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

The mechanisms of respiratory muscle deoxygenation during incremental leg exercise with expired gas analysis were investigated in 29 patients with chronic heart failure and 21 normal subjects. The deoxygenation and blood volume of the respiratory muscle and exercising leg muscle were assessed by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). To evaluate the influence of the leg exercise on the blood volume of the respiratory muscle, 10 normal subjects also underwent a hyperventilation test with NIRS. The respiratory muscle deoxygenation point (RDP), at which oxygenated hemoglobin starts to decrease, was observed in both groups during exercise. The oxygen consumption (VO2) and the minute ventilation at the RDP in the patients was lower (p<0.01). At the same VO2, the respiratory rate was higher in patients (p<0.01). During exercise, the blood volume of the leg muscle increased, while that of the respiratory muscle decreased. During a hyperventilation test, the minute ventilation was higher than that of the RDP during exercise, the blood volume of the respiratory muscle did not decrease, and the RDP was not detectable. In conclusion, a limited ability to increase perfusion of respiratory muscles during exercise combined with the greater work of breathing results in early respiratory muscle deoxygenation in patients with chronic heart failure.
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PMID:Early occurrence of respiratory muscle deoxygenation assessed by near-infrared spectroscopy during leg exercise in patients with chronic heart failure. 1008 71

Cardiovascular abnormalities have been considered important extrarenal manifestations of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). However, little is known about their prevalence in patients with ADPKD undergoing hemodialysis (HD). To investigate whether cardiac abnormalities are more prevalent in these patients, clinical and echocardiographic manifestations of cardiovascular disease were evaluated in a group of 32 patients with ADPKD and a matched control group of 32 patients without diabetes treated by chronic HD for more than 6 months. Predialysis systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP), prevalence of hypertension, and number of patients requiring antihypertensive medications were lower in the ADPKD group than controls. There was no difference in the prevalence of cardiac events, including cardiac failure, ischemic heart disease, and arrhythmia. Systolic dysfunction, diastolic patterns, and left ventricular hypertrophy were similar in the two groups. In patients with ADPKD, simple regression analysis showed left ventricular mass (LVM) index was correlated with hemoglobin level and predialytic systolic and diastolic BPs. In multiple regression analysis, predialysis systolic BP was the only independent variable linked to LVM index. The prevalence of aortic, mitral, and tricuspid valve disease did not differ between groups. In conclusion, the occurrence of cardiovascular complications in patients with ADPKD is similar to that of HD patients with other primary renal diseases, although hypertension is less prevalent.
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PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease and end-stage renal disease. 1043 Sep 73

Recent uncontrolled studies have suggested improved maximal exercise capacity and decreased exercise ventilation in heart failure after administration of increased inspired oxygen concentrations. To study the responses further, 16 patients performed staged, symptom-limited cycle ergometry with humidified 21% and 60% inspired oxygen concentrations using a randomized, double-blind, crossover study design. Serial measurements of minute ventilation, heart rate, blood pressure, leg blood flow, and arterial and venous lactate and oxygen content were obtained. Exercise time did not change between the 2 tests (595 +/- 179 seconds and 602 +/- 181 seconds for 21% and 60% oxygen concentrations, respectively). Similarly, measurements of the ventilatory response to exercise and of leg blood flow were not different between the 2 oxygen concentrations. Although hemoglobin oxygen saturation increased from 96.7 +/- 2.1% to 97.9 +/- 1.5% at rest, at both rest and maximal exercise there was no statistically significant difference in arterial or venous oxygen content. This study failed to demonstrate any physiologic or functional benefit from the administration of increased oxygen concentrations to patients with stable heart failure.
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PMID:Lack of effect of increased inspired oxygen concentrations on maximal exercise capacity or ventilation in stable heart failure. 1087 25

A 41-year-old woman who had been given a diagnosis of aplastic anemia 14 years before was admitted because of recurrence of the disease. Despite therapy, the anemia progressed gradually. The patient refused blood product transfusions for religious reasons. Angina pectoris-like chest pain without ischemic changes on electrocardiograms appeared at a hemoglobin concentration (Hb) of 1.6 g/dl. The patient died of heart failure at Hb 1.5 g/dl. Autopsy showed enlargement of the heart, fatty changes in the myocardium and liver due to chronic hypoxia, and no changes in coronary arteries.
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PMID:[An aplastic anemia patient died of severe anemia who refused transfusion]. 1069 2

