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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-apnoeic oxygen desaturation related to rapid eye movement (REM) sleep in a patient with hypothyroidism, obesity, respiratory failure, and
cardiac failure
was improved by treatment with nasal continuous positive airway pressure of 10 cm H2O.
Thorax
1989 Jun
PMID:Non-apnoeic REM sleep induced nocturnal oxygen desaturation treated by nasal continuous positive airway pressure. 266 26
Ten patients with respiratory failure and nocturnal hypoventilation were treated for three to nine months by nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation. Four patients had chronic obstructive lung disease (median FEV1 19% predicted) and six restrictive chest wall disorders (median FVC 25% predicted); eight of the patients also had
cardiac failure
. The median daytime arterial oxygen tension, measured before and after at least three months' treatment, increased from 6.2 (range 5.4-9.6) to 9.1 (7.1-9.8) kPa in those with restrictive disease (p less than 0.05), and from 6.0 (5.7-6.5) to 7.1 (6.3-7.7) kPa in the four with airflow limitation (NS). Median values for arterial carbon dioxide tension over the same time fell from 8.2 (range 6.7-9.8) to 6.5 (6.0-6.9) kPa in the group with restrictive disease (p less than 0.05) and from 8.2 (7.0-9.2) to 7.1 (4.9-7.7) kPa in those with airflow limitation (p less than 0.02). Total sleep time while patients were using nasal positive pressure ventilation varied from 155 to 379 (median 341) minutes, and included 4-26% rapid eye movement sleep (median 14%). The percentage of monitored time during the night in which the arterial oxygen saturation was less than 80% fell from a median (range) of 96 (3-100) to 4 (0-9) in the six patients with restrictive disease and from 100 (98-100) to 40 (2-51) in those with airflow limitation. There were no changes in spirometric values but exercise tolerance improved in all patients. The technique may prove an acceptable alternative to long term domiciliary oxygen therapy in selected patients.
Thorax
1988 May
PMID:Control of nocturnal hypoventilation by nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation. 314 60
Open heart surgery was performed without perfusion under deep hypothermia in 343 patients with congenital heart defects aged from 1 year 3 months to 44 years. Cooling to a temperature of 26-25 degrees C in the oesophagus was achieved by covering the body with crushed ice. The patients were maintained under superficial ether narcosis and they were given morphine (0.5 mg/kg) and tubocurarine (0.5-1.0 mg/kg). The duration of circulatory arrest was 30 minutes in 190 and longer in 153 patients--60-77 minutes in 10 patients. It took an average of 7.6 minutes for resumption of normal cardiac activity after circulatory arrest prolonged beyond 60 minutes. Of the 343 patients operated on 32 (9.3%) died. Analysis of the mortality pattern showed that patients with acute
cardiac insufficiency
contributed most to the total number of deaths (19 patients, 5.5%); those with pulmonary oedema ranked second (4 patients, 1.2%) and those with brain oedema third (3 patients, 0.9%). Neurological complications were observed in 13 patients (3.8%). Their frequency was significantly related to the duration of circulatory arrest. Circulatory inadequacy in patients with poor myocardial function who had undergone extensive repair appeared to be a contributory factor. The results obtained without perfusion under deep (26-25 degrees C) hypothermic protection suggest that 75 minutes is a safe time, in terms of brain damage, for circulatory arrest. Under these conditions complex cardiac defects can be repaired.
Thorax
1988 Mar
PMID:Hypothermic protection (26-25 degrees C) without perfusion cooling for surgery of congenital cardiac defects using prolonged occlusion. 340 6
Two cases of middle aortic syndrome in children are described along with two other cases reported earlier. In childhood, this disease may present as incipient or overt
cardiac failure
. Surgical treatment should be undertaken based on an objective assessment of the severity of the stricture and after taking into account the future growth of the child.
