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

We describe herein the case of a 3-day-old male neonate with umbilical arteriovenous malformation showing umbilical hemorrhage. The patient was born after 38 weeks and 3 days of gestation with a birth weight of 2784 g. Sudden massive umbilical hemorrhage occurred on day 3. Cardiopulmonary arrest developed, but the patient was successfully rescued by immediate cardiopulmonary resuscitation. An umbilical venous catheter was inserted for blood access. However, umbilical hemorrhage continued and hemostasis was difficult. Congenital bleeding disorders were excluded based on laboratory findings. Ultrasonography on day 15 revealed a mass with rich blood supply directly under the umbilicus. Umbilical arteriovenous malformation was suspected from abdominal contrast-enhanced computed tomography on day 17. Excision of the arteriovenous malformation was performed on day 29. The mass was connected to three arteries including the umbilical arteries, with the umbilical vein flowing out from the mass. Umbilical arteriovenous malformation was diagnosed from evidence during the operation and pathological findings. Umbilical arteriovenous malformations are rare and often discovered by heart failure symptoms, but rare cases present with umbilical bleeding, as in this report. Umbilical arteriovenous malformation must be taken into consideration as along with congenital bleeding disorders when massive umbilical hemorrhage is identified.
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PMID:A neonate with umbilical arteriovenous malformation showing hemorrhagic shock from massive umbilical hemorrhage. 1939 3

We present the case of a 13-year-old boy with a ruptured cerebral arteriovenous malformation who had rapidly progressive cardiac failure leading to death. Serial electrocardiograms, cardiac enzymes, echocardiograms, and pulmonary artery catheter data confirmed severe ventricular dysfunction related to myocardial ischemia and infarction. Cardiac dysfunction after cerebral insult is commonly described in adults with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage and has been termed "neurogenic stunned myocardium" because of its transient nature in most of patients. In children, cardiovascular dysfunction has been described in a few reports and only after traumatic brain injury. No deaths have been reported. This case report illustrates the potentially lethal consequences of cardiovascular dysfunction in children after ruptured cerebral arteriovenous malformation with subarachnoid hemorrhage. Compromised cardiac function should be considered during the early evaluation and management of these patients and supportive care instituted to limit secondary brain injury from poor perfusion.
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PMID:Death from cardiac failure in a child with ruptured cerebral arteriovenous malformation. 1944 33

Congenital arteriovenous malformations are rare causes of congestive cardiac failure in neonates. The most common sites are in the head and liver, but other sites include the thorax, the abdomen and the limbs. The onset of failure is usually not in the immediate neonatal period, but later on in life, albeit that lesions such as the arteriovenous malformation of the vein of Galen, and other arteriovenous malformations in different locations which produce high flow can present early. We describe here the first case, to the best of our knowledge, of prenatal detection of an intrathoracic arteriovenous malformation producing neonatal cardiac failure, which was successfully treated by surgery postnatally.
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PMID:An intrathoracic arteriovenous malformation discovered as an extremely uncommon reason of neonatal congestive cardiac failure. 1967 2

Parkes Weber syndrome is a rare disease characterized by overgrowth of an extremity linked to the presence of an arteriovenous malformation with multiple arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs). We report a patient with Parkes Weber syndrome with high-output cardiac failure due to multiple AVFs complicated by severe aortic regurgitation (AR) who required surgical treatment for AVFs. Division of the left deep femoral artery and banding of the left superficial femoral artery were performed. Such procedures can cause aggravation of AR and left ventricular failure due to the sudden increase in cardiac afterload. Pulmonary artery pressure, mixed venous oxygen saturation and cardiac index monitored by a thermodilution catheter, and a transesophageal echocardiography were useful in evaluating the effect of the surgical procedure and resultant acute increase in cardiac afterload on cardiac output and left ventricular function.
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PMID:General anesthesia in a patient with Parkes Weber syndrome with high-output cardiac failure due to multiple arteriovenous fistulas complicated by severe aortic regurgitation. 2014 Apr 61

