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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There are two families of dopamine (DA) receptors, called D1 and D2, respectively. The D1 family consists of D1- and D5-receptor subtypes and the D2 family consists of D2-, D3-, and D4-receptor subtypes. The amino acid sequences of these receptors show that they all belong to a large superfamily of receptors with seven transmembrane domains, which are coupled to their intracellular signal transduction systems by G-proteins. The implications of DA receptors in neuropsychiatry and cardiovascular and renal diseases are discussed. Neuropsychiatry indications include
Parkinson's disease
, schizophrenia, migraine, drug dependence, mania and depression, and Gilles de la Tourette syndrome. The underlying dysfunction of dopaminergic systems and the potential benefits of dopaminergic therapy in these different indications are critically examined. With respect to the pharmacological treatment of
Parkinson's disease
, a range of DA agonists are in various stages of preclinical and clinical development. D2-receptor agonist activity is predominant in most effective antiparkinsonian DA agonists. However, in practice, it is difficult to treat patients for several years with DA agonists alone; therapeutic benefit is not sustained. Rather, the use of a combination of DA agonists and levodopa is considered preferable. Reports of the efficacy of DA partial agonists await confirmation, and recent clinical investigations also suggest the potential of D1 receptor agonists as antiparkinson drugs. Regarding migraine pathogenesis, clinical and pharmacological evidence suggests that DA is involved in this disorder. Most prodromal and accompanying symptoms may be related to dopaminergic activation. Several drugs acting on DA receptors are effective in migraine treatment. Furthermore, migraine patients show a higher incidence of dopaminergic symptoms following acute DA agonist administration, when compared with normal controls. In cardiology, the therapeutic benefits of DA agonists are noted in the treatment of
heart failure
. Low doses of DA are widely used for its specific dopaminergic effects on renal function, which are suggested to be beneficial, and for its alpha- and beta-adrenergic-mediated responses that occur with higher doses. However, studies have been unable to demonstrate that DA can prevent acute renal failure or reduce mortality. It appears that the significant progress that is being made in the molecular understanding of DA receptors will continue to have a tremendous impact in the pharmacological treatment of neuropsychiatric, cardiovascular, and renal diseases.
...
PMID:Dopamine receptors--physiological understanding to therapeutic intervention potential. 1059 3
A patient with severe
Parkinson's disease
presented with increasing dyspnea, bilateral pleural effusion and peripheral edema that were refractory to diuretic therapy and were first misdiagnosed as signs of right-sided
heart failure
. Pergolide was the only culprit for this devastating condition and on its discontinuation all signs of fluid retention resolved. In this report, drug reactions to ergots and dopamine agonists are discussed.
...
PMID:Pergolide-induced dyspnea, bilateral pleural effusion and peripheral edema. 1107 Apr 68
Stem cells are unique cell populations with the ability to undergo both self-renewal and differentiation. A wide variety of adult mammalian tissues harbors stem cells, yet "adult" stem cells may be capable of developing into only a limited number of cell types. In contrast, embryonic stem (ES) cells, derived from blastocyst-stage early mammalian embryos, have the ability to form any fully differentiated cell of the body. Human ES cells have a normal karyotype, maintain high telomerase activity, and exhibit remarkable long-term proliferative potential, providing the possibility for unlimited expansion in culture. Furthermore, they can differentiate into derivatives of all three embryonic germ layers when transferred to an in vivo environment. Data are now emerging that demonstrate human ES cells can initiate lineage-specific differentiation programs of many tissue and cell types in vitro. Based on this property, it is likely that human ES cells will provide a useful differentiation culture system to study the mechanisms underlying many facets of human development. Because they have the dual ability to proliferate indefinitely and differentiate into multiple tissue types, human ES cells could potentially provide an unlimited supply of tissue for human transplantation. Though human ES cell-based transplantation therapy holds great promise to successfully treat a variety of diseases (e.g.,
Parkinson's disease
, diabetes, and
heart failure
) many barriers remain in the way of successful clinical trials.
...
