Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cardiomyoplasty is a new surgical procedure that uses a skeletal muscle electrostimulated in order to reinforce or even substitute partially the cardiac muscle. We present the electrophysiology aspects in a patient with dilated cardiomyopathy that underwent cardiomyoplasty. First the latissimus dorsi muscle was prepared with a neurostimulant ITREL II. During the surgical procedure a dual-chamber pacemaker mode DDD brand CPI was placed. After three months, ablation radiofrequency of the AV node was performed in order to control the atrial fibrillation that caused heart failure. By means of the AV block we obtained synchrony between the ventricular stimulation and the latissimus dorsi muscle, and by this the patient improved. Using the modern pacemakers and radiofrequency we can control the bradyarrhythmias as well as the tachyarrhythmias frequent in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, increasing the success rate of cardiomyoplasty.
...
PMID:[The usefulness of electrophysiology in a patient undergoing cardiomyoplasty]. 128 59

The aim of this study was to assess the long term prognosis of congenital atrioventricular block (AVB). From 1965 to 1990, 42 cases of congenital AVB (22 antenatal or natal diagnoses and 20 presumed congenital AVB according to Yater's criteria). The AVB was isolated in 28 cases and associated with cardiac disease in 14 cases (8 of which were corrected transposition of the great arteries). The average age of the patients was 14 years (range 32 years to 18 months) at the time of the study. There was a clear female predominance (64%). Maternal connective tissue disease was present in 18% of cases (in the group of children born after 1977 when maternal connective tissue diseases was systematically looked for). Cardiac failure was present in 10 cases (8 with associated AVB); syncope and sudden death were observed in 11 cases. The indication for pacemaker therapy was the presence of poor prognostic factors: syncope, poorly controlled cardiac failure, low heart rate, increased QRS duration, prolonged QTc, infrahisian AVB, long pauses or arrhythmias on Holter monitoring. The only significant prognostic factors in this series were a previous history of syncope, increased QRS duration and a QTc of over 0.45 seconds. Fourteen patients were paced (endocavitary pacing only from 1981), usually in the DDD mode: 8 for syncope, 2 for cardiac failure, 4 for a poor prognostic factor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Long-term prognosis of congenital atrioventricular block]. 129 88

Left ventricular systolic function at rest was determined by echocardiography and Doppler in 20 patients after dual chamber pacemaker implantation due to second and third degree A-V block. Measurements were performed in each patient during VVI and DDD mode pacing at three different atrio-ventricular (A-V) intervals: 100, 150 and 200 ms. The essential hemodynamic superiority of DDD stimulation over VVI mode in the form of significant increase of forward stroke volume index (SVI) and cardiac index (CI) during dual chamber stimulation at identical rate stimulation was observed. Closer individual analysis of the values of CI during DDD stimulation at three different A-V intervals (100, 150 and 200 ms) gave the possibility of programming optimal A-V intervals (the highest value of CI) for each patient. The sequential atrio-ventricular stimulation as compared to right ventricular stimulation essentially improves the left ventricular systolic function at rest in patients without symptoms of heart failure. Maximum hemodynamic advantage during DDD stimulation depends on individual selection of A-V delay in each patient.
...
PMID:[Effect of ventricular and sequential stimulation on the left- ventricular systolic function]. 140 99

Permanent cardiac pacing is now easily feasible in children and even in small infants, but the long-term results of this procedure are not well known. We analyzed our experience to determine the morbidity of pacing in children. Over the past 10 years, 47 pediatric patients (pts) required pacemaker implantation in our institution. The mean age was 8.3 +/- 4 years (1 day-17 years) and mean body weight was 23 +/- 14 Kg (2.2-60 Kg). 25 pts had heart disease. 40 children had an A-V block (congenital in 22 cases, post-operative in 17 pts, and secondary to a systemic disease in 1 case); 7 pts had a sick sinus syndrome, primitive in 4 and postoperative in 3 cases. The first pacemaker implantation was epicardial in 17 and transvenous in 30 pts. The pacing was single-chamber in 45 pts (VVI 32, VVIr 7, AAI 5, AAIr 1) and dual-chamber in 2 pts (DDD 1, VDD 1). Two newborns, both with a congenital A-V block and severe heart failure, died in the first hours after epicardial pacing. Two other children, both with congenital heart disease, died during follow-up, but the death was not pacemaker-related. Finally, two children were lost to follow-up. The mean follow-up of the 41 remaining pts was 5.2 +/- 3.5 years (4 months-10 years). Twelve children (29%) required 19 implant revisions and the causes were: lead fracture (26%), rising stimulation threshold (26%), growth problems (21%), erosion and/or pocket infection (21%). Revisions were more common in epicardial (52%) than in endocardial (22%) implantation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Complications and sequelae of cardiac electrostimulation in children. Our experience with 47 children]. 142 83