Thorax
1981 Jan
PMID:Middle aortic syndrome as a cause of heart failure in children and its management. 611 34
Walking tests, frequently used to document effects of treatment on exercise capacity, have never been standardised. We studied the effects of encouragement on walking test performance in a randomised study that controlled for the nature of the underlying disease, time of day, and order effects. We randomised 43 patients with chronic airflow limitation or chronic
heart failure
or both to receive or not receive encouragement as they performed serial two and six minute walks every fortnight for 10 weeks. Simple encouragement improved performance (p less than 0.02 for the six minute walk), and the magnitude of the effect was similar to that reported for patients in studies purporting to show beneficial effects of therapeutic manoeuvres. Age and test repetition also affected performance. These results demonstrate the need for careful standardisation of the performance of walking tests, and suggest caution in interpreting studies in which standardisation is not a major feature of the study design.
Thorax
1984 Nov
PMID:Effect of encouragement on walking test performance. 650 88
Rupture of the left ventricle after myocardial infarction results either in sudden death from cardiac tamponade or, when pericardial adhesions are present, in bleeding that is confined to a limited space, which gradually expands as the blood flows through a small communicating orifice under high pressure, forming a false aneurysm. In three such patients a false aneurysm of the left ventricle after myocardial infarction was successfully treated by operation. The interval from the initiating event to the time of surgery averaged 10 months. Two of the patients had pericarditis and all presented at some stage of the illness with tachyarrhythmias and
cardiac failure
. All the patients survived operation and have improved functionally. Because of the propensity of false aneurysms to rupture, early diagnosis and aggressive surgical treatment are recommended.
Thorax
1983 Jan
PMID:Surgical treatment of false aneurysm of the left ventricle after myocardial infarction. 684 58
From 1972 to 1981 40 patients have required urgent valve replacement for left-sided bacterial endocarditis. The aortic valve was replaced in 31 patients, the mitral valve in four, and both in five patients. Twenty-six patients (65.5%) were in functional class IV
heart failure
according to the New York Heart Association criteria, and 13 patients (32.5%) were in class III
heart failure
at the time of operation. One patient in class II was operated on urgently for multiple cerebral embolism but died of fatal cerebral haemorrhage. In 22 patients (55%) there were no pre-existing valvular lesions and these patients were found to be more liable to develop severe haemodynamic failure. Premature closure of the mitral valve, documented by M-mode echocardiography, was a useful diagnostic aid and successfully determined the best timing of surgery in 14 out of 20 patients with severe aortic regurgitation. Cardiac arrest before operation appeared to be a significant risk factor (p = 0.0015) unless followed by immediate cardiopulmonary bypass. There were eight operative deaths (20%). Of 26 patients who were in functional class IV
heart failure
, 19 were operated on within four days of their haemodynamic deterioration and all survived. The operation was delayed in the remaining seven patients and none of them survived (p = 0.000003). There were no operative deaths among the patients in class III
heart failure
. There was only one episode of reinfection in the 16 patients followed up for at least three years. The duration of postoperative antibiotic treatment (four to six weeks in our patients), rather than any preoperative antibiotic regimen, seems to be important for preventing reinfection. At present there are 28 survivors, of whom 24 are in functional class I and four in class II.
Thorax
1983 Mar
PMID:Surgical management of native valve endocarditis. 685 79
Most measurements of pulmonary blood volume have been based on the Stewart-Hamilton dye dilution principle and have required direct catheterisation of the cardiac chambers. Alternatively a precordial counter may be used to detect the composite right and left heart curves after an intravenous injection of radionuclide. We investigated the use of a gamma camera/computer system to determine the radionuclide dilution curves from individual cardiac chambers. Pulmonary transit time and pulmonary blood volume were measured in nine normal subjects, eight patients with angina pectoris but without
heart failure
, and 13 patients with ischaemic heart disease and left ventricular failure. Patients with
heart failure
had significantly greater (p less than 0.001) pulmonary blood volumes and pulmonary transit times than normal subjects or patients without
heart failure
. Reproducibility measurements of pulmonary blood volume, determined in 12 subjects, gave a coefficient of variation of 2.6%. The effect of posture on pulmonary blood volume was determined in six subjects lying supine and tilted at a 45 degree angle. A reduction in pulmonary blood volume in the tilted position was observed in each subject (p less than 0.005). This simple non-invasive measurement should allow more detailed assessment of physiological or pharmacological changes of the pulmonary vascular bed.
