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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The radiologic appearance of atypical cardiogenic pulmonary edema (ACPE) is presented in 10 cases admitted from 1983 to 1985, with age ranges from 74 to 89, and with diagnosis of ischemic heart disease, with myocardial infarction in 50% of them. Clinically they had asthenia, adynamia and anorexia in 80%, cough and weight loss in 50%. All of them had tachycardia, pulmonary rales and 50% pericardial rub. ECG showed in 80% anterior subepicardial ischemia, 60% posteroinferior subepicardial ischemia, 60% bifascicular block, and 50% left anterior fascicular block. Chest films were interpreted at first as
pulmonary fibrosis
in 90% of the cases with superior lobe involvement in 50%. Heart enlargement was present in 50%. A chronic lung disease was disclosed on clinical and pulmonary physiological grounds. It is concluded that asthenia, adynamia and anorexia were atypical manifestations of
heart failure
in the elderly. Silent myocardial infarction was observed in half of our patients and it was complicated with pericardial involvement in 50%. Irregular distribution of fluids in pulmonary edema was attributed to anatomic changes in elder lung. These atypical behaviour of pulmonary edema, has been misinterpreted on radiologic basis with pulmonary infection, tumours, metastasis or fibrosis. Those radiologic changes disappeared or improved in 72 hrs. with treatment of left ventricular failure.
...
PMID:[Radiologic characteristics of cardiogenic pulmonary edema in the elderly]. 296 66
Selected patients with terminal lung disease have been managed effectively by lung transplantation. Strict selection criteria for donors and recipients, attention to technical detail, and avoidance of perioperative corticosteroids increase the likelihood of success. The underlying pulmonary disease determines the appropriate procedure. Single-lung transplantation is most appropriate for patients with
pulmonary fibrosis
. Patients with emphysema or septic pulmonary disease who have adequate or recoverable cardiac function can be well served by double-lung transplantation. However, such patients are still treated in some centers by combined heart-lung transplantation. Patients with right-
heart failure
secondary to vascular or parenchymal pulmonary disease are best managed by combined heart-lung transplantation. Donor availability, airway healing, and diagnosis of rejection remain significant problems and are the focus of experimental and clinical investigation in many centers.
...
PMID:Status of lung transplantation. 328 63
The antitumor activity of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), combined either with bleomycin or adriamycin plus radiation, was studied in a controlled randomized clinical trial. Sixty-one previously untreated inoperable esophageal cancer patients entered the study and 56 have been evaluated: 58 male and 3 female patients with a mean age of 57 years (range 37-74). Concerning localization of the tumors in the esophagus, 2 were in the upper third, 36 in the middle third and 18 in the lower third. The length of the filling defects in the esophagogram (X-ray) was in 9 patients less than 5 cm, in 31 5-8 cm, and in 16 patients greater than 8 cm. Squamous cell carcinoma was found in 51 patients, adenocarcinoma in 3, and anaplastic (squamous cell) carcinoma in 2 patients. Modality A consisted of a combination of 5-FU (10 mg/kg i.v. 2 X weekly, 4 weeks) and bleomycin (10 mg/m2 i.v., 2 X 4 weeks) which was given concurrently with radiation (3600-4000 rad - 1000 rad weekly). In modality B the combination of 5-FU (same dose) and adriamycin (30 mg/m2 i.v. day 1, 2, 23 and 24) was applied with the same schedule and dosage of radiation. Seventy-five percent of the patients (21/28) have responded to treatment (CR + PR) in modality A, with 11 complete and 10 partial responses. In arm B, response was recorded in 64% of patients (18/28), with 2 complete and 16 partial responses. The difference in complete responses (39% vs 8%) was statistically significant (P less than 0.05). The median remission duration in complete responders was 12 months in modality A (range 6-18 months), and 6.8 months in modality B (range 3-10 months). All the responses occurred in patients with squamous cell carcinoma, except one partial response in a case of adenocarcinoma. As far as the age is concerned (less than 55 vs greater than 55 years), no significant difference in response rate was found (67% vs 71%). More favorable results were observed in the group of patients with less than 10% weight loss (79% vs 63%). Toxicity was moderate (myelosuppression, cardiotoxicity), but one treatment-related death (
pulmonary fibrosis
,
cardiac failure
) was recorded in arm A, as well as one death (rupture of aorta) in group B. Approximately 60% of patients in both modalities suffered from severe mucositis and retrosternal pain. The results of the study showed that the combination of 5-FU with adriamycin and particularly with bleomycin, given concurrently with lower radiation dosage, is an effective palliative treatment for inoperable esophageal cancer.
