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

Catheter-balloon mitral valvuloplasty was performed in 7 females with rheumatic mitral stenosis on the 19th-32nd week of pregnancy. Four patients were operated on with signs of cardiac insufficiency, two--in a state of pulmonary pre-edema. Edema of the lungs in one patient continued developing on the operating table. The results of the treatment were good in all cases. The area of the mitral orifice increased from 0.9-1.75 to 2.4-3.5 cm2. The pressure gradient between the left atrium and the left ventricle dropped from 25-40 to 2-8 mm Hg. This was attended by the disappearance of the diastolic murmur and the clinical manifestations of stasis in pulmonary circulation in all patients. The development of mitral regurgitation after the operation was not encountered in any of the patients. The period of roentgenoscopy lasted 17.5 min. on the average. Screens were used to protect the fetus from the direct effect of the X-rays. Pregnancy ended in delivery in 6 patients; spontaneous labor at term occurred in 4, cesarean section had to be performed in one patient with placenta previa; one woman gave birth to twins on the 36th week of pregnancy. All the babies were healthy. Catheter-balloon valvulotomy does not yield to closed mitral commissurotomy in efficacy. The fact that it is only mildly injurious and does not need general anesthesia make this intervention preferable for pregnant women suffering from mitral stenosis.
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PMID:[Treatment of mitral valve stenosis in pregnant women by the method of balloon valvuloplasty]. 179 21

Disorders of the heart frequently cause pulmonary dysfunction because of the close structural and functional association of the heart and lungs. The pulmonary vasculature is very commonly affected by cardiac pathology. The pulmonary vasculature is normally a low-pressure, low-resistance circuit with high compliance and tremendous vascular reserve. Although resting vascular tone is low, there are many identified mediators of pulmonary arterial tone that may help mediate pulmonary blood flow. Alveolar hypoxia is clearly a stimulus for increasing pulmonary vascular resistance although factors that mediate the response to hypoxia are not fully understood. Patients with left-to-right shunting due to congenital heart disease because of elevations in pulmonary artery flow and pressure tend to develop progressive anatomic changes in the pulmonary vasculature. This leads to an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance, irreversible pulmonary hypertension, right heart failure, reversal of shunt flow, and Eisenmenger's syndrome. The degree of anatomic vascular damage due to left-to-right shunting can be graded histologically. Lesser grades of damage are reversible with corrective surgery, whereas more severe grades show no improvement or progression with operation. Chronic left-sided congestive heart failure seen in rheumatic mitral stenosis can cause secondary changes in the pulmonary vasculature. Pulmonary hypertension and increased pulmonary vascular resistance can increase reflexly and form a "second stenosis" that further limits cardiac output. Unlike congenital heart disease, severe grades of pulmonary arterial damage are not seen in left heart failure from mitral stenosis or other causes, and consequently with surgical correction pulmonary hypertension reverses. Pulmonary function testing is adversely affected by congestive heart failure. Both restrictive (stiff lungs) and obstructive (cardiac asthma) defects are observed in congestive heart failure. DLCO is abnormally decreased. With treatment of heart failure these defects reverse. Both elevated systemic and pulmonary venous pressures affect fluid filtration in the pleural space and cause pleural fluid accumulation. The fluid is transudative with low protein, low lactate dehydrogenase, and low cell counts. Transudative effusions from heart failure resolve with treatment. With large effusions and cardiomegaly, pulmonary dysfunction results because of atelectasis from compression and space-occupying effects of the heart and pleural fluid. Following myocardial infarction, cardiac surgery, or other cardiac trauma, the postcardiac injury syndrome can result. The syndrome is characterized by exudative pleural and pericardial effusions along with pulmonary infiltrates, fever, chest pain, leukocytosis, and an elevated ESR. The syndrome must be diagnosed by exclusion of bacterial pneumonia, pulmonary emboli, and congestive heart failure. Treatment is with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents or systemic co
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PMID:Pulmonary and pleural complications of cardiac disease. 268 66

Autopsy data of 58 cases (1958-1986) was analysed for cardiac lesions. The cases were divided into 2 groups; paediatric (23) and adult (35). The heart was normal in 8.7% and 20.5% of the above groups respectively. Rest of the cases showed left ventricular hypertrophy with variable dilatation. Obstructive lesion in the aorta and or renal arteries was present in 91.3% of paediatric and 80.0% of adult cases. Congestive cardiac failure was very common in paediatric group (60.8%) and was not seen in absence of obstructive lesion in the aorta or renal arteries. Histologically the aortic lesion was healed in 70% and 50% of paediatric and adult cases. The commonest additional lesion found, was coronary artery involvement in 11 cases (17%). Ostial stenosis was noted in 7 cases, including 2 in paediatric age group. Epicardial coronaries were involved in 4 cases with infarcts in 4. Aortic incompetence was rare (3.4%). Associated rheumatic mitral stenosis was seen in 2 and healed infective endocarditis in one. Histologically apart from the above mentioned lesions the myocardium showed essentially a response to hypertension. Focal lymphocytic infiltration was seen in 2 children and tuberculosis myocarditis in 3 adults. No case of any other type of myocarditics or cardiomyopathy was seen. In conclusion hypertension and coronary artery disease are the main factors responsible for myocardial failure but additional related or unrelated factors were present in 15.0% cases.
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PMID:Cardiac lesions in non-specific aorto-arteritis. An autopsy study. 798 78

