Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 22-year-old man with a synovial cell sarcoma attained an excellent response to therapy with adriamycin (NSC-123127) and dimethyltriazeno imidazole carboxamide (NSC-45388). Therapy was discontinued at a cumulative dose of adriamycin of 600 mg/m2. Relapse occurred 13 1/2 months later, and therapy with adriamycin was restarted. Because of tumor progression, therapy was discontinued after a cumulative dose of adriamycin of 120 mg/m2. Ten weeks later, severe congestive heart failure developed which ultimately caused the patient's death. Exacerbations of the heart failure were temporally related to the administration of the antitumor antibiotics actinomycin-D (NSC-3053) and mithramycin (NSC-24559). Electron microscopic examination of the heart revealed changes characteristic of adriamycin cardiomyopathy. Thus, even after a long hiatus, it may not be safe to exceed the recommended maximum cumulative dose level of adriamycin. The pathogenic mechanisms involved in the development of adriamycin cardiomyopathy are reviewed, and the possible synergistic effect of other antitumor antibiotics is discussed.
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PMID:Cardiomyopathy after widely separated courses of adriamycin exacerbated by actinomycin-D and mithramycin. 17 14

A 7-year-old female mixed-breed dog with an undifferentiated sarcoma of the orbit was treated for 7 months with doxorubicin hydrochloride. Though remission was achieved, the dog died of acute heart failure.
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PMID:Remission of orbital sarcoma in a dog, using doxorubicin therapy. 65 21

A 20-year-old man with metastatic Ewing Sarcoma developed severe congestive heart failure. Because he had been treated with a large amount of Adriamycin, the diagnosis was initially thought to be Adriamycin cardiotoxicity. However, ante- and post-mortem studies revealed the presence of massive cardiac metastases. At post-mortem, there was no evidence of Adriamycin cardiotoxicity. This case emphasizes that cardiac metastases must be considered in the differential diagnosis of heart failure in patients treated with Adriamycin.
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PMID:Metastatic Ewing sarcoma to the heart simulating adriamycin cardiotoxicity. 74 91

From January 1981 to December 1987, 59 major upper abdominal operations were performed on 57 patients aged 80 to 90 years at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Procedures for primary adenocarcinoma of the stomach, distal esophagus, pancreas, or hepatobiliary system were performed with curative intent or for palliation in 34 of 59 patients (58%) and bypass with limited or no resection in 13 of 59 patients (22%) patients. Emergency operations were performed in six (10%) patients for gastric bleeding, perforation, or outlet obstruction. Six (10%) patients underwent laparotomy for benign biliary obstruction (1), splenectomy for secondary thrombocytopenia (2), or gastrectomy for sarcoma (2) or lymphoma (1). Hospital mortality was 15% overall and 9% for major resections, 15% for bypass, and 67% for emergency procedures. Major complications occurred in 10 (20%) elective procedures. Mortality was associated with respiratory or cardiac failure while complications most commonly included arrhythmias and wound infection. Mean postoperative hospitalization was 18 days overall and 45 patients (76%) were discharged home. Median survival following major resection was 17.5 months but less than 2 months after bypass procedures. A protocol of pre-operative evaluation, intra-operative hemodynamic monitoring and postoperative intensive care has been formalized for use in elderly or poor-risk patients.
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PMID:Upper abdominal cancer surgery in the very elderly. 206 87

Tuberous sclerosis (Bourneville-Pringle phacomatosis) has been known to be associated with cardiac rhabdomyoma, but apparently never previously with primary pericardial mesothelioma. We present an autopsy case of this condition in a 59-year-old man, who had been diagnosed as having tuberous sclerosis in view of the presence of facial sebaceous adenoma, mental retardation, intracranial calcification, cerebral ventricular dilatation and renal tumor. During the clinical course, characterized by heart failure due to cardiac tamponade, cardiac sarcoma was diagnosed by imaging techniques. Autopsy revealed biphasic-type primary pericardial mesothelioma. As to the tuberous sclerosis, atypical giant cells in the tubers of the cerebral cortex and the lateral ventricular wall were found, which were considered to be derived from neurons rather than glial cells on the basis of staining with Bodian, Holzer, and antibodies against NSE, GFA and S-100 protein. In old tubers protruding into the lateral ventricles, fibrous glias were present with dense calcospherite deposits, coinciding with the CT findings. The renal tumors were angiomyolipomas, which were present bilaterally and showed partially infiltrative growth, but seemed to have a benign nature because of the lack of metastasis and atypism of the leiomyocytes.
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PMID:An autopsy case of tuberous sclerosis associated with primary pericardial mesothelioma. 248 38

