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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case-control study was performed to investigate the significance of arteriosclerosis, heredity and some infections in the etiology of Parkinson's disease. The study group consisted of all traceable patients with Parkinson's disease living in a defined area, a total of 444 patients, and of control subjects for each patient, matched in sex and age, chosen from among the general population residing in the same area. No significant differences were found between the patients and the controls concerning the occurrence of
cardiac insufficiency
, coronary heart disease, or stroke. The Parkinsonian patients, however, had a significantly lower incidence of clinical arterial hypertension when compared with the controls. In addition, the patients more often had low systolic blood pressures and more rarely high pressures than the controls. Even the mean systolic blood pressure was significantly lower in the patients than in the controls. The low blood pressure seems to be an effect of Parkinson's disease itself with a minor contribution of levodopa therapy. The observations above are considered to indicate that arteriosclerosis and Parkinson's disease are probably only concurrent disorders and not in etiological relationship with each other. There was no statistically significant difference in the proportion of the patients and the controls with relatives with Parkinson's disease or essential
tremor
, which suggests that genetic factors do not have a significant role in Parkinson's disease and on the other hand that essential
tremor
and Parkinson's disease are two separate disease entities. No other encephalitis than a lethargic one was found to precede Parkinson's disease and the occurrence of meningitis was rare both among the patients and the controls. The history of Spanish influenza was found to be as frequent in the patients as in the controls, thus not supporting the idea that influenza has etiological importance in Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Arteriosclerosis, heredity, and some previous infections in the etiology of Parkinson's disease. A case-control study. 100 13
The association between diseases and symptoms and general hospital care was studied in a geographically defined population of 1040 persons aged 65 years or over (90% of the eligible non-institutionalized elderly). In eight years, 25% of the subjects used over 60 hospital bed-days. In age-controlled analyses high use of hospital care was predicted by chronic urinary infections and in women also by chronic bronchitis, diabetes mellitus and
heart failure
. Among men, the risk of high use of hospital care was greatest in those reporting chronic urinary infection (risk ratio 1.9), and among women in those reporting chronic bronchitis (2.1) and diabetes (2.0). As far as symptoms were concerned, the highest risks of hospital care were found in men reporting
tremor
(risk ratio 1.6) and depressive symptoms (1.5); and in women reporting memory disturbances and dizziness (risk ratios 1.9 and 1.7, respectively). High use of care was predicted by six symptoms in men and seven in women. Reported symptoms proved to be better predictors of high use of hospital care than reported diagnoses.
...
PMID:Diseases and symptoms as predictors of hospital care in an aged population. A prospective register-based study. 149 34
Trimipramine and clozapine show some similarities in their receptor binding profiles. Since both have the same affinity for the D2 receptor and since the affinity for this receptor correlates closely with the antipsychotic potency of a drug, an antipsychotic efficacy of trimipramine in acute schizophrenia could be expected. Therefore 28 schizophrenic patients in an acute phase were treated with trimipramine up to 400 mg/d in an open clinical trial. For the whole group of patients the BPRS total score changed from 58 +/- 5 before treatment to 46 +/- 18 at the last rating (p less than 0.05). According to our clinical judgement the patients were divided into three subgroups. Thirteen patients showed a good remission under trimipramine so that they could be discharged on a trimipramine maintenance treatment. They improved on the BPRS from 58 +/- 6 before treatment to 32 +/- 8 at endpoint. Six patients deteriorated during the first week of treatment and had to be withdrawn from the study. Nine patients showed insufficient improvement or became worse after an initial improvement. The observed side-effects (dry mouth, sedation, sweating, increased appetite, constipation,
tremor
, vertigo) are well known under trimipramine and were therefore expected. Beyond these, one patient developed a
cardiac insufficiency
. No clinical relevant extrapyramidal side-effects occurred. Since the improvement of florid psychotic symptoms seems to be markedly higher under trimipramine than the one reported under placebo, our results indicate that trimipramine may have an antipsychotic potency.
...
