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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow may be normal, reduced or increased in cirrhosis. The mechanism of departures from normal is not known. Other renal functional changes in cirrhosis include avid
sodium
reabsorption, impaired concentrating and diluting abilities, and partial renal tubular acidosis. Fluid and electrolyte disorders are common. Sodium retention with edema and ascites should generally be treated conservatively because they tend to disappear as the liver heals and because forced diuresis has hazards. The indications for diuretics are (1) incipient or overt atelectasis; (2) abdominal distress; and (3) possibility of skin breakdown. Hyponatremia is common and its mechanism and treatment must be assessed in each patient. Hypokalemia occurs and requires treatment. Respiratory alkalosis and renal tubular acidosis seldom need therapy. The hepatorenal syndrome is defined as functional renal failure in the absence of other known causes of renal functional impairment. The prognosis is terrible and therapy is unsatisfactory. The best approach is not to equate the occurrence of renal failure in cirrhosis with the hepatorenal syndrome. Rather the physician should first explore all treatable causes of renal failure, eg, dehydration, obstruction, infection,
heart failure
, potassium depletion, and others.
...
PMID:Fluid and electrolyte disturbances in cirrhosis. 96 15
The mineralocorticoid activity of 18-hydroxydeoxycorticosterone (18-OH-DOC) was measured during chronic electrolyte balance studies or during the postprandial increase in electrolyte excretion in conscious dogs with an aortic-caval fistula. In the chronic balance study, daily doses of DOCA and 18-OH-DOC ranging from 1 to 25 mg were administered intramuscularly for 3 consecutive days each, 6 h prior to feeding. For the postprandial study, 2-10 mg of DOCA and 18-OH-DOC were administered at feeding and postprandial electrolyte excretion was measured hourly for 6 h.
Sodium
and fluid retention in the dogs with an aortic-caval fistula was related to the dose of mineralocorticoid administered and equivalent
sodium
-retaining responses were achieved with 6-10 times more 18-OH-DOC than DOCA. Rapid absorption of both steroids was suggested from the postprandial measurements of urinary
sodium
excretion. Slight potassium retention occurred during the chronic administration of large doses of DOCA but the postprandial potassium responses produced by the steroids were variable and suggested a slight kaliuresis. The data also emphasize the importance of mineralocorticoids in
sodium
retention and ascites formation in this experimental model of high-output
heart failure
.
...
PMID:Mineralocorticoid activity of 18-OH-DOC and DOCA in dogs with an aortic-caval fistula. 96 72
Vasodilator therapy has been shown to have beneficial effects in
heart failure
. In order to evaluate the haemodynamic actions of vasodilator administration in primary congestive cardiomyopathy,
sodium
nitroprusside was infused intravenously at a rate of 15 to 100 mug/min to 12 patients. Mean arterial pressure fell 15 per cent from 86+/-3-0 to 72+/-2-4 mmHg (11-40 +/- -4 to 9-6 +/- 0-3 kPa), and there was a small but significant decrease in mean heart rate from 96 +/- 4-8 to 90 +/- 4-4 beats/min. These changes were accompanied by a significant decrease in mean pulmonary artery pressure from 40 +/- 2-2 to 26 +/- 2-8 mmHg (5-3 +/- 0-3 kPa to 3-5 +/- 0-4 kPa), mean pulmonary capillary wedge pressure from 25 +/ -2-2 to 16 +/- 2-1 mmHg (3-3 +/- 0-3 to 2-1 +/- 0-3 kPa), and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure from 27 +/- 1-8 to 17 +/- 1-5 mmHg (3-6 +/- 0-3 to 2-3 +/- 0-2 kPa). Cardiac index increased by an average of 48 per cent from 2-1 to 3-1 l/min per m2, and left ventricular stroke work index increased from 18-4 +/- 1-6 to 21-3 +/- 1-9 g m/m2. These results show that pronounced left ventricular dysfunction in patients with congestive cardiomyopathy is improved during vasodilator therapy.
...
PMID:Circulatory response to vasodilator therapy in congestive cardiomyopathy. 97 93
In order to examine the question, whether improved digitalis tolerance by Spirolactone may be partially a result of antagonism on myocardial potassium balance, 6 patients without clinical signs of
heart failure
were given 400 mg, 3 were given 200 or 300 mg Spirolactone orally daily and 6 patients received placebo during a 5 to 7 days period. During cardiac catheterization hemodynamics and serum potassium concentrations were determined repeatedly prior to and following intravenous administration of 0,375 to 0,625 mg Strophanthin. Injection of Strophanthin resulted in a significant drop in left ventricular enddiastolic pressure and a rise in dp/dt max. In the control group a significant increase in arterial and coronary sinus potassium concentration was observed. Myocardial potassium balance was definitely negative from the third to the eighth minute. Values in the group receiving Spirolactone did not differ significantly from the placebo group. It is suggested that therapeutic doses of Strophanthin resllt in a loss of potassium from the myocardium by inhibition of the
Na+
, K+ membrane ATPase not influenced by pretreatment with Spirolactone.
...
PMID:[Influence of spirolactone on the myocardial potassium balance following strophanthin in man (author's transl)]. 97 68
Hyperkalaemia with severe myocardial consequence may complicate the treatment of
heart failure
. In five patients who developed kalaemia ranging from 6.5. to 8.6. mEq/l, the ECG showed altered auriculogram and/or widened QRS, the latter change being associated with ST segment elevation and very large T wave in one case. Such hyperkalaemia cannot be termed iatrogenic, although it is promoted by diuretic-induced hyponatraemia and dehydration. The essential part is played by an aggravation of the haemodynamic status, responsible for acute renal insufficiency with oligoanuria, and by the attendant metabolic acidosis. The correction of this metabolic acidosis promotes diuresis, causing potassium depletion and the rapid regression of electrocardiographic abnormalities. Parenteral alkalinization with
sodium
bicarbonate, associated with furosemid to prevent
sodium
overload, instituted in emergency, is the only way to prevent asystole or ventricular fibrillation when kalaemia exceeds 8 mEq/l.
