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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cardiac complications of radiotherapy of the thorax (e.g. for Hodgkin's disease and carcinoma of the breast) are various: 1) Pleural effusions, occurring a few months to two years after radiotherapy, spontaneously curable but may give signs of tamponnade or lead to constriction. 2) Constrictive pericarditis often several years after irradiation, with a poor prognosis in spite of attempts at pericardectomy which is indicated at the stage of hemodynamic constriction. 3) Myocardial involvement with advanced fibrosis and with various clinical presentations. The failure of pericardectomy and mitral incompetence were evidence of myocarditis in the case reported here.
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PMID:[Constrictive pericarditis and post-radiotherapy myocarditis with mitral incompetence (author's transl)]. 21 10

Occult or overt but delayed cardiac disease after thoracic radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease may be common. Detailed cardiac evaluation was performed in 108 patients, mean age 46 +/- 6.2 years, with Hodgkin's disease at 175 +/- 43 months after irradiation. The study protocol included clinical examination, graded treadmill exercise test and echocardiography. Some patients with angina pectoris, previous myocardial infarction and an abnormal ECG were studied by thallium-201 scintigraphy, cardiac catheterization and coronary angiography. Cardiac disease was found in 12 patients (11%). Three patients had angina pectoris, one patient had myocardial infarction, two complained of dyspnea on effort and two had congestive heart failure. At catheterization, constrictive pericarditis was diagnosed in four patients; in two additional patients an occult constrictive pericarditis was found. One patient had both mitral and tricuspidal regurgitation and one had mitral regurgitation alone. Eight patients (7.4%) had severe coronary artery disease; four of these had associated constrictive pericarditis. Four patients had a pericardiectomy and another four had undergone coronary artery by-pass graft. Two patients died after operation from persistent pericardial constriction. It is concluded that the incidence of delayed cardiac disease after radiotherapy is relatively high; chronic pericardial disorders and coronary artery disease are the most frequent manifestations of this disease. Standard surgical treatment may be beneficial because of the relative youth of these patients.
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PMID:Cardiac disease after chest irradiation for Hodgkin's disease: incidence in 108 patients with long follow-up. 760 65

We analysed the risk of myocardial infarctions in 339 patients with Hodgkin's disease treated with radiotherapy (rt) with or without chemotherapy. A total of 112 patients underwent cardiac testing with echocardiography, rest and exercise electrocardiogram and myocardial scintigraphy. Nearly all patients have been treated with < 2.0 Gy per fraction to the anterior cardiac region. A significantly increased risk of myocardial infarctions or of sudden death has been observed (10 patients). No cardia events have been observed in 215 non-smokers without hypertension and without coronary artery disease (CAD) already present before rt. In the heart study group (112 patients), there were 6 patients with probable or proven CAD. Five of these 6 patients had known risk factors for CAD. Echocardiography showed sclerosis of the aortic and or the mitral valves in 34 patients. Of these patients, 2 had a slight and 1 a moderate aortic stenosis, 5 had a slight and 1 a moderate mitral regurgitation. Evidence for a disturbance of the diastolic function has not been observed. No patient had a clinically relevant pericardial lesion. In patients without risk factors for CAD, there is only a low risk of ischaemic cardiac events after modern mediastinal rt for Hodgkin's disease. Patients should eliminate the known risk factors. There is a high incidence of sclerosis of the mitral and or the aortic valves developing into clinically important lesions in few patients. Decision on the treatment strategy and the rt technique should also involve consideration of the cardiac risk. For routine follow-up, we recommend inclusion of an echocardiography in intervals between 3 and 4 years.
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PMID:Cardiac lesions after mediastinal irradiation for Hodgkin's disease. 815 79

We investigated the clinical, electrophysiological, haemodynamic and angiographic aspects of four patients (two men and two women, aged 31-46 years) who developed complete heart block 13-20 years after therapeutic irradiation of the chest for Hodgkin's disease. The initial cardiac symptom was syncope in three, effort intolerance in one. The electrocardiogram recorded third-degree atrioventricular block in three patients, right bundle branch block and posterior fascicular block in one. The electrophysiological study, performed in three cases, showed that the block was infranodal in two. Three patients had significant coronary arterial stenoses, that involved the ostia in two. All patients had mild-to-moderate aortic and mitral regurgitation. One patient had haemodynamic signs of constriction. Another patient had recurrent pericardial effusions. All had echocardiographic evidence of a thickened pericardium. Cardiac involvement can be extensive in patient with radiation-induced heart block. Because coronary artery disease can be particularly severe, coronary angiography appears to be warranted in such patients.
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PMID:Associated cardiac lesions in patients with radiation-induced complete heart block. 831 49

We report two patients with AIDS and non-Hodgkin lymphoma evolving myocardium. Clinical findings were nonspecific, but rapid progression and cardiac dysfunction developed. An echocardiogram showed restrictive pericarditis in both cases. One of them showed mitral insufficiency because of an infiltrated and trapped posterior mitral valve.
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PMID:[Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with heart disease in patients with AIDS: clinical and echocardiographic aspects]. 913 81

