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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) with a positive Coombs' test. A 59-year-old female was admitted to our hospital in February, 1997 with symptoms of
heart failure
. Ultrasound cardiography showed moderate pericardiac effusion and she was diagnosed as having pericarditis. After admission she had
anorexia
and her urine volume was reduced. Laboratory tests showed anemia and thrombocytopenia. Her Coombs' test result was positive. Her renal function gradually worsened and her conscious level was reduced. We diagnosed her as TTP and judged that she needed hemodialysis. We performed plasma exchange and started steroid therapy. The renal biopsy was compatible with TTP. After treatment, her level of consciousness improved, but her renal function did not improve. On the 51st hospital day she fell into acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and entered ICU. We considered ARDS caused by infection and continued treatment, but she died of shock and lactate acidosis. Activity of von Willebrand factor-cleaving protease in our case was 15% before the first PE, and 25 % just before death. A case of TTP without collagen disease usually shows a negative Coombs' test result. We think that this was a rare case in which autoimmune hemolytic anemia was supervened with TTP.
...
PMID:[Case of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura with a positive Coomb test]. 1597 91
Cachexia, usually defined as the loss of >5% of an individual's baseline bodyweight over 2-6 months, occurs with a number of diseases that includes not only AIDS and advanced cancer but also chronic
heart failure
, rheumatoid arthritis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Crohn disease, and renal failure.
Anorexia
is considered a key component of the
anorexia
-cachexia syndrome. Progestogens, particularly megestrol acetate, are commonly used to treat
anorexia
-cachexia. The mechanism of action of megestrol is believed to involve stimulation of appetite by both direct and indirect pathways and antagonism of the metabolic effects of the principal catabolic cytokines. Because the bioavailability of megestrol acetate directly affects its efficacy and safety, the formulation was refined to enhance its pharmacokinetics. Such efforts yielded megestrol acetate in a tablet form, followed by a concentrated oral suspension form, and an oral suspension form developed using nanocrystal technology. Nanocrystal technology was designed specifically to optimize drug delivery and enhance the bioavailability of drugs that have poor solubility in water. Megestrol acetate nanocrystal oral suspension is currently under review by the US FDA for the treatment of cachexia in patients with AIDS. Preclinical pharmacokinetic data suggest that the new megestrol acetate formulation has the potential to significantly shorten the time to clinical response and thus may improve outcomes in patients with
anorexia
-cachexia.
...
PMID:The science of megestrol acetate delivery: potential to improve outcomes in cachexia. 1598 2
Mycobacterium kansasii infection has been reported to be about 20 percent of non-tuberculous mycobacteriosis, and its disseminated type is uncommon and the prognosis is reported to be generally poor. We experienced one case of disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection. A 81 year-old man who had been short-bowel syndrome due to the operation for superior mesenteric artery occlusion since 1998 was admitted on April 24th, 2001 to our hospital because of slowly progressive consciousness disturbance and
anorexia
. He had shown progressive productive cough and respiratory failure and laboratory findings were C-reactive protein elevation and pancytopenia. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibody was negative. Chest X-ray and computed tomography showed diffuse miliary nodules and infiltrative shadow. Sputum examination was positive for mycobacteria. The cultured isolate was identified as Mycobacterium kansasii. Bone marrow aspirations revealed inflammatory granuloma with necrosis. He was diagnosed as disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection and
heart failure
, and was treated by anti-tuberculosis drugs and diuretics. Treatment was very effective and Chest X-ray findings and respiratory failure had been completely improved. In this case we speculated that the malnutrition due to short-bowel syndrome could be one of the most suspected reasons of Mycobacterium kansasii dissemination. Disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection has been rarely reported comparing with the other mycobacterial infections in Japan. However, due to the increasing numbers of immunocompromised hosts with aging, HIV infection, cancer, and steroid therapy, this type of infection will become more common and its earlier diagnosis and adequate treatment will be important to improve the prognosis.
...
