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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Autosomal dominant hypocalcemia (ADH) caused by activating mutations of calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) is characterized by hypocalcemia with inappropriately low concentration of PTH and relative hypercalciuria. Active
vitamin D
treatment often leads to nephrolithiasis and renal impairment in patients with ADH. However, differential diagnosis between ADH and idiopathic hypoparathyroidism is sometimes very difficult. Here, we report a mutation of CaSR and its functional property found in three generations of a Japanese family. The proband developed seizures at 7 days of age. His mother and elder sister were discovered to have hypoparathyroidism by family survey, but his father was normocalcemic. His grandfather developed
heart failure
and was found to have hypoparathyroidism. All affected members had been treated with active vitamin D3 and bilateral nephrolithiasis were detected in three of them. DNA sequencing revealed that all affected patients had a heterozygous mutation in CaSR gene that causes proline to leucine substitution at codon 221 (P221L). In vitro functional analysis of the mutant CaSR by measuring inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate production in response to changes of extracellular Ca indicated that this mutation is an activating one and responsible for ADH in this family. Therefore, careful monitoring of urinary Ca excretion before and during treatment of PTH-deficient hypoparathyroidism is very important, and screening of CaSR mutation should be considered in patients with relative hypercalciuria or with a family history of hypocalcemia.
...
PMID:A family of autosomal dominant hypocalcemia with an activating mutation of calcium-sensing receptor gene. 1273 14
From experience in six cases the anabolic steroid hormones, especially long-acting testosterone and estrogen preparations, are the treatment of choice in Paget's disease, as in postmenopausal osteoporosis. Details of the management of three patients over a period of four years are presented. Roughly 4 per cent of the population, mostly persons over 40, show some evidence of Paget's disease. Only a small number of them, however, have severe manifestations requiring treatment, such as pain, howing or fracture of the bones, pressure on nerves or
heart failure
. In rare cases malignant changes occur in the involved bone. Since the cause of Paget's disease is not known, treatment in the past has been largely empirical. Reifenstein and Albright had advocated the therapeutic use of calcium,
vitamin D
and ascorbic acid, and, in postmenopausal women, administration of estrogens; but with fractures or immobilization, intake of calcium-containing foods, such as milk, must be restricted to avoid dangerous piling up of calcium and kidney stones, and fluids must be forced. In recent years anabolic steroid hormones, principally oral androgens and estrogens, have been employed by Gordan and others to promote bone repair, lessen bone pain and decrease urinary excretion of calcium. While these hormones probably do not arrest the disease, they seem to stabilize it and bring relief of symptoms. More recently, Albright and Henneman demonstrated that very large doses of corticotropin (ACTH) or cortisone resulted in immediate cessation of bone pain, decrease in urinary excretion of calcium and histologic evidence of regression of the disease process. The large doses required, however, also produce dangerous side effects, such as psychosis and osteoporosis, indicating that such treatment probably should not be continued over long periods.
...
PMID:Paget's disease; changes occurring following treatment with newer hormonal agents. 1441 Jun 71
The reduction of cardiovascular disease risk in kidney failure involves treatment of modifiable risk factors and provision of proven interventions to patients with established disease. Volume status management is key to blood pressure control. Statins are the agents of choice for the treatment of dyslipidemia. Target hemoglobin levels should be achieved using intravenous iron and erythropoietic agents. Combinations of calcium and noncalcium-containing phosphorus binders and
vitamin D
and its analogues should be used to attain target parathyroid hormone, phosphorus, and calcium phosphorus product levels. beta Blockers and aspirin are recommended in patients with ischemic heart disease and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (or angiotensin II receptor blockers), and beta blockers are recommended in patients with
heart failure
with reduced ejection fraction. In patients who require revascularization, studies suggest a survival benefit of coronary artery bypass graft surgery over percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and coronary artery stenting.
...
PMID:Treating the Patient with Kidney Failure to Reduce Cardiovascular Disease Risk. 1521 21
Hypocalcemia is a rare cause of reversible
heart failure
. We reported a 40-year-old woman who had severe
heart failure
resistant to the usual antifailure therapy. She had severe hypocalcemia due to hypoparathyroidism after strumectomy. Echocardiography showed a large left ventricle with very low ejection fraction of 25% and moderate mitral regurgitation. After supplementation of calcium and
vitamin D
, her clinical situation and hemodynamics improved rapidly. At 15 months, myocardial impairment resolved fully. In conclusion, hypocalcemia should be considered in the differential diagnosis of resistant severe
heart failure
.
...
PMID:A rare cause of reversible dilated cardiomyopathy: hypocalcemia. 1548 88
The increasing prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in the United States demands a closer evaluation of and attention to associated morbidities, and, particularly, the rising mortality related to cardiovascular disease in all age groups. Patients with CKD demonstrate an increased risk of coronary artery disease due to calcium deposition and subsequent arterial stiffening, in addition to left ventricular dysfunction with associated
heart failure
and arrhythmias. While clearly impacted by the traditional risk factors for development of cardiovascular disease (CVD), patients with CKD are also affected by non-traditional risk factors, including calcium overloading related to aggressive management of secondary hyperparathyroidism. Recent data have shown that a substantial number of patients with CKD are deficient in
vitamin D
on a nutritional basis, in addition to the known decrease in the kidney-produced active metabolite during progressive CKD. Historically,
vitamin D
has been described as an endocrine hormone that regulates blood calcium and parathyroid hormone levels. It has become increasingly clear, through the recognition of a vitamin D receptor in most tissues, that
vitamin D
possesses functions well beyond calcium homeostasis, such that a deficiency may contribute to the development of CVD. In this brief review, the role of
vitamin D
activation through its vitamin D receptor will serve as an introduction to the magnitude of the nutritional deficits in children, adults, and those with CKD. As therapeutic entities in the management of renal osteodystrophy,
vitamin D
analogues play an important role in cardiovascular health that continues to evolve. Preliminary studies indicate that
vitamin D
therapy for control of secondary hyperparathyroidism may confer cardioprotection and reduce mortality. Attention to care of osteodystrophy in CKD must take into account heart health as well.
