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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A random single-blind study of oxprenolol against perhexiline has been undertaken in angina pectoris. Both drugs were effective in treatment (P less than 0.01) but perhexiline was better than oxprenolol (P less than 0.05), 12 of the 14 patients preferring perhexiline. Offset against this was the greater incidence of side effects with perhexiline, including one patient who later developed
peripheral neuropathy
. Despite the greater efficacy of perhexiline, it is suggested that side effects should preclude its routine prescription as a drug of first choice in angina pectoris. It should remain of value in the special situations of resistant angina and angina with
heart failure
or bronchospasm, when its use should be carefully monitored for these side effects.
...
PMID:Comparative trial of perhexiline maleate and oxprenolol in patients with angina pectoris. 36 44
From 1960 through 1972, 236 cases of amyloidosis with histologic proof were found. The amyloidosis was primary (without evidence of preceding or coexisting disease) in 132 cases (group 1) and associated with multiple myeloma in 61 (group 2). Secondary amyloidosis appeared in 19 cases (associated with rheumatoid arthritis or osteomyelitis in two-thirds of them). There were 22 patients with amyloid localized to a single organ (bladder, lung, skin, or larynx in more than half of them). Two patients had familial amyloidosis. In group 1 and group 2, the most common presenting symptoms were fatigue, weight loss, edema, dyspnea, light-headedness or syncope, and paresthesias. Symptoms of the carpal-tunnel syndrome were frequent. The liver was palpable in almost 50% of the series, but splenomegaly was an initial finding in less than 10%. Macroglossia was recorded in 26% of group 2 and in 12% of group 1. Enlargement of submandibular structures was noted in about 10% of cases; and purpura, particularly around the eyes, was a significant feature. Substantial numbers of the patients had carpal-tunnel syndrome, nephrotic syndrome, congestive heart failure, sprue,
peripheral neuropathy
, or orthostatic hypotension. Approximately 50% of patients had renal insufficiency at the time of diagnosis. Proteinuria was found in more than 90%. A monoclonal protein was found in the serum of 49% of group 1 and in 74% of group 2. Monoclonal proteins were found in the urine of 35% and 81%, respectively. Only 12% of patients in group 1 had no monoclonal protein when both serum and urine were analyzed, and all patients of group 2 had a monoclonal protein in the serum or urine when both were analyzed. Lambda light chains were more common than kappa. None of the patients in group 1 had more than 15% plasma cells in the marrow, whereas more than half of group 2 had more than 15% plasma cells. Roentgenograms showed no evidence of skeletal disease in 94% of group 1, but 50% of group 2 had skeletal abnormalities. Rectal biopsy was positive for amyloid in 84% of cases. Kidney, liver, and carpal-tunnel biopsies were positive in 90% or more. Follow-up of all 193 patients in groups 1 and 2 revealed that 80% of group 1 and 97% of group 2 had died. The median survival was 14.7 months in group 1 and 4 months in group 2.
Cardiac failure
was the most common cause of death, accounting for 30% of the fatalities. We also reclassified all cases by the method of Isobe and Osserman (105), which is based on clinical patterns: pattern I--principal involvement of tongue, heart, gastrointestinal tract, muscle, nerves, skin, and carpal ligaments; pattern II--principal involvement of liver, spleen, kidneys, and adrenals; and mixed pattern I and II. This analysis failed to reveal predictive value in the clinical pattern classification, and did not discern the survival differences between primary amyloidosis (group 1) and amyloidosis with myeloma (group 2). Consequently, for the present we prefer the classification used in this study.
...
