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

We have described a spectrum of pancreatic surgery after cardiopulmonary bypass. At one end is a subclinical lesion which was manifested only by elevations in serum isoamylase levels (27 percent of patients) and increased ribonuclease levels (13 percent of patients) in asymptomatic patients followed after cardiac surgery. At the other end is a severe and often lethal necrotizing pancreatitis. Acute necrotizing pancreatitis was found at autopsy in 25 percent of 138 patients who died after cardiac surgery, and it correlated strongly with low output, acute tubular necrosis, and infarction of the liver, spleen, or bowel. It was the principal cause of death in 4 percent of these patients. In addition, 24 percent of 38 nonsurgical patients who died from cardiac failure and hypoperfusion had acute pancreatitis at autopsy, whereas acute pancreatitis was not observed in 55 nonsurgical patients who died without a significant period of low output. Acute pancreatitis was recognized postoperatively in 12 patients (0.2 percent). Three had mild pancreatitis, and all responded well to conservative therapy. In nine patients, fulminant necrotizing pancreatitis developed. Their courses were characterized by significant early postoperative hemodynamic compromise, abdominal distention, ileus, fever, and episodes of late vascular instability associated with hypocalcemia. The diagnosis of pancreatitis was usually missed because of the absence of pain, tenderness and hyperamylasemia. The diagnosis was confirmed at laparotomy in eight patients and at autopsy in one. The only two survivors among the nine with severe cases had aggressive mobilization, debridement, and wide drainage of the necrotic pancreas. We suggest that a mild subclinical injury to the pancreas may occur as a consequence of cardiopulmonary bypass and may progress to severe ischemic necrosis if hypoperfusion follows in the postoperative period, the presentation of necrotizing pancreatitis may be atypical in the cardiac surgical patient and should be considered if nonspecific abdominal symptoms are present, and aggressive debridement and drainage may be the optimal treatment for aggressive forms of this disease.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis after cardiopulmonary bypass. 258 Apr 53

The aim of the present study is to evaluate the real need and the sensitivity of serum myoglobin levels as an early index for the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction. A total of 62 patients (38 suffering from acute myocardial infarction, 16 from "angina pectoris", 8 from heart failure) and 20 healthy volunteers were included in the study. The patients with acute myocardial infarction were divided in 3 subgroups according to the time passed between the beginning of the pain and their admittance to our Department (Coronary Care Unit), that was, less than 6 hours, between 6 and 12 hours, between 12 and 24 hours. Among the patients with "angina", 8 presented spontaneous crisis whereas 4 had crisis only during treadmill test. 8 of the healthy volunteers received intramuscular injections of physiological solution every 12 hours during the 3 days preceding the study. In all subjects serum myoglobin level were measured by radioimmunoassay; in patients with acute myocardial infarction serum CK and MBCK levels with enzymatic method were measured too. No variation of plasma myoglobin levels was seen in patients with angina, neither in healthy volunteers had they received or not intramuscular injections. The low increase in plasma myoglobin levels observed in patients with heart failure might be due to a deficit of renal function. Serum myoglobin levels were significantly elevated in all the patients with acute myocardial infarction, whereas plasma CK and MBCK levels were significantly high only 6 hours after the necrosis. In myocardial infarction the levels of myoglobin rise during the first hours, peak at 10 hours and return to normal in 20 hours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Changes in plasma myoglobin levels in ischemic heart disease]. 261 6

Of 33 cases of scorpion sting admitted to hospital in Mahad, Maharashtra State, India, 10 had a mean blood pressure between 100 and 137 mm/Hg and 11 had a heart rate between 130 and 215 per min. Seven patients developed acute pulmonary oedema; there were 2 deaths. Three patients had local pain at the site of sting. The role of vasodilators such as prazosin hydrochloride, sodium nitroprusside and nifedipine were investigated in addition to digoxin, diuretics and aminophylline to alleviate refractory myocardial failure due to scorpion sting.
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PMID:Stings by red scorpions (Buthotus tamulus) in Maharashtra State, India: a clinical study. 261 59

