Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An 83-day-old male infant had convulsions, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and lactic acidosis. Cranial computed tomography revealed low-density areas in both parieto-occipital lobes and in the left temporal lobe. Muscle biopsy did not reveal ragged-red fibers, but abnormal mitochondria were found in the capillary endothelial cells as well as in the muscle fibers. At 5 months of age, the patient developed purpura on the soles and palms. Skin biopsy showed degeneration of the endothelial cells with abnormal mitochondria in the arterioles and capillaries. Myelinated nerves in the skin had vacuolated axons with swollen mitochondria, and their myelin sheaths showed vacuolation. At 9 months of age, he died of heart failure, and autopsy revealed abnormal mitochondria in the myocardium but not in the coronary vessels. Our findings indicate that the symptoms of the mitochondrial encephalopathy, myopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes (MELAS) syndrome cannot be fully explained by the mitochondrial angiopathy alone.
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PMID:MELAS of infantile onset: mitochondrial angiopathy or cytopathy? 186 30

Two patients are presented in whom percutaneous radiofrequency spinal rhizotomy was complicated by contralateral paresis. Both patients were elderly and suffered from cardiac failure, chronic obstructive respiratory disease, and generalized vascular disease. Investigation of the paresis indicated a contralateral ischaemic cord lesion. It is suggested that local haemodynamic changes induced by heat-mediated rhizotomy may compromise oxygen delivery to the adjacent cord, especially in the presence of pre-existent cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Ischaemic spinal cord lesion following percutaneous radiofrequency spinal rhizotomy. 1193 79

Twenty five infants with truncus arteriosus underwent complete surgical correction in the first year of life between January 1984 and June 1990 at Marie Lannelongue Hospital. All had cardiac failure and pulmonary hypertension. Another severe cardiac malformation was present in 6 cases. Complete repair was carried out under cardiopulmonary bypass with moderate hypothermia. After closing the ventricular septal defect the continuity of the right ventricle and pulmonary artery was reestablished by a valved Dacron conduit with a bioprosthesis (13 patients), by an autologous pericardial conduit with the same type of prosthesis (5 patients), by a valveless conduit (1 patient) or by direct insertion of the pulmonary artery (6 patients). Eight children (32%) died shortly after surgery. Seventy one per cent of children operated in the first month of life died compared with only 17% of those operated after one month of life (p less than 0.05). The seventeen survivors have been followed up for an average of 21 +/- 22 months. Three secondary deaths were observed at 33 days, 2 and 10 months after surgery: the first child died of left ventricular failure and pulmonary vascular disease related to the complexity of the associated cardiac malformations; the other 2 deaths were unexpected. The one and three year survival rate is 54%. Pulmonary stenosis with a systolic pressure gradient of more than 30 mmHg was found in 7 patients of whom 6 had valved Dacron conduits (p less than 0.01). One child was successfully operated 60 months after the total correction and another child is on the waiting list for reoperation 69 months after the total correction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Immediate and mid-term results of complete repair of truncus arteriosus during the first year of life]. 189 4

The possibility of vascular injury should always be kept in mind during lumbar laminectomy. Patients with pre-existing vascular disease are predisposed to injury. Unexplained hypotension is highly suggestive of a vascular catastrophe and is an indication for more detailed examination, sometimes laparotomy. If the patient's clinical condition is stable, consider arteriography. The development of high-output cardiac failure in a patient who has recently undergone lumbar laminectomy is almost diagnostic of traumatic arteriovenous fistula. The best prognosis for recovery of acute vascular interruption occurs with immediate treatment within 24-48 hours. Continued awareness of the possible occurrence of these injuries and familiarity with their various manifestations will facilitate early diagnosis, prompt operative repair, and improved mortality.
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PMID:Vascular complications of lumbar decompression laminectomy and foraminotomy. A unique case and review of the literature. 202 21