Mechanical cardiac assistance can be critical in saving the lives of patients with acute cardiac failure. However, currently used methods of ventricular assistance require advanced technical knowledge and equipment, and only small numbers of patients can be provided with them. Our aim was to develop new cannulas to construct a less invasive biventricular assist system that would permit easy application without thoracotomy. We prepared 2 centrifugal pumps and 4 uniquely shaped cannulas and conducted experiments to investigate the potential and problems of the system. In the first experiment, the system was attached to 6 dogs with ventricular fibrillation to confirm whether our system could maintain cardiac output. In the second experiment, the system was installed for 3 days in 3 goats, and changes in aminotransferases, BUN, creatinine, and plasma free hemoglobin levels were examined. In Experiment 1, it was demonstrated that the system was able to maintain circulation in dogs. In Experiment 2, although the flow rate of the pumps was maintained over 3 days, increased hemolysis and deteriorating renal function were observed. Although these problems need to be solved, the system was still helpful in the management of acute biventricular failure for short periods and may be clinically useful in the near future.
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PMID:Potentialities and problems of a novel bilateral ventricular assist system without thoracotomy. 1071 68

We present a four-month-old girl with severe hemolytic anemia and reticulocytopenia. This case is the youngest with hemolytic anemia encountered in our hospital. Findings of autoimmune hemolytic anemia were preceded by diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus (DPT) and oral polio vaccines which were given one month before. At admission, she had heart failure, her hemoglobin (Hb) was 27 gm/L, hematocrit (Hct) 8.5 percent, reticulocyte count 0.2 percent, and gamma and non-gamma Coombs tests were positive. Plasma Hb was 23 percent (N < 3%) and haptoglobin 0 mg/dl. Bone marrow aspiration smear revealed erythroid hyperplasia. No infection, immunodeficiency or malignancy could be established. She received multiple transfusions and did not respond to methyl prednisolone therapy of seven days' duration, but was successfully treated with a combination of immunosuppressive therapy (cyclophosphamide, 6-mercaptopurine, intravenous immunoglobulin and prednisolone, which was added later). This case is interesting in that the disease was preceded by DPT vaccination, was associated with reticulocytopenia and was resistant to steroids.
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PMID:A warm antibody mediated acute hemolytic anemia with reticulocytopenia in a four-month-old girl requiring immunosuppressive therapy. 1077 Jun 64

In children with large left-to-right shunts secondary to congenital heart defects the imbalance between the pulmonary and systemic perfusion may lead to circulatory congestion with clinical signs similar to those of heart failure. The circulatory function in this state was evaluated by using the invasive measurements performed during cardiac catheterisations in n = 64 young patients with ventricular septal defect (n = 56) or complete atrioventricular septal defect (n = 8) aging 0.1-23.7 years (median 1.1 years). The mean shunt ratio was Qp/Qs = 2.4 (range 1-8). With increasing shunt ratio the pulmonary perfusion raised (r = 0.84), but the systemic output dropped significantly (r = -0.77) while the total cardiac output (Qp + Qs) increased slightly not exceeding 141/min/m2. In infants, the systemic hypoperfusion affects the hemoglobin content: Hb = 14.9-1.01 x Qs, r = 0.63, p < 0.01. This may be due to the diminished oxygen extraction reserve of 46%. With dropping systemic output, the vascular resistance increases and the mean aortic pressure (MAP) remains normal. The actual pressure values layed near to the curve of the normal aortic pressure calculated as MAP = Qs x Rs. This pressure-flow-resistance diagram was used to interpret the effects of vasodilators established by 7 studies: ACE-Inhibitors, Hydralazine, and Na-Nitroprusside reduce the vascular resistance effectively but induce hypotension, because the systemic output fails to increase. In the chronic circulatory congestion secondary to a large intracardiac left-to-right shunt the pulmonary perfusion increases with the shunt ratio but the systemic output decreases and the total cardiac output is limited to a maximum of 141/min/m2. In this state vasodilators cause systemic hypotension thus offering no acceptable therapeutic option.
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PMID:[Circulatory failure in children with left-to-right shunt in the framework of congenital heart defects: pathophysiology and therapeutic results]. 1081 53