From October 1986 to November 1988, 4 cases of rectal ulcers from which M. fortuitum was isolated were observed. The patients, all women, were respectively 24, 83, 85 and 86 years old. The complaints were: anorectal pain, rectal bleeding and stools mixed with glairy material. The ulcers were situated in the anterior, posterior or lateral wall of the rectum; one of these perforated in the perirectal space with development of a local abscess. The presence of M. fortuitum in the lesions was established by detection of mycobacteria in the smear (2 cases) or in the histological section (1 case), and by positive cultures (all cases). All strains were susceptible to aminoglycosides, quinolones (except 2), macrolides and to imipenem. They were resistant to current antituberculous drugs, to tetracycline and to beta-lactamines. Two patients healed, one spontaneously and the other one with antibiotics (amikacin and norfloxacin for 3 months); two patients died, one because of cardiac failure and intercurrent infection and the other one after rectal bleeding. The histopathological pattern of the lesions was pleomorphic: chronic aspecific inflammatory reaction, granulomatous tissue with Langhans cells (1 cas), necrotic abscesses without caseation, intratissular acid-fast bacilli (1 case). The isolation of M. fortuitum in the rectal ulcers has been discussed.
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PMID:[Rectal ulcer infected by Mycobacterium fortuitum. Apropos of 4 cases]. 266 75

The fundamental principles of pheochromocytoma management are reviewed. These are a high index of clinical suspicion; biochemical confirmation of the diagnosis; preoperative localization and pharmacologic treatment with alpha-adrenergic blockers (and occasionally with beta-adrenergic blockers and/or alpha-methylparatyrosine); meticulous anesthesia and intraoperative cardiovascular monitoring; and attention to the surgical principles of wide exposure, careful dissection and complete exploration, early interruption of tumor vasculature, and delivery of the tumor with the capsule intact. For malignant lesions, the roles of pharmacologic management (alpha- and beta-adrenergic blockade, alpha-methylparatyrosine, and drugs for heart failure, diabetes, and pain), teleradiotherapy, radiopharmaceutical treatment with I-131 MIBG and chemotherapy (with cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and dacarbazine) are discussed.
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PMID:Management of pheochromocytoma. 266 82

The pathogenesis, clinical features, indications for therapy, and current pharamacologic management of Paget's disease are reviewed. Paget's disease is a bone disorder of unknown etiology primarily affecting the elderly. Overactive bone resorption leads to the accelerated formation of disorganized, weak bone. Pain and fractures are common clinical features. Neurologic, cardiovascular, metabolic, and neoplastic complications are also reported. Because most patients are asymptomatic, the disease is often detected during routine roentgenography or laboratory tests. Primary indications for pharmacologic intervention include bone pain, neural compression, immobilization hypercalcemia or hypercalciuria, cardiac failure, and orthopedic surgery. Recurrent or non-healing fractures and rapidly progressing complications are additional indications. Drugs used in the management of Paget's disease include calcitonin, etidronate disodium, and plicamycin. Although these agents are efficacious, each has disadvantages. Clinical resistance to animal calcitonins may develop, and the cost of therapy may be prohibitive. Etidronate may induce ostemalacia. The use of plicamycin is limited by potentially severe toxicities. Dichloromethylene and aminohydroxypropylidene are promising diphosphonate compounds but are still investigational In those patients who are unresponsive to single-agent regimens, combination therapy may prove effective. Although many patients with Paget's disease do not require pharmacologic therapy, calcitonin and etidronate are the agents of choice when it is indicated.
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PMID:Pharmacologic management of Paget's disease. 266 12

Pancreatitis may be associated with thoracic complications, notably chronic massive pleural effusion (CMPE) and, rarely, pseudocysts with mediastinal extension (PME) and enzymatic mediastinitis (EM). Our personal experience with 14 cases of thoracic complications (nine CMPE, two PME associated with pleural effusion, and three EM of 670 patients who underwent surgery; of these, 191 had acute and 479 had chronic pancreatitis) during 16 years (1970-1986) is reported. In the patients with CMPE, the initial symptoms were progressive dyspnea eventually associated with cough and chest pain. In the PME cases, there was dysphagia associated with left subscapular pain and left chest pain. The initial signs in the patients with EM were sudden dyspnea, cyanosis, retrosternal pain, tachycardia, and acute heart failure. A fistula between the pancreatic ductal system and the pleural cavity in seven of the nine patients with CMPE was demonstrated by intraoperative pancreatography and/or cystography. On the contrary, preoperative endoscopic pancreatography demonstrated the sinus tract in only three of the seven. In both cases of PME, computed tomography (CT) provided a correct diagnosis that was confirmed at surgery. In the patients with EM, the diagnosis was suggested by the clinical appearance and was confirmed by the chest roentgenogram and by CT. All patients had operations after varying periods of unsuccessful 2-4-week-long conservative treatment. One patient with infected ascites died postoperatively. There were no thoracic recurrences of pancreatic disease among the other patients at a 10-month-10-year follow-up observation after surgery.
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PMID:Thoracic complications of pancreatitis. 275 44