PMID:[A rare case of disseminated Mycobacterium kansasii infection]. 1599 1
Pericardial effusion is a potentially life-threatening problem leading to a rise in the intrapericardial pressure resulting in varying degrees of hemodynamic compromise. Cardiac tamponade occurs when the intrapericardial pressure equals or exceeds right ventricular diastolic filling pressures leading to a decreased cardiac output. In dogs, the most common causes of pericardial effusion that require pericardiocentesis are cardiac neoplasia and idiopathic pericardial effusion (IPE). The incidence of cardiac neoplasia in dogs is low, and it is rare in cats. In dogs, hemangiosarcoma and chemodectoma are the two most common types of cardiac neoplasia. In cats, lymphosarcoma is the most common form of cardiac neoplasia, but they are more likely to develop pericardial effusion secondary to congestive heart failure or feline infectious peritonitis. Common histories include lethargy, dyspnea,
anorexia
, collapse, and abdominal distension. Pericardiocentesis is used to stabilize animals with life-threatening cardiac tamponade, relieve the pressure leading to right-sided
heart failure
, and obtain fluid samples for diagnostic evaluation. The fluid should be quantified and characterized. Serious complications associated with pericardiocentesis are rare. Complications include cardiac puncture, arrhythmias, and laceration of a tumor or coronary artery resulting in intrapericardial hemorrhage or sudden death.
...
PMID:Therapeutic pericardiocentesis in the dog and cat. 1618 Mar 97
A 7.5-year-old castrated male ferret (Mustela putorius furo) was diagnosed with third-degree atrioventricular (AV) block. A monopolar epicardial pacemaker system was implanted, resulting in a regular, paced cardiac rhythm with third-degree AV block at 140 beats per minute. Over the next 2 months, the ferret developed
anorexia
, interstitial pneumonia, intermittent diarrhea, and hind-limb weakness and had a slow and progressive recovery. The ferret developed clinical signs of congestive heart failure 4 months after the surgery, resulting in its death 3 weeks later. Necropsy results attributed the death to
cardiac failure
due to extensive myocardial mineralization. To the authors' knowledge this is the first published report of surgical report of surgical pacemaker implantation in a ferret.
...
PMID:Pacemaker implantation in a ferret (Mustela putorius furo) with third-degree atrioventricular block. 1693 90
Cachexia is a process that accompanies many chronic diseases, and consists of a combination of wasting of lean body mass, increased energy expenditure, and a paradoxical
loss of appetite
. Cachexia both worsens quality of life and negatively affects treatment of the underlying disease. Conditions as diverse as cancer, renal failure, and
heart failure
show a remarkable similarity in their associated cachexia, exhibiting changes in metabolism and endocrinology, including marked increases in levels of cytokines that accompany these diseases. So far, it has been difficult to treat disease-associated cachexia successfully. One treatment that has shown promise in animal trials, however, involves antagonism of the central melanocortin system, an anorexigenic pathway in the hypothalamus and brainstem. Humans who have genetic mutations involving pro-opiomelanocortin or the melanocortin 4 receptor in this pathway exhibit increased appetite and increased lean body mass. Recent research has shown that in rodent models of cancer and renal failure, administration of melanocortin 4 receptor antagonists results in an attenuation of symptoms of cachexia, including maintenance of appetite, lean body mass, and basal energy expenditure. Although this research needs to be substantiated in humans, it provides a promising direction for treating the wasting that is associated with a variety of disease states.
...
PMID:Therapy insight: Use of melanocortin antagonists in the treatment of cachexia in chronic disease. 1693 26
The 350,000 maintenance hemodialysis (MHD) patients in the United States have an unacceptably high mortality rate of >20%/year. Almost half of all deaths are assumed to be cardiovascular. Markers of kidney disease wasting (KDW) such as hypoalbuminemia,
anorexia
, body weight and fat loss, rather than traditional cardiovascular risk factors, appear to be the strongest predictors of early death in these patients. The KDW is closely related to oxidative stress (SOX). Such SOX markers as serum myeloperoxidase are associated with pro-inflammatory cytokines and poor survival in MHD patients. Identifying the conditions that modulate the KDW/SOX-axis may be the key to improving outcomes in MHD patients. Dysfunctional lipoproteins such as a higher ratio of the high-density lipoprotein inflammatory index (HII) may engender or aggravate the KDW, whereas functionally intact or larger lipoprotein pools, as in hypercholesterolemia and obesity, may mitigate the KDW in MHD patients. Hence, a reverse epidemiology or "bad-gone-good" phenomenon may be observed. Diet and gene and their complex interaction may lead to higher proportions of pro-inflammatory or oxidative lipoproteins such as HII, resulting in the aggravation of the SOX and inflammatory processes, endothelial dysfunction, and subsequent atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and death in MHD patients. Understanding the factors that modulate the KDW/SOX complex and their associations with genetic polymorphism, nutrition, and outcomes in MHD patients may lead to developing more effective strategies to improve outcomes in this and the 20 to 30 million Americans with chronic disease states such as individuals with chronic
heart failure
, advanced age, malignancies, AIDS, or cachexia.