The blood hemoglobin F (HbF) concentration increases in response to chronic arterial hypoxemia and is abnormally elevated in sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) post-mortem indicating a need for greater oxygen affinity of hemoglobin (Hb) or diminished oxygen usage by tissues or both. Modifying Hb oxygen affinity in rats revealed that increased, rather than decreased, hemoglobin-oxygen affinity permitted survival at greatly reduced environmental oxygen pressures equivalent to high altitude. Decreased Hb-oxygen affinity resulted in bradycardia 5-10 minutes before death. Cardiorespiratory recordings from infants dying suddenly and unexpectedly at home demonstrated cardiovascular failure with hypotension and bradycardia, rather than a cessation of breathing.A fall in blood pressure and acidosis due to hypoxemia in combination with reduced arterial oxygen saturation leads to circulatory failure, heart failure and death. It is speculated that the final mechanism of SIDS mimics failure to survive at high altitudes and very low environmental oxygen pressures when low arterial oxygen pressures combine with decreased Hb-oxygen affinity lead to severe hypoxemia and death.
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PMID:Sudden infant death syndrome: a preconditioning approach to acute arterial hypoxemia. 1086 52

Fumonisins are mycotoxins produced by Fusarium verticillioides, which induce acute pulmonary edema in swine. We previously reported that ingestion of fumonisin-containing culture material decreases cardiovascular function in swine (1996,a,b; Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 31, 169-172; 33, 140-148; 1999, Am. J Vet. Res. 60, 1291-1300). The main purpose of this study was to confirm that fumonisin B(1) was responsible for the observed cardiovascular changes. Treated pigs (n = 6) were given daily intravenous injections of purified fumonisin B(1) at 1 mg/kg for 4 days, while controls (n = 6) were injected with equal volumes of saline. On day 5, pigs were anesthetized with butorphanol-chloralose and instrumented for hemodynamic studies. Terminally, bronchoalveolar lavage was performed on each pig to determine the relative permeability index of the pulmonary endothelium. Fumonisin B(1)-treated pigs had marked decreases in the maximal rate of change of left ventricular pressure (dP/dt(max)), mean aortic pressure, cardiac output, and arterial pO(2), accompanied by increases in mean pulmonary artery pressure, oxygen extraction ratio, and blood hemoglobin concentration. Plasma and left ventricular sphingosine and sphinganine concentrations were markedly increased in treated pigs at day 5; however, there was no difference in the relative permeability index between groups. Serum cholesterol concentrations and activities of hepatic-derived enzymes were increased, and hepatocyte apoptosis and mitoses were present in the livers of fumonisin-treated pigs. In the lungs of treated pigs, there was proteinaceous edema and membranous accumulations in capillary endothelial cells. These results indicate that cardiovascular function is altered by fumonisin B(1), and that fumonisin-induced pulmonary edema is caused by left-sided heart failure and not by altered endothelial permeability. Because of the potential for contamination of human foodstuffs by fumonisins, the cardiovascular toxicity of these compounds must be taken into consideration.
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PMID:Purified fumonisin B(1) decreases cardiovascular function but does not alter pulmonary capillary permeability in swine. 1086 73

An association between moderate anemia and poor perinatal outcomes has been found through epidemiologic studies, although available evidence cannot establish this relation as causal. Anemia may not be a direct cause of poor pregnancy outcomes, except in the case of maternal mortality resulting directly from severe anemia due to hypoxia and heart failure. Preventing or treating anemia, whether moderate or severe, is desirable. Because iron deficiency is a common cause of maternal anemia, iron supplementation is a common practice to reduce the incidence of maternal anemia. Nevertheless, the effectiveness of large-scale supplementation programs needs to be improved operationally and, where multiple micronutrient deficiencies are common, supplementation beyond iron and folate can be considered. High hemoglobin concentrations are often mistaken as adequate iron status; however, high hemoglobin is independent of iron status and is often associated with poor health outcomes. Very high hemoglobin concentrations cause high blood viscosity, which results in both compromised oxygen delivery to tissues and cerebrovascular complications. Epidemiologic studies have also found an association between high maternal hemoglobin concentrations and an increased risk of poor pregnancy outcomes. Evidence does not suggest that this association is causal; it could be better attributed to hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and to preeclampsia. The pathophysiologic mechanism of these conditions during pregnancy can produce higher hemoglobin concentrations because of reduced normal plasma expansion and cause fetal stress because of reduced placental-fetal perfusion. Accordingly, higher than normal hemoglobin concentrations should be regarded as an indicator of possible pregnancy complications, not necessarily as a sign of adequate iron nutrition, because iron supplementation does not increase hemoglobin higher than the optimal concentration needed for oxygen delivery.
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PMID:Significance of an abnormally low or high hemoglobin concentration during pregnancy: special consideration of iron nutrition. 1087 93


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