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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Since April 1986, 40 total artificial hearts (TAH) were implanted as a bridge to transplantation in our institution. In an attempt to identify factors affecting survival of TAH recipients we reviewed our experience over 1000 days of mechanical support. There was no postoperative bleeding requiring surgery nor were there any clinical episodes of thromboembolic complications. Over a total functioning period greater than 3 years there were no mechanical failures in the driving system but one artificial ventricle had to be replaced because of mechanical dysfunction.
Infections
and multiple organ failure were the primary causes of morbidity and mortality during mechanical support. When the patients who underwent staged transplantation (no. 17) were compared with those who died during mechanical support (no. 23) there were no differences in TAH driving mode or hemodynamic variables between the groups. Although preoperative pulmonary, hepatic and renal functions were found to be similar between the groups, there were significant differences in the early evolution (3 days) of hepatic and renal functions following TAH implant (p less than 0.01). Urinary output was found to be the earliest variable discriminating recovery and survival (p less than 0.01). Finally, univariate analysis indicated age (less than 40 vs greater than 40 years) and modality of cardiac decompensation (acute vs chronic) as the most important factors affecting survival after TAH implantation. Since young patients (less than 40 years of age) with acute decompensation were successfully transplanted in 82% of cases while 100% of older patients with chronic decompensation died before or after transplantation, TAH should be advised in young patients with acute or chronic
heart failure
and in selected older candidates with recent, acute
cardiac failure
.
...
PMID:Mechanical circulatory support as a bridge to transplantation: current status of total artificial heart in 1989 and determinants of survival. 221 4
We have defined the clinical presentation and course of X-linked agammaglobulinemia (X-LA) by means of a multi-center retrospective survey of 96 patients.
Infections
were the most common presenting feature of patients with X-LA. The most frequent infections involved the upper respiratory tract (75%), lower respiratory tract (65%), gastrointestinal tract (35%), skin (28%), and central nervous system (16%). Clinical clues to the diagnosis of X-LA were the chronic or recurrent nature of infections, a family history of immunodeficiency, and infections at more than one anatomic location.
Infections
remained a significant problem after the diagnosis of X-LA was made and gamma-globulin prophylaxis had been instituted. One or more chronic infectious diseases occurred in 71% of patients. The respiratory tract was the most common site of disease, and the gastrointestinal tract was relatively spared. Patients died at a mean age of 17 years. The two major causes of death were chronic pulmonary disease with resultant
cardiac failure
, and disseminated viral infections which characteristically caused a dermatomyositis-like syndrome, hepatitis, pneumonitis, and meningoencephalitis.
...
PMID:X-linked agammaglobulinemia: an analysis of 96 patients. 258 Nov 10
Acute and therapeutically uncontrollable
cardiac insufficiency
in a case of chronic heart disease with acute risk of rejection and with a record of previous transplantation or during a heart operation should be considered as an indication for implantation of an artificial heart or a ventricle-supporting system, if a donor heart is not available. Two results are expected from such an approach, restoration of adequate circulation and improvement of organ functionally providing a chance for later transplantation. Attention should be given, according to the authors' own experience, to effective surgical haemostasis.
Infections
have quite often proved to be incurable after implantation of an artificial heart and, consequently, provide a clear-cut contraindication to implantation.
...
PMID:[Current status of use of the artificial heart in combination with heart transplantation]. 305 51
Over a period of 6 years, only twelve cases of dilated cardiomyopathy were clinically diagnosed in Nigerians between the ages of 11-30 years at the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria. Eleven presented with
heart failure
, while the twelfth patient presented with a cerebrovascular accident. Two other patients also had a cerebrovascular accident. A history of febrile illness was obtained in seven, but in only three was fever unresponsive to antimalarials, documented on admission. Antistreptolysin-O titre was normal and erythrocyte sedimentation rates elevated in each of the patients. Leucocytosis was present in six, three had a four-fold rise or fall in antibody titres against Coxsackie-B viruses and one, a four-fold rise or fall against Toxoplasma gondii. Histological evidences of myopericarditis were found in three of the six patients who died. It is concluded that dilated cardiomyopathy is rare in young adult Nigerians, and that constitutional upset is common, as in children, but prognosis is poorer.