Significant tricuspid regurgitation (TR) can contribute to increased morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing mitral valve surgery for mitral stenosis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between the severity of preoperative functional TR and late adverse outcomes in patients undergoing mitral valve replacement (MVR). The study group comprised 68 patients (54 women, 14 men; mean age 45 +/-10 years) with rheumatic mitral stenosis (MS) who had undergone MVR without tricuspid valve surgery between 4 and 13 years (mean 8.1 +/-2.6 years) before their last clinical examination. All patients underwent a complete preoperative and late postoperative color-Doppler echocardiographic examination. The severity of TR was assessed echocardiographically by using color-Doppler flow images and flow direction in the inferior vena cava or hepatic veins. Patients were classified into 2 groups; 42 with mild (62%) and 26 with significant (38%) TR. Patients with significant TR showed longer preoperative symptomatic period and more atrial fibrillation than those with mild TR. All patients had medical treatment. Functional capacity and NYHA class of the patients in both groups improved significantly after MVR. Freedom from symptomatic heart failure (functional class III or IV) was higher (86% vs 54%) and the need for hospitalization was significantly lower for the mild TR group. Significant preoperative functional TR diagnosed by echocardiography was associated with an adverse outcome. Therefore, further studies are needed to evaluate the effect of concomitant tricuspid valve repair on the late outcome of patients undergoing mitral valve surgery in order to prevent significant late morbidity.
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PMID:Outcome of significant functional tricuspid regurgitation late after mitral valve replacement for predominant rheumatic mitral stenosis. 1762 89

We describe a 34-year-old man with an ostium secundum atrial septal defect, Ebstein's anomaly of the tricuspid valve with severe tricuspid regurgitation, congenital valvular pulmonary stenosis, rheumatic mitral stenosis and regurgitation with aortic regurgitation, who presented with decompensated heart failure after developing atrial fibrillation. The complex haemodynamic interplay of these lesions is also discussed.
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PMID:Quadrivalvular heart disease of mixed congenital and rheumatic aetiology with concomitant ostium secundum atrial septal defect and Ebstein's anomaly of the tricuspid valve. 2364 97

Rheumatic mitral stenosis (MS) is a well-known entity in the developing world. Though rarely seem, MS can present at a very young age with severe symptoms. We describe here an unusual association of a large perimembranous ventricular septal defect with juvenile rheumatic MS leading to severe pulmonary hypertension and heart failure in a very young child.
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PMID:Juvenile rheumatic mitral stenosis in association with perimembranous ventricular septal defect in a 3-year-old boy. 2427 8

Young women may have asymptomatic mitral valve disease which becomes unmasked during the haemodynamic stress of pregnancy. Rheumatic mitral stenosis is the most common cardiac disease found in women during pregnancy. The typical increased volume and heart rate of pregnancy are not well tolerated in patients with more than mild stenosis. Maternal complications of atrial fibrillation and congestive heart failure can occur, and are increased in patients with poor functional class and severe pulmonary artery hypertension. Patients can be diagnosed by echocardiography and symptoms treated with beta-1 antagonists and cautious diuresis. Patients with heart failure unresponsive to treatment can undergo percutaneous balloon mitral valvuloplasty. Labour and delivery goals include reducing tachycardia by adequate pain control and minimized volume shifts. Mitral valve regurgitation, even when severe, is usually very well tolerated in pregnancy as the increase in volume is offset by a decrease in vascular resistance. On the other hand, patients with left ventricular dysfunction, moderate pulmonary hypertension or NYHA functional class III-IV are at increased risk for heart failure and arrhythmias. They may need cautious diuresis and limitations on physical activity during pregnancy, as well as invasive haemodynamic monitoring for labour and delivery. Vaginal delivery is preferred and caesarean section reserved for obstetric indications.
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PMID:Mitral valve disease in pregnancy: outcomes and management. 2758 98

A 46-year-old female diagnosed several years ago with arterial hypertension and an ischemic stroke with significant recovery was admitted for dyspnea on usual physical activity and fatigue. Physical examination revealed signs of heart failure with crackles on both lung bases, distented jugular veins, accentuated pulmonic valve closure (P2) and tricuspid regurgitation murmur. Echocardiography identified a large tumor in the left atrium, suggestive of atrial myxoma, which caused a severe functional mitral stenosis and produced severe pulmonary hypertension. A cardiac embolic source should always be checked in young patients with stroke. Atrial myxoma can mimic a variety of diseases: rheumatic mitral stenosis, infective endocarditis or autoimmune disease. A review on myxoma's histology, immunohistochemistry and genetics together with clinical aspects is presented.
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PMID:A rare cause of ischemic stroke: cardiac myxoma. Case report and review of literature. 3053 32

Left atrium and left atrial appendage thrombus is common in patients with mitral stenosis, causing significant morbidity and mortality. We described a case of rheumatic mitral stenosis, a 48-year-old female patient, who had undergone percutaneous transvenous mitral commissurotomy 26 years back. She presented with an episode of palpitations and breathlessness on mild exertion. She found to have rapid atrial fibrillation and heart failure. Her echocardiography showed severe mitral stenosis and large left atrial thrombus intermittently obstructing the mitral valve. While she was prepared for urgent valve replacement she had cardiac arrest and died. The echocardiogram showed the thrombus was stuck and closed the mitral valve orifice. From this events we did a review in our institution about the mitral stenosis patients who found to have left atrium thrombus by routine transthoracic echocardiography in five years period. Looking for factors contributing to thrombus formation and outcome predictor, as to outline management plan. <Learning objective: Our aim is to give more attention to the factors contributing for left atrium thrombus formation and thrombus character in mitral stenosis patients and its clinical impact to prevent miserable events in such high risk patients.>.
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PMID:Sudden death as a first manifestation of left atrium thrombus in rheumatic severe mitral stenosis. 3149 75