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

Platelet adhesiveness was measured in a total of 589 healthy volunteers and patients. Patients suffered from heart failure, diabetes mellitus, myocardial infarction and deep vein thrombosis have a significant higher platelet adhesiveness as healthy volunteers. The effect of the socalled stressors on platelet adhesiveness was shown in vivo; the same values of platelet adhesiveness were seen as in patients. Therefore it can be concluded that stressors constitute a risk factor in patients with altered vessel walls.
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PMID:[Effects on platelet functions]. 43 58

Complications are the major causes of illness and death after burning and most of them stem from the burn wound. Their origin and importance are reviewed with emphasis on problems and growing points in knowledge. Fluid leakage from the circulation into the burn is the cause of hypovolemic shock, but the underlying permeability changes in the burn are only partly understood. Other nonbacterial complications include acute cardiac failure, acute anemia, hemolytic jaundice, renal failure, encephalopathy, complex hypermetabolic effects including pseudodiabetes, gastric and duodenal ulceration, deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, pulmonary and glomerular microthrombosis, hepatic jaundice, and arterial thrombosis. Involvement of the airway in conflagrations carries special hazards like glottic edema and inhalation of irritant fumes. Nowadays, bacterial causes are dominant and these remain the main challenge. Bacterial infection and invasion of the burn are usually responsible for septicemia, bronchopneumonia, and pyelonephritis although other sources also contribute. Indirect manifestations of septicemia include paralytic ileus, acute gastric dilatation, toxic myocarditis, and some cases of renal failure. Therapeutic complications like agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia, and colitis occur at times. High concentrations of oxygen given therapeutically can produce fatal aseptic hypoxic pneumonitis.
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PMID:A review of the complications of burns, their origin and importance for illness and death. 44 73

Arteriovenous fistula is an infrequent complication of lumbar disc surgery. It is often not suspected, and the symptoms are diagnosed as deep venous thrombosis or heart failure. As a result of our review of the Brazilian literature and a survey of 3,500 Brazilian physicians, 5 cases of post-laminectomy arteriovenous fistula are added to the literature. A review of these cases shows that: (1) the right common iliac artery was injured in most cases, (2) the vena cava was frequently injured, and (3) direct repair was possible when the vena cava and the aorta were injured. A vascular prosthesis was necessary when the iliac arteries were damaged. The correct diagnosis is usually made by detection of an abdominal bruit in a patient with a history of lumbar disc surgery and is confirmed by arteriogram. Surgical treatment, either by suture or bypass, is the treatment of choice and results in cure.
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PMID:Postlaminectomy arteriovenous fistula: the Brazilian experience. 175

Between May 1989 and April 1990, 21 patients, candidates for coronary angioplasty but with major left ventricular dysfunction, underwent the procedure using percutaneous cardiopulmonary support (CPS). All patients had one or more previous infarcts, severe angina, and 19 out of 21 had one or more episodes of cardiac failure. Angioplasty was carried out by the usual method, after establishing a percutaneous femoro-femoral CPS. Twenty-three procedures were performed and 22 successes were recorded without any complications (success = 95% per patient). There were no deaths, infarcts or emergency surgical referrals. Two patients required transfusion. The canulae were removed by compression. The only local complication was one case of deep vein thrombosis. The results of this short series suggest that myocardial revascularisation is possible with an acceptable risk in selected coronary patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction by coronary angioplasty with percutaneous cardiopulmonary support.
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PMID:[Coronary angioplasty under extracorporeal circulation. Technique and experience of the Centre cardiologique du Nord]. 206 14

A 56-year-old patient with deep vein thrombosis shown by phlebography developed a massive pulmonary embolism during perfusion ventilation lung scanning with complete occlusion of the main pulmonary artery branch. 40 minutes after beginning of symptoms the patient suffered from persistent heart failure. Under external heart massage and controlled ventilation a cardio-pulmonary bypass was established after sterniotomy. After manual manipulations to express peripheral emboli pulmonary embolectomy and cava clipping was performed. The patient recovered without neurological damage.
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PMID:[Embolectomy in fulminant lung embolism and persistent electromechanical uncoupling--a case report and review of the literature]. 234 58

During a period of 13 years 11 patients were operated on because of a spontaneous aortocaval fistula caused by a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. The classic diagnostic signs of an aortocaval fistula (pulsatile abdominal mass with bruit and high output heart failure) were present in approximately half of the patients, whereas hematuria was a constant finding in all patients. Six patients had macrohematuria, and five had microhematuria. Seven patients (64% survived, and four had postoperative complications: 1 ileus, 2 postoperative pneumonias, 2 deep venous thrombosis, 1 postoperative hemorrhage. The mean operative blood loss was 7 L. After operation the average follow-up time was 4 years. In four patients who died the perioperative (within 30 days) causes of death were renal failure, a bleeding duodenal carcinoma, myocardial infarction, and operative bleeding. It is concluded that hematuria is a more frequent finding than earlier assumed among patients whose abdominal aortic aneurysm has ruptured into the vena cava. The presence of hematuria in a patient suffering from an abdominal aortic aneurysm is an indication for aortography to rule out an aortocaval fistula.
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PMID:Hematuria is an indication of rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm into the vena cava. 203 12

