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

Patients with refractory heart failure comprise a very important subgroup of patients with congestive heart failure. Before assuming that this condition simply reflects advanced, perhaps terminal, myocardial dysfunction, potentially reversible factors should be sought carefully. We describe a 58-year-old Hispanic man with a diagnosis of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy who presented with symptoms of severe congestive heart failure, glossitis, and peripheral neuropathy. His hemodynamic profile was characterized by refractory low-output cardiac failure and decreased vascular resistance. Thiamine deficiency was documented by a high thiamine pyrophosphate effect. His clinical condition was quickly reversed with thiamine administration. This response to thiamine administration supports the diagnosis and indicates that thiamine deficiency may play an important etiologic role in the deterioration of cardiac function in some patients with congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Reversal of refractory congestive heart failure after thiamine supplementation: report of a case and review of literature. 1474 81

Acute thiamine deficiency, an uncommon cause of hemodynamic instability in Western countries, may be manifested by acute heart failure and neurological deficits. Severe metabolic acidosis is one of its least recognized features. We present a report of foreign workers who complained of weakness and lower limb edema and were found to have acute thiamine deficiency. One died of refractory metabolic acidosis and shock, and the diagnosis was reached post mortem. Thiamine deficiency should be considered in every case of severe lactic acidosis without an obvious cause, especially in high-risk populations (malnourished, alcoholics, Far-East workers, etc). Whenever it is suspected, empiric treatment with thiamine should be initiated immediately. Physicians who care for populations at risk should be familiar with the clinical spectrum of nutritional deficits, and monitor the nutritional habits of these patients carefully. The treatment is inexpensive and devoid of adverse effects. Moreover, delaying thiamine administration in patients with deficiency may cause severe life-threatening metabolic acidosis and affect recovery. The prophylactic use of thiamine in a high-risk population, even before blood levels are received, may be cost effective.
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PMID:Fatal metabolic acidosis caused by thiamine deficiency. 1502 27

Diuretics could lead to an impairment of lipid and glucose metabolism. These potentially adverse effects of the diuretics could be compensated by non-pharmacological strategies such as weight loss or physical activity. Diuretics lead to an increased urinary loss of vitamin B1 (thiamine), a diuretic side effect which is often forgotten. In the setting of a high vitamin B1 intake the increased urinary excretion is of no pathophysiologic relevance. However, in the setting of low or suboptimal dietary intakes of thiamine the insufficient thiamine nutriture may be of importance. Vitamin B1 plays an important role in energy metabolism, especially also at the level of the heart muscle. Wet beri-beri is the characteristic vitamin B1 deficiency disease, which is besides others also characterized by heart failure. Evidence suggests that heart failure can be improved by the additional administration of Vitamin B1. Older individuals under a chronic diuretic therapy should obtain an oral vitamin B1 supplementation.
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PMID:[Forgotten metabolic side effects of diuretics: lipids, glucose and vitamin B1 (thiamin) metabolism]. 1519 37

Two chronically ill patients with limited nutritional intake during several weeks developed prolonged lactic acidosis. As no other causes of hyperlactaemia could be identified, thiamine deficiency was suspected. Supplementation of 600 mg thiamine resulted in a rapid normalisation of serum lactate levels (in patient 1 from 10.9-2.4 mmol/l; in patient 2 from 11.8-2.0 mmol/l) and acid base status (patient 1: pH from 7.11-7.30, bicarbonate from 8.6-21.2 mmol/l; patient 2: pH from 7.24-7.46, bicarbonate from 16-28 mmol/l; before and after treatment, respectively). Thiamine deficiency was confirmed by the degree of stimulation of erythrocyte transketolase activation by adding thiamine pyrophosphate, evaluated before and after thiamine replacement therapy. Stimulation decreased in patient 1 from 170% to 17% and in patient 2 from 20% to 0%, respectively. In addition to the metabolic derangement right ventricular heart failure was confirmed by echocardiography in both patients and again this was rapidly reversible by thiamine supplementation. We conclude that in malnourished patients unexplained prolonged lactic acidosis may result from thiamine deficiency, which is rapidly reversible by thiamine replacement therapy.
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PMID:Lactic acidosis in thiamine deficiency. 1684 96

In developed countries, the incidence of cardiac beriberi is rare. It can lead to high output cardiac failure and pulmonary hypertension. We hereby report an atypical case of beriberi heart with reversible right heart failure and severe pulmonary hypertension. Thiamine deficiency can cause reversible pulmonary hypertension, and it must be included in the differential diagnosis in patients with high risk of nutritional deficiency.
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PMID:Thiamine deficiency as a rare cause of reversible severe pulmonary hypertension. 1734 20

