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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Congestive heart failure is the most arrhythmogenic disorder in cardiovascular medicine. As left ventricular performance deteriorates and symptoms of dyspnea and
fatigue
become progressively more severe, nearly all patients with
heart failure
experience frequent and complex ventricular tachyarrhythmias and nearly half die suddenly during long-term follow-up. This imminent risk of sudden death appears to be present for all patients with congestive heart failure; ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring and programmed electrical stimulation are not useful in distinguishing patient subsets that are particularly predisposed to fatal arrhythmic events. Although conventional antiarrhythmic agents are widely prescribed as a nonspecific approach to prevent sudden death in these patients, there is little evidence to indicate that these drugs possess clinically important antiarrhythmic activity in patients with congestive heart failure, and these agents frequently serve to exacerbate the
heart failure
state and the underlying ventricular tachyarrhythmia. A useful approach to the prevention of sudden death in patients with congestive heart failure addresses the reversible causes of lethal ventricular arrhythmias in these individuals. Both experimental and clinical evidence indicates that circulating neurohormones and electrolyte deficits (particularly of potassium and magnesium) interact to provoke malignant ventricular ectopic rhythms and that the prevention of electrolyte depletion and the use of neurohormonal antagonists may exert clinically important antiarrhythmic actions. This physiologic approach may prove to be a more effective means of ameliorating the problem of sudden death than the empiric administration of conventional antiarrhythmic drugs.
...
PMID:Hormone-electrolyte interactions in the pathogenesis of lethal cardiac arrhythmias in patients with congestive heart failure. Basis of a new physiologic approach to control of arrhythmia. 287 53
Ten patients with moderate
heart failure
who still had symptoms despite 40 mg frusemide daily were treated with increased doses of frusemide and the addition of captopril in randomised order. Four different methods were used to assess the patients' response to treatment. Both treatments improved symptom-limited exercise tolerance, higher-dose frusemide having a more favourable effect. Perceived exertion during submaximal exercise was reduced by similar amounts by both treatments. The time taken to walk 100 m at a self-selected slow speed was reduced by both treatments; again higher-dose frusemide had a more beneficial effect. The higher dose of frusemide also had a more favourable effect on visual analogue scores for dyspnoea,
fatigue
, and general well-being.
...
PMID:Symptomatic assessment of patients with heart failure: double-blind comparison of increasing doses of diuretics and captopril in moderate heart failure. 287 33
beta-Blocking drugs are widely used throughout the world and serious adverse reactions are relatively uncommon. Most of those which do occur are pharmacologically predictable and may be avoided by ensuring that patients who are to be given beta-blockers do not have a predisposition to the development of bronchospasm,
cardiac failure
or peripheral ischaemia. In some situations, the use of a beta 1-selective blocking drug may reduce the risk of a severe adverse reaction, but there is little evidence that other ancillary properties such as partial agonist activity are of relevance in this context. Long term experience with many of the beta-blockers in current use suggests that unpredictable major adverse reactions such as the practolol oculomucocutaneous syndrome are unlikely to be repeated, although some of these drugs may be associated with immunological disturbances and some have been implicated in the development of retroperitoneal fibrosis. beta-Blocking drugs appear to be associated with a number of subjective side effects including muscle
fatigue
, peripheral coldness and some neurological symptoms. These side effects are highly subjective and are therefore difficult to quantify and it is not known whether they are of major importance in terms of their effect upon patients' overall well-being. It cannot be assumed that simply because such side effects can be elicited that they do, in fact, matter. However, because beta-blockers are often prescribed for patients who have no symptoms and for whom the benefits of therapy are generally small, such side effects would be of considerable importance if they had an overall effect upon quality of life. There are theoretical reasons to suppose that the incidence and severity of such side effects may be related to the ancillary properties of the individual drugs, but there is little evidence that parameters such as beta 1-selectivity, or partial agonist activity are clinically important determinants of the severity of these side effects. Lipophilicity, however, may be associated with an increased incidence of neurological symptoms. beta-Blocking drugs may cause a variety of metabolic disturbances including an increase in serum VLDL-cholesterol concentrations. However, long term studies have not shown that such disturbances are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, indicating that such metabolic changes may not be of major importance in practice. beta-Blocking drugs may be involved in a number of interactions with other drugs, but few of these have been shown to be of clinical significance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Adverse reactions and interactions with beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs. 287 46
433 patients aged 29-80 with mild to moderate
heart failure
entered a multicentre double-blind randomised between-patient comparison of xamoterol 200 mg twice daily, digoxin 0.125 mg twice daily, and placebo. Patients were assessed at baseline and after three months. Of 349 who completed the double-blind phase, 300 had valid exercise tests. Compared with placebo, xamoterol significantly increased exercise duration and work done on a bicycle ergometer and improved breathlessness and
tiredness
during daily life as assessed by visual analogue scale and by Likert scale. Digoxin showed no statistically significant advantage over placebo on any of the measures except the Likert scale. Exercise performance and work done were significantly higher with xamoterol than with digoxin.