Extension of Wilms' tumor through the inferior vena cava into the heart presents a formidable clinical challenge. Excision of such a tumor without provoking emobilization may require cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The completeness of excision and the likelihood of tumor embolization during operation guide subsequent radiation therapy (RT) and chemotherapy. To help define these issues, the clinical records of 15 patients enrolled in three National Wilms' Tumor Studies (NWTS) who had intracardiac tumor extension (ICE) were reviewed. The median age at diagnosis was 4 years. One patient had clear cell sarcoma (CCS); the remainder had favorable histologic findings (FH). The clinicopathologic stage was stage II in one patient, stage III in eight patients, and stage IV in six patients. ICE was detected before operation in six patients, during operation in five patients, and after operation in five patients. CPB was used in 10 patients. Eleven patients (73%) had operative complications, with major intraoperative hemorrhage occurring most often (six patients). Complications occurred less often when ICE was recognized before operation (three of six patients) than when it was not (eight of nine patients). Embolization occurred in only two patients. There were no operative deaths. The patient with CCS died. Eleven of 14 patients with FH survived, with an actuarial event-free, 2-year survival rate of 86%. There were no patients in the first NWTS. Of the six patients in the second NWTS (NWTS-2), four died (67%). All nine patients in the third NWTS (NWTS-3) survived, but follow-up was shorter (median 4 years 9 months vs. 2 years 7 months). No particular surgical procedure was associated with an increased death rate. This review suggests Wilms' tumor with ICE presents a formidable surgical undertaking but has a relatively good prognosis. Embolization is an uncommon event in ICE (two patients, 13.3%), allowing a planned operative approach. Echocardiography and ultrasonography provide accurate preoperative diagnosis. And ICE should be suspected in patients with extensive vena cava thrombosis or who have hypotension or heart failure during examination or surgery.
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PMID:Intracardiac extension of Wilms' tumor. A report of the National Wilms' Tumor Study. 302 96

Two cases of primary pulmonary artery sarcoma are reported. The patient in the first case was a 61-year-old male with a two-year history of cough and exertional dyspnea, who died of intractable cardiac failure two months after admission without establishment of a diagnosis related to the etiology of cardiac failure. Autopsy revealed a sessile tumor within the pulmonary trunk and a solitary metastatic lesion in the lung. Histologic, immunohistochemical and electron microscopic studies were performed and a diagnosis of malignant mesenchymoma was made. The patient in the second case was a 32-year-old male complaining of exertional dyspnea and back pain. Radiologic studies indicated a mediastinal tumor involving the pulmonary artery. Exploratory thoracotomy revealed that the mediastinal mass arose from the left pulmonary artery. He died of respiratory failure 26 months after onset of his initial symptoms. Histologic, immunocytochemical and electron microscopic studies of both surgical and autopsy materials revealed a malignant fibrous histiocytoma. One hundred ten previously reported cases of this tumor are reviewed, and its clinicopathologic and morphologic features and probable histogenesis are discussed.
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PMID:Primary pulmonary artery sarcoma. Report of two autopsy cases studied by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy, and review of 110 cases reported in the literature. 305 9

We describe the clinical presentation and pathological features of a cardiac sarcoma that occurred within the right atrial cavity of a 14-year-old boy. The patient presented with a 2-month history of increasingly severe heart failure. Tumor tissue obtained by biopsy showed light microscopic features of leiomyosarcoma. Immunohistochemical reactions and ultrastructural studies provided evidence of tumor cell differentiation along three cell lines--smooth muscle, fibroblastic, and endothelial--suggestive of origin from a multipotent subendothelial reserve cell. Postmortem examination disclosed a large necrotic tumor filling the right atrial chamber. Implants were present on the pericardium, but there were no other metastatic lesions. The difficulty of making a diagnosis of these rare neoplasms when the tumor is small and potentially curable results in a grim prognosis.
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PMID:Spindle cell sarcoma of the heart in childhood: light microscopic, ultrastructural, and immunohistochemical evidence for smooth muscle, endothelial, and fibroblastic differentiation. 324 1

One-hundred-fourteen evaluable patients with metastatic soft tissue or bony sarcoma with measurable disease were treated with Adriamycin (doxorubicin) administered intravenously at a dose of 60 mg/M2 on day 1, followed by DTIC (dacarbazine) at a dose of 750 mg/M2; courses were administered at 3-week intervals. Ten complete remissions and 17 partial remissions were observed. The most responsive cell type was malignant fibrous histiocytoma with a response rate of 54%. This treatment schedule was very well tolerated, with only moderate myelosuppression and moderate nausea and vomiting. Cardiac toxicity was identified in three patients, with two patients demonstrating electrocardiogram (EKG) changes and arrhythmias and only one patient developing heart failure. The 24% overall response rate suggests no compromise in activity on this schedule, with a significant reduction in toxicity.
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PMID:A useful high-dose intermittent schedule of adriamycin and DTIC in the treatment of advanced sarcomas. 375 66

Single agent activity of aclacinomycin A or aclarubicin (ACR) for acute leukaemia in adults was as follows: complete remission was achieved in 8 of 21 (38%) with untreated patients and 7 of 41 (17%) with prior chemotherapy; thus the overall complete remission rate was 24%. The optimal dose schedule was 14 mg/m2/d daily i.v. administration, and a median total dose of 200 mg/m2 and 16 days were necessary for induction of complete remission. In combination, with behenoyl ara-C, ACR, 6-mercaptopurine and prednisolone, complete remission was achieved in 40 of 60 (67%) previously untreated patients, and 41 of 65 (63%) with prior chemotherapy; thus the overall rate was 65%. In a phase II study of ACR for solid tumours, response was achieved in carcinoma of oesophagus (1/3), stomach (12/84, 14%), gall bladder (1/4), pancreas (1/8), lung (4/30, 13%), breast (6/33, 18%), uterus (1/4), ovary (3/9, 33%), head and neck (1/5) and sarcoma (1/5). Side-effects of ACR most frequently observed were nausea and vomiting (around 30%) and a moderate grade marrow suppression was noted. An ECG change was observed in 7%, but there were no cases of chronic heart failure.
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PMID:Clinical review of aclacinomycin A in Japan. 386


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