...
PMID:The value of two combined chemoradiotherapy approaches in the treatment of inoperable esophageal cancer. 620 Sep 79
A patient is described who had polymyositis with arthritis, keratodermia blenorrhagica,
pulmonary fibrosis
, and
cardiac failure
with a right bundle branch block. The cutaneous lesions on his palms and soles, considered to be specific for Reiter's syndrome, pointed to an overlapping of polymyositis with features of this syndrome. Findings typical of myositis were present. In addition a muscle biopsy showed sarcolemmal and endomysial deposits of IgG and IgM, and the serum level of IgM was elevated. Because skin lesions appeared at the height of symptoms in other organs, the possibility is raised that both might stem from a common immune process.
...
PMID:Keratodermia blenorrhagica, arthritis, and polymyositis with cardiopulmonary complications. 622 68
A 53-year-old man with scleroderma,
pulmonary fibrosis
, cardiac decompensation and secondary polycythaemia, but no arterial hypertension, developed central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) in the left eye. 1.5 years later, during the treatment with systemic steroids and anticoagulants, he developed CRVO in the right eye, and a further half year later, secondary glaucoma in the left eye and loss of the visual acuity to counting fingers at 2.5 m in the right eye and at 0.5 m in the left. Retinal vascular changes, pulmonary and
cardiac insufficiency
and secondary polycythemia, symptoms of scleroderma, most probably contributed to the development of bilateral CRVO.
...
PMID:Bilateral central retinal vein occlusion in a patient with scleroderma. 726 1
Seven patients with late sequelae of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) are described. All seven had significant chronic symptoms from asthma. At the time of diagnosis of ABPA all patients had marked irreversible pulmonary function abnormalities; symptoms of chronic bronchitis were present in all.
Pulmonary fibrosis
was present in six of seven patients. Three patients have died from irreversible lung disease with terminal
cardiac failure
. Despite the difficulty in establishing an early diagnosis of ABPA, its importance must be emphasized in order to attempt to prevent progression of the disease to severe irreversible and potentially fatal end-stage lung disease.
...
PMID:Late sequelae of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis. 741 34
Progress over the last 40 years has greatly reduced morbidity and mortality in the constantly changing field of thoracic surgery. The first part of this review focuses on current indications and limitations in lung surgery. Technical procedures for pneumonectomy, lobectomy, bronchial resection and conservative surgery are well established. Although major respiratory or
cardiac failure
still limit indications bronchogenic cancer extension is no longer a contraindication. Exeresis after 70 years of age is not an exception. Surgery for non-small cell lung cancer has given promising results with a 5-year survival rate of 60-80% for patients in stage I and II. For stage III, two recent comparative studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of preoperative adjuvant chemotherapy which should logically be proposed with or without radiotherapy in patients with resectable tumours. Surgical removal of lung metastases and mesotheliomas has also made considerable progress. Unfortunately, except for therapeutic trials, exeresis of small cell lung cancer does not provide any beneficial effect and cannot be proposed. Indications for surgery in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease however has been quite successful and now goes beyond classical exeresis of large compressive bullae. In many situations patients with diffuse emphysema can benefit from surgical reduction in lung volume before proposing transplantation. Lung transplantation is indicated for
pulmonary fibrosis
, pulmonary vascular disease and obstructive lung pulmonary disease with an overall survival rate of 50% at 5 years and 43% at 6 years. The rate of successful bilateral lung transplantation for cystic fibrosis remains to be determined.
