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)

Neonatal asphyxia is a major topic of neonatal research. However, no clear-cut physiologic parameters exist which enable an early identification of neonatal infants who are either at risk to develop brain damage or posthypoxic heart failure. Parameters indicating dysfunction of the heart and kidneys as creatinine and creatinine kinase have been evaluated. In our study, 47 asphyxiated infants (umbilical artery pH < 7.18 and either a 1-min Apgar score < 4 or a 5-min Apgar score < 7) were compared to 27 nonasphyxiated controls regarding significant differences in creatinine, creatinine kinase, its MB fraction, and a newly introduced myocardial hypoxia indicator -- troponin T -- to establish the value of these parameters in the retrospective diagnosis of asphyxia. Further we evaluated two subsets of these 47 asphyxiated infants with either subsequent signs of encephalopathy (seizures) or heart failure. Creatinine, creatinine kinase and troponin T were significantly elevated in asphyxiated infants compared with controls; no differences were found in creatinine kinase and its MB fraction. In asphyxiated infants with heart failure, troponin T was significantly higher than in the other asphyxiated infants. However, none of the parameters studied was significantly different in patients with brain damage compared with asphyxiated infants without neurological sequelae. Troponin T has a high positive predictive value in the postnatal diagnosis of asphyxia. The diagnostic power of troponin T equals that of creatinine. However, troponin T is more sensitive in the identification of infants with asphyxia and cardiocirculatory failure than creatinine. Creatinine kinase and its MB fraction have no diagnostic value.
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PMID:Value of myocardial hypoxia markers (creatine kinase and its MB-fraction, troponin-T, QT-intervals) and serum creatinine for the retrospective diagnosis of perinatal asphyxia. 961 54

A severely hypocalcaemic, hypomagnesaemic lactating bitch exhibited clinical signs of pulmonary oedema, paresis, dementia, gastrointestinal ileus and urinary bladder atony. The total calcium, ionised calcium and magnesium levels were extremely low. The clinical picture was very different from the one typically encountered in canine lactation tetany, and instead resembled bovine postparturient paresis. Muscle tremors, rigidity and seizures were not part of the acute clinical picture, but rather atony, weakness and paresis. General muscle dysfunction probably resulted from the extremely low ionised calcium levels in combination with very low levels of magnesium and possibly potassium. Heart failure and atony of the urinary bladder and intestines were probably a result of the severe hypocalcaemia. The alteration in calcium to magnesium ratio may have depressed neuromuscular transmission, leading to paresis and atony. The unusual electrocardiogram possibly also resulted from abnormal magnesium and calcium cation levels.
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PMID:Paresis and unusual electrocardiographic signs in a severely hypomagnesaemic, hypocalcaemic lactating bitch. 967 8

Fish venoms can be lethal for Vertebrates. The effect depends of dose and subject, more than incriminated fish. The most constant symptom is a violent pain; but the serious pharmacological effects are respiratory and heart failure with marked hypotension and cardiac perturbations, neurologic damage, such as seizure and coma. Experimentation is difficult due to venom instability. Activity is lost by distilled water, lyophilisation in buffers, several successive freezing and defreezing. In addition, when venom is broken, other pharmacological effects are evidenced, for instance, with Synanceia verrucosa venom, hypertensive phase takes the place of hypotension. It is difficult to distinguish toxin effect from this of denaturation products of the toxin. Noradrenaline is present in Synanceia venom, and it seems that acetylcholine exists in some venom, at least when diluted in saline solution. Other biological active products are present. Purified toxins allow pharmacological investigations. Stonefish venom is better studied, because venomous glands contain relatively high venom quantity. Stonustoxin from Synanceia horrida exerts its action through NO-synthase liberation, and its primary action can be attributed to its potent vasorelaxant activity, causing a rapid, marked and irreversible hypotension. Trachynilysin, from Synanceia trachynis, causes massive release and depletion of acetylcholine and damage to nerve and muscle fibres, which can account for the inhibition of neuromuscular function, and skeletal paralysis. But the used doses are not compatible with respiratory arrest. Verrucotoxin from Synanceia verrucosa activates potassium channels dependent from ATP; this can explain damage, and probably neurologic and respiratory distress.
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PMID:[Pharmacological properties of fish venoms]. 975 86