Infections
by Coxsackie-B viruses, T. gondii and possibly other viruses appear to be of major aetiological factors
...
PMID:Dilated cardiomyopathy in young adult Africans: a sequel to infections? 629 52
The surgical technique recommended for vaginal extirpation of the uterus from patients with corpus carcinoma differs from methods suggested for any other indications, including inadequately controllable metrorrhagia, uterus myomatosus, in situ carcinoma, Stage Ia carcinoma of the cervix, and positional abnormality. Reported are 1,052 cases of hysterectomy for which these indications had been valid. More than 25 per cent of the patients concerned had been above 60 years of age. There had been complications of two types, intra-operative and postoperative.
Infections
of the urinary tract ranked on top of the list and accounted for 5.6 per cent of all complications. They were followed by intra-operative bleeding in 2.6 per cent of the cases and postoperative bleeding in 1.6 per cent. There were also two cases of ileus, one of them fatal. Another death occurred due to
cardiac insufficiency
.
...
PMID:[Indications for vaginal hysterectomy]. 713 61
Infections
after cardiac pacemaker implantation are rare (0.13 to 12.6%) but potentially severe complications. Staphylococcus is the genus most frequently isolated (72 to 100% of cases). The use of systematic prophylactic antibiotics remains controversial. From November 1991 to October 1993, 207 consecutive patients were submitted to a series of measures designed to reduce the risk of infection: a) intravenous bolus injection of Cefamindole, 15 minutes before implantation, b) cutaneous disinfection with iodinated polyvindone, c) injection of an ampoule of rifampin before closure of the pacemaker in the pouch, d) absence of drainage system. Patients were predominantly female (60.9%), with a mean age of 77 +/- 10 years, frequently suffering from heart disease (53.8%). The indication for implantation was atrioventricular block (39.7%), carotid sinus syndrome (27.5%), atrial arrhythmia (27.5%), resection of the node-His tract (5.3%). This procedure corresponded to the first implantation in 88.4% or replacement of a previous pacemaker in 11.6% of cases and the pacing mode was single-chamber (38.4% or replacement of a previous pacemaker in 11.6% of cases and the pacing mode was single-chamber (38.7%), or double chamber (61.3%). The mean duration of the procedure was 51.5 min +/- 30 min. The mean follow-up was 12.7 +/- 5 months. The overall mortality was 14% (11 cases of
cardiac failure
, 6 sudden deaths, 4 cerebrovascular accidents, 4 cases of pneumonia, 4 neoplasms). Only one infectious problem (endocarditis, i.e. 0.48%) was observed.
...
PMID:[Multifactor prevention of endocarditis and cardiac pacemakers. A prospective study apropos of 207 patients]. 876 12
Infections
caused by Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex are generally manifested as pulmonary disease, osteomyelitis or lymphadenitis, and cutaneous infection is rare. We describe a case of M. intracellulare infection of the skin in a 79-year-old man without apparent immunologically disabling disease or therapy. He had cutaneous infection of the right hand over 10 years, developing a fistula and, finally, an ulcer and abscess, 2 months before his death from
heart failure
. Mycobacterium intracellulare was identified by both microbiological characteristics and DNA-DNA hybridization.
...
PMID:Infection with Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare with abscess, ulceration and fistula formation. 903 10
Infections
are thought to be important in the pathogenesis of many heart diseases. Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) has been linked to chronic dilated cardiomyopathy, a common cause of progressive heart disease,
heart failure
and sudden death. We show here that the sarcoma (Src) family kinase Lck (p56lck) is required for efficient CVB3 replication in T-cell lines and for viral replication and persistence in vivo. Whereas infection of wild-type mice with human pathogenic CVB3 caused acute and very severe myocarditis, meningitis, hepatitis, pancreatitis and dilated cardiomyopathy, mice lacking the p56lck gene were completely protected from CVB3-induced acute pathogenicity and chronic heart disease. These data identify a previously unknown function of Src family kinases and indicate that p56lck is the essential host factor that controls the replication and pathogenicity of CVB3.