The long-term efficacy of physiologic dual-chamber (DDD) pacing in the treatment of end-stage idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy was evaluated in a longitudinal study of up to 5 years in 17 patients. The considerable clinical improvement achieved after implantation of a pacemaker programmed for DDD pacing at an atrioventricular delay of 100 ms was maintained throughout the follow-up period or until death and was associated with a consistent decrease in New York Heart Association class and an increase in left ventricular ejection fraction. Cardiothoracic ratio, heart rate and echocardiographic dimensions progressively decreased, and systolic and diastolic blood pressures increased. Median survival time was 22 months. During follow-up, 4 patients received donor hearts, 9 had a sudden death at home without defined cause or after a thromboembolic event, and 1 died from adenocarcinoma. Three patients survived the follow-up. No patient needed rehospitalization owing to a worsening of heart failure after pacemaker implantation. An interruption of pacing in DDD mode for 2 to 4 hours was followed within the first months by a marked decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction and an increase in cardiothoracic ratio and echocardiographic dimensions, but this response consistently decreased during follow-up. The data indicate that DDD pacing can be recommended as a useful tool in the long-term treatment of end-stage idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy, with progressive improvement in cardiac function and a reduction of the dilatation of the left ventricle.
...
PMID:Long-term efficacy of physiologic dual-chamber pacing in the treatment of end-stage idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. 144 85

It is well known that during permanent ventricular pacing atrial arrhythmias and embolic complications occur much more frequently in comparison to permanent atrial or sequential pacing. Hemodynamic disturbances caused by ventriculoatrial conduction (VAC) are thought to be responsible for those complications. The aim of this study was to compare the left atrial size and its wall motion in three groups of patients with sick sinus syndrome. Group 1: 58 patients with VVI pacing and VAC observed (22 males, 36 females, aged 31-86, mean 62.3). Group 2: 43 patients with primary AAI pacing (13 males, 30 females, aged 27-74, mean 57.8). Group 3: 13 patients with AAI or DDD replacing the primary VVI mode due to pacemaker syndrome and/or heart failure, all with VAC present during VVI pacing (7 males, 6 females, aged 26-80, mean 59.8). Two-dimensional/M-mode echocardiography was performed in all these patients. In group 1 mean diastolic as well as mean systolic atrial diameters were significantly greater (P less than 0.005) and wall motion significantly smaller (P less than 0.005) in comparison to the other groups. Left atrial wall motion amounted to only 7.4% of the mean diastolic diameter in this group. Mean left atrial diastolic and systolic diameters and wall motion in patients with pacemakers preserving atrioventricular synchrony (group 2 and group 3) were almost identical and wall motion amounted to about 22% of the diastolic diameter in both these groups. We conclude that ventriculoatrial conduction leads to significant enlargement of left atrium and to the atrial wall-motion decrease. This predisposes to arrhythmias and embolic complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Left atrial size and wall motion in patients with permanent ventricular and atrial pacing. 170 33

In patients with sinus node disease (SND), VVI pacing seems an inappropriate method of cardiac stimulation because of its potential adverse hemodynamic and arrhythmic effects. AAI-DDD pacing, preferred because of lower morbidity, may also determine a higher survival rate. We examined retrospectively two groups of patients with SND. Stimulated respectively with VVI pacing (group 1 = 57 patients) and AAI pacing (group 2 = 53 patients). The mean duration of the follow-up interval was 40.1 months for group 1 and 45 months for group 2. Ten patients (17.5%) in the VVI group and five (9.4%) in the AAI died. During the follow-up, in the VVI group three patients developed congestive heart failure and ten developed chronic atrial fibrillation, whereas only one case of heart failure and two with atrial fibrillation have been recorded in the AAI group. Moreover, four patients had embolic complications in group 1. Five patients (9.4%) with AAI pacing were converted to sequential pacing due to the occurrence of second-degree heart block. The statistical analysis was developed by the X2 test for the comparison of the proportion of the events (atrial fibrillation, congestive heart failure, embolic accidents) in the two groups: a significantly higher morbidity (P less than 0.01) was recorded in the AAI group. Survival is also higher in AAI patients, but the survival rate difference, calculated using the Mantel-Cox method, is not statistically significant. The findings of our study show that in SND the superiority of AAI pacing over VVI is statistically significant as far as morbidity is concerned, and we have also noticed an evident but not statistically significant superiority regarding mortality.
...
PMID:Morbidity and mortality of patients with sinus node disease: comparative effects of atrial and ventricular pacing. 170 96

