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

Serum myoglobin levels were studied in 178 consecutive patients admitted for chest pain due to ischemic cardiac injury. Serum myoglobin level was compared with the clinical condition, electrocardiographic changes, and serum creatine kinase levels. Elevated serum myoglobin concentration was present in all patients with acute myocardial infarction, as defined by World Health Organization, Geneva, criteria, and, in addition, in about 50% of patients with so-called acute coronary insufficiency. On this basis we could define two different groups of patients with acute coronary insufficiency: cases exhibiting elevated serum myoglobin levels (group 1) and those with normal levels (group 2). In group 1 although creatine kinase levels were in the normal range, they were significantly higher than in group 2. Four patients from group 1 developed heart failure and another a typical acute myocardial infarction during hospitalization, whereas no patients of group 2 had such complications. In patients with acute myocardial infarction, the elevation of serum myoglobin preceded that of creatine kinase in most cases. Myoglobin release appears to be related to infarct size, the highest levels were found in extensive myocardial infarction and less marked elevations in cases of subendocardial infarction and in half of the cases with acute coronary insufficiency. It is proposed that serum myoglobin is a reliable measure of myocardial necrosis and serves to detect a hitherto undefined population of small-size acute myocardial infarction, with its attendant clinical and prognostic implications.
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PMID:Serum myoglobin levels in patients with ischemic myocardial insult. 340 Oct 97

The clinical course of 13 cystic fibrosis patients with a total of 24 episodes of pneumothorax was analysed. The study is based on 488 (273/215) patients seen over 20 respectively 10 years at the University Children's Hospitals Frankfurt/Main and Essen. A pneumothorax was observed with a frequency of 2.7% mainly in adolescents of young adults with advanced pulmonary disease (mean age 17.4 years). It was not seen before the age of 10 years. Thus among 255 patients at risk above 10 years a pneumothorax occurred in 5.1%. Presenting symptoms were acute chest pain (n = 17), dyspnea (n = 17) and irritating cough (n = 8). In two patients pneumothorax was an incidental diagnosis. A tension pneumothorax was seen in 7 (= 30%; 3 initial, 4 recurrences of which 3 were ipsilateral). Out of 11 recurrences (n = 6, ipsi- and n = 5, contralateral) 4 occurred only once, one twice and in one patient five times. Two patients died as a consequence of the event (one initially due to tension pneumothorax, one due to heart failure). The therapeutic approach was conservative. Without specific treatment pneumothorax resolved in 12 cases. Ten patients were treated by chest tube drainage and only one patient by pleurodesis with a sclerosing agent. Though the therapeutic results were favorable in the patients presented, the authors suggest more aggressive treatment in view of the high ipsilateral recurrence rate. Detailed recommendations are given.
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PMID:[Spontaneous pneumothorax in cystic fibrosis]. 340 26

The clinical features and outcome were determined for 100 consecutive patients aged 65 years or older with a history of diabetes mellitus who presented to hospital with acute myocardial infarction. Each case was compared with an age- and sex-matched nondiabetic control also admitted to hospital with acute myocardial infarction. Chest pain was equally common in both groups and was the main presenting symptom. Cardiac failure was a more frequent accompaniment in the diabetics, despite the lack of evidence for greater infarct size in this group. The outcome was worst for female diabetics, of whom 46% died. Contrary to popular teaching, painless myocardial infarction is not a specific feature of elderly diabetics.
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PMID:Myocardial infarction in old people. The influence of diabetes mellitus. 341 Oct 61

In a consecutive series of 2312 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) admitted from 1973 till 1979, 188 were 80 years or older (group III). They were compared with 1167 patients younger than 65 years (group I) and 957 aged 65 to 79 years (group II). The sex ratio (males/females) fell from 5.46 in group I to 0.9 in group III. Group III patients had more frequently a history of previous heart failure and more often atypical or no chest pain before admission. Less group III patients were admitted within 4 hours after onset of symptoms, but the incidence of heart failure, pulmonary edema and cardiogenic shock on admission and during CCU stay was definitely higher than in younger patients. Atrial arrhythmias, 2nd and 3rd degree atrioventricular block, complete bundle branch block and intraventricular conduction disturbances occurred more frequently in group III. The electrocardiographic extent and location of the infarction and peak enzyme levels were similar in the three groups. Mortality in group III was 43.6% at the 28th day and 76.6% at one year after AMI. At different intervals after the onset of AMI mortality increased progressively from group I to III. Age by itself, probably on the basis of definite structural changes of the heart and of other organs occurring during aging, leads to higher early and late mortality in very elderly people.
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PMID:Acute myocardial infarction in the very elderly. A comparison with younger age groups. 349 69

In studies of patients with cardiac failure following an acute myocardial infarction, 1114 patients were followed for 7-day mortality. In the 45% of patients receiving diuretics on day 1, the death rate was twice that of patients not receiving diuretics. In patients treated 6 to 12 hours following the onset of chest pain, mortality was 2.8 times that of patients treated within 6 hours of the onset of chest pain. Randomization to methylprednisolone sodium succinate (MPSS, Solu-Medrol Sterile Powder, The Upjohn Company) did not improve the low mortality rates of those patients who did not need diuretics nor who were treated early. However, patients who were treated late and who needed diuretics and who were randomized to MPSS had a death rate half that of those who received placebo.
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PMID:Positive synergism between diuretics and methylprednisolone following acute myocardial infarction. 352 10