A 48-year-old woman with no cardiovascular risk factors was admitted to the hospital because of acute dyspnea. At 27-year-old, she developed Hodgkin's disease, that was successfully treated with splenectomy, combined chemotherapy (nitrogen mustard, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone-MOPP regimen) and radiotherapy (4500 rads). At 43-year-old the lymphoma relapsed and she had further chemotherapy with doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastina and dacarbazine. After this treatment, she had an episode of pulmonary edema, attributed to doxorubicin acute cardiotoxicity. She responded to digitalis and diuretics and was discharged with an electrocardiogram (ECG) showing left bundle branch block and a normal echocardiogram. The patient enjoyed good health for several years and 4 months before the present admission the ECG and echocardiogram were unchanged. On this admission there were signs of left ventricular failure with acute pulmonary edema, and a new soft apical murmur (3-4 Levine). The patient required endotracheal intubation and high doses of diuretics, digitalis and vasodilators. The cardiac enzymes were negative, the serial ECGs confirmed left bundle branch block, while the echocardiogram showed moderate to severe mitral regurgitation, akinesia of the interventricular septum and inferior wall with dilation of the left ventricle. A previous silent myocardial infarction was suspected. After recovery, she underwent cardiac catheterization confirming akinesia of the interventricular septum and inferior wall with moderate mitral regurgitation, while coronary angiography showed a critical ostial stenosis of the right coronary artery. In view of a dipyridamole-thallium scan negative for myocardial viability, reperfusion was not attempted. With changes in radiotherapeutic techniques, the incidence of radiation-induced heart disease (pericarditis, myocarditis, conduction abnormalities and, rarely, occlusive coronary artery disease) is declining. Nevertheless, after irradiation of the chest and mediastinum a longterm cardiological follow-up is useful in selecting patients at higher risk of radiation-induced coronary artery disease, who will eventually require coronary angiography and reperfusion intervention.
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PMID:[Silent myocardial infarction in a patient treated with radiation therapy and polychemotherapy for Hodgkin's lymphoma]. 928 80

This report presents a case of occult constrictive pericarditis and mitral valve insufficiency following chest radiotherapy. A 44-year-old man had received radiotherapy for the treatment of Hodgkin's disease 8 years ago. At age 40 years, effusive pericarditis occurred and he was treated with intrapericardial drainage. Biopsy revealed a fibrotic and thickened pericardium. He developed congestive heart failure 3 years later. The patient was found to have occult constrictive pericarditis and mitral valve insufficiency. He underwent mitral valve replacement, tricuspid annul plasty, and pericardiectomy. Although there is the benefit of cure for the Hodgkin's disease, the prognosis after treatment is affected by radiotherapy-induced heart disease. After radiotherapy of the chest and mediastinum, long-term cardiological follow-up is recommended in order to detecting patients with radiation-induced heart disease, such as the present case.
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PMID:Cardiac disease late after chest radiotherapy for Hodgkin's disease: a case report. 1055 24

We present a patient with acute retrosternal pain and dyspnoea. Clinical examination revealed a woman in shock with a loud holosystolic murmur and congested jugular veins. Echocardiography showed severe mitral insufficiency. At transoesophageal echocardiography a large mass was seen in the right atrium. The differential diagnosis was a thrombus or an intracardiac tumour. Subsequent histology revealed a non-Hodgkin lymphoma in the right atrium, the wall of the left atrium extending to the mitral valve and further location in the pelvis and duodenum. The discussion incorporates a brief overview of the literature.
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PMID:An unusual case of biventricular cardiac failure. 1135 25

The authors describe the disease of a 22-year-old woman treated from the age of 13 years on account of Hodgkin's lymphoma by irradiation and cytostatic treatment. On account of a relapse of lymphoma at the age of 14 years megachemotherapy with subsequent transplantation of autologous bone marrow. In the course of eight years of the follow up gradual development of constrictive pericarditis with exsudate. Concurrently progression of mitral insufficiency based on valvular prolapse resulting from radiation. During the last two years refractory systemic hypertension resistant to treatment. At the peak of the disease development of cardiac tamponade and cardiac cachexia with anasarca. After anamnestic, clinical and haemodynamic analysis total pericardetomy was indicated and mitral valve replacement performed. The operation led to improvement of the patient's condition, systemic hypertension receded completely. The patient is in permanent remission.
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PMID:[Cardiac damage in a young woman with Hodgkin's disease and long term survival after combination therapy and bone marrow transplantation]. 1266 28

The association between Hodgkin's lymphoma, antiphospholipid syndrome and severe mitral insufficiency is a very rare event. We report on a 25-year-old female patient suffering from Hodgkin's lymphoma and presenting with thromboembolic events and severe mitral insufficiency. The possible link between these symptoms being antiphospholipid antibodies, is discussed briefly.
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PMID:A patient with Hodgkin's lymphoma, antiphospholipid syndrome and severe mitral insufficiency. 1709 16


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