PMID:Multilineage differentiation from human embryonic stem cell lines. 1135 44
Stem cells as a source material for growing cellular transplants to repair dysfunctional organs appear to be a new challenge for medical science. Though stem cells are also present in foetal and adult organs, embryonic stem cells from the pre-implantation embryo in particular have the potency to proliferate easily in vitro and the capacity to differentiate into all the body's organ-specific cells. Therefore, these are the ideal cells for developing new cell transplantation therapies for diseases such as
Parkinson's disease
, diabetes mellitus and
heart failure
. The use of spare in vitro fertilization (IVF) embryos or pre-implantation embryos specially created to harvest human embryonic stem cells is, however, controversial and an ethical problem. In a European discussion platform organised by the European Commission Research Directorate-General, the status quo of the progress was presented and subsequently commented upon and discussed in terms of medical-ethical, social, industrial and patient interests. The expectations of this new medical technology were high, but clinical trials seem only acceptable once the in vitro differentiation of stem cells can be adequately controlled and once it is known how in vitro prepared stem cells behave after implantation. The ethical justification of the use of in vitro pre-implantation embryos remains controversial. The prevailing view is that the interests of severely ill patients for whom no adequate therapy exists, surmounts the interest of protection of a human in vitro pre-implantation embryo, regardless of whether it was the result of IVF or of transplantation of a somatic cell nucleus of the patient in an enucleated donor egg cell (therapeutic cloning).
...
PMID:[A European discussion about stem cells for therapeutic use]. 1213 43
Locomotor disability, as defined by difficulties in activities of daily living related to lower limb function, can be the consequence of diseases and impairments of the cardiovascular, pulmonary, nervous, sensory and musculoskeletal system. We estimated the associations between specific diseases and impairments and locomotor disability, and the proportion of disability attributable to each condition, controlling for age and comorbidity. The Rotterdam Study is a prospective follow-up study among people aged 55 years and over in the general population. Locomotor disability in 1219 men and 1856 women was assessed with the Stanford Health Assessment Questionnaire. Diseases and impairments were radiological osteoarthritis, pain of the hips and knees, morning stiffness, fractures, hypertension, vascular disease, ischemic heart disease, stroke,
heart failure
, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), depression,
Parkinson's disease
, osteoporosis, diabetes mellitus, overweight, and low vision. Adjusted odds ratios, etiologic and attributable fractions were calculated for locomotor disability. The occurrence of locomotor disability can partly be ascribed to joint pain, COPD, morning stiffness, diabetes and
heart failure
in both men and women. In addition in women osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, low vision, fractures, stroke and
Parkinson's disease
are significant etiologic fractions. In men with morning stiffness, joint pain,
heart failure
, diabetes mellitus, and COPD a significant proportion of their disability is attributable to this impairment. In women this was the case for
Parkinson's disease
, morning stiffness, low vision,
heart failure
, joint pain, diabetes, radiological osteoarthritis, stroke, COPD, osteoporosis, and fractures of the lower limbs, in that order. We conclude that locomotor complaints,
heart failure
, COPD and diabetes mellitus contribute considerably to locomotor disability in non-institutionalized elderly people.
...
PMID:Determinants of locomotor disability in people aged 55 years and over: the Rotterdam Study. 1238 Jul 18
We studied 48 patients after bilateral subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) who were evaluated 6 months after the surgical procedure using the Unified
Parkinson's Disease
Rating Scale (UPDRS) in a standardized levodopa test. Additional follow-up was available in 32 patients after 12 months and in 20 patients after 24 months. At 6 months follow-up, STN-DBS reduced the UPDRS motor score by 50.9% compared to baseline. This improvement remained constant at 12 months with 57.5% and at 24 months with 57.3%. Relevant side effects after STN-DBS included intraoperative subdural hematoma without neurological sequelae (n = 1), minor intracerebral bleeding with slight transient hemiparesis (n = 1), dislocation of impulse generator (n = 2), transient perioperative confusional symptoms (n = 7), psychotic symptoms (n = 2), depression (n = 5), hypomanic behaviour (n = 2), and transient manic psychosis (n = 1). One patient died because of
heart failure
during the first postoperative year. The current series demonstrates efficacy and safety of STN-DBS beyond the first year after surgical procedure. Complications of STN-DBS comprise a wide range of psychiatric adverse events which, however, were temporary.
...
