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

The study of fluid and electrolyte disturbances by isotope radiodilution method is carried out in 22 patients with chronic respiratory insufficiency and cardiac failure. The simultaneous measurements of hydro-ionic compartments have been carried out with tritiated water (HTO), labelled sodium (22Na), labelled potassium (42K) and labelled bromine (82Br). From these measurements, the various water spaces are calculated: total water (ET) and extracellular fluids (LEC), also exchangeable electrolytes: sodium (NaE), potassium (KE), chlorine (ClE) and derived values. Results are compared to corresponding values in controls with the same obesity index. Patients with respiratory insufficiency show a fluid and sodium rise, similar to that found in cardiac failure and denutrition. The (NaE + KE)/ET ratio is not significantly decreased and the natremia is only slightly lower. There is no real potassium depletion in most patients.
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PMID:[Isotopic study of fluid and electrolyte disturbances in decompensated chronic respiratory insufficiency (author's transl)]. 0 42

A mechanism is outlined to explain why oedema forms so readily in hot climates. A continual cutaneous vasodilation produces a low total peripheral resistance so that the mean arterial pressure cannot be raised except by increasing cardiac output. This inability to raise the arterial pressure as efficiently as usual will lead to difficulties in dealing with excess sodium and water loads, because the mean arterial pressure is the major determinant of urinary output. Anything which favours the retention of sodium and water in hot climates must therefore make things worse. This mechanism will also explain the post-partum cardiac failure syndrome which occurs in Northern Nigeria, since Hausa women take high-sodium diets and lie on heated beds during the post-partum period. The necessity for a further increase of cardiac output to excrete excess sodium and water in hot climates causes stress in persons with vulnerable myocardia and produces the symptoms and signs of cardiac failure more rapidly.
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PMID:Oedema and heart-failure in the tropics. 7 65

17 patients with severe hyponatraemia (none had cardiac failure or had lately had an operation) all had excessively high plasma-antidiuretic hormone (A.D.H.). Only 13 had features typical of the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of A.D.H. (S.I.A.D.H.). Plasma-A.D.H. was not related to either plasma-sodium or diagnosis. There were as many patients with chest infection as with carcinoma of the lung. Plasma-sodium and plasma-A.D.H. returned rapidly towards normal in the patients with chest infection or volume depletion but these concentrations corrected much more slowly in patients with carcinoma of the lung. The increase in plasma-sodium in patients with chest infection was too rapid to be produced by water-deprivation treatment and was due to return of plasma-A.D.H. to normal. The term S.I.A.D.H. implies an understanding of pathophysiology that does not exist. As a diagnosis it does not help in management or prognosis. A simpler, more descriptive terminology such as "hyponatraemia with carcinoma of the lung" would be more useful and less confusing in the clinical situation.
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PMID:Severe hyponatraemia. A study of 17 patients. 7 64

Changes in myocardial water content, left ventricular diastolic stiffness, cardiac performance, coronary blood flow, myocardial contractile force, rate of change of myocardial force, and peak acceleration of the aortic volume flow were examined in twenty-five dogs during glucose-induced hyperosmolality before and after pancreatectomy, the latter with and without insulin treatment. Glucose-induced hyperosmolality accounted for myocardial dehydration, increased diastolic stiffness and consequent decrease of left ventricular performance only in the absence of insulin, while coronary blood flow, myocardial contractile force, rate of change of myocardial force and peak acceleration of the aortic volume flow increased independently from the presence or absence of insulin during the glucose-induced hyperosmolality. These findings suggest that the frequent development of heart failure in hyperosmolar diabetic coma could partly be explained by myocardial dehydration and by the consequent decrease in left ventricular compliance and performance.
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PMID:Effect of hyperglycaemia-induced hyperosmolality on heart function in the dog. 11 46

1 This study has compared the diuresis produced by a single oral administration of 6 mg piretanide, 9 mg piretanide and 1 mg bumetanide in a group of nine patients with cardiac failure using a balanced randomized design. 2 The natriuresis and kaliuresis produced in the first 6 h after administration of piretanide 9 mg and bumetanide 1 mg were similar. Piretanide 6 mg produced a lesser response. 3 There was evidence of sodium and water conservation following the diuresis for up to 48 h with all three treatments. 4 The patterns of urate and calcium excretion were similar for the two diuretics.
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PMID:A single dose comparison of piretanide and bumetanide in congestive cardiac failure. 38 25

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

A patient with a vipoma of the pancreas and persistently elevated blood levels of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) had watery diarrhea, hypokalemia, and achlorhydria (WDHA syndrome). In the untreated state, the diarrhea was never profuse. Fecal volumes ranged from 0.16 to 1.24 L/day. Attempts to correct the dehydration by fluid and electrolyte loading resulted in a massive increase in fecal water and electrolyte loss. Prednisone cured the diarrhea and was associated with a decrease in plasma VIP levels. The patient had a marked circulatory disturbance with systemic arterial hypotension and cutaneous vasodilation that caused a subnormal body temperature. Removal of the tumor led to a dramatic change in the patient's circulation. Generalized vasodilation with systemic venous and arterial hypotension gave away to vasoconstriction with severe venous and arterial hypertension. Central venous pressure rose from -4.4 to +4.0 cm H2O and arterial pressure rose from 80/55 to 195/110 mm Hg. These changes might explain the unexpected and sometimes fatal heart failure that has complicated the removal of these tumors from some patients.
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PMID:Vipoma of the pancreas: observations on the diarhrhea and circulatory disturbances. 43 2