PMID:Amyloidosis: review of 236 cases. 115 71
Between 1961 and 1990, 52 patients with biopsy-proven familial amyloidosis born in North America were examined at the Mayo Clinic. At the time of diagnosis of familial amyloidosis, 83% of these patients had
peripheral neuropathy
, 33% had autonomic neuropathy, and 27% had cardiomyopathy. Renal disease was noted in fewer than 10%, and liver involvement was rare. The median age at diagnosis was 64 years. The sensitivity of various diagnostic biopsies was similar to that for primary amyloidosis: deposits of amyloid were found in 77 and 78% of the subcutaneous fat aspirates or rectal biopsy specimens, respectively, and in 41% of specimens of bone marrow. The median duration of survival of 5.8 years for patients with inherited amyloidosis was superior to that for patients with primary amyloidosis. When patients were stratified by organ involvement, the survival of patients with familial amyloidosis remained superior. The presence of cardiomyopathy and an interactive variable of age and the presence of autonomic neuropathy were powerful predictors of survival. Of the 52 patients, 22 died, 12 (55%) of
cardiac failure
or cardiac arrhythmia. Nine patients (41%) died of inanition in conjunction with progressive peripheral or autonomic neuropathy. Transthyretin was identified by immunohistochemical studies in 31 of the 34 tissue specimens tested. A transthyretin mutation was identified in 24 of the 31. A transthyretin mutation was found in five additional patients for whom tissue was unavailable for immunostaining.
...
PMID:Familial amyloidosis: a study of 52 North American-born patients examined during a 30-year period. 140 68
The classical form of thiamine deficiency in children is comprised of
peripheral neuropathy
, encephalopathy and high-output
cardiac failure
, predominantly right-sided. "Shoshin beriberi"
cardiac failure
has a different presentation, with vasoconstriction, hypotension and severe metabolic acidosis. A three-month breast-fed infant developed these features (biochemical tests confirmed the diagnosis). His mother, although non-symptomatic, had biochemical evidence of thiamine deficiency.
...
PMID:Shoshin beriberi in an infant of a thiamine-deficient mother. 142 19
A 38-year-old male with no history of asthma, who initially presented with episcleritis and subsequently developed symptoms of systemic vasculitis with marked blood eosinophilia, was diagnosed as having Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS). Both the patient's skin lesions and pulmonary infiltrates revealed histologically proven vasculitis with predominantly eosinophilic infiltration. All the symptoms of systemic vasculitis except the persisting
peripheral neuropathy
dramatically improved after corticosteroid was systemically used. Since scattered non-asthmatic cases of CSS have been reported recently, and three such patients have died of acute
heart failure
due to delayed diagnosis, absence of asthma should not be regarded as an absolute criterion for exclusion of the diagnosis of CSS. Earlier recognition of this disease is important, since earlier institution of steroid therapy can prevent the acute onset of fatal cardiac involvement during the course of this disease.
...
PMID:Churg-Strauss syndrome: report of a case without preexisting asthma. 159 19
A cluster of cases of late onset amyloidosis, presenting chiefly with
peripheral neuropathy
and
cardiac failure
, has been described in Donegal, north-west Ireland. Molecular genetic and protein analyses show that two new patients from the same region have a mutation in the transthyretin gene previously reported in a family with an Irish ancestor from the Appalachian region of the United States.
...
PMID:Irish (Donegal) amyloidosis is associated with the transthyretinALA60 (Appalachian) variant. 166 69
Refsum's disease is a polyneuropathy due to a hereditary error in the metabolism of a fatty acid, phytanic acid, usually leading to
cardiac failure
only at an advanced stage of the disease. The authors report the case of two brothers with Refsum's disease revealed by a
heart failure
before the clinical stage of the
peripheral neuropathy
