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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In exsudate cells separated from serous body cavities of 29 tumour patients and 30 patients with inflammatory and congestive effusion in
cardiac failure
or liver cirrhosis respectively the activities of acid and
alkaline phosphatase
were determined. In addition to sudanophilia the cell content of glycogen and that of ribonucleinic acid were evaluated. By means of cytochemical findings it could be found that an increase of unspecific esterase, acid phosphatase and ribonucleic acid in atypical cells points to a malignous ethiology of the exudate.
...
PMID:[Cytochemical tests on sediment cells of malignant and benign exudates]. 5 3
There are probably 2.5 million patients with Paget's disease in the U.S.; 125,000 of these have severe disease meriting specific treatment. While the diagnosis can often be made by inspection, or by measurement of the temperature of involved limbs, it is often missed. Nonspecific findings include pain, headaches, deafness,
heart failure
, neurologic deficits and renal stones. A specific diagnosis can usually be established by radiologic examination of the skeleton and measurement of the serum
alkaline phosphatase
level. Bone scans are often helpful. In moderate-to-severe symptomatic disease, calcitonin limits the unregulated chaotic bone resorption and exerts highly specific and effective suppressive activity.
...
PMID:Paget's disease: New treatment for an old disease. 13 63
Clinical and experimental heart irradiation can cause a variety of sequelae. A single dose of greater than or equal to 15 Gy leads to a reversible exudative pericarditis, occurring in dogs, rabbits or rats at around 100 days. Its time-course is very similar in all species investigated, but there are considerable species and strain differences in severity and incidence. After longer, dose-dependent latency times chronic congestive
myocardial failure
develops. At histological examination myocardial degeneration and necrosis is observed, which in some species is accompanied by a variable degree of interstitial fibrosis. In rabbits and rats, myocardial degeneration becomes apparent at around 70 days after 20 Gy and is preceded by a marked reduction in capillary density as well as ultrastructural endothelial cell degeneration. Simultaneously to structural capillary damage, a focal loss of the endothelial marker enzyme
alkaline phosphatase
was observed in rats in areas with subsequent myocardial degeneration. Cell kinetic studies in rabbits and rats revealed a radiation-induced wave of increased endothelial cell proliferation at 30-100 days postirradiation. In the rat it is exclusively seen in conjunction with alteration of endothelial cell marker enzymes. The temporal and spatial pattern of proliferative response exludes endothelial cell death in mitosis as the sole pathogenetic mechanism causing capillary loss and myocardial degeneration. Parallel to development of morphological damage, haemodynamic studies in various rats strains revealed a drop in cardiac output and left ventricular ejection fraction to about 64% of normal values after 20 Gy. In vivo, this slightly reduced cardiac function was then maintained in a steady state for many weeks, probably due to a compensatory up-regulation of cardiac beta-adrenergic receptors. In denervated working heart preparations in vitro, however, these compensatory mechanisms are not effective and stroke volume as well as cardiac contractility show a rapid and steady deterioration. In many respects radiation-induced heart disease conforms to radiobiological concepts of late-responding tissues, showing a chronic progressive time-course and a very pronounced fractionation effect. However, pathogenesis cannot be understood in terms of target cell depletion alone, and experimental evidence indicates the importance of alterations of regulatory mechanisms.
...
PMID:Radiation-induced heart disease: review of experimental data on dose response and pathogenesis. 135 1
Local heart irradiation with single or fractionated doses leads to
heart failure
after dose-dependent latency times. Clinical symptoms of
heart failure
are dyspnoea at rest, apathy and subcutaneous oedema. Animals autopsied when they presented with these symptoms, have a congested liver and occasional pleural effusions. The left ventricle is dilated, showing a reduction in wall thickness by 15-17% of control values. Histological examination reveals a focal degeneration and necrosis of about 23% of the total myocardial volume. Loss of
alkaline phosphatase
activity from myocardial capillaries, which is known to precede myocardial degeneration, involves 77% of the myocardium. These findings at the time of manifest
heart failure
are constant, independent on whether injury to the heart was inflicted by single-dose or fractionated irradiation or whether
heart failure
developed within a relatively short time after high total doses or within many months after low total doses. The latent time of
heart failure
therefore can be considered an appropriate endpoint for comparison of treatment groups. From experiments giving 1, 2, 4, or 10 dose fractions, a low alpha/beta ratio of 3.7 Gy (95% confidence interval 1.8-5.6 Gy) can be calculated. When the time interval between dose fractions is varied in a split-dose experiment, time intervals of up to 3 h do not increase the survival time significantly. This appears to indicate very slow repair of sublethal damage. On the other hand, it cannot be excluded that pathogenetic mechanisms independent of cell death in the renewing cell population contribute to this effect, making an interpretation of the alpha/beta ratio in terms of cell survival parameters of a defined target cell population difficult.