...
PMID:Double-blind placebo-controlled comparison of digoxin and xamoterol in chronic heart failure. The German and Austrian Xamoterol Study Group. 289 16
Adverse effects of beta-adrenergic receptor blocking drugs can be divided into two categories: 1) those that result from known pharmacological consequences of beta-adrenergic receptor blockade; and 2) other reactions that do not appear to result from beta-adrenergic receptor blockade. Adverse effects of the first type include bronchospasm,
heart failure
, prolonged hypoglycemia, bradycardia, heart block, intermittent claudication, and Raynaud's phenomenon. Neurological reactions include depression,
fatigue
, and nightmares. It is not yet proven whether the beta 1-selective adrenergic blockers or those with partial agonist activity reduce the overall frequency of adverse reactions seen with propranolol. Patient age does not appear, in itself, to be associated with more beta-blocker side effects. Side effects of the second category are rare. They include an unusual oculomucocutaneous reaction and the possibility of oncogenesis. There are also many drugs that interact with beta-blockers, which may increase toxicity. Finally, there are specific patient characteristics where one beta-blocker may be more effective and safer than another.
...
PMID:Beta-adrenergic receptor blockers. Adverse effects and drug interactions. 289 72
The major therapeutic goals in the treatment of congestive heart failure are the relief of symptoms and the prolongation of life, but it remains unclear whether there is a relation between changes in exercise tolerance and alterations in the risk of death. Although all vasodilator and inotropic agents produce short-term haemodynamic benefits, these acute effects do not predict the long-term clinical responses to these drugs. Converting-enzyme inhibitors appear to improve symptoms and survival. A combination of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate produces variable effects on exercise tolerance but appears to prolong life. Catecholamines and phosphodiesterase inhibitors may reduce dyspnea and
fatigue
but adversely affect mortality. Calcium channel blocking drugs may exert deleterious effects on both symptoms and prognosis. alpha-Adrenergic blocking drugs produce no beneficial or adverse effects on clinical status or mortality. Hence, there is no consistent relation between the symptomatic and prognostic effects of drug therapy in patients with chronic
heart failure
. This variability makes it impossible to predict the effects of any drug on exercise tolerance or survival based on an evaluation of the agent's short-term haemodynamic effects.
...
PMID:Effect of vasodilator and inotropic drugs on clinical symptoms and long-term survival in chronic congestive heart failure. 290 57
A 15-year-old girl with a four-month history of
cardiac failure
from undetermined cause was admitted to the hospital with weakness,
fatigue
, and weight loss. During her hospitalization she was found to have abused diet aids, laxatives, and cathartics. Although an electrocardiogram revealed nonspecific T-wave abnormalities and laboratory studies showed supranormal enzyme test results for creatine kinase and lactate dehydrogenase, no definite explanation of the cardiomyopathy was forthcoming. Ipecac abuse leading to cardiomyopathy was suspected early in the hospitalization. HPLC analysis of a urine sample showed emetine, a principle component of ipecac, the presence of which was later confirmed by more-specific HPLC analysis with photodiode array detection.