...
PMID:[New techniques in thoracic surgery. I]. 756 9
A case of pediatric progressive systemic sclerosis is reported and a literature review concerning medical and dental aspects of this condition is provided. Systemic features include sclerodactyly, Raynaud's phenomenon, telangiectasia, calcinosis, myositis, arthritis, tenosynovitis, renal failure, esophageal hypomotility,
pulmonary fibrosis
and
heart failure
. Oral manifestations include reduced interincisal distance, xerostomia, telangiectasia, increased periodontal ligament width, osseous resorption of the mandible, periodontal disease, and increased decayed, missing, and filled teeth (DMFT). The prognosis is difficult to predict because spontaneous remission has been documented, but death may result from extensive visceral involvement (heart, kidney, and lung).
...
PMID:Progressive systemic sclerosis in a child: case report. 824 4
Lung function of patients with
heart failure
is characterized by a variety of changes proposed as being due to passive congestion, secondary
pulmonary fibrosis
, and/or recurrent pulmonary emboli. A diffusion impairment thought to be due to cyclosporine has also been noted in patients following heart transplantation. Similar changes of unclear origin have been observed in renal transplant recipients. The objective of this study was to determine the extent to which lung function changes are reversible by cardiac transplantation and relate changes to the status of the recipients lung in the presence of possible vascular, iatrogenic, immune, or infectious injury. We analyzed the data of 22 patients who underwent lung function testing before and after heart transplantation and correlated changes to hemodynamic change, episodes of rejection, concentration of cyclosporine, and cytomegalovirus infection. Despite excellent graft function, the carbon monoxide transfer factor deteriorated to a mean of 57 percent of predicted postoperatively. The fall in diffusion factor did not correlate with episodes of cardiac rejection, cyclosporine levels, or hemodynamic status. In those patients who had serologic evidence of cytomegalovirus infection, the reduction in transfer factor was greater compared to those without infection despite a normal chest radiograph. The effects of cardiopulmonary bypass were unlikely to have been responsible for the abnormalities as lung function was assessed at a mean of 14 months after surgery. In heart transplant recipients, a change in diffusion capacity may represent an additional marker for cytomegalovirus infection and reflect infectious/immune injury late following surgery.
...
PMID:Pulmonary diffusion abnormalities in heart transplant recipients. Relationship to cytomegalovirus infection. 840 71
The purpose of this study was to define the characteristics and the frequency of antiarrhythmic drug-induced side effects. All patients referred for cardiological consultation and treated with antiarrhythmic drugs between April 1992 and October 1993 were prospectively investigated. 300 patients were included in the study: 41 (13.6 per cent) had drug-induced side effects, nine of which were serious: 5 proarrhythmic effects, 1
pulmonary fibrosis
, 1 peripheral neuropathy, and 2 acute
cardiac failure
. Side effects led to discontinuation of treatment in 26 cases (7.6 per cent). Statistical analysis showed that side effects occurred more commonly with disopyramide (46.1 per cent, P < 0.01) or propafenone (41.7 per cent, P < 0.05) and less frequently with sotalol (2 per cent, P < 0.01) than with the other drugs (flecainide 20 per cent; amiodarone 16.4 per cent; cibenzoline 4.8 per cent; hydroquinidine 4.3 per cent). Side effects were more common on bitherapy (39 per cent) than on monotherapy (13 per cent) in general and in the amiodarone-treated group in particular. In conclusion, side effects of antiarrhythmic drugs involved 1/6 patients overall and led to discontinuation of treatment in 1/14. The frequency of proarrhythmias (1.1 per cent) was lower than previously reported, suggesting that recently published clinical trials have modified the prescription habits.
...
PMID:Antiarrhythmic drug-induced side effects: a prospective survey of 300 patients. 857 Dec 78
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