The regulation of the peripheral-limb circulation was investigated in 21 patients suffering from chronic cardiac failure (NYHA stage II and III). In 11 patients the extremital circulation was intact, while 10 patients suffered from peripheral obliterative arterial disease, too (intermittent claudication or rest pain). The control group consisted of 75 subjects with normal cardiac condition. In 35 of the control subjects the peripheral circulation was intact, the remaining 40 suffered from extremital venous isotope dilution technique. In congestive heart failure the limb blood flow and the limb oxygen consumption slightly diminished, but remained in the normal range. The limb vascular resistance significantly increased. In patients suffering from intermittent claudication or rest pain, the marked diminution of the limb blood flow and elevation of the vascular resistance was more pronounced in congestive heart failure than in healthy subjects. The pathologically elevated limb vascular resistance decreased and the limb blood flow significantly increased in congestive heart failure on administration of vasodilator drugs. A pathological and mostly reversible increase in extremital vascular resistance is the most characteristic sign of the peripheral circulation in congestive heart failure.
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PMID:The characteristics of the peripheral-limb-circulation in congestive heart failure. 277 85

The long-term physical and psychologic well-being of patients who have sustained a myocardial infarction is dependent on skilled care during the first hours. Although the immediate preservation of life is the first priority, the relief of symptoms and anxiety and the protection of the myocardium are of short- and long-term importance not only to the quantity but also to the quality of life. Pain relief, particularly in the prehospital phase, is often inadequate. Fear, triggered by pain, may be aggravated by the environment; aggressive (and often unnecessary) measures and the inhuman use of technology may interfere with personal care. Intensive observation is essential for the control of dangerous arrhythmias; the early use of fibrinolytic agents and beta blockers limits the extent of myocardial damage and reduces mortality. The effectiveness of therapy for cardiac failure and shock is questionable. The value of invasive monitoring and of inotropic drugs is uncertain, although the relief of symptoms by diuretic agents and vasodilator drugs is not in doubt. Success in the management of myocardial infarction depends on a highly individualized approach.
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PMID:Quality of life after myocardial infarction. 288 37

A consecutive series of 559 hospital survivors of acute myocardial infarction aged less than 66 years were studied; 93 were designated prospectively as low-risk because they were suitable for early submaximal exercise testing and had none of the following clinical or exercise test 'risk factors': (1) angina for at least one month prior to infarction; (2) symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias, or (3) recurrent ischaemic pain, both after the first 24 h of infarction; (4) cardiac failure; (5) cardiomegaly; and (6) an abnormal exercise test (angina, ST-depression or poor blood pressure response). Altogether 301 patients were exercised; their mortality over a median follow-up of 2.4 years was 10.2%, versus 24.6% in the 258 patients not exercised (P = 0.0005). Absence of clinical 'risk factors' alone, in the exercised patients, identified 156 with a mortality of 5.4% versus 15.6% in the 145 with at least one clinical 'risk factor' (P = 0.004). The fully defined low-risk group comprised 93 of the former patients who had neither clinical nor exercise test 'risk factors'. None of these patients died compared with 19 of those with at least one 'risk factor' (mortality = 14.7%; P = 0.002). Their respective rates of non-fatal reinfarction were similar and never exceeded 5% per annum. Therefore, simple clinical and exercise test criteria can positively identify low-risk patients after infarction in whom secondary prevention may be inappropriate.
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PMID:Identification of patients at low risk of dying after acute myocardial infarction, by simple clinical and submaximal exercise test criteria. 290 8


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