...
PMID:Fractionation response and repair kinetics of radiation-induced heart failure in the rat. 173 30
The case is reported of a 49-year-old chronic alcoholic woman, who presented with severe pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) mimicking as an acute abdomen. She was admitted with right-sided hypochondrial abdominal pain and hepatomegaly, with a moderate jaundice. On admission to intensive care unit, she had an arterial blood pressure of 110/70 mmHg, a heart rate of 100 b.min-1, and a respiratory rate of 36 c.min-1. An electrocardiogram showed sinus rhythm and right-sided
heart failure
. Whilst breathing 6 l.min-1 oxygen, her arterial blood gases were: PaO2 47 mmHg PaCO2 29 mmHg. Severe PAH was confirmed by measuring her mean pulmonary arterial pressure, which was 46 mmHg, whilst her pulmonary wedge pressure was 7 mmHg. Hepatic function was also altered: total bilirubin 41 mumol.l-1,
alkaline phosphatase
145 UI.l-1 and gamma glutamyl transferase 1 340 UI.l-1. She developed arterial hypotension, which did not respond to increasing doses of isoproterenol. She died on the third day. Necropsy confirmed the diagnosis of primary PAH, with acute "cardiac liver".
...
PMID:[Pseudosurgical acute abdomen syndrome in primary pulmonary hypertension]. 175 58
It is common for general practitioners (GPs) to refer patients suspected of impaired liver function for laboratory tests (
alkaline phosphatase
, lactate dehydrogenase, bilirubin, prothrombin, aspartate aminotransferase). In a prospective multipractice study over a six-month period, including 30 GPs, 55 patients were recorded as having, for the first time, a high level of
alkaline phosphatase
(AP) as an isolated finding, 14 with an increase of aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT), eight with an increase of both AP and ASAT, three with an increase of ASAT, AP, and bilirubin, two with an isolated increase of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), one with an increase of ASAT, AP, and bilirubin, combined with a low prothrombin (PP), and, finally, one patient with a low prothrombin in isolation. In most cases the tests were requested because of unspecific symptoms. The most common causes of abnormal test results were neoplasms, alcoholic liver disease, and
heart failure
. Thirty patients were referred to hospital for further investigations. During the same study period, 50 patients with known abnormal liver function tests were recorded, and the most common causes of these abnormalities were neoplasms, rheumatoid arthritis, and alcoholic liver disease.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of abnormal liver function tests in general practice in a defined population in Denmark. 180 31
During the period 1950-1985, a total of 179 cases of clinically overt hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) were registered in Denmark, 140 males and 39 females. Median age at diagnosis was 55 years (range 29-81). Diagnostic approaches, symptoms and physical signs at discovery are described. All patients had grade 3-4 liver haemosiderin iron, and cirrhosis was present in 84%. Serum (S-) transaminase was elevated in 92%, S-
alkaline phosphatase
in 47% and S-bilirubin in 23%, while plasma prothrombin time was below normal in 34%. Females had higher
alkaline phosphatase
than males (p less than 0.05). Bone marrow haemosiderin iron (n = 81) showed no relation to iron status indicators and was unsuitable as a diagnostic tool. Skin biopsy (n = 56) was positive for haemosiderin iron in 67% and for melanin in 57%, but was of limited value in the assessment of HH. Arthropathy was registered in 44%; arthralgias and clinical joint abnormalities occurred more frequently in females than in males (p less than 0.05). Latent diabetes mellitus was found in 34% and overt diabetes in 55%, being more frequent in males than in females (p less than 0.05). Other endocrine abnormalities were seen in 66%.
Cardiac failure
was observed in 9% and abnormal ECG in 35%. Males had higher haemoglobin (p less than 0.0001) and S-iron (p less than 0.01) than females, while S-transferrin, transferrin saturation, S-ferritin and mobilizable iron stores showed no significant sex differences. Median transferrin saturation was 87% (range 52-100); values greater than 62% were observed in 96% of the patients. Median S-ferritin was 3,400 micrograms/l (800-12,700) and median iron stores 14.8 g (4.5-36.4).
...