...
PMID:Emetine identified in urine by HPLC, with fluorescence and ultraviolet/diode array detection, in a patient with cardiomyopathy. 292 Apr 26
Eleven patients with intractable rheumatoid arthritis were treated with fractionated total lymphoid irradiation at a total dose of 20 Gy. Lasting improvement in clinical symptoms was found in four patients during treatment and the remaining patients experienced a similar benefit within 2 months of irradiation. There was marked reduction in exacerbations and the number of joints involved. Morning stiffness, joint swelling and tenderness decreased. Complications included severe
fatigue
during treatment and acute bacterial arthritis in multiple joints in one patient. Four of the patients have since died, one of renal failure and another of cardiogenic shock following surgery 3 and 24 months after total lymphoid irradiation. Both had generalised amyloidosis. The third patient developed joint empyema and died of toxic
cardiac failure
. The fourth died 3 months after resection of a Kaposi's sarcoma complicated by wound infection which responded to treatment. Immunologically, total lymphoid irradiation resulted in suppression of the absolute lymphocyte count and a reduction in T-helper cells, while the number of T-suppressor cells remained unchanged. These data provide evidence of T-cell involvement in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis. Total lymphoid irradiation can induce sustained improvement in clinical disease activity, but severe, possibly fatal, side-effects cannot be ignored.
...
PMID:Total lymphoid irradiation of intractable rheumatoid arthritis. 294 4
Dilated cardiomyopathy, owing to any cause, usually culminates in the clinical syndrome of congestive heart failure.
Heart failure
is characterized by exertional dyspnea and
fatigue
, but the precise mechanisms that produce these symptoms are still not clear. Sodium retention occurs early in
heart failure
, but this disturbance is dynamic in nature and is not always present in the patient. The mechanism of early salt and water retention in
heart failure
is not defined. Gross edema and ascites occur much later, undoubtedly owing to the convergence of a number of factors. The peripheral adaptations to
heart failure
include activation of the renin-angiotensin system and the sympathetic nervous system, and the release of AVP. The result is an increase in preload with a resultant increase in stroke volume for some patients, but the price is paid in the form of heightened impedance to ejection and circulatory congestion. The sympathetic nervous system disturbances in
heart failure
are striking, as disturbances in both circulating and myocardial NE levels are consistently found. Vasorelaxant and natriuretic hormones, as well as certain prostaglandins, may be released in an attempt to offset excessive "compensatory" pressor-sodium retentive mechanisms, but the net result seems to be excessive peripheral vasoconstriction and a downward spiral of deterioration in many patients. One would hope that an unraveling of the complex pathophysiology of
heart failure
would lead to therapy that would change the natural history of the disease. The results of the first V-HeFT trial give room for cautious optimism in this regard.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of congestive heart failure secondary to congestive and ischemic cardiomyopathy. 304 87
Severe shortness of breath is a prominent symptom in acute
heart failure
(pulmonary oedema) and is related to left atrial pressure. A reduction of this pressure almost always leads to an improvement in symptoms. Patients with chronic
heart failure
complain of both shortness of breath and
tiredness
even when fluid overload has been corrected by the appropriate use of diuretics. Shortness of breath under these circumstances is not related simply to central haemodynamics but is determined more by the interaction of changes in respiratory pattern and the metabolic consequences of reduced perfusion of exercising skeletal muscle. An important clinical consequence is that when such patients are optimally treated with diuretics, further improvement of symptoms would not be expected from drugs which merely alter central haemodynamics without influencing other factors such as skeletal muscle blood flow on exercise, or lung perfusion.
...
PMID:The origin of symptoms in patients with chronic heart failure. 304 95
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