...
PMID:The kidney disease wasting: inflammation, oxidative stress, and diet-gene interaction. 1701 6
Cytokine-induced sickness behavior was recognized within a few years of the cloning and expression of interferon-alpha, IL-1 and IL-2, which occurred around the time that the first issue of Brain, Behavior, and Immunity was published in 1987. Phase I clinical trials established that injection of recombinant cytokines into cancer patients led to a variety of psychological disturbances. It was subsequently shown that physiological concentrations of proinflammatory cytokines that occur after infection act in the brain to induce common symptoms of sickness, such as
loss of appetite
, sleepiness, withdrawal from normal social activities, fever, aching joints and fatigue. This syndrome was defined as sickness behavior and is now recognized to be part of a motivational system that reorganizes the organism's priorities to facilitate recovery from the infection. Cytokines convey to the brain that an infection has occurred in the periphery, and this action of cytokines can occur via the traditional endocrine route via the blood or by direct neural transmission via the afferent vagus nerve. The finding that sickness behavior occurs in all mammals and birds indicates that communication between the immune system and brain has been evolutionarily conserved and forms an important physiological adaptive response that favors survival of the organism during infections. The fact that cytokines act in the brain to induce physiological adaptations that promote survival has led to the hypothesis that inappropriate, prolonged activation of the innate immune system may be involved in a number of pathological disturbances in the brain, ranging from Alzheimer's disease to stroke. Conversely, the newly-defined role of cytokines in a wide variety of systemic co-morbid conditions, ranging from chronic
heart failure
to obesity, may begin to explain changes in the mental state of these subjects. Indeed, the newest findings of cytokine actions in the brain offer some of the first clues about the pathophysiology of certain mental health disorders, including depression. The time is ripe to begin to move these fundamental discoveries in mice to man and some of the pharmacological tools are already available to antagonize the detrimental actions of cytokines.
...
PMID:Twenty years of research on cytokine-induced sickness behavior. 1708 43
Cachexia is a complex syndrome. The main components of this pathological state are
anorexia
and metabolic abnormalities, such as glucose intolerance, fat depletion and muscle protein catabolism among others. The aim of the present article is to review the recent therapeutic approaches that have been designed to fight and counteract muscle wasting in different pathological states such as cancer, AIDS and chronic
heart failure
.
...
PMID:Novel approaches to the treatment of cachexia. 1819 Aug 67
Concurrent infection with bovine leukaemia virus (BLV) and Theileria annulata was diagnosed in a Friesian calf about 6 months of age at a dairy farm at the Qassim region of central Saudi Arabia. The disease ended fatally with signs of liver and
heart failure
. There was
anorexia
, pyrexia, anaemia, generalized oedema and jaundice. Haematology showed low RBC counts, PCV percentage and haemoglobin concentration and WBC counts. Lymphocyte differential was high. Examination of blood smears stained with Giemsa's stain showed the presence of piroplasms in red blood cells. Autopsy showed enlarged lymph nodes and lymphosarcoma lesions in the omentum and the heart. There was hydroperitoneum, hydropericardium and hydrothorax. The liver was pale yellow and friable. Impression smears from sliced lymph nodes and stained with Giemsa's stain showed presence of Koch's blue bodies in lymphoblasts. Histopathological examination revealed fatty degeneration of hepatocytes and pleomorphic lymphoblasts and giant cells in lymph nodes. Lymphoblasts infiltrated the omentum and heart tissues. Amyloid was found around blood vessels in the liver, kidneys and lymph nodes. BVL infection was diagnosed by demonstrating antibodies against the virus in serum using agar gel immunodiffusion and was confirmed with ELISA.
...
PMID:Concurrent infection with bovine leukaemia virus and Theileria annulata in a Friesian calf. 1831 46
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