Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (hemoptysis)
6,129 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The quality of life of adolescent patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) who have not undergone intracardiac repair was investigated by assessing the physical activity, complications, and the educational and occupational status of 69 patients (32 males and 37 females, average age 18 +/- 2 years) who had graduated from junior high school by April 1993. Group A consisted of 54 patients with mild CHD (small left-to-right shunt disease, mild aortic stenosis and/or regurgitation, and other CHD) who reported to have no symptoms. Group B consisted of 15 patients who complained of restrictions on physical activity associated with CHD (Eisenmenger syndrome, and CHD complicated with pulmonary atresia or severe pulmonary stenosis). All group A patients were in NYHA class I, and none had had serious complications due to CHD. Their heart condition had not been a disadvantage in terms of educational and occupational opportunities after graduation from junior high school. All group B patients in NYHA class II had reduced physical activity. Eleven patients suffered from complications associated with CHD, such as brain abscess, infective endocarditis, Down syndrome, supraventricular tachycardia, brain infarction, hemoptysis, mental retardation associated with conotruncal anomaly face syndrome, and I degree AV block without symptoms. Two remained at home after graduation from junior high school, and four after high school. Only two of 15 obtained full time jobs after graduation from high school. About half of the patients with symptomatic CHD are unable to participate actively in society since graduation from junior high or high school.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Adolescent congenital heart disease: quality of life in patients not undergoing intracardiac repair]. 793 75

Seventy one patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis who died during the past 5 years (1989 to 1993) were evaluated on their causes of death. Twenty two patients (31%) died directly of tuberculosis, and among them, 18 patients (81%) of 22 patients who died of tuberculosis) had very advanced tuberculosis. The majority of them (64%) were old age over 70 years and were bedridden due mostly to cerebrovascular injuries. The serum level of albumin was low in all 17 patients in whom it was measured. Establishment of diagnosis of tuberculosis was delayed over one month after the onset of symptoms in 59% of patients who died of severe disease. Sixty one percent (11/18) of patients died within the first month after the initiation of chemotherapy and about 90% (16/18) died within 3 months. Two patients died from massive hemoptysis and other patients died of either respiratory failure or tuberculosis meningitis. From these observations it was found that very advanced tuberculosis was the major cause of death in patients who died of tuberculosis and that the advanced disease was chiefly caused by the delay on the establishment of diagnosis, and it was most important to detect tuberculosis as early as possible, with regular check up of chest X-ray and frequent examination for AFB (acid-fast bacilli) for tuberculosis suspected patients. On the other hand, the majority of patients (49/71) died of complicating medical problem unrelated to tuberculosis. Seventeen patients died from malignancy (seven lung cancer, four lymphoma, two laryngeal cancer, etc). Ten deaths were the result of bacterial superinfection. Other patients died from respiratory failure due to COPD, arteiosclerotic heart disease, or cerebrovascular injuries, etc. Two patients of old age died of hepatic failure possibly caused by adverse reaction of TB chemotherapy. It was found that diseases unrelated to tuberculosis were the cause of death in approximately 70% of patients with active tuberculosis, and it should be emphasized to detect early and to treat these diseases, in particular malignancy. And it is also imperative that the chemotherapy for TB must be instituted very carefully with frequent monitoring of liver function in patients with old age.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation on causes of death in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis]. 868 6

A 27-yr-old woman with recurrent episodes of hemoptysis (and hematemesis due to esophageal varices) was found to have unilateral pulmonary vein atresia. Reversed flow in the left pulmonary artery, a finding highly suggestive of this rare congenital anomaly, was demonstrated during cardiac catheterization. The definitive diagnosis was afforded by pulmonary wedge angiography, which not only demonstrated the atretic leftsided pulmonary veins, but also revealed a serpiginous system of systemic collateral veins to be the cause of her esophageal varices. Pneumonectomy of the nonfunctioning hypoplastic lung, the most successful approach to this disorder, may be complicated by severe bleeding of the numerous systemic arterial collateral vessels transected during surgical mobilization of the affected lung. Percutaneously delivered vascular occlusion coils were used in this case to occlude the large systemic to pulmonary artery collateral arteries immediately prior to pneumonectomy. Intra- and perioperative bleeding was minimal, and the patient has done well without further episodes of hemoptysis or hematemesis. Percutaneous occlusion of systemic to pulmonary collaterals may prove useful as a preoperative step for other congenital heart disease patients requiring lung or heart/lung transplantation.
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PMID:Esophageal varices in association with unilateral pulmonary vein atresia. 885 49

Heart failure is not a common manifestation of hypothyroidism if there is no underlying heart disease. We report a case of familial primary hypothyroidism in a young male, that clinically onset with dyspnea, hemoptysis and serum CPK elevation, and in which further explorations revealed a dilated cardiomyopathy due to hypothyroidism. Because of its bad prognosis, we underline the need to identify those cases of dilated cardiomyopathy that can be treated with the appropriate therapy.
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PMID:[Heart insufficiency as first manifestation of familial primary hypothyroidism]. 938 Sep 39