...
PMID:The tyrosine kinase p56lck is essential in coxsackievirus B3-mediated heart disease. 1074 50
We describe a 40-year-old man with limited scleroderma who presented with acute
heart failure
following a flu-like illness. He was known to have incomplete left anterior bundle branch block, initial isolated pulmonary hypertension with enlarged right atrium, and no pulmonary fibrosis. He received therapy for acute
heart failure
and was transferred to a scleroderma centre for specific treatment of scleroderma cardiomyopathy. Investigations showed raised inflammatory markers and diffuse hyperechogenic thickening of the myocardium on echocardiography. Contrast-enhanced (Gd-DOTA) cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CV-MRI) showed multiple areas of non-homogeneous delayed hyperenhancement in the left ventricle, suggestive of myocarditis. Antiadenovirus IgM antibodies were detected with a titer consistent with recent infection. Six weeks later a repeat Gd-DOTA CV-MRI showed an almost complete resolution of the areas of hyperenhancement and there was a significant reduction in the adenovirus antibody titer with serological conversion to IgG. To our knowledge this is the first report of viral myocarditis in scleroderma.
Infections
are important causes of morbidity and mortality in this disease and should always be included in the differential diagnosis of cardiac symptoms. We propose that contrast-enhanced CV-MRI is valuable in a non-invasive diagnosis of heart disease in patients with scleroderma.
...
PMID:Acute myocarditis associated with adenoviral infection in a patient with scleroderma. 1467 36
Little is known about the hospital inpatient care of patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD). Here, we describe the features of the emergency hospital admissions of a geographically defined population of PD patients over a 4-year period. Patients with PD were identified from a database for a Parkinson's disease service in a district general hospital with a drainage population of approximately 180,000. All admissions of this patient subgroup to local hospitals were found from the computer administration system. Two clinicians experienced in both general medicine and PD then reviewed the notes to identify reasons for admission. Admission sources and discharge destinations were recorded. Data regarding non-PD patients was compared to PD patients on the same elderly care ward over the same time period. The total number of patients exposed to analysis was 367. There was a total exposure of 775.8 years and a mean duration of 2.11 years per patient. There were 246 emergency admissions to the hospital with a total duration of stay of 4,257 days (mean, 17.3 days). These days were accounted for by 129 patients (mean age, 78 years; 48% male). PD was first diagnosed during 12 (4.9%) of the admissions. The most common reasons for admission were as follows: falls (n=44, 14%), pneumonia (n=37, 11%), urinary tract infection (n=28, 9%), reduced mobility (n=27, 8%), psychiatric (n=26, 8%), angina (n=21, 6%),
heart failure
(n=20, 6%), fracture (n=14, 4%), orthostatic hypotension (n=13, 4%), surgical (n=13, 4%), upper gastrointestinal bleed (n=10, 3%), stroke/transient ischemic attack (n=8, 2%), and myocardial infarction (n=7, 2%). The mean length of stay for the PD patients on the care of elderly ward specializing in PD care was 21.3 days compared to 17.8 days for non-PD patients. After hospital admission, there was a reduction in those who returned to their own home from 179 to 163 and there was an increase in those requiring nursing home care from 37 to 52.
Infections
, cardiovascular diseases, falls, reduced mobility, and psychiatric complications accounted for the majority of admissions. By better understanding the way people with PD use hospital services, we may improve quality of care and perhaps prevent some inpatient stays and care-home placements.
...
PMID:Emergency hospital admissions in idiopathic Parkinson's disease. 1588 38
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