High blood pressure (BP) is associated with increased risk of vascular disease, including myocardial infarction and stroke. Since drugs that lower BP will reduce the risk of those complications of hypertension that are due to high pressure (strokes due to small-vessel disease, including lacunar infarction and intracerebral hemorrhage due to rupture of microaneurysms, heart failure, and renal failure), it has been assumed that such drugs would also reduce the risk of myocardial infarction due to atherosclerosis. However, in addition to hypertension, many other factors are involved in the atherosclerotic process including blood lipids such as cholesterol, blood platelets, and arterial flow disturbances such as turbulence and vortex formation. Some drugs that lower BP have unwanted effects on blood lipids and arterial flow patterns, which are thought to offset the benefit of BP reduction, whereas other drugs have beneficial effects on such factors. Ames has calculated that the adverse effects of antihypertensive drugs on lipids are enough to completely offset the benefit of treating mild hypertension. We have shown that antihypertensive drugs have different effects on blood velocity, and that these effects are associated with differences in the effects of drugs on arterial flow disturbances at the site of carotid stenosis in man, such that propranolol reduced, and hydralazine increased, the occurrence of abnormal high-velocity flow patterns associated with turbulence and vortex formation. In cholesterol-fed hypertensive rabbits (one-kidney Goldblatt), propranolol was more effective than hydralazine in preventing the occurrence of aortic atherosclerosis, even though hydralazine lowered blood pressure more effectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hypertension and atherosclerosis: effects of antihypertensive drugs on arterial flow patterns. 248 Nov 60

Pre-dialysis plasma oxalate concentration was measured in a cross-sectional study of 75 patients receiving maintenance haemodialysis. The aims of this study were to enable formulation of hypotheses regarding the determinants of plasma oxalate concentration and to allow preliminary examination of the possibility that hyperoxalaemia confers an increased risk of cardiac and vascular disease even in the absence of primary hyperoxaluria. Plasma oxalate concentration ranged between 7 and 76 mumol/l, mean (SD) 34.6 (18.1) mumol/l (normal range less than 0.8-2.0 mumol/l). Significant correlations were found between plasma oxalate concentration and plasma creatinine, duration of dialysis, current dose of ascorbic acid, and serum phosphate, and each of these variables retained significance on multiple linear regression. Oxalate clearance across a 1 m2 hollow-fibre Cuprophan dialyser, at 500 ml/min dialysate flow and blood flow between 175 and 225 ml/min, was measured 1 h after commencement of dialysis (n = 19). Mean (SD) clearance was 96.5 (27.0) ml/min. No significant association was found between self-reported maximum walking distance or the occurrence of symptoms of cardiac failure and plasma oxalate concentration. No relationship was found between plasma oxalate concentration and electrocardiographic conduction disturbances (n = 8) 'major' ST/T wave changes (n = 22), 'minor' ST/T wave changes (n = 49). Plasma oxalate was significantly greater in patients with radiologically detectable calcification of medium-sized arteries than in those without calcification, but duration of dialysis was also significantly longer in these patients. Routine haemodialysis results in marked hyperoxalaemia, which may be exacerbated by ascorbate supplementation. Oxalate clearance is similar to that of other small molecules such as creatinine and phosphate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Plasma oxalate concentration, oxalate clearance and cardiac function in patients receiving haemodialysis. 251 11

The safety of 738 high-risk patients treated with enalapril under various clinical programs was evaluated. High risk was defined as the presence of a collagen vascular disease; a renal disease, including renovascular hypertension; or either hypertension or refractory cardiac failure with serum creatinine greater than or equal to 1.7 mg/dl at baseline. Essential hypertension was the primary diagnosis in most of these patients. Treatment with enalapril in these patients usually continued without interruption for the length of the particular protocol. The incidence of adverse reactions resulting in discontinuation of treatment was comparable to that observed with other standard antihypertensive therapies in patients with milder forms of disease. No enalapril-related neutropenia, proteinuria, dysgeusia or ageusia were reported in these high-risk patients. The incidence of discontinuation due to rash was less than 0.5%. Resolution and/or improvement of captopril-related adverse effects was observed in many patients crossed over to treatment with enalapril. In patients with collagen vascular diseases and those with severe impairment of renal function (serum creatinine greater than or equal to 3.0 mg/dl), the incidence of discontinuation due to adverse experiences or death as well as the profile of reported adverse experiences was similar to those for the total group of high-risk patients. The data suggest that enalapril is efficacious and well tolerated by the high-risk patients.
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PMID:High-risk patients treated with enalapril maleate: safety considerations. 253 44