Primary cardiac tumors are very infrequent at all ages; the most frequent in the pediatric age is rhabdomyoma. This tumor is associated with tuberous sclerosis in 37 to 80%, with a frequency of 1 for each 40,000 live newborns. This case is about a newborn, who in the immediate postnatal period presented pansystolic murmur, grade IV cardiomegaly, electrocardiographic changes of biventricular hypertrophy and heart failure. Echocardiogram and magnetic resonance images showed several tumors in the septum and in ventricular walls; histopathology study of the heart, confirmed the diagnosis. The diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis was made clinically (seizures, hypomelanotic macules) and with the image of parenchymal hypodense areas. In our country there is little information about both diseases, that's why we made a review of the incidence, diagnosis, prognosis and treatment.
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PMID:[Neonatal cardiac rhabdomyoma: case report and clinico-epidemiologic considerations]. 1036 39

The most venomous scorpion species are Buthotus tamulus of India, the Leiurus quinquestriatus and Androctonus crassicauda of North Africa and the Middle East, the Tityus serrulatus of Brazil, and the Centruroides suffussus of Mexico. The severity of scorpion envenomation varies with the scorpion's species, age, and size, and is much greater in children. Systemic intoxication reflects the overstimulation of the CNS, the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system. Severity ranges from local pain and paresthesia to fatal cardiotoxicity and encephalopathy. Symptoms include: agitation, tachycardia, vomiting, abdominal pain, salivation, diaphoresis, dehydration, muscle rigidity and twitching, tremor, seizures, coma, pupillary changes, hyperthermia, tachyarrythmias and occasionally bradyarrhythmias, hypertension, and less often hypotension, cardiac failure, and priapism in males. Laboratory abnormalities include: hyperglycemia, leucocytosis, transient elevation of cardiac and pancreatic enzymes, ischemic changes in the ECG, and evidence of cardiac dysfunction on echocardiography. The principles of management are: observation, cardiac monitoring, supportive treatment with intravenous fluids and electrolytes, and a meticulous use of cardiovascular agents: vasodilators, adrenergic antagonists, or calcium channel blockers in the hypertensive phase; and inotropic agents in the event of hypotension. Antiarrhythmics such as lidocaine, may be required. There is increasing evidence for the efficacy of specific antivenom. The advance in supportive care and antivenom efficacy has markedly improved the outcome of patients with scorpion envenomation.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations and management of scorpion envenomation. 1044 63

A 75-year-old man with a recent history of pulmonary embolism, presented with collapse followed by a gran mal seizure and right-sided non-pulsatile proptosis. On recovery, he had diplopia on lateral and upward gaze and signs of congestive cardiac failure. Further pulmonary embolism was proven by lung scintigraphy. Computed tomography of his orbits confirmed a contrast-enhancing space-occupying lesion of the medial wall of the right orbit, with no intracranial abnormality. The patient was investigated for metastatic tumour as a possible cause of the space-occupying lesion and the unprovoked thromboembolic event, but no evidence of malignancy was found. The orbital lesion was not biopsied because of the risk of bleeding from anticoagulation. Three weeks later, the patient represented with recurrent cardiac failure, proptosis, and diplopia. A transorbital ultrasound confirmed an encapsulated, well-defined vascular lesion, with typical appearances and Doppler flow characteristics of a cavernous haemangioma. Diuretic therapy abolished the proptosis and diplopia in tandem with relief of the cardiac failure. This is the first description of recurrent proptosis with diplopia due to recurrent congestive expansion of an orbital cavernous haemangioma.
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PMID:Recurrent proptotic diplopia due to congestive expansion of cavernous haemangioma with relapsing right-sided cardiac failure. 1062 2