...
PMID:Renal osteodystrophy in children: a systemic disease associated with cardiovascular manifestations. 1662 9
Adaptive physiologic buffers enable organisms to respond to environmental variation with appropriate plasticity. Modern humans have substantially remodeled their environment such that many interactions with the environment have become relatively discontinuous functions compared to the past. Examples include sunlight, temperature, and altitude. We propose that environmental discontinuity represents a Darwinian maladaptation and may promote disease by inducing buffer dysfunctions. Skin pigmentation is an adaptive, dynamic buffer that normalizes sunlight exposure to balance the potential harm of damaging rays with the importance of sunlight in driving systemic biologic functions such as melatonin and
vitamin D
. Due to lifestyle characteristics such as indoor-outdoor living, well-intended sun-avoidance campaigns, and inhomogeneous use of apparel and sunblock techniques, modern humans increasingly experience sunlight variation as a discontinuous function. The resulting skin pigmentation buffer dysfunction may promote diseases associated with over- or under-exposure to sunlight, the most striking example being melanoma. In addition to promoting discontinuity of sunlight exposure, sun-avoidance campaigns may undermine sun-dependent biologic pathways such as melatonin and
vitamin D
that appear to protect against cancer. These issues may partly explain the rise in melanoma rates despite the implementation of sun-avoidance campaigns. Also discussed is the potential role that discontinuous temperature variation associated with modern lifestyles plays in diseases such as viral infection,
heart failure
, and acute coronary syndromes. Acute discontinuous changes in pressure and oxygen levels related to air travel may contribute to autonomic dysfunction, venous thromboembolism, and viral infections. Therapeutic implications are discussed.
...
PMID:Environmental discontinuity hypothesis: Buffer dysfunctions as a source of human disease. 1675 13
Here we report 2 cases of hypocalcemic cardiomyopathy revealing a 22q11 microdeletion syndrome. This presentation at diagnosis is rare as the cardiac phenotype is mainly made of conotruncal congenital heart defects in this condition.
Cardiac failure
was diagnosed during the neonatal period in the 2 cases and was associated with profound hypocalcemia. As usual, treatment with calcium and
vitamin D
led to the regression of the hypocalcemia and the left ventricular function was fully restored. While this circumstances are unusual, we recommend that screening for 22q11 deletion should be performed when confronted to hypocalcemic cardiomyopathy or left ventricular systolic dysfunction in conotruncal defects in neonates.
...
PMID:[Neonatal hypocalcaemic dilated myocardiopathy due to a 22q11 microdeletion]. 1680 47
Vitamin D deficiency is common in Arab countries particularly among women. This is the result of a low dietary intake of the vitamin, limited exposure to sunlight (a paradox in view of the high sunshine figures), skin colour, obesity and high parity. Apart from its adverse effects on bone in women and their offspring, vitamin D deficiency has the potential to cause or exacerbate
heart failure
through a number of mechanisms including activation of the renin-angiotensin system and increased arterial pressure. Accordingly, we propose that ensuring adequate
vitamin D
levels in Arab women will have a much greater impact on health than just the prevention of bone disease. In particular, we suggest that prevention and correction of vitamin D deficiency will reduce the incidence of
heart failure
and, for Arab women with established
heart failure
and vitamin D deficiency, improve cardiac function.
...
PMID:Hypothesis: Correction of low vitamin D status among Arab women will prevent heart failure and improve cardiac function in established heart failure. 1682 39
1alpha,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D(3) [1,25D] deficiency and vitamin D receptor [VDR] genotypes are risk factors for several diseases and disorders including heart diseases. Extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling mediated by matrix metalloproteinases [MMPs] contributes to progressive left ventricular remodeling, dilation, and
heart failure
. In the present study, we used high-density oligonucleotide microarray to examine gene expression profile in wild type [WT] and vitamin D receptor knockout mice (VDR KO) which was further validated by RT-PCR. Microarray analysis revealed tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases [TIMP-1 and TIMP-3] were significantly under expressed in VDR KO mice as compared to WT mice which was further validated by RT-PCR. Zymography and RT-PCR showed that MMP-2 and MMP-9 were up regulated in VDR KO mice. In addition, cross-sectional diameter and longitudinal width of the VDR KO heart myofibrils showed highly significant cellular hypertrophy. Trichrome staining showed marked increase in fibrotic lesions in the VDR KO mice. Heart weight to body weight ratio showed approximately 41% increase in VDR KO mice when compared to WT mice. This data supports a role for 1,25D in heart ECM metabolism and suggests that MMPs and TIMPs expression may be modulated by
vitamin D
.
...
PMID:Heart extracellular matrix gene expression profile in the vitamin D receptor knockout mice. 1727 88
This article, based on a series of presentations at the American Medical Directors Association, briefly highlights new advances in medical areas of interest to long-term care physicians. The areas discussed are
heart failure
,
vitamin D
, falls, new treatments for diabetes mellitus, blood pressure measurement, anemia, clinical nutrition, pressure ulcers, Clostridium difficile, insomnia, and antipsychotic therapy.
...
PMID:Intensive session: New approaches to medical issues in long-term care. 1784 44
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