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

A salt-free diet is usually useless or dangerous in the elderly subject. It has at present only rare indications, such as after acute pulmonary oedema or congestive heart failure during initial treatment. In all other cases, it may be replaced by a reasonable diet; sodium intake remains permitted, but naturally one should not fall in the opposite extreme. As in younger subjects, and provided one takes into consideration the subjacent renal condition, properly prescribed diuretics have transformed the situation in the treatment of heart failure as in essential hypertension. Naturally the patient still requires regular clinical supervision and laboratory tests which may in practice be limited to periodical estimation of blood urea and serum potassium, less regularly, blood sugar and uric acid.
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PMID:[Salt-free diet and diuretics in the elderly (author's transl)]. 21 98

This article reviews the homeostasis of water and salt in normal and pre-eclamptic pregnancy. During pre-eclampsia there is a decrease in circulating plasma volume, which the administration of diuretics reduces still further. There is no proof that diuretics have a beneficial effect on prevention or treatment of toxemia of pregnancy. They should thus be regarded as contraindicated, except in cases of cardiac insufficiency and certain renal diseases.
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PMID:Salt, diuretics and pregnancy. 39 74

This is a prospective study on 24 patients with chronic renal failure. Thirteen of them had evidence of acute uraemic encephalopathy. Of those 9 patients were found to have dilutional hyponatraemia, two patients severe salt and water depletion and one patient septicaemia. Hyponatraemia was associated with pulmonary oedema in 3 patients. Correction of salt and water disturbances and treatment of heart failure improved cerebral functions in 10 (77%) patients. It is therefore concluded that dilutional hyponatraemia probably leading to cerebral oedema is a reversibe major factor in the development of acute uraemic encephalopathy. This, if left uncorrected, may prove fatal especially in tropical countries.
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PMID:Acute uraemic encephalopathy in tropical countries. 70 18

One hundred thirty-seven courses of furosemide therapy were given to 106 hospitalized pediatric patients with salt and water retention associated with cardiac or renal disease. The diuretic was effective and safe in the pediatric age group when administered acutely as a parenteral medication and over a long-term course by the oral route in the doses and at the time intervals used in this study. On the basis of each kilogram of body weight, the infants with edema as a result of cardiac failure and the children with edema secondary to renal disease responded equally well to furosemide therapy.
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PMID:The use of furosemide in the treatment of edema in infants and children. 72 25

The effects of ticrynafen (250-500 mg) on salt-water and uric acid metabolism have been studied in 18 patients with no haemodinamic abnormalities or salt-water repletion (cardiac failure, oedema). The main results are: -- an effective natriuresis is observed in the first days and is attenuated thereafter. In subjects with a reduced GFR, a negative salt balance is obtained altough the volume of diuresis is not significantly increased. -- The potassium loss is variable according to dosage (maximum at 500 mg), renal function (low when reduced). -- The increase of urinary uric acid excretion and the lowering of blood uric acid concentration are rapid and prolonged. In conclusion, we confirm the effective natriuretic and uricosuric properties of ticrynafen.
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PMID:[Thienylic acid, a new drug with saluretic and uricosuric activity. Preliminary data]. 74 34

To assess the effect of long-term lithium therapy on cardiac arrhythmias and cardiovascular performance, extended ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring was performed in 12 patients, and rest and exercise electrocardiograms in 10 of 12, before and during lithium therapy. Lithium increased the frequency of premature ventricular contractions in three patients, decreased it in one, and produced no change in eight. Three of four patients with atrial arrhythmias showed improvement during lithium therapy. Exercise performance was unchanged. Although 7 of the 12 patients manifested T wave flattening in the resting electrocardiogram, none had S-T segment displacement at rest or on treadmill exercise. Before lithium therapy, arrhythmias on exercise included premature atrial contractions in four patients, ventricular arrhythmias in four (premature ventricular contractions in four, with couplets in two and with ventricular tachycardia in one). During lithium therapy, exercise did not provoke premature atrial contractions or ventricular tachycardia in any of the patients, but three patients had premature ventricular contractions (with couplets in one case). We conclude that lithium at therapeutic levels may precipitate or aggravate ventricular arrhythmias. When administered to patients with heart disease, factors that interfere with renal clearance of lithium (heart failure, salt restriction, long-term diuretic therapy) must be recognized and doses must be adjusted accordingly. Careful follow-up and electrocardiographic monitoring are advisable if lithium is to be used in the presence of ventricular arrhythmias. Cardiovascular performance as assessed by treadmill exercise testing was not affected by long-term lithium therapy.
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PMID:Effect of lithium on cardiovascular performance: report on extended ambulatory monitoring and exercise testing before and during lithium therapy. 99 8

