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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eight patients with the middle aortic syndrome are described. They were aged 2 months to 14 years at diagnosis; follow up was one to 11 years. Clinical presentations included asymptomatic hypertension (n = 5), severe headache, nose bleed, and chest pain (n = 1), and
cardiac failure
(n = 1). All had severe hypertension requiring multiple drug treatment. Diminished peripheral pulses were not helpful in the diagnosis, which is made on aortography. Associated clinical findings were
Williams' syndrome
(n = 3) and appreciable eosinophilia (n = 3). The differential diagnosis includes Takayasu's arteritis, fibromuscular dysplasia, and neurofibromatosis. Blood pressure was adequately controlled by medical treatment in six patients. Surgical angioplasty was performed in two. One patient remained normotensive without drug treatment 21 months after operation; the other died of sepsis and uncontrollable haemorrhage in the postoperative period. Medical treatment is satisfactory in most cases: surgery should be reserved for those in whom blood pressure cannot be controlled without unacceptable side effects of drug treatment. Although rare, the middle aortic syndrome should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hypertension when commoner causes have been excluded. Aortography is necessary for diagnosis.
...
PMID:Middle aortic syndrome: clinical and radiological findings. 158 Jun 80
Seventeen patients underwent surgical treatment of the ascending aorta, aortic valve, and coronary artery as well. Diagnosis of 13 patients were annulo-aortic ectasia, 3 had dissecting aneurysm (type I: 2, type II: 1), and one had supra-valvular aortic stenosis. In annulo-aortic ectasia, Bentall's method was carried out in 11 cases, and Cabrol's operation was performed in 3, one of the latter group had received Bentall's procedure 4 years prior to the second operation. One patient died of acute myocardial infarction 3 days following operation, who had severe stenosis of the left anterior descending artery not detected by preoperative angiography. During long-term follow up, 2 patients died of
cardiac failure
. Three patients had dissection of the ascending aorta and coronary artery (right coronary artery: 2, left coronary artery: 1). The aorta was reconstructed, aortic valve was replaced, and coronary artery was revascularized with saphenous vein graft. They have been alive and well up to post operative 6 years. Right coronary ostioplasty as well as aortic valve replacement and extended aortoplasty were attempted in one patient with
Williams' syndrome
. This patient had been well until sudden death which occured 11 months after the operation.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment and their long-term results of the ascending aortic lesions involving coronary arteries]. 189 67
Between September 1955 and January 1990, 94 pediatric patients were managed for renovascular hypertension caused by renal artery occlusive disease. Patients (50 boys and 44 girls) were aged 4 days to 17 years (median age: 7 years). At initial evaluation, 34 patients had symptoms of hypertensive encephalopathy or acute
heart failure
, 36 had moderate symptoms, and 24 were symptom-free. Sixty-five cases were classified on the basis of clinical, radiological, and histological features, as follows: neurofibromatosis (17), fibromuscular dysplasia (11), diffuse arterial calcified elastopathy (11), renal artery thrombosis (10),
Williams syndrome
(4), Takayashu disease (3), and miscellaneous diseases (9). In the 29 remaining patients, classification was based only on radiological features: causes included unilateral renal artery stenosis (15), bilateral renal artery stenosis with or without aortic stenosis (11), and miscellaneous disorders (3). Surgical treatment consisted in 47 renal revascularization, procedures (14 aortorenal bypasses, 8 aortorenal reimplantations, 9 anastomoses in the upper mesenteric arterial system, 7 autotransplantations, 4 resection-reanastomosis procedures, and 5 miscellaneous procedures). Renal revascularization failed in 15 cases (32%) (because of thrombosis in 14 cases and dehiscence in one). Residual or recurrent stenosis was seen in 7 arteries, whereas the anatomic result was satisfactory in 25 arteries (53%). Blood pressures returned to normal in 16 of 40 (40%) patients successfully treated by revascularization. An additional 25 patients recovered normal blood pressure values after primary nephrectomy (21), partial nephrectomy (4) or nephrectomy after failed renal revascularization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Renal artery pathology and its therapeutic indications in the child]. 192 4
The authors analyzed the potentialities of combined radiodiagnosis of supravalvular stenosis (SS) and concomitant diseases of the heart and major vessels (
Williams-Beuren syndrome
) in 7 patients aged 7 mos. to 24 yrs. Polypositional chest and heart x-ray procedure, catheterization of the cardiac cavities, pulmonary artery and aorta, left ventriculography (6), right ventriculography (4) and angiopulmonography were used. The diagnostic potentialities of each method were defined. It was proved that SS practically in all patients was accompanied by major vascular changes in the pulmonary, vertebral, coronary, carotid, subclavicular, renal and other arteries,
heart failure
(atrial septal defect, and mitral incompetence).
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of supravalvular stenosis of the aorta]. 281 59
Supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) is an inherited vascular disease that can cause
heart failure
and death. SVAS can be inherited as an autosomal dominant trait or as part of a developmental disorder,
Williams syndrome
(WS). In recent studies we presented evidence suggesting that a translocation disrupting the elastin gene caused SVAS in one family while deletions involving the entire elastin locus caused WS. In this study, pulsed-field, PCR, and Southern analyses showed that a 100-kb deletion of the 3' end of the elastin gene cosegregated with the disease in another SVAS family. DNA sequence analysis localized the breakpoint between elastin exons 27 and 28, the same region disrupted by the SVAS-associated translocation. These data indicate that mutations in the elastin gene cause SVAS and suggest that elastin exons 28-36 may encode critical domains for vascular development.