A new method for selection of the pacing mode in 60 consecutive patients with severe cardioinhibitory or mixed carotid sinus syndrome was prospectively validated. DDD pacing was preferred for 26 patients with: (1) the cardioinhibitory form and who had symptomatic pacemaker effect; (2) mixed type I form, (cardioinhibitory and vasodepressor) with symptomatic pacemaker effect, ventriculoatrial conduction or orthostatic hypotension; (3) mixed type II; or (4) severe bradycardia. VVI pacing was selected in the remaining 34 patients without these symptoms. During a 32 +/- 10 month follow-up period syncope and severe dizziness persisted in five patients in the VVI group (15%) and in three patients in the DDD group (12%). Symptomatic relief occurred in 87% (52/60) of patients. Minor symptoms persisted in 47% of the VVI group and 42% of the DDD group. No patient developed cardiac insufficiency or intolerance to pacing. During a 2-month duration a single-blind, randomized, cross-over study compared VVI and DDD pacing, 69% of the patients programmed from DDD to VVI suffered more frequent, severe, and intolerable symptoms. (1) Thirty four of 60 patients (57% of the entire group) in whom VVI pacing was satisfactory were identified prior to pacemaker implant. In the remainder, VVI pacing was contraindicated as it produced frequent side effects. (2) The preimplant predictive value that VVI pacing would be successful was 85% for those eventually receiving VVI pacemakers and the preimplant predictive value that VVI pacing would fail was 69% for those who underwent DDD implant.
...
PMID:Validation of a method for choice of pacing mode in carotid sinus syndrome with or without sinus bradycardia. 170 5

Diastolic mitral regurgitation (MR) is known to be induced by prolonging atrioventricular (AV) delay in patients implanted with a DDD pacemaker. We studied the relationship between diastolic MR and PQ intervals on cardiac function in 50 patients (71.3 +/- 11.3 years old: mean +/- SD), who had been implanted with DDD pacemakers. In 19 patients, prior to pacemaker implantation, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) was measured using a Swan-Ganz catheter during AV sequential pacing with an AV delay of 0.165 seconds. Transmitral blood flow was measured with pulsed Doppler echocardiography, while prolonging AV delay stepwise by 0.025 seconds from 0.065 seconds for about 5 minutes each. In nine patients, AV delay could not be prolonged enough due to occurrence of intrinsic AV conduction. In the other 41 patients, diastolic MR was induced by prolonging AV delay. The critical PQ intervals that induced diastolic MR ranged from 0.14 to 0.26 (0.23 +/- 0.03) seconds. Four of five patients whose critical PQ intervals were 0.20 seconds or shorter had heart failure, while 36 patients whose critical PQ intervals were greater than 0.20 seconds were free from signs and symptoms of heart failure. Their PCWPs were 2-27 (7.5 +/- 5.1) mmHg. There was a significant negative correlation between the critical PQ intervals for the appearance of diastolic MR and PCWP during AV sequential pacing, which was performed prior to pacemaker implantation (r = -0.85, P less than 0.001). It is suggested that the appearance of diastolic MR is determined mainly by PQ intervals and cardiac function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Relationship between diastolic mitral regurgitation and PQ intervals or cardiac function in patients implanted with DDD pacemakers. 172 Nov 78

The paper describes the clinical case of an elderly patient with heart failure, the possessor of a dual-chamber pacemaker programmed in DDD mode, in whom a complete interatrial block with left atrial standstill was diagnosed. The authors discuss the physiopathological aspect of the case which is a paradigmatic example of the problems related to dual-chamber pacing. In particular, the utility of an echo-Doppler assessment of the mechanical activity of the atria is emphasized together with a careful choice of the optimal atrioventricular delay in programming and the follow-up of dual-chamber pacing.
...
PMID:[The physiopathology of dual-chamber cardiac stimulation. Apropos a case with a dual-chamber pacemaker, left atrial standstill and heart decompensation]. 178 95


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next >>