Dogs with experimental high-output heart failure (HOF) exhibit marked retention of salt and water secondary to hypersecretion of both renin and aldosterone. The present study was undertaken to evaluate the systemic and intrarenal arteriolar action of angiotensin II (AII) in dogs with HOF and to provide additional information about the role of AII in low-output states. The intravenous infusion of a specific AII antagonist, [Sar1, Ala8]AII (6 mug/kg min-1), into conscious dogs with HOF decreased the mean arterial pressure (AP) from 101 +/- 7 to 83 +/- 7 mmHg (P less than 0.01) after 45 min of infusion. Intrarenal arterial infusion of the AII antagonist (0.2 and 2.0 mug/kg min-1) into anesthetized dogs with HOF also decreased AP and produced a marked increase in renal blood flow (RBF) with no changes in either creatinine clearance or sodium excretion. Similar results were obtained during the intrarenal infusion of the antagonist into sodium-depleted dogs and dogs with thoracic vena caval constriction, but not in normal dogs. The data demonstrate an important role for AII in the regulation of AP and RBF in high- and low-output states.
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PMID:High-output heart failure in the dog: systemic and intrarenal role of angiotensin II. 116 74

The case report of a 27-year-old woman who had been normotensive before her 1st pregnancy 6 years earlier is presented. At 2 months postdelivery she began taking estro-progesterone. She was given Enidrel R (norethynodrel 4.925 mg, mestranol .075 mg) for 18 months and then Ovariostat (lynestrenol 2.5 mg, mestranol .075 mg). Her blood pressure was not recorded until 2 years later when it was 180 mm Hg systolic. Contraceptive therapy was then stopped. A month later pregnancy occurred. At that time her blood pressure was 120 mm Hg. The delivery was normal. 4 months later she began taking Ovariostat again. Headaches soon developed and her blood pressure was found to be 270/150 mm Hg. On admission to the hospital 3 weeks later her blood pressure was 250/100 mm Hg. Renal failure was present. Creatinine clearance was 12 ml/minute. No cause for this hypertension was found. 1 month later hypertension was 210/160 mm Ha. Retinal hemorrhaging had lessened but azotemia persisted. Heart failure and oliguria followed. Dialysis was done weekly. A bilateral nephrectomy was done. Microscopic study of renal tissue showed malignant nephroangiosclerosis. After 10 days her blood pressure was 150/100 mm Hg. Her general condition improved. A salt-free diet was prescribed. Blood pressure subsided to 140/80 mm Hg before dialysis. A renal graft was done and 10 months later blood pressure was normal. These hypertensions are usually benign and subside when the contraceptive therapy is discontinued. When estrogen-progesterones are prescribed, blood pressures should be recorded frequently and therapy stopped if hypertension arises.
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PMID:Malignant hypertension with irreversible renal failure due to oral contraceptives. 119 51

In rats with unilateral renal artery stenosis, the malignant phase of hypertension is characterized by: systolic blood pressure above 180-190 mm Hg; sodium and water loss; polyuria and polydipsia; markedly activated renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system; impairment of renal function and malignant nephrosclerosis in the contralateral kidney; some rats exhibit signs of cerebral hemorrhage, heart failure, acute renal failure, and some rats die. After such a phase of malignant hypertension, a period of remission may occur, which is followed by another malignant phase, etc. When malignant hypertensive rats are offered, in addition to water, saline as drinking fluid, they compulsively drink the saline, BP falls transiently, and all signs of malignant hypertension nearly or completely disappear. These observations indicate that, at a critically high BP level, it is salt and water loss which, by activating the renin-angiotensin system, trigger the vicious circle of malignant renal hypertension in rats.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of malignant hypertension: experimental evidence from the renal hypertensive rat. 119 18

Studies were performed to determine whether the intrarenal distribution of cortical blood flow is altered in congestive heart failure. Utilizing the radioactive microsphere method, we studied eight dogs that developed congestive heart failure secondary to the construction of an aortocaval fistula. They had marked reduction in total renal blood flow not accompanied by intracortical redistribution of blood flow. All dogs had developed edema and/or ascites, and gained a mean of 3.4 kg; glomerular filtration rate, hematocrit, and urinary sodium excretion fell significantly. Renal vascular resistance increased; mean blood pressure and filtration fraction were unchanged. Furosemide was administered to a second group of nine fistula dogs. The drug produced a marked natriuresis associated with a decrease in outer cortical blood flow (zone 1) and an increase in midcortical zones 2 and 3; no change was observed in zone 4. We conclude: 1) chronic salt retention occurs in high-output heart failure in the absence of redistribution of renal cortical blood flow, and 2) the effect of furosemide on intrarenal hemodynamics of dogs with heart failure is similar to that seen in normal animals.
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PMID:Distribution of renal blood flow in dogs with congestive heart failure. 125 34


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