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

Nitroglycerin and its derivatives have become widely used agents in the treatment of severe forms of heart failure. Their beneficial effects in this disease results from their ability to reduce preload and afterload of the heart muscle leading to an increase of cardiac index, a decrease in mean pulmonary artery and wedge pressures as well as pulmonary and peripheral vascular resistances. This is associated with reducing the patients' complaints. Intravenous nitrates are used in the treatment of myocardial infarction complicated by an increased left ventricular filling pressure as well as in various forms of acute and worsening left ventricular failure, mainly in pulmonary edema. Oral and transdermal nitrates are administered in chronic congestive heart failure NYHA class III and IV.
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PMID:[Use of nitroglycerin in the treatment of congestive heart failure]. 251 63

A patient is described in whom renal arterial stenosis in a functionally solitary kidney led to arterial hypertension and high output cardiac failure. The pulmonary oedema was resistant to conventional drug therapy but showed prompt regression after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. This case report demonstrates the usefulness of cardiac output measurement in selected patients presenting with hypertension and pulmonary oedema.
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PMID:Renal arterial stenosis as a cause of high output cardiac failure. 252 61

A 38-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of dyspnea. The diagnosis of total lipodystrophy was made by following findings: (1) gaunt appearance; (2) insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus; (3) hyperlipidemia; (4) fatty liver. Chest X-ray demonstrated cardiomegaly, pulmonary edema and pleural effusion. Echocardiogram was characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy with asymmetrical septal hypertrophy and left ventricular dysfunction. Renal biopsy revealed focal glomerulosclerosis. We reported a patient with total lipodystrophy combined with heart failure and renal failure, which have been rarely associated with the disease.
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PMID:Total lipodystrophy with heart failure and renal failure: report of a case. 253 Mar 77

27 cases of uremia with abnormal appearances on the chest films were analysed. The results showed that the clinical features were cough, expectoration dyspnea and hemoptysis. However, the degree of these symptoms was relatively mild as judged from the amount of pulmonary edema found on the chest films. The chest X-ray finding in these group of patients were characterized by pulmonary blood stasis, interstitial edema of the lung and edematous alveoli. The pathogenesis of uremic lung was said to be related to blood urea nitrogen and creatinine retention and the concurrent presence of left side heart failure may also play a role. Hemodialysis and other comprehensive treatments could help the patients with uremic lung for relief the symptoms. But the fundamental managements to improve the prognosis for this disease are early treatment of the primary renal diseases, in order to prevent the occurrence of renal failure. Kidney transplantation should be advised.
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PMID:[The uremic lung]. 263 29

A radiographic scoring system has been reported to have a high diagnostic accuracy in the differentiation of pulmonary oedema of renal, cardiac and capillary origin. In the present study, a similar scoring system was used in 51 patients with radiographic appearances of pulmonary oedema due to renal failure (n = 16), cardiac failure (n = 13) and to adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (n = 22). Evidence of increased pulmonary capillary permeability to transferrin was sought in all patients using a double-isotope method to derive a protein accumulation index (PAI). Using the clinical diagnosis of each type of pulmonary oedema as the "gold standard", sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for the chest radiographic scoring system in pulmonary oedema of cardiac origin were 46, 84 and 75%, respectively. For renal patients these values were 63, 86 and 78% and for ARDS, 89, 33 and 77%. For the PAI in ARDS, sensitivity was 85%, specificity 67% and accuracy 86%. The radiographic scoring system failed to distinguish between pulmonary oedema of renal and cardiac origin and cannot be considered of diagnostic value, but it was more successful in assessment of ARDS. Radiographic appearances suggestive of capillary injury and increased capillary permeability to transferrin occurred in all groups and such findings are not specific to ARDS as currently defined.
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PMID:The radiographic differentiation of pulmonary oedema. 266 83

The patient was a 70-year-old male with complaint of macrohematuria at the first visit to our clinic on June 10, 1986. At that time, cystoscopy revealed a thumb sized papillary tumor and a rice sized non papillary tumor, and the biopsy specimen was pathologically diagnosed as undifferentiated carcinoma. But, he refused admission. On January 30, 1987, he came back to our clinic with complaints of dyspnea, general fatigue and weight loss. Moderate lt. gynecomastia was found and the level of serum hCG-beta was detected as high as 101 ng/ml. Excretory urogram and enhanced CT revealed a large mass in the bladder. In the seventeenth day after admission, he died of lung edema and heart failure. The findings of autopsy showed a large light greenish to light brownish tumor of 10 X 10 X 3 cm in the bladder. Distant metastases were observed in internal, common iliac and paraaortic lymph nodes, but without other distant metastasis. In histological and immunohistochemical studies, the final diagnosis is choriocarcinoma of the bladder, containing syncytiotrophoblastic giant cells with hCG-beta granules as an undifferentiated carcinoma. To our knowledge this case is the eighth described in Japan. Herein we report a new case of primary choriocarcinoma of the bladder and make a brief review of the literatures.
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PMID:[Primary choriocarcinoma of the bladder: a case report of autopsy]. 267 66