. In the younger brother, the affection started at the age of 22 years by an acute pulmonary oedema which revealed a dilated, hypokinetic myocardiopathy, associated with retinitis pigmentosa, ptosis, anosmia and biological myolysis. The normal plasma concentration of phytanic acid measured several times led to the conclusion of Kearns-Sayre syndrome even if certain aspects were atypical (moderate conduction disorders, no characteristic aspect in the muscle biopsy). Five years later, the older brother, aged 28, presents a dyspnea on effort which leads to the discovery of a hypokinetic, hypertrophic myocardiopathy, slightly dilated, associated with cardiac conduction disorders, retinitis pigmentosa, anosmia and biological myolysis. The plasma concentration of phytanic acid being very high. Refsum's disease was diagnosed and the diagnosis of younger brother was corrected. From the study of these two cases, the characteristics of the cardiac disorders can be specified: the cardiopathy can reveal the disease and correspond to a dilated or hypertrophic myocardiopathy. The diagnosis of the disease can be difficult because the plasma phytanic acid may remain at normal level, thus requiring the assay of the activity of phytanate oxydase. The existence of ophthalmologic signs (retinitis pigmentosa or progressive ophthalmoplegia externa) associated with a myocardiopathy must systematically lead to a search for Refsum's disease, this diagnosis having fundamental therapeutic implications (died, even plasmapheresis).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Refsum's disease. Apropos of 2 cases disclosed by myocardiopathy]. 169 53
123 patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) presented to the National Cancer Center Hospital (Tokyo) between 1978 and 1986. 22 of 71 patients with limited stage disease (LD) and none of 52 patients with extensive disease (ED) survived for 3 years. 15 of the 22 three year survivors had significant late complications. All patients received chemotherapy and either thoracic irradiation, resection or both. No prophylactic cranial irradiation was given. 4 patients developed
cardiac failure
, 2 with a dilated cardiomyopathy, despite the fact that no patient received over 420 mg/m2 of doxorubicin. 12 patients of the 17 who received thoracic irradiation developed radiation pneumonitis and 3 required hospitalisation for severe haemoptysis (2) or cavity formation (1). 1 patient who received nimustine developed a fatal myelodysplastic syndrome and 2 additional patients developed second primary tumours in the oesophagus (1) and stomach (1). Mild
peripheral neuropathy
(WHO grade 1) was persistent in 3 patients and asymptomatic azotemia (WHO grade 1) in 7. Despite advances in the treatment of SCLC there are very few asymptomatic long-term survivors.
...
PMID:Late toxicities and complications in three-year survivors of small cell lung cancer. 185 18
Thirty out of 287 patients (10.4%) admitted to hospital for infective endocarditis between December 1970 and January 1990 had neurological complications. Twenty-three patients had native valve infectious endocarditis and 7 had prosthetic valve endocarditis. The clinical features were characterized by the frequency of aortic valve involvement (23 out of 30) and other complications, especially
cardiac failure
(16 cases) and peripheral vascular manifestations (7 cases). The commonest organism was the staphylococcus (53% of identified organisms) but the number of negative blood cultures was high (50% of cases). The neurological complication was often the presenting symptom of the endocarditis (19 cases) but it occurred after bacteriological cure in 4 cases. The complications observed were cerebral ischemia (16 cases), cerebral haemorrhage (11 cases), coma (2 cases), and one
peripheral neuropathy
causing a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome. These complications presented with hemiplegia in 17 cases, a meningeal syndrome in 8 cases, a convulsion in 1 case, a Von Wallenberg syndrome in 1 case, and a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome in 1 case. Twelve patients had a transient or permanent neurological coma. Cerebral CT scan showed ischemic lesions in 7 cases and haemorrhagic lesions in 10 cases. Carotid angiography demonstrated mycotic aneurysms in 6 patients. Twelve patients died: the cause of death was neurological coma (7 cases), low cardiac output (4 cases) and haemorrhagic shock (1 case). Four patients underwent neurosurgery: 3 for clipping a mycotic aneurysm and 1 for drainage of an intracerebral haematoma. Poor prognostic factors were: coma,
cardiac failure
, cardiac valve prosthesis and, above all, the extent and multiplicity of the neurological lesions. The authors propose the following measures to improve the prognosis: early surgery in cases of large and/or mobile vegetations especially when the infecting organism is a staphylococcus and when a systemic embolism has occurred; routine CT scanning and/or digitised cerebral angiography in all patients with infective endocarditis to detect surgically accessible mycotic aneurysms.
...
PMID:[Neurologic manifestations of infectious endocarditis]. 201 89
Primary amyloidosis is an uncommon disease which can be considered a diagnostic challenge. A recently observed case, initially characterized by
peripheral neuropathy
and subsequently by
heart failure
and sudden death, is described.
...
PMID:[Primary amyloidosis. A case report]. 216 Jun 28
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