Thorax
1981 Dec
PMID:Radionuclide determined pulmonary blood volume in ischaemic heart disease. 733 71
Shortcomings of Paper Medical Records have been well recognized: limited readability, completeness, consistency, availability, structure, etc. Although electronic storage solves the problems of availability and legibility, data analysis and decision support require more than free text in electronic form. Although many information systems contain diagnoses and lab data in coded form, findings have often been left to free text. Even though the shortcomings of paper records are more pronounced in specialized care than in primary care, Dutch general practitioners have proven far more receptive to the use of computerized records. Specialists are very diverse in their domains of expertise and usually work in a complex environment: no single record would satisfy them all. Our objective is to support the specialist with the acquisition of patient data in a structured format with emphasis on history and physical exam. Important considerations have been that it will benefit physician and patient if record data can be shared, and that every specialist can record both data within, as well as outside, his domain of expertise. The philosophy of our Computer-based Patient Record model is based on two main principles: 1) A 'mother' record that can be extended with specialized subrecords. 2) A structure that supports flexible retrieval, efficient data entry and data analysis. The mother record contains information that all records have in common, but also offers the option of entering information, which has not been modeled in a subrecord. The 'face' of the mother record is the patient profile which offers the physician an overview of the status of the patient on any specified date. The profile includes diagnoses, medication, test results, and dates of previous visits. From this overview, the physician can directly access the subrecords, zoom in on data, or call another view. To avoid abrupt change in the daily routine of the physician, the interface allows the user to keep records in a rather conventional way, i.e., as free text. Yet, the interface constantly brings to attention the benefits of structured data, which will stimulate the physician to enter the data in a structured way; when most fields in the patient profile are empty, such as medication and past history, he may regret to have only entered free text in a 'summary' field. The mother record and a specialized record for the out-patient clinic of
cardiac failure
have been developed with the Department of Internal Medicine and the
Thorax
Centre of the Academic Hospital Rotterdam. The demonstration will show the versatility of both records. The application runs on a Unix platform with the use of an Interbase DBMS, OSF-Motif windows, and the Hermes kernel.
...
PMID:Computer-based patient record with a cardiologic extension. 859 36
The risk of
thoracic cancer
surgery in patients of advanced age, i.e. 75 years or older, was analysed by reviewing 119 consecutive patients from August 1986 to May 1998 with bronchial carcinoma (n = 87), pulmonary metastases (n = 22), mesothelioma and pleural carcinosis (n = 7) and mediastinal or chest wall tumours (n = 3). Repeated surgery in one case of bronchial carcinoma and in another of metastases gave a total of 124 operations. Of the patients, 22 were 80 years or older (21%) and 32% were female. The median age was 77 years (range 75-87 years). Six fatalities occurred within 30 days or during hospitalization. This corresponds to a 4.8% mortality for the whole series and 6.8% for the subgroup of bronchial carcinoma. The causes of death were surgical complications in two patients, one died from
heart failure
after simultaneous combined coronary artery bypass grafting and left lower lobectomy 2 hours after the operation from
heart failure
refractory to resuscitation. With this exception all these patients had stage II (n = 2) or stage III A (n = 3) bronchial carcinoma. It is concluded that cancer surgery in the elderly is safe provided appropriate selection is observed. Indications should be very restrictive for advanced cancer and for pneumonectomy.
...
PMID:Thoracic cancer surgery in the elderly. 980 Sep 68
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