The phrase 'heart failure' is used as a shorthand by medical practitioners to describe a wide variety of medical conditions ranging from acute heart failure with pulmonary oedema to terminal chronic heart failure. The medical treatment of these entities varies widely and is dependent on an understanding of the haemodynamics, pathophysiology and aetiology of the conditions, and on the pharmacology of the drugs selected. Important distinctions should be made between systolic and diastolic, acute and chronic, and extracellular and cellular heart failure. Drugs often used for treatment include diuretics, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, nitrates and digoxin. Pure positive inotropic drugs are of value in the treatment of circulatory collapse, post-operatively and in terminal heart failure. Drugs with a mild positive inotropic effect which also possess other properties such as systemic vasodilation, renal vasodilation and alteration of diastolic function may be of wider value in the treatment of mild to moderate chronic heart failure but that prediction awaits proof from controlled clinical trials.
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PMID:Relevance of the aetiology of heart failure to drug therapy. 268 Apr 94

Heat stroke is a life-threatening syndrome of multi-organ dysfunction caused by elevated body temperature. It may result from failure of the thermoregulatory mechanisms or from inadequate heat dissipation and affects members of several risk groups. A number of authors reported cardiac involvement in heat stroke, but heart failure rarely has been documented. We report the cases of two heat stroke victims, one of whom developed pulmonary edema and the other, peripheral edema. In both, RVG demonstrated dilatation and diffuse hypokinesis of the right ventricle, which persisted for several weeks. We conclude that the heart may be involved in heat stroke and that heart failure is a potential complication of the syndrome that can have a prolonged subclinical course. Fluid replacement in heat stroke should be done under careful observation, which may be facilitated by noninvasive assessment of cardiac function.
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PMID:Evidence of prolonged myocardial dysfunction in heat stroke. 234 46

To evaluate the early and late results of mitral valve replacement and reconstruction for mitral insufficiency due to ruptured chordae tendineae respectively, 74 consecutive cases were analyzed. Fifty-five (74.3%) of the patients were men, and the mean age was 48 +/- 12 years old (range 16 to 76). The causes of the mitral disease were idiopathic in 50 (67.6%), rheumatic in 7 (9.4%) and infective endocarditis in 11 (14.9%) patients. In idiopathic 50 cases, 24 had mitral valve prolapse and 16 had both mitral valve prolapse and hypertension. Forty-one (55.4%) of the patients were in NYHA functional class III or IV preoperatively. Thirty (40.5%) cases underwent surgery within one year after their initial symptoms of heart failure onsets including six emergency operation cases due to uncontrollable acute lung edema. Chordae to anterior mitral leaflet were ruptured in 31 (a5, m16, p10)[41%] patients, to the posterior mitral leaflet in 45 (a4, m23, p18)[59%], and to both leaflets in one patient. Mitral valve replacement was performed in 68 patients (91.9%) and 6 patients (8.1%) underwent mitral valve repairs. Twenty cases underwent associated procedures that included tricuspid valve annuloplasty in 8, aortic valve replacement in 5 and myocardial revascularization in 4 cases. There were two operative deaths (2.4%); both occurred after replacement, left ventricular rupture in one and DIC in one. Mean follow-up period was 4.5 years (range 1 to 17) in 67 cases. There were four late deaths; all occurred after replacement. However five patients sustained mild mitral insufficiency after mitral valve repair including one that became worse of regurgitation three years after isolated Kay's annuloplasty, there were no cases that had needed reoperation and no late death after reconstruction. Left ventricular function and pulmonary arterial pressure were almost normalized in more than 90% cases postoperatively. Our data indicated that mitral valve reconstruction (McGoon's plus Kay's method as standardized maneuver) was the procedure of choice for selected patients with mitral insufficiency owing to ruptured chordae tendineae to the posterior mitral leaflet, including more limited patients with ruptured chordae to the anterior mitral leaflet.
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PMID:[Mitral insufficiency due to ruptured chordae tendineae--clinical features, early and late results of valve replacement and repair]. 273 33

Twenty-seven patients underwent reoperation because of thrombotic obstruction of a disc-type cardiac valve prosthesis. Preoperative clinical features included effort dyspnea in 81%, new-onset angina in 44%, a new murmur in 89%, and an abnormal opening or closing sound associated with the prosthetic valve in 56%. Symptoms were present for 1 week or more before reoperation in 86%, although many patients were referred only after acute exacerbation of heart failure and development of pulmonary edema. Noninvasive studies confirmed prosthetic valve malfunction in only 33%, but cardiac catheterization documented thrombotic obstruction in all 15 patients in whom it was performed. In 14 of the 27 patients, prothrombin time was in the therapeutic range at the time of admission. Prompt reoperation for valve replacement or thrombectomy was performed with an operative mortality of 11%, and long-term outcome was satisfactory in all but 1 hospital survivor. These findings emphasize the importance of considering the diagnosis of thrombosed heart valves in patients with mechanical heart valves who are seen with nonspecific symptoms.
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PMID:Thrombotic obstruction of disc valves: clinical recognition and surgical management. 276 2


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