The prognosis regarding cardiac events--acute myocardial infarction (AMI) or cardiac death after discharge--was evaluated in 257 patients admitted because of suspected AMI due to chest pain, but in whom AMI was not confirmed (non-AMI patients). The findings and patient prognoses were compared with those of 275 patients with confirmed AMI. All patients were younger than 76 years and free of severe chronic diseases, and no cause of chest pain other than possible ischemic heart disease was found. The patients were followed for cardiac events for 11 to 24 months (median 14). The prognoses for the non-AMI patients were significantly better than those for the AMI patients (p = 0.05). The proportion without a cardiac event after 1 year was estimated at 91% and 86%, respectively. In the non-AMI patients, angina pectoris, previous AMI and electrocardiographic changes on admission (intraventricular block and permanent or transient ST-T changes) were significant predictors of cardiac events by univariate and multivariate analysis. In the AMI patients, female gender, heart failure, previous AMI and angina pectoris were significant predictors of cardiac events by univariate analysis. With use of multivariate analysis, female gender, heart failure and angina pectoris were independent predictors of cardiac events. Thus, non-AMI patients admitted with chest pain have a high risk of cardiac events after discharge. The risk is highest when there is evidence of coronary artery disease (electrocardiographic changes on admission and angina pectoris or previous AMI.
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PMID:Risk factors and prognosis after discharge for patients admitted because of suspected acute myocardial infarction with and without confirmed diagnosis. 357 45

The diagnostic features and outcome of acute myocardial infarction in 100 very elderly (aged 85 years or more) hospitalized patients are reviewed and compared with those in a group of younger elderly (aged 65-84 years). The diagnostic triad of chest pain, sequential ECG changes and raised cardiac enzymes was present in only 24 very elderly patients and in 27 the diagnosis was not initially suspected. Presenting symptoms were often atypical and characteristic ECG changes could not be demonstrated in 25 patients. Very elderly patients had a higher mortality during the first few days in hospital, despite no greater incidence of cardiac failure and similar infarct size to the younger patients. Subsequent in-hospital mortality was similar in both groups. A higher index of suspicion of myocardial infarction in acutely ill very elderly patients should lead to earlier diagnosis, more appropriate management and may improve immediate prognosis.
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PMID:Acute myocardial infarction: diagnostic difficulties and outcome in advanced old age. 363 Aug 47

In 67 patients with a clinical history of suspected acute myocardial infarction (MI) who developed T-wave inversions in standard ECG and had normal serum aspartate aminotransferase activity (possible MI) the clinical outcome was compared with that in patients fulfilling criteria for subendocardial infarction. Patients with possible MI had a lower mortality (p = 0.02) and also a lower reinfarction rate (p = 0.14) during the first 2 years as compared with those with subendocardial MI. Although patients with subendocardial MI had more problems with chest pain in the acute phase, angina pectoris occurred more frequently in patients with possible MI during a longer follow-up period. Congestive heart failure occurred more frequently in patients with subendocardial MI during initial hospitalization, whereas treatment for heart failure appeared similar in the two groups during a longer follow-up time. We conclude that the clinical course in patients with possible MI, here defined as chest pain and appearance of T-wave inversions without elevation of serum enzyme activity, seems to differ from that in patients with subendocardial MI, particularly regarding long-term survival and incidence of angina pectoris.
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PMID:Appearance of T-wave inversions without raised serum enzyme activity in suspected acute myocardial infarction: clinical outcome in relation to subendocardial infarction. 370 48

Small vessel disease has been described in various cardiac conditions including diabetes mellitus, amyloidosis, and connective tissue disease. Less well understood is the incidence and morphological features of small vessel disease in patients with myocardial disease of unknown etiology. This study examines the incidence, clinical presentation, and pathological changes of small vessel disease in patients with normal epicardial coronary arteries undergoing endomyocardial biopsy. Biopsy specimens in 110 consecutive patients were analyzed by light and electron microscopy. Small vessel abnormalities were present in 16 patients (14.6 percent) of whom five patients had associated hypertension and 11 patients had idiopathic small vessel disease. There were six males and 10 females with a mean age of 53 (26 to 76) years. Clinical presentations were arrhythmias, heart failure, or chest pain. The left ventricular ejection fraction was reduced (less than 50 percent) in 12 of these 16 patients. The morphological features of small vessel disease included marked thickening of the arterial wall owing to subendothelial deposits of heterogeneous electron dense materials consisting of microfibrils, collagen and elastic fibers, cellular debris, and other amorphous substances. Subendothelial deposits comprised a mean 60 percent (40 to 76 percent) of the arterial wall thickness.
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PMID:Morphological changes in small vessels on endomyocardial biopsy. 371 82

48 patients with chest pain or unexplained heart failure were examined with exercise test, systolic time intervals, apexcardiogram and left- and right-sided heart catheterization including coronary arteriography. The 23 patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD) and 19 patients with congestive cardiomyopathy (COCM) could as groups be separated by several of the parameters. Two major patterns of change were present when using the whole range of parameters, probably reflecting that the heart and circulation had compensated for left ventricular dysfunction in different ways in IHD and COCM. Comparing patients with the same ejection fraction (EF), preejection-period index (PEPI) pre-ejection-period/left ventricular ejection time (PEP/LVET) and systolic blood pressure/left ventricular end systolic volume index (SBP/LVESVI), were all more abnormal in patients with COCM than with IHD at most EF levels. The best separation between the diseases was obtained using exercise capacity in combination with PEP/LVET. The correlations between invasive and noninvasive parameters underlined that no single parameter can satisfactorily characterize the circulatory function in patients with individual differences in preload, afterload, pulse rate, cardiac volumes, compliance and contractility. No or poor correlations were found between exercise capacity and the different function parameters used.
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PMID:Different patterns of hemodynamic abnormalities in patients with ischemic heart disease compared with patients with congestive cardiomyopathy. 371 97


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