PMID:Trimipramine--an atypical neuroleptic? 180 21
Salbutamol (albuterol) is a beta 2-selective adrenoceptor agonist which accounts for its pronounced bronchodilatory, cardiac, uterine and metabolic effects. During the intervening years since salbutamol was first reviewed in the Journal (1971), it has become extensively used in the treatment of reversible obstructive airways disease. Numerous studies in this disease (including severe acute, childhood and exercise-induced asthma) have confirmed the bronchodilatory efficacy of salbutamol, and it has been shown to be at least as effective as most of the currently available bronchodilators, if not more effective. The onset of maximum effect of salbutamol is dependent on the formulation used and the route by which it is administered. In most patients inhaled salbutamol is a first-line therapy, since it offers rapid bronchodilation, usually relieving bronchospasm within minutes. Although oral salbutamol has often proved to be less efficacious than the inhaled formulation, it still affords clinically significant bronchodilation, and it is particularly useful in those patients unable to coordinate the use of inhalers. Parenteral formulations of salbutamol are generally reserved for the treatment of severe attacks of bronchospasm and they are one of the treatments of choice in these life-threatening situations. Studies of the concomitant use of salbutamol and other agents such as anticholinergics, methylxanthines and beclomethasone dipropionate have usually shown a complementary response in the majority of patients, as might be expected from the different mechanisms of action of these groups of drugs. Salbutamol is generally well tolerated and any side effects observed are a predictable extension of its pharmacology. Since the frequency of side effects is dose related, and therefore dependent on the route of administration, it is not surprising that they are much more common following intravenous and oral rather than inhalation therapy.
Tremor
, tachycardia and hypokalaemia are the most frequently reported adverse effects. After nearly 20 years of use, salbutamol is well established as a 'first-choice' treatment in reversible obstructive airways disease. Indeed, throughout this time many new bronchodilatory agents have been studied but none have proved more effective. Clinical evaluation of salbutamol in the treatment of premature labour, hyperkalaemia and
cardiac failure
awaits further studies, although to date some encouraging results have been reported.
...
PMID:Salbutamol in the 1980s. A reappraisal of its clinical efficacy. 267 May 12
The pharmacologic treatment of dilated cardiomyopathy encompasses measures such as temporary administration of amino acids and calories for those who may be undernourished and avoidance of drugs such as alcohol, nicotine, amphetamines and high doses of tricyclic antidepressants. Anticoagulants should be used in patients with persistent failure or marked dilatation of the cardiac chambers since about 20% suffer from major embolic complications. In patients with ventricular tachycardia, R-on-T, or multifocal ventricular ectopic beats, class I antiarrhythmic drugs, or if unsuccessful, amiodarone should be administered since the risk of sudden death is substantial. In addition to digitalis and diuretics, the use of vasodilators is generally accepted to be of clinical value for reduction of symptoms in
heart failure
. Reports concerned with long-term clinical and hemodynamic effects with drugs such as prazosin, captopril and the combination of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate are conflicting and, so far, there is no evidence that any vasodilator prolongs survival. The beta-agonists, such as prenalterol, are limited in their usefulness by tachycardia induction, a tendency to provoke serious arrhythmias,
tremor
and anxiety as well as hemodynamic tolerance development. While the noncatecholamine inotropics such as milrinone may provide symptomatic relief in severe congestive heart failure, they also increase heart rate, induce ventricular arrhythmias and are associated with high one-year mortality rates. The beneficial effect of long-term beta-blockade, which we first reported in 1975 to include a decrease in functional class, increase in exercise tolerance, improvement in physical findings, increase in ejection fraction and enhanced survival, has been met with scepticism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pharmacologic treatment of dilated cardiomyopathy with special reference to the role of beta-blockers. 286 98
To establish the criteria for the selection of a beta-adrenergic blocking agent (beta-blockers) suitable for the long-term treatment of
tremor
, 20 patients with essential
tremor
were treated with five different types of beta-blockers. All beta-blockers were effective for essential
tremor
, but their efficacy differed. The weaker the intrinsic sympathomimetic activity (ISA) and the more marked the membrane stabilizing activity (MSA), the more marked was the anti-
tremor
effect. Propranolol, which showed the strongest anti-
tremor
effect, had no ISA, but its long-term administration induced symptoms of
heart failure
, such as pretibial oedema, in most cases. In most of these cases, when propranolol was replaced by indenolol, which showed a very slight ISA, the pretibial oedema subsided and well-controlled
tremor
was maintained over a long period. With regard to efficacy and usefulness, it was thought that the beta-blockers with a very slight ISA and a marked MSA, such as indenolol, was most suitable for the long-term treatment of essential
tremor
.