PMID:Two-year follow-up of subthalamic deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease. 1463 76
Every month new clinical trials are published that provide relevant insight into medical care. Health care professionals are expected to review the results of these trials to update their knowledge and clinical practice. Although it is impossible to review every clinical trial, it is important to evaluate study findings in one's area of interest or practice. For nurses and other practitioners in the field of geriatrics, clinical trials involving drug therapy can be particularly valuable. This article is a review of clinical trials published in the past year that provide new information about drug therapy used by elderly patients. It reviews recent clinical trials in the areas of cardiology (hypertension, dyslipidemia, antioxidants for cardiovascular disease, hormone replacement therapy, atrial fibrillation, systolic
heart failure
), hematology (venous thromboembolic disease), neurology (
Parkinson's disease
, post-herpetic neuralgia), and rheumatology (osteoarthritis). Major findings and implications for geriatric clinical practice are included.
...
PMID:What's new about old drugs. 1475 53
Many concepts about acute and chronic effects of stress depend on alterations in sympathetic nerves supplying the heart. Physiologic, pharmacologic, and neurochemical approaches have been used to evaluate cardiac sympathetic function. This article describes a fourth approach that is based on nuclear scanning to visualize cardiac sympathetic innervation and function and relationships between the neuroimaging findings and those from other approaches. Multiple-system atrophy with orthostatic hypotension (formerly the Shy-Drager syndrome) features normal cardiac sympathetic innervation and normal entry of norepinephrine into the coronary sinus (cardiac norepinephrine spillover), in contrast to
Parkinson disease
with orthostatic hypotension, which features neuroimaging and neurochemical evidence for loss of cardiac sympathetic nerves. This difference may have important implications not only for diagnosis but also for understanding the etiology of
Parkinson disease
. By analysis of curves relating myocardial radioactivity with time (time-activity curves) after injection of a sympathoneural imaging agent, it is possible to obtain information about cardiac sympathetic function. Abnormal time-activity curves are seen in common disorders such as
heart failure
and diabetic neuropathy and provide an independent, adverse prognostic index. Analogous abnormalities might help explain increased cardiovascular risk in psychiatric disorders such as melancholic depression.
...
PMID:Functional neuroimaging of sympathetic innervation of the heart. 1524 Mar 74
Stem cells are undifferentiated cells, with the ability to self renew and to differentiate into specialised cells. Embryonic stem cells (ES) have proven to be truly pluripotent, since they are able to give derivatives of the three primitive embryonic layers. Human ES have a normal karyotype, maintain high telomerase activity, and exhibit remarkable long-term proliferative potential, providing the possibility for unlimited expansion in culture. Though human ES cell-based transplantation therapy holds great promises to successfully treat a variety of diseases (e.g.,
Parkinson's disease
, diabetes, and
heart failure
) many barriers remain in the way of successful clinical trials. Less spectacular, the applications in the field of reproductive biology are also outstanding: stem cell biology will lead us to a better understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of events such as infertility, failure of implantation, genomic imprinting and meiosis. The obstetrician and gynaecologist could act an important part in the production and study of embryonic stem cells. However, these data have to be integrated in the ethical and juridical background of embryonic stem cell research in France.
...
PMID:[Embryonic stem cells: a position for the obstetrician and gynaecologist. Part one]. 1550 Nov 64
Responsible locus for dementia in
Parkinson disease
(PD) was investigated. Serial 1,395 autopsy cases were studied for the combined pathology of PD and Alzheimer disease (AD). Following the one-year rule by the first Consensus Guidelines, definite AD pathology was quite rare in PD with dementia (PDD) but common in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) . Plaque-dominant senile changes apparently enhanced neocortical Lewy-body pathology in both the conditions. About the hypometabolism in the visual cortex of PDD, a 66-year old man presented with fluctuation in hallucination commensurate with fluctuating hypometabolism. Considering the paucity in pathological changes of the visual cortex, this hypometabolism may represent functional impairment in the fiber connection. Comparative pathological studies with PD and PDD were carried out. Only one case of a 48-year-old woman, who unexpectedly died of
heart failure
, was free from cognitive decline, and did not show limbic and neocortical involvement. Another case of a 75-year old man with MCI presented with the similar pathology. All other cases showed clinical documentation of cognitive impairment and limbic and neocortical pathological involvement. Thus, the combination of prospective clinical and radiological studies and retrospective pathological studies (dynamic neuropathology) may be essential to investigate a role of the basal-forebrain cholinergic system.
...
PMID:[Parkinson disease with dementia--responsible locus for dementia]. 1565 3
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