In this report, the authors describe 4 recent cases of posterior giant dural venous sinus ectasia in neonates diagnosed during pregnancy and encountered at 3 different institutions. Posterior giant venous sinus ectasia was diagnosed in 4 patients using antenatal ultrasonography and confirmed in 2 patients using prenatal MR imaging and in 3 patients using postnatal MR angiography. In 2 children angiography was performed at the age of 6 months. The pregnancy was terminated in 1 case, and the fetus underwent an autopsy. The 3 children who were born presented with various degree of cardiac insufficiency and were admitted to the intensive care unit after birth. Signs of increased intracranial pressure were present immediately after birth, including a bulging fontanel. No endovascular treatment was used in these cases. Surgery was performed in 2 cases as an attempt to alleviate increased intracranial pressure symptoms, without any real benefit. A slow venous flow in the ectasia was shown by ultrasonography in the case in which the pregnancy was terminated. Angiography or MR angiography did not show an obvious arteriovenous malformation in any of the cases, but an arteriovenous fistula secondary or contributing to the formation of the venous ectasia is one of the physiopathological hypotheses of the cause of this condition. Interestingly, spontaneous progressive thrombosis and regression of the intravascular component of the venous sinus ectasia was observed in all cases. The clinical outcome was acceptable in 1 child (who had a moderate handicap after the surgery) and good for the other 2 children (who had normal neurological development). Stratified thrombi of different ages are found in these giant venous ectasias and develop within the leaves of the dura close to the confluence of the major posterior venous sinuses. Therefore, it appears that the formation of a progressive thrombosis represents the normal evolution of these giant dural venous sinus ectasias, which explains the favorable outcome in some cases without specific surgical treatment, except for resuscitation techniques.
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PMID:Giant dural venous sinus ectasia in neonates. 2043 68

A neonate with congestive heart failure at birth due to a nearly holohemispheric pial arteriovenous malformation is described. This occurred despite a normal second trimester prenatal sonogram. Successful treatment of heart failure was achieved by embolization alone. This case demonstrates that hemodynamically significant lesions may arise later or enlarge more rapidly in utero than previously thought.
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PMID:Neonatal giant pial arteriovenous malformation: genesis or rapid enlargement in the third trimester. 2062 63

Congenital arteriovenous malformations are a well-described cause of neonatal heart failure. Fistulous connections are typically intrahepatic or intracranial. We present a case of a neonate with an intrathoracic arteriovenous malformation between the subclavian artery and superior vena cava resulting in florid neonatal heart failure. This unusual fistulous connection has only rarely been reported in the literature, and in those reports, it has not resulted in neonatal heart failure.
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PMID:Congenital arteriovenous malformation between the subclavian artery and superior vena cava presenting in neonatal heart failure. 2150 97

Purpose. We report a case of a 60-year-old male who underwent sequential Onyx embolizations of a cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM) which we implicate as the most likely etiology of subsequent acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Methods. Case report and literature review. Results. Shortly after the second Onyx embolization procedure, the patient declined from respiratory failure secondary to pulmonary edema. Clinical entities typically responsible for pulmonary edema including cardiac failure, renal failure, iatrogenic volume overload, negative-pressure pulmonary edema, and infectious etiologies were evaluated and excluded. The patient required mechanical ventilatory support for several days, delaying operative resection. The patient met clinical and radiographic criteria for ARDS. After excluding other etiologies of ARDS, we postulate that ARDS developed as a result of Onyx administration. The Onyx copolymer is dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), a solvent excreted through the lungs and has been implicated in transient pulmonary side effects. Additionally, a direct toxic effect of the Onyx copolymer is postulated. Conclusion. Onyx embolization and DMSO toxicity are implicated as the etiology of ARDS given the lack of other inciting factors and the close temporal relationship. A strong physiologic rationale provides further support. Clinicians should consider this uncommon but important complication.
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PMID:Acute respiratory distress syndrome after onyx embolization of arteriovenous malformation. 2168 80

Congestive heart failure in the newborn period is uncommon and is most commonly related to congenital structural heart disease. However, the differential diagnosis is broad and includes arrhythmias, congenital or acquired myopathies, sepsis, severe anemia, or other conditions leading to high-output cardiac failure. Here we report on a 4-day-old girl with high-output heart failure due to a congenital cerebral arteriovenous malformation.
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PMID:A neonate with high-outflow congestive heart failure and pulmonary hypertension due to an intracranial arteriovenous malformation. 2173 Aug 2

Congenital hepatic arteriovenous malformation is a rarely seen vascular malformation with persistent pulmonary hypertension in neonates. The authors report a full-term female newborn presenting with intractable heart failure and respiratory distress soon after birth. Investigation by echocardiography showed severe persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn and patent ductus arteriosus. The hepatic angiogram revealed congenital hepatic arteriovenous malformation; therefore, secondary pulmonary artery hypertension complicated with 'steal' phenomenon was conclusively diagnosed.
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PMID:Congenital hepatic arteriovenous malformation presenting with severe persistent pulmonary hypertension. 2173 18


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