...
PMID:Comparative studies on the effects of beta-adrenergic blockers in essential tremor. 289 95
On Nov 1, 1984, an orthotopic cardiac transplantation was performed in an 8-month-old female infant with subendocardial fibroelastosis. Because of the advanced state of
cardiac failure
, the operation was done despite a positive tissue crossmatch for antitoxic donor-specific antibodies. Immunosuppression consisted of high doses of cyclosporine (up to 550 mg/m2 or 30 mg/kg) and steroids. Hypertension and
tremor
of the extremities, which were attributed to cyclosporine, occurred during the first week but resolved after seven days. No signs of nephrotoxic effects have been noted; however, a severe episode of allograft rejection was detected by endomyocardial biopsy on the seventh postoperative day, and a moderate rejection episode was noted on the 22nd postoperative day. Histologic improvement was seen after treatment with conventional steroid pulses. The patient was discharged on Nov 29, 1984. Complications consisted of four episodes of otitis media caused by Staphylococcus aureus and one rejection episode that was treated on an outpatient basis with an intravenous methylprednisolone sodium succinate pulse. Our experience emphasizes both the feasibility and importance of performing endomyocardial biopsies in infant recipients. Through biopsy, episodes of rejection can be discovered when clinical signs are not yet apparent. Eighteen months after transplantation, the child was developing and growing normally.
...
PMID:Cardiac transplantation in an 8-month-old female infant with subendocardial fibroelastosis. 352 37
Dopexamine, a new compound with postjunctional dopamine receptor activating and beta adrenoceptor agonist properties, was given to 10 patients with chronic
heart failure
at diagnostic cardiac catheterisation to investigate its acute haemodynamic and metabolic effects. The drug was administered by intravenous infusion in three incremental doses and produced significant dose related increases in cardiac index, stroke volume index, and heart rate and falls in systemic vascular resistance and left ventricular end diastolic pressure; aortic and pulmonary artery pressures were unchanged. Isovolumic phase (max dP/dt and KVmax) and ejection phase (peak aortic blood velocity, maximum acceleration of blood, and maximum rate of change of power with time during ejection) indices of myocardial contractility were all increased by dopexamine but these changes were hard to interpret in the presence of an increase in heart rate. Myocardial efficiency and ejection fraction were both increased and left ventricular end diastolic and end systolic volumes fell. These largely beneficial changes were achieved without a statistically significant increase in myocardial oxygen consumption or disturbance of myocardial metabolic function. Dopexamine was well tolerated but
tremor
was reported by two patients at the intermediate dose and mild chest pain by two patients at the high dose.
...