...
PMID:[Severe hyperkalemia in cardiac patients]. 98 Jul 25
The peculiarities of water and electrolytes elimination prior to and following therapy with diuretics were studied in 92 patients with Stage II-III
cardiac insufficiency
. The control group was comprised of 23 patients with Stage 0-I insufficiency and 12 normal volunteers. A progressing
cardiac insufficiency
was found to be accompanied by a reduction in
sodium
and water excretion. The results of the study permit to suggest the localization of enhanced reabsorption of
sodium
in cases of
cardiac insufficiency
, to evaluate the proportion of the participation of the antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone in the pathogenesis of
sodium
retention in the kidney, and to assess the diuretics as means of pathogenetic treatment of
cardiac insufficiency
, which proves rational on early stages of the disease without accompanying severe circulatory disorders.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of sodium and water elimination in chronic cardiac insufficiency]. 101 5
The study was conducted in 58 patients with congenital heart diseases. Preoperative
cardiac insufficiency
in patients with congenital heart diseases was shown to favour a complicated postoperative course which, in turn, is accompanied by alterations in the water-electrolyte metabolism. The development of cellular hyperhydration in patients with congenital heart diseases depends on the severity of the postoperative course and is its characteristic reflection. Distinct changes in the content of the electrolytes develop at this stage: potassium concentration reduction in the cells and
sodium
concentration increase in them.
...
PMID:[Acute cardiac insufficiency and water-electrolyte metabolism in the postoperative period in congenital heart defects]. 101 6
Despite the bewildering number of diuretics available to the physician, these drugs can be divided into 4 main groups, characterised by their site of action on
sodium
reabsorption in the kidney. Drugs acting on the ascending limb of the loop of Henle have a powerful but short acting diuretic effect; they include frusemide, ethacrynic acid and bumetanide. The benzothiadiazines and related compounds have a moderate diuretic action spread over a longer period, whilst the potassium-sparing diuretics, triamterene, amiloride and spironolactone, have only a weak diuretic effect but a marked ability to diminish urinary potassium excretion. The fourth group is made up of miscellaneous substances which function as vasodilator or osmotic agents. The pathogenesis of oedema formation in
heart failure
is outlined and a logical approach to treatment suggested. Duiretics are being increasingly used in the treatment of non-oedematous states, in particular hypertension, diabetes insipidus and hypercalciuria; their exact role in pregnancy and acute renal failure remains controversial. Side-effects can be related to their effect on electrolyte excretion and include hypokalaemia, hyponatraemia, hyperkalaemia and hyperuricaemia. The incidence of disturbed carbohydrate tolerance in previously normal individuals is low. Other less common side-effects are also discussed.
...
PMID:Diuretics: mechanism of action and clinical application. 109 41
Intrarenal distribution of blood flow was measured by the 133xenon washout curve in 33 patients with heart disease. Plasma renin activity and
sodium
concentration were also measured on the day when the xenon study was performed. The patients were divided into three groups according to cardiac index: Group I whose cardiac index showed higher than 3.50 1/min/M2, BSA, group II whose index ranged from 2.50 to 3.50, and group III who had lower than 2.50. Total renal blood flow was significantly decreased in group II (p less than 0.001), as compared with normal controls. The percents of the total renal blood flow supplied to component I decreased significantly in group I, II (p less than 0.05) and group III (p less than 0.01). The flow rate in component I decreased significantly only in group II (p less than 0.05) and group III (p less than 0.01). There was a significant increase in the percent distribution of component II in group II (p less than 0.05) and in group III (p less than 0.01). The flow rate of component II showed a slight increase in group I and III. The study of autoradiographs done in dogs with
heart failure
demonstrated that component I corresponded to a cortical area having a relatively faster flow rate, whereas component II corresponded to the cortical area which was perfused more slowly. Accordingly, component III indicated outer medulla. There was no apparent relation between intrarenal distribution of blood flow and plasma renin activity although the latter tended to be elevated in patients treated with diuretics. In view of the data available it was concluded that outer cortical as well as outer medullary blood flow are decreased in chronic congestive heart failure and that there is no apparent correlation between outer cortical flow and plasma renin activity.
...
PMID:Intrarenal distribution of blood flow and renin in chronic congestive heart failure. 111 37
After serum creatinine levels exceeded 10mg/100ml, median survival was 55 days (to death or dialysis) in a group of 112 patients with chronic renal disease. Renal failure was partially reversible in 29 patients, partially accounting for prolonged survival. Those with polycystic kidneys, pyelonephritis, or obstructive nephropathy survived longer,partially because of more frequent reversibility and a slower increase in serum creatinine concentration. Kiabetic nephropathy, myelomatous kidneys, and amyloidosis were associated with shorter survival, less frequent reversibility, and more rapid progression. Urinary infection and extracellular volume depletion often accounted for partially reversible renal failure and prolonged survival. Blood pressure and age were not prognostic variables, while coexistent
heart failure
shortened survival. Survival correlated significantly with
sodium
excretion.
...
PMID:Prognosis of chronic renal failure. II. Factors affecting survival. 114 31
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