This review examines the incidence, natural history, diagnosis, prophylaxis, and management of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) in neurosurgical patients. Recent studies estimate the incidence of postoperative DVT detected by fibrinogen scanning in neurosurgical patients to be 29% to 43%. Specific factors that enhance the risk of venous thromboembolism include previous DVT, surgery, immobilization, advanced age, obesity, limb weakness, heart failure, and lower extremity trauma. Clinical diagnosis of venous thromboembolism is unreliable but can be augmented by noninvasive screening tests such as iodine-125-fibrinogen scanning, Doppler ultrasonography, and impedance plethysmography. As prophylactic measures, mini-dose heparin and external pneumatic compression of the legs have decreased the incidence of DVT in clinical studies of neurosurgical patients. However, no prophylactic measure has been convincingly shown to prevent PE in neurosurgical patients. Thrombi involving the popliteal, deep femoral, and iliac veins appear most likely to cause significant PE. Anticoagulation therapy constitutes standard management of DVT and PE; however, in neurosurgical patients the potential for precipitating intracranial or intraspinal hemorrhage may necessitate vena caval interruption. This appears to be an effective alternative to anticoagulation.
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PMID:Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary emboli in neurosurgical patients: a review. 638 85

The most important and consistent symptom of acute PE is the sudden onset of dyspnoea unexplained by pneumonia, heart failure, pneumothorax, or exacerbation of airway obstruction. The features commonly remembered such as haemoptysis and pleural rub may be absent in up to two thirds of patients. With previous cardiorespiratory disease the signs and symptoms become nonspecific and a relatively minor PE can produce clinical features more suggestive of a large embolus. Hypoxia and a raised respiratory rate are also suggestive but cannot be relied upon if there is pre-existing cardiorespiratory disease or in the elderly. Although the radiological appearance of an infarct shadow may be recognized, the chest X-ray is frequently nonspecific or normal. A negative perfusion scan excludes any significant emboli and an abnormal perfusion scan is suggestive of PE but not diagnostic; its specificity can be increased considerably if facilities are available for a concurrent ventilation scan. A deep venous thrombosis when present is also indicative of PE, although its absence does not preclude the diagnosis. Factors predisposing to deep venous thrombosis are usually present in the patient with PE. No single diagnostic aid can be relied upon in the diagnosis of PE. As with many illnesses much of the evidence begins with a careful consideration of the presenting history and physical signs. Further help can be obtained from various investigations, but results must be interpreted with consideration of the patient's age and pre-existing health. The final diagnosis may need to be established by pulmonary angiography.
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PMID:Diagnostic criteria for pulmonary embolism. 701 62

A randomised trial was undertaken in one hundred patients with heart failure and/or chest infection to determine whether low-dose subcutaneous heparin induced the frequency of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in the legs. Heparin, (5000 units 8 hourly) significantly reduced the frequency of DVT, diagnosed by the 125I-fibrinogen scan technique, from 26 to 4 per cent (p less than 0.01). Heparin was started within 12 hours of admission to hospital and continued until the patient was fully mobile. Heparin did not cause bleeding problems except for a 20 per cent incidence of injection site bruising. We therefore recommend prophylaxis with low-dose subcutaneous heparin in patients with heart failure or chest infection who require more than three days bed rest.
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PMID:Prevention of deep vein thrombosis in medical patients by low-dose heparin. 729 71

Impedance plethysmography (IPG) and duplex scanning with color flow Doppler were performed in 100 consecutive high-risk patients with clinically suspected deep venous thrombosis. Risk factors included recent surgery (< three weeks) in 23%, malignant disease in 91%, clotting abnormalities in 32%, and limited activity in 70%. Lower limb findings of either edema, calf tenderness, or both occurred in 92%. There was agreement between the two tests in 76 patients (29 positive and 47 negative). In 12 patients the IPG was positive and the duplex negative. Four of these had extensive pelvic disease, 2 had lung cancer with an obstructive profile, and 2 had heart failure, all of which are known to cause false-positive IPG results. In the other 12 patients the IPG was negative and the duplex positive; however, 3 of these patients had nonocclusive thrombi, 5 had pelvic disease, and 1 had a hemiparesis of the involved lower limb. In 15 patients (11 with positive duplex studies and 4 with negative) a venogram was obtained and confirmed the results. All patients were followed up clinically and none developed complications suggesting inaccurate duplex results. In conclusion, the IPG is of limited utility in this population with a sensitivity of 71%, specificity of 80%, and false-negative rate of 29% when duplex Doppler and clinical outcome are used as the standard. Where available, duplex Doppler should be preferred for evaluation of suspected deep venous thrombosis in patients with extensive medical disease.
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PMID:Evaluation of suspected deep venous thrombosis in oncologic patients. 809 42


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