PMID:Acute haemodynamic and metabolic effects of dopexamine, a new dopaminergic receptor agonist, in patients with chronic heart failure. 404
There is an increasing use and variety of beta-adrenoceptor blocking agents (beta-blockers) available for the treatment of hyperthyroidism. Recent comparative studies suggest that atenolol (200mg daily), metoprolol (200mg daily); acebutolol (400mg daily), oxprenolol ( 160mg daily), nadolol ( 80mg daily) and timolol (20mg daily) produce a beneficial clinical response equal to that seen with propranolol ( 160mg daily). Most beta-blockers reduce resting heart rate by approximately 25 to 30 beats/min, although a lesser reduction is seen with those possessing intrinsic sympathomimetic activity such as oxprenolol and pindolol. While earlier studies employing large doses of intravenous propranolol concluded that beta-blockade reduced myocardial contractility, more recent non-invasive studies suggest that the predominant cardiac effect is on heart rate. In patients with
cardiac failure
, beta-blockers may, however, produce a profound fall in cardiac output. Nevertheless, in combination with digoxin they may be useful in controlling the atrial fibrillation of thyrocardiac disease. beta-Blockers improve nervousness and
tremor
(although to a lesser extent with cardioselective agents) and severe myopathy, and they also reduce the frequency of paralysis in patients with thyrotoxic periodic paralysis. There is often subjective improvement in sweating but usually no major effect on eye signs. Recent studies show a 10% reduction in oxygen consumption/basal metabolic rate with long term oral use of selective or nonselective beta-blockers. In addition, many agents (propranolol, metoprolol, nadolol and sotalol but not acebutolol, atenolol or oxprenolol) reduce circulating tri-iodothyronine (T3) concentration by between 10 and 40%, although the clinical significance of this effect (if any) is not established. beta-Blockers may also have endocrinological effects on gastrin, cyclic AMP, catecholamines and other hormone levels. Given in adequate dosage, propranolol has been shown to control thyrotoxic hypercalcaemia. Minor side effects (nausea, headaches, tiredness, etc.) are quite common but overall beta-blockers are well tolerated by the thyrotoxic patient. The major use of these drugs is in symptomatic control while awaiting definitive diagnosis or treatment. As an adjunct to antithyroid drugs or radioactive iodine, beta-blockers will produce a satisfactory clinical response in the weeks to months before these forms of therapy produce a euthyroid state. beta-Blockers are more convenient than antithyroid drugs in the control of patients receiving therapeutic radioiodine, in that continuous therapy and assessment of biochemical response is possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Use of beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs in hyperthyroidism. 614 1
Bronchodilating drugs can be divided into three main groups: beta-adrenergic stimulants including specific beta-2 receptor agonists (salbutamol, terbutaline, fenoterol) which are the agents of this group used in everyday practice, theophylline and its derivatives, and atropine-like drugs (ipratropium bromide). Bronchodilators act chiefly upon the spasm observed at the bronchial level in reversible obstructive phenomena (mainly asthma), their effect upon inflammation and hypersecretion being slight or controversial. Beta-stimulants have a relatively specific mode of action at the bronchial level in the setting of use in pneumology; they exhibit cardiac effects only at high doses and when used by oral or parenteral routes. Relative to isoprenaline, they also have the advantage of being active orally and over a longer period of time. They are given in maintenance treatment of asthma, by parenteral or oral routes or as aerosols. Main side effects of adrenergic beta-stimulants are
tremor
with oral administration, and tachycardia with very high doses by parenteral or oral routes; when given as aerosols these agents may fail to control severe attacks. The bronchodilating properties of theophylline have been known for a long time; late advances concerning this drug result from better knowledge of its pharmacokinetics. Recent studies have discriminated between serum levels correlated with therapeutic effectiveness and those accompanied with mild or severe side effects; in addition, it has been clearly shown that the half life of this alkaloid varies from one person to another and with various physiopathologic (age, dietary habits, liver failure,
heart failure
...) or pharmacologic (drug interactions with enzyme inductors or inhibitors...) factors; these recent advances have led to improved individual adjustment of theophylline dosage using serum concentration assays if needed. Theophylline is used in acute attacks and in maintenance therapy of asthma. Main side effects are digestive intolerance and, with toxic doses, neurologic disorders. Atropine-like drugs inhibit the effects of the parasympathetic reflex which results from stimulation of receptors by irritation of the respiratory tract, through the action of mediators. In this group, ipratropium is the only drug given in aerosols; this, together with its pharmacologic specificity, contributes to its tolerance. In some instances, the bronchodilating effect of ipratropium bromide is comparable to that of sympathomimetics.
...
PMID:[Bronchodilators]. 632 Apr 43
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