In a prospective study of 312 patients undergoing elective coronary bypass surgery we evaluated 50 preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative factors with the aim of identifying predisposing causes for perioperative neurological morbidity. Factors which showed a significant association with the development of neurological complications included the duration and severity of heart disease before surgery; the presence of extracoronary vascular disease; history of cardiac failure; history of diabetes; difficulty in terminating bypass; intraoperative mean arterial pressure levels of less than 40 mmHg; a large drop in haemoglobin level during surgery; prolonged stay in the intensive therapy unit after operation; and abnormalities of blood pressure control in the postoperative period. The significance of these findings is discussed and a comparison made with data available from previous studies.
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PMID:An analysis of factors predisposing to neurological injury in patients undergoing coronary bypass operations. 260 82

Coronary vascular disease in the cardiac transplant recipient has become the third most frequent cause of death or retransplantation after infection and acute rejection. A unique pattern of concentric fibrointimal thickening develops within 1 year of cardiac transplantation; however, it is relatively inapparent on routine arteriography. The disease progresses primarily in distal vasculature, leading to progressive occlusion. Angiographically discrete lesions associated microscopically with advanced atherosclerotic plaques frequently occur in the more proximal vessels often associated with thrombus. The number of rejection episodes is somewhat predictive of the development of transplant coronary disease. Annual arteriograms performed in cardiac transplant recipients have revealed several distinctive angiographic features that include clockwise rotation of the heart, presence of coronary arterial-cameral fistulae, presumably resulting from right ventricular endomyocardial biopsy specimens and collateralization of the brachial anastomosis from coronary atrial branches. It is concluded that serial angiography in cardiac transplant recipients is important in the early detection of progressive graft atherosclerosis, a process that is clinically silent until such time as overt heart failure or cardiogenic shock occurs.
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PMID:Angiographic implications of cardiac transplantation. 267 63

Patients presenting for abdominal aortic surgery have a high incidence of vascular disease elsewhere, manifested primarily by hypertension, coronary and cerebrovascular disease, as well as co-existing respiratory, renal and metabolic disorders. Routine clinical assessment, electrocardiogram, chest roentgenograms, resting and exercise radionuclide ventriculography and echocardiography, dipyrdiamole-thallium scanning are all designed to assess the functional status of the myocardium and to detect the presence of significant coronary artery disease. Patients with no abnormalities on physical examination, routine evaluation and no redistribution on dipyridamole-thallium scanning should proceed to surgery with the expectation of very low perioperative cardiac risk. Patients with evidence of coronary artery disease and significant redistribution on dipyridamole-thallium scan should undergo coronary angiography and possible myocardial revascularization before definitive aortic vascular surgery. For high cardiac risk patients with no bypassable lesions presenting for abdominal aortic aneurysm resection a conservative policy of serial three monthly ultrasound or CT assessment may be adopted, with selective resection for rapid aneurysm expansion or symptom development. A variety of extra-anatomical and angioplastic techniques is available for similar high cardiac risk patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease. The haemodynamic consequences of aortic cross-clamping, especially in aneurysm patients, include a significant reduction in stroke volume, cardiac index, and myocardial oxygen consumption with an increased systemic vascular resistance. Patients with coronary artery disease may respond to aortic cross-clamping by increasing pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and by demonstrating ECG evidence of myocardial ischaemia. Pulmonary artery catheterization is especially indicated in patients with a history of previous myocardial infarction, angina or signs of cardiac failure and in patients with evidence of diminished ejection fraction, abnormal ventricular wall motion or myocardial redistribution on preoperative scanning. The more widespread application of intraoperative transoesophageal two-dimensional echocardiography and radionuclide cardiography monitoring techniques into anaesthetic practice will enable measurement of left ventricular dimensions, myocardial performance and wall motion. Suggested guidelines for anaesthetic management are presented in Table VI. A combined opiate-oxygen-volatile anaesthetic agent technique will best ensure a hypodynamic circulation with preservation of myocardial oxygenation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Anaesthesia for abdominal aortic surgery--a review (Part II). 267 22


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