...
PMID:Supravalvular aortic stenosis associated with a deletion disrupting the elastin gene. 813 45
Four patients with suprarenal coarctation of the abdominal aorta were managed from 1978 to 1993 (mean follow-up 8.75 years). Ages at the time of diagnosis were 2 months, 8 months, 4.5 years, and 15 years, respectively. Three children presented with severe hypertension, two of whom were in congestive heart failure, and the fourth child presented with a cold, ischemic leg. The 8-month-old patient had
Williams syndrome
(supravalvular aortic and pulmonic stenosis, bilateral renal artery stenosis and celiac artery occlusion, "elfin" facies, and mental retardation) and was treated nonoperatively. After 12 years of follow-up, he was given five medications to control hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, and
heart failure
. Three patients with abdominal aortic coarctation were treated operatively and none died. Two patients underwent bypass grafting from the supraceliac aorta to the infrarenal aorta, with bilateral renal artery reconstruction in one. Postoperative arteriograms obtained 1 year or more after operation were normal in both cases. The 2-month-old patient underwent patch aortoplasty, with subsequent reoperation 1.5 years later for recurrent hypertension and
heart failure
with a bypass graft to the left kidney and removal of an infarcted right kidney. In all three patients, operative repair of the suprarenal aortic coarctation has resulted in long-term control of blood pressure and cardiac and renal function.
...
PMID:Coarctation of the abdominal aorta. 852 35
Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS)
is a genetic disorder characterized by a distinctive facial gestalt, mental retardation, mild growth deficiency, and cardiovascular disease. The occurrence of sudden death in the
WBS
is known from several case reports, but information about the risk of sudden death as derived from the data of a large cohort of patients is lacking. We analyzed the data of 293
WBS
patients who had been treated for 43 years at the same two institutions. We thus collected 5,190 patient years without loss to follow-up. During this period ten patients died. Five of them died from: reticulosarcoma (1), after accident (1),
heart failure
(1), following heart surgery (2). Of the remaining five patients, four died suddenly and one died of unknown cause suggestive of sudden cardiac death. Thus, the incidence of sudden death in our
WBS
cohort amounts to 1/1,000 patient years. This risk of sudden death is comparable to that following surgery for congenital heart disease, and is 25-100-fold higher compared to the age-matched normal population.
...
PMID:Risk of sudden death in the Williams-Beuren syndrome. 1515 Jul 72
Williams syndrome
is a complex syndrome comprising developmental abnormalities, craniofacial dysmorphic features, and cardiac anomalies. The most common cardiac anomaly is supravalvular aortic stenosis. We report a case of a 6-year-old girl with
Williams syndrome
who presented with decompensated
heart failure
due to ischemic cardiomyopathy. Her only significant cardiac anomaly was severe stenosis of the left main coronary artery. She subsequently died despite surgical revascularization. Isolated coronary anomalies are rare in
Williams syndrome
but should be considered especially in the presence of
heart failure
or ischemia.
...
PMID:Severe coronary artery disease in the absence of supravalvular stenosis in a patient with Williams syndrome. 1554 15
Supravalvular aortic stenosis is an uncommon but well-characterized congenital form of left ventricular outflow obstruction. The lesion involves the ascending aorta and often occurs in association with pulmonary arterial stenoses or stenoses of other arteries, especially at major branch points. It can occur sporadically, as an autosomal dominant condition, or as one component of
Williams-Beuren syndrome
. In fact, the clinical and structural characteristics of supravalvular aortic stenosis are identical in both syndromic and nonsyndromic cases. The severity of supravalvular aortic stenosis varies; but if it is left untreated, it may result in
heart failure
, myocardial infarction, and sudden death. Supravalvular aortic stenosis in Williams-Beuren patients occurs as a consequence of a complete deletion of one copy of the elastin gene on chromosome 7q11.23. However, the underlying genetic cause of isolated supravalvular aortic stenosis has been identified as translations, gross intragenic deletions, and point mutations that disrupt the elastin gene. We report the results obtained in a mutation screening of the elastin gene in 28 patients with supravalvular aortic stenosis and other vascular abnormalities. The aim of the screening was to characterize the molecular cause of this lesion. We have detected 11 changes, including nine polymorphisms and two novel putative missense mutations.
...
PMID:Elastin mutation screening in a group of patients affected by vascular abnormalities. 1599 Sep 52
Supravalvar aortic stenosis (SVAS) in patients with
Williams' syndrome
is often accompanied by coronary, pulmonary, and even myocardial lesions and therefore associated with increased perioperative morbidity and mortality. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) provides reliable short-term mechanical circulatory support to patients, especially young, in acute postoperative
cardiac failure
when conventional means are ineffective. The incorporation of centrifugal pumps in these systems has made their use more efficient and less traumatic. We describe our experience of using the Levitronix CentriMag pump in two patients with
Williams' syndrome
who underwent surgical correction of supravalvular aortic stenosis.
...
PMID:Postcardiotomy mechanical circulatory support in two infants with williams' syndrome. 2474 44
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