PMID:Hereditary haemochromatosis in Denmark 1950-1985. Clinical, biochemical and histological features in 179 patients and 13 preclinical cases. 191 39
The hearts of mature male rats of the Wistar and Sprague-Dawley strains were locally irradiated with single doses of 17.5 and 20.0 Gy of X rays, respectively. These two dose levels had previously been shown to result in a comparable latent period between irradiation and the death of rats of these two strains from
cardiac failure
. Morphological changes in the myocardium and modifications in cardiac function were assessed in the animals at 28, 70, and 100 days after irradiation. The first radiation-induced change which was observed in the myocardium was a rapid decline in capillary density and a loss of
alkaline phosphatase
activity by the capillary endothelial cells. The capillary density was reduced to approximately 50% of that of unirradiated control values at 28 days and to approximately 40% of the control values between 70 and 100 days after irradiation. The loss of enzyme activity was also detected at 28 days. Examination of histological sections showed an increase by 70 days in the areas with negative enzyme activity up to approximately 70% of the myocardium. The reduction in capillary density and the loss of enzyme activity occurred before any marked pathological changes were seen in the myocardium. The pathological lesions seen in the myocardium at 100 days after irradiation were qualitatively and quantitatively the same in the two strains of rat. Measurements of cardiac output in Sprague-Dawley rats showed a gradual decline in output after irradiation; however, measurements in Wistar rats showed a progressive increase in cardiac output over the same period of time. It was shown by rubidium extraction that there was an increase in the percentage of the total cardiac output distributed to the ventricular muscle of Sprague-Dawley rats, while similar measurements in Wistar rats showed no significant change. In spite of the marked strain differences observed in cardiac output and rubidium extraction, blood perfusion per gram of ventricular muscle was apparently not modified in both strains of rat after irradiation. These findings indicated that the correlation between morphological effects after irradiation and the functional expression of damage is highly complex.
...
PMID:Morphological and functional changes in the rat heart after X irradiation: strain differences. 277 40
Osteitis deformans is a focal disease of the osteoclasts characterised by increased bone resorption subsequently followed by increased bone formation leading to abnormal bone. A viral etiology seems increasingly probable, but remains unproven. 5-30% of the patients present with symptoms such as pain, deformity and fracture. Hearing loss, nerve- or root-compression, arthrosis and hyperuricaemia may complicate the disease while malignant degeneration, hypercalcemia and high output
cardiac failure
are rare. The diagnosis is based on X-ray findings but biopsy may be necessary in selected cases. The extent of the disease is revealed by bone scintigraphy and the activity of the disease reflected by urine hydroxyproline excretion and serum
alkaline phosphatase
.
...
PMID:[Paget's osteitis deformans. Epidemiology and clinical picture]. 292 39
The long-term follow-up of 80 heart transplant patients (70 men, 10 women) from January 1982 to July 1985 who had received cyclosporine (CsA) showed a high incidence of mild to severe liver dysfunction. Fifty patients (62.5%) had long-lasting postoperative biological disturbances (alanine amino transferase greater than 2N and/or
alkaline phosphatase
greater than 1.5N for 3 months or more). Most patients were asymptomatic; eight were icteric, and one had arthralgia. The most common biological feature consisted of isolated elevation of ALAT (27 cases). Assessment of causes led to a definite etiology in 42 patients: 7
cardiac failure
, 13 HBsAg-positive liver disease (26%) (chronic persistent hepatitis 8, chronic active hepatitis 2, subacute necrosis 2). Fourteen patients (28%) sustained non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis (chronic persistent hepatitis 5, chronic active hepatitis 1, cirrhosis 1), and 7 (14%) sustained a drug-related hepatitis. Liver biopsy and complete virus screening was contributive to the diagnosis in nearly all patients. Additionally, prolonged impairment of liver function tests occurred in 62% of heart transplant recipients, mostly during the first 6 postoperative months. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and NANB hepatitis accounted for 26% and 28% of the cases of liver dysfunction, respectively; drug-induced hepatitis may have been involved in 14% of the cases. Complete hepatitis virus screening should be performed before heart transplant and in any case of abnormal liver function posttransplantation. HBV vaccination prior to heart transplant is recommended in HBsAg- and HBcAb-negative candidates for heart replacement. Long-term follow-up of these patients is mandatory to assess the severity of these liver dysfunctions.
...
PMID:Prevalence and causes of long-lasting hepatic dysfunction after heart transplantation: a series of 80 patients. 329 31
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