For this article, the literature on the pathophysiology, clinical features, natural history, prognosis, and management of the Eisenmenger syndrome in adults was reviewed. English-language articles from 1966 to the present were identified through a search of the MEDLINE database by using the terms Eisenmenger, congenital heart disease, and pulmonary hypertension. Selected cross-referenced articles were also included. Articles on the pathophysiology, clinical presentation, evaluation, natural history, complications, and treatment of the Eisenmenger syndrome in adults were selected, and descriptive and analytical data relevant to the practicing physician were manually extracted. The Eisenmenger syndrome is characterized by elevated pulmonary vascular resistance and right-to-left shunting of blood through a systemic-to-pulmonary circulation connection. Most patients with the syndrome survive for 20 to 30 years. The hemostatic changes associated with the syndrome may lead to thromboembolic events, cerebrovascular complications, or the hyperviscosity syndrome. Erythrocytosis is present in most patients, but excessive phlebotomy may cause microcytosis and exacerbate the symptoms of hyperviscosity. Other complications associated with the Eisenmenger syndrome include hemoptysis, gout, cholelithiasis, hypertrophic osteoarthropathy, and decreased renal function. Pregnancy or noncardiac surgery is associated with a high mortality rate in patients with the Eisenmenger syndrome. Because most pediatric patients with the Eisenmenger syndrome survive to adulthood, primary care physicians should have a thorough understanding of the syndrome; its associated complications; and medical and surgical management, especially with regard to the appropriate timing of phlebotomy and lung or heart-lung transplantation. In addition, patients with the syndrome should undergo routine follow-up at a tertiary care center that has physicians and nurses with special expertise in congenital heart disease. In patients with the Eisenmenger syndrome who are pregnant or require noncardiac surgery, a multidisciplinary approach should be used to reduce the excessive mortality associated with these conditions.
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PMID:The Eisenmenger syndrome in adults. 955 69

Cyanotic congenital heart diseases constitute about 10 percent of total congenital heart disease cases in adults in the developing world. Prolonged cyanosis and old age adversely affect the outcome of surgery, thus posing a challenge to the cardiac surgeons. This study was conducted to assess the feasibility, safety and outcome of surgery in this group of patients. From January 1991 to December 1997, a total of 303 patients, aged 14 to 54 years (mean 19.8 +/- 1.5 years) with diagnosis of various cyanotic congenital heart diseases were operated at our institute. There were 210 males (69.3%). Two hundred and forty-seven patients (81.5%) had tetralogy of Fallot's physiology, 51 patients (16.8%) had single ventricle physiology and five (1.6%) had other lesions. Sixty-six patients (21.7%) had pre-operative complications such as haemoptysis, epistaxis, cerebrovascular accidents, brain abscess and infective endocarditis. Sixty patients (19.8%) had previous palliative shunts and 26 patients (8.5%) had coil embolisation of major aortopulmonary collaterals prior to surgery; 229 patients (75.5%) underwent biventricular repair, 52 (17.1%) had univentricular repair, 22 (7.7%) had palliative shunts and one patient had open ligation of a major aortopulmonary collateral in addition. In-hospital mortality was 3.3 percent. Follow-up period ranged from five months to seven years (mean 4.2 +/- 1.8 years). There were two late deaths. Of the 291 survivors, 11 were lost to follow-up. Two hundred and fifty-eight patients (92.1%) are in New York Heart Association class I. Significant residual defects warranting reoperation were present in four patients (1.3%). It is concluded that congenital heart surgery in older cyanotic patients can be performed safely with satisfactory results.
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PMID:Adult cyanotic congenital heart disease: surgical experience. 1040 48

A 14-year-old boy with a history of congenital cardiopathy is presented. At age 4, a left systemic-to-pulmonary fistula was performed, using a tubular prosthesis to anastomose the left subclavian artery to the left pulmonary artery. Following this procedure, he developed recurrent episodes of hemoptysis, cough, and left upper lobe consolidation. Treatment resulted in clinical but no radiologic resolution. At age 6, a new right systemic-to-pulmonary anastomosis was needed, as the left one was no longer functioning. After placement of the second shunt, the hemoptysis disappeared. At age 14, flexible bronchoscopy revealed a foreign body granuloma at the left secondary carina. Rigid bronchoscopy and laser photoresection showed it to be the left vascular prosthesis, placed 10 years before. Surgery failed to remove it.
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PMID:Recurrent hemoptysis following a systemic-to-pulmonary anastomosis in a child with a complex congenital cardiomyopathy. 1098 18

Massive hemoptysis is a life-threatening emergency that rarely occurs in association with heart failure and is even less frequent when the underlying cause is dilated myocardiopathy. We report the case of a 69-year-old man with undiagnosed heart disease who presented with severe hemoptysis. Images showed evident cardiac insufficiency. The unusualness of the case obliged us to rule out other diseases through differential diagnosis before starting to treat the underlying condition.
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PMID:[Massive hemoptysis secondary to cardiac insufficiency in a context of dilated myocardiopathy]. 1148 Oct 60

Fallot tetralogy with pulmonary artery atresia is a special situation in which the patient can survive up to middle-age. In these cases some complications such as hemoptysis can appear with difficult treatment that endangers the life of the patient. When the cause of bleeding is the arteriovenous shunts, which are frequent in the multiple vascular malformations originated in this congenital cardiopathy, the selective embolization of these malformations can be an effective option of treatment.
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PMID:[Tetralogy of Fallot complicated by severe hemoptysis in the adult]. 1148 Nov 17

A 55-year-old man had undiagnosed tetralogy of Fallot with the complications of decompensated heart failure and infective endocarditis, as well as pulmonic involvement secondary to the endocarditis. The patient had a massive hemoptysis and died. This case is a rare insight into the late outcome of this congenital heart disease.
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PMID:Cyanotic tetralogy of fallot with its infective endocarditis complication on the tricuspid and pulmonary. 1474 57


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