The inotropic effects of albumin were studied in 94 seriously injured patients who received an average of 14.5 transfusions, 9.2 liters of crystalloid and 0.9 liters of plasma prior to end of operation; 46 patients, by random selection, received added albumin averaging 31 gm during operation, 198 gm during the early postoperative period of extravascular fluid sequestration, and 395 gm during the first 4 days of the later fluid mobilization period. Left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) was plotted against pulmonary wedge pressure (Ppw) in 22 patients who had indwelling thermistor pulmonary artery catheters at the time of the first study. Calculated heart work units (WU) were derived from the pulse pressure, mean arterial pressure, pulse rate, and central venous pressure (CVP) in patients without LVSWI measurements. Albumin supplementation increased serum albumin (4.2 vs. 2.9 gm%), plasma volume, CVP (15 vs. 9 cm H2O), but did not alter red cell volume (1,531 vs. 1,519 ml). The ratio of LVSWI/Ppw fell in albumin patients (1.9 +/- 1.6 vs. 4.8 +/- 1.8), and the ratio of WU/CVP was significantly depressed in albumin patients (4.9 +/- 2.3 vs. 7.3 +/- 2.1). The slopes of the LVSWI/Ppw and WU/CVP were shifted to the right in albumin patients. This negative inotropic effect was associated with impaired oxygenation, as reflected by an increased ratio of inspired oxygen per arterial oxygen tension (0.62 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.33 +/- 0.1). Finally, 24 of the 46 albumin-treated patients were digitalized for heart failure, compared to only 11 of the 48 nonalbumin patients. Pending subsequent studies, albumin should be considered a potentially negative inotropic agent.
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PMID:Negative inotropic effect of albumin resuscitation for shock. 46 73

After the acute onset of heart failure and in the absence of acute myocardial infarction, plasma volume may occasionally be depleted to the extent that the patient presents with clinical signs of circulatory shock. In five patients, the acute onset of clinical and radiographic signs of cardiogenic pulmonary edema were associated with reduction in arterial blood pressure and cardiac output. The pulmonary arterial wedge pressure was within normal limits but a reduction in plasma volume was demonstrated, which is best explained by the rapid translocation of plasma water that represented pulmonary (and most likely also peripheral) edema fluid. The infusion of 5 percent albumin solution significantly increased cardiac output, mean arterial pressure and cardiac work, reversed lactic acidosis, enhanced furosemide-induced diuresis and was followed by a decrease in both clinical and radiographic signs of pulmonary edema. These observations confirm that volume expansion may constitute appropriate treatment for some patients with cardiogenic pulmonary edema who may present with hypotension and who are unresponsive to conventional therapy.
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PMID:Hypovolemia and hypotension complicating management of acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema. 50 39

A case of chlorpropamide-induced, symptomatic hyponatremia in a diabetic patient is reported. The hyponatremia was associated with loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. These symptoms caused reduced food intake which provoked severe hypoglycemia with disturbed consciousness. The hyponatremia developed when the chlorpropamide doses were increased from 400 to 600 mg/day. Withdrawal of chlorpropamide was followed by remission of hyponatremia. Chlorpropamide-induced hyponatremia is a rare complication and is due to an antidiuretic effect of chlorpropamide caused by increased secretion of adiuretin and potentiation of the effect of chlorpropamide caused by increased secretion of adiuretin and potentiation of the effect of adiuretin in the tubuli of the kidney. This case report and the analysis of 18 published cases in the literature show the following characteristics for chlorpropamide-induced hyponatremia: (1) Hyponatremia is a rare complication in the treatment of diabetics with chlorpropamide. The patients typically are female and over sixty. The dosage of chlorpropamide usually was 500 mg daily or even more. (2) Hyponatremia is often unrecognized for a long time because the symptoms are not specific. The characteristic symptoms include loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, confusional state and, rarely, convulsions and coma. Recovery occurs spontaneously after withdrawal of the drug. (3) The incidence of this type of hyponatremia is increased in cases of preexisting tendency to water retention such as heart failure and renal failure, and in cases of diuretic therapy. In the light of these findings, the authors believe that chlorpropamide is no longer a drug of choice in the treatment of diabetic women, especially in cases of preexisting tendency to water retention and in diuretic therapy. In such cases, a sulfonylurea without antidiuretic effect is to be preferred.
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PMID:[Hyponatremia and hypoglycemia after treatment with chlorpropamide. Case histories with review of the literature on 18 cases of chlorpropamide induced hyponatremia]. 66 98


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