7%) were classified as diffuse proliferative nephritis (WHO type IV), 15.6% of type II, 6.7% each of type III and V, with the rest of type V plus IV (4.4%). Tubulointerstitial inflammation was found in 77.3% of cases. During the follow-up period (42 +/- 35.8 months), 6 patients died. The cause of death were uremia in 3, infection in 2, and
cardiac failure
in 1. By life-table analysis, the probabilities of survival for 1 and 5 years were 89.5 and 80.6%, respectively. In comparison between sexes, except for a higher amount of urinary protein excretion (4.5 +/- 3.1 vs 3.5 +/- 3.0 g/day, p < 0.05), there were no statistically significant differences in clinical and pathological parameters, and probability of survival.
...
PMID:Lupus nephritis in males: 8-year experience at Siriraj Hospital. 761 14
The physiology of the release of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) from the posterior pituitary is briefly reviewed. The importance of both osmolar and non-osmolar stimuli is emphasised. Osmolar and non-osmolar factors usually reinforce each other; for example, hydropenia leads to hyperosmolality and hypovolaemia, both promoting ADH release, while hydration has the opposite effect. In disease, osmolar and non-osmolar factors may become dissociated leading to baroreceptor-mediated ADH release in the presence of hyponatraemia and hypo-osmolality. Examples include
heart failure
, glucocorticoid or thyroxine deficiency, hepatic cirrhosis and
nephrotic syndrome
with or without the superimposed effect of diuretics, i.e. conditions in which circulatory, and in particular effective arterial, volume is reduced. It is dangerous to label such conditions as 'inappropriate' secretion of ADH since the maintenance of circulating volume is at least as important a physiological requirement as the defence of tonicity. The syndrome of inappropriate secretion of ADH (SIADH) is uncommon in childhood and should only be diagnosed when physiological release of ADH in response to non-osmolar as well as osmolar factors has been excluded. Criteria for the correct identification of SIADH are discussed; the presence of continuing urinary sodium excretion in the presence of hyponatraemia and hypo-osmolality is essential to the diagnosis. SIADH in children is usually due to intracranial disease or injury. The mainstay of treatment is water restriction which reverses all the physiological abnormalities of the condition. Hypertonic saline is rarely indicated for the short-term control of neurological manifestations such as seizures. Drugs have little or no place in the treatment of SIADH in children.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. 861 39
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