Thiamine, or vitamin B1, is a water-soluble B complex vitamin that was first discovered in 1910 in the process of exploring how rice bran cured patients of beriberi. Thiamine is not synthesized in humans, therefore its availability for necessary cellular processes hinges on its continual ingestion. The amount of thiamine one needs to ingest to maintain balance is disease state-dependent or medication-dependent. Severe chronic thiamine deficiency can have significant neurologic and cardiac effects, the latter is reflected in a particular type of heart failure called wet beriberi. This form of heart failure clearly benefits from thiamine supplementation. It is unclear, however, whether thiamine supplementation offers any benefit in other forms of heart failure. Despite this, it is not unreasonable for heart failure patients to routinely ingest a thiamine-containing multivitamin; patients using diuretics have an increased urinary excretion of thiamine and thus are at a higher risk for developing thiamine deficiency. The role of thiamine in heart failure, however, remains arguable.
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PMID:Loop diuretic therapy, thiamine balance, and heart failure. 1767 78

Thiamine deficiency may present four classic clinical forms: peripheral polyneuropathy, anorexia and muscular weakness (dry beriberi); high output heart failure with signs of congestion (wet beriberi); beriberi associated with shock (Shoshin beriberi) and Wernicke's encephalopathy. In this report we describe a picture that is suggestive of severe pulmonary hypertension and cor pulmonale, with jugular stasis, congestive hepatitis and generalized edema that reversed completely after the administration of thiamine.
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PMID:Thiamin deficiency as a cause of reversible cor pulmonale. 1866 Sep 37

Cognitive abnormalities, including memory deficits, are common in heart failure (HF). Brain structures, including the hippocampus, fornix, and thalamus participate in memory processing, and most show structural injury and functional deficits in HF. The mammillary bodies and fornix play essential roles in spatial and working memory processing, interact with other structures, and may also be injured in HF. We assessed mammillary body volumes and cross-sectional fornix areas in 17 HF and 50 control subjects using high-resolution T1-weighted magnetic resonance images. Mammillary body volumes and fornix cross-sectional areas were significantly reduced bilaterally in HF, and these differences remained after controlling age, gender, and intracranial volume. Mammillary body and fornix injury may contribute to the compromised spatial and working memory deficits in HF. Pathological processes eliciting the damage may include injury accompanying hypoxic/ischemic processes in pathologic HF perfusion and breathing, and thiamine deficiency accompanying diuretic use and nutritional mal-absorption in the condition.
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PMID:Mammillary bodies and fornix fibers are injured in heart failure. 1902 86

Beriberi is an uncommon disorder related to thiamine deficiency. It is mainly found in underdeveloped countries among populations with poorly diversified diet, consisting largely of milled white cereals, a poor source of thiamine. In industrialized countries, thiamine deficiency with cardiac failure is more frequently found than the dry beriberi in high risk groups like chronic alcoholics. Nevertheless our attention was drawn to an outbreak of 70 cases of dry beriberi which occurred from 1997 to 2005 in the French territories of Reunion and Mayotte islands. It was characterized by an acute or sub-acute sensorimotor polyneuropathy with axonal lesions, affecting the lower limbs and occasionally the upper limbs, sometimes associated with cardiac beriberi. It affected young, non alcoholic individuals from the Mahoran and Comorian community who were in apparent good health when the illness occurred. Our study highlighted the feeding habits which are partly responsible for the development of the disease due to a chronic lack of thiamine and which probably contributed together with multiple cofactors to trigger off the illness. But many elements and mainly biological ones, also lead us to think that there is a genetic predisposition to develop this neuropathy.
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PMID:[Polyneuropathies in vitamin B1 deficiency in Reunion and Mayotte islands in 70 patients of Maori and Comorian descent]. 1973 12

A 52-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital because of appetite loss, unsteadiness, psychogenic symptoms, ataxia, and consciousness disturbance as a result of the ingestion of a diet restricted to only carbohydrates for a long term. Laboratory examination indicated the presence of pancytopenia with macrocytic anemia; further, decreased vitamin B1 and B12 levels were detected in her serum. Magnetic resonance imaging fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR), revealed high-signal intensity in the bilateral corpus striatum, third ventricle circumference, and cerebellar cortex. Thereafter, she received drip infusion that did not include vitamin B1 or B12 and subsequently suffered a cardiac arrest due to the aggravation of cardiac insufficiency; consequently, she was transferred to our hospital. Upon admission the patient was diagnosed to have obvious cardiomegaly with pleural effusion; further, a negative T-wave was obtained on the electrocardiogram. A diagnosis of beriberi heart disease was made because of thiamine deficiency. She was treated by thiamine administration, following which the cardiac symptoms improved immediately. Various neurological symptoms caused by encephalopathy, peripheral neuropathy and subacute combined spinal cord degeneration improved by treatment with thiamine and cyanocobalamine administration; however, some of these symptoms still remained. General awareness of the fact that neurological symptoms can be caused by vitamin deficiency is essential.
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PMID:[Case of Wernicke's encephalopathy and subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord due to vitamin deficiency showing changes in the bilateral corpus striatum and cardiac arrest due to beriberi heart disease]. 1980 6


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