In summary, SUDEP accounts for death in approximately 8% of the young epileptic population. It is commoner in young male epileptics with a long history of generalised seizures, who have a history of head trauma and alcohol excess, and who are taking more than one antiepileptic drug. Most deaths are unwitnessed and occur at home, usually in bed and presumably overnight. Subtherapeutic AED levels do not necessarily imply non compliance, and may simply reflect drug degradation in the plasma after death. Many victims have pulmonary oedema on postmortem examination, and some show ischaemic damage of the heart despite normal coronary arteries. This possibly arises as a result of repeated episodes of vasoconstriction from seizure related catecholamine bursts. Animal studies have demonstrated the occurrence of central apnoea and also support the theory of acute fatal cardiac failure. Possible association with the daily level of geomagnetic activity is reported. The precise reason for a particular seizure being fatal in an otherwise healthy individual is as yet undetermined.
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PMID:Sudden unexpected deaths in epileptics--a literature review. 1062 8

We describe a patient with carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase deficiency (MIM 212138), who presented with neonatal generalized seizures, heart failure, and coma. Laboratory evaluation revealed hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, lactic acidemia, hyperuricemia, and mild dicarboxylic aciduria. The fact that total plasma carnitine (7.1 micromol/l [20-30]) and free carnitine (1.9 micromol/l [12-18]) were low together with a high acylcarnitine/free carnitine ratio of 2.7 [0.4-1.0] prompted acylcarnitine analysis. This revealed the presence of large amounts of long-chain derivatives including C(16:0), C(16:1), C(18:1), C(18:2). Based on these findings carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase deficiency was suspected which was confirmed by enzyme studies in fibroblasts. The underlying complex metabolic consequences of this defect are reviewed. Prenatal diagnosis was performed in a subsequent pregnancy and a defect ruled out by measurement of carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase activity in cultured chorionic villi cells. As the clinical recognition of a life-threatening fatty acid oxidation disorder may be difficult, defects in this pathway should be considered in any child with coma, an episode of a Reye-like syndrome, and cardiomyopathy. Since routine laboratory tests often do not provide clues about potential disorders and profiles of urinary organic acids may not be characteristic, we recommend to measure free carnitine and acylcarnitines in plasma in any child with hyperammonemia, hypo/hyperketotic hypoglycemia or lactic acidemia for prompt treatment, proper genetic counseling, and potential prenatal diagnosis.
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PMID:Carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase deficiency: metabolic consequences of an impaired mitochondrial carnitine cycle. 1087 4

This study is to determine the incidence of visceral organ involvement in tuberous sclerosis (TS). We reviewed 30 cases of TS diagnosed between 1987 to 1997. There were 17 males and 13 females, ages ranged from one day old to 17 years old. Among the 30 cases, 25 patients had seizures and skin manifestations; 24 had cerebral tubercles; 10 had heart involvement (9 rhabdomyoma, 1 dilated cardiomyopathy); 4 had kidney involvement (3 polycystic kidney disease, 1 renal hamartoma); and 3 had retinal astrocytic hamartoma. Based on our study, the most common visceral organs involved were the heart and kidney. Among the ten patients with cardiac rhabdomyoma, six were less than 1 year old (mean age 1.6 +/- 2.2 years old). One newborn presented with a cardiac mass diagnosed by prenatal sonography and another newborn, noted to have tachycardia after birth, underwent surgical intervention due to impending heart failure. Four patients had kidney abnormalities; three were less than 5 years old (mean age 5.2 +/- 5.2 years). During this 10 year period, there was no mortality seen among patients with visceral organ involvement. We suggest that clinicians treating patients with TS should not overlook the visceral organs, especially heart and kidney, which, if involved can have significant morbidity.
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PMID:Tuberous sclerosis with visceral organ involvement. 1091 May 38

A case of antenatal tuberous sclerosis was diagnosed by ultrasonography. Intracardiac tumour (highly suspected rhabdomyoma) with transitory heart failure and multiple brain lesions were observed. After delivery, echocardiography, spiral CT and MR imaging diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis was confirmed by typical skin lesions (depigmented macules) and development of seizures.
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PMID:Intracardiac tumour and brain lesions in tuberous sclerosis. A case report of antenatal diagnosis by ultrasonography. 1093 61


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