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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many drugs for the treatment of
hypertension
are available in the United States today. Of the various factors that determine the appropriate treatment for a particular patient, the presence of concomitant heart disease requires specific tailoring of the antihypertensive therapy. Coronary artery disease,
aortic insufficiency
, congestive heart failure, left ventricular hypertrophy, premature ventricular contractions, supraventricular arrhythmias, mitral valve prolapse, orthostatic hypotension, and aortic dissection are some of the conditions that influence the choice of treatment. Diabetes places hypertensive patients at increased risk of heart disease, and exercise and sexual function are other considerations that govern the selection of treatment for the hypertensive person. For all of these conditions, more than one drug choice is often possible, but usually hypertensive patients can be treated with a beta-blocker or a calcium channel blocker in these special circumstances.
...
PMID:The hypertensive patient with concomitant cardiovascular disease. 329 95
The term "penetrating aortic ulcer" refers to an ulceration of an atheromatous plaque that extends deeply through the intima and into the aortic media. It may precipitate an intramedial dissection (usually localized) or may rupture into the adventitia to form a pseudoaneurysm. The typical patient with penetrating atheromatous aortic ulcer is elderly and has
hypertension
, atherosclerosis, and back or chest pain, but pulse deficit, stroke,
aortic insufficiency
, and compromise of a visceral vessel are not present. Classic aortic dissection and symptomatic thoracic aortic aneurysms are among possibilities in the differential diagnosis. Aortography demonstrates the presence of an aortic ulcer similar in appearance to gastric ulcers seen on barium examination; in addition, an intramural aortic hematoma may be present. Our experience with penetrating aortic ulcers in symptomatic patients indicates that conservative medical therapy leads to recurrence of symptoms and a need for surgical intervention. We present a case that illustrates the salient features of this distinct clinical entity.
...
PMID:The penetrating aortic ulcer: pathologic manifestations, diagnosis, and management. 338 11
Cardiac function is difficult to assess in patients with atrial fibrillation due to the widely fluctuating cycle lengths resulting in variable ventricular hemodynamics. With respect to ECG-gated blood pool scintigraphy, distortion of the time activity curve occurs due to a summation of irregular cycle lengths. Therefore, performing such a study has been regarded meaningless. To evaluate left ventricular function during atrial fibrillation using scintigraphic technique, a new processing algorithm was devised to make multiple gated images which are discriminated by the preceding R-R interval, and left ventricular filling and function curves were established. The left ventricular filling curve, obtained by plotting end-diastolic volume against the preceding R-R intervals demonstrated an impairment of blood filling in cases of mitral stenosis and constrictive pericarditis, which resolved after mitral commissurotomy in case of mitral stenosis. The left ventricular function curve, established by plotting stroke volume against end-diastolic volume, was analyzed according to indices such as "slope" and "position". Both of these indices were significantly reduced in relation to the severity of heart failure according to the NYHA's functional classification and cardiomegaly on chest radiography. On individual comparisons of underlying diseases, the indices decreased in the following order; lone atrial fibrillation, hyperthyroidism, aging,
hypertension
, mitral valve disease, ischemic heart disease, dilated cardiomyopathy and
aortic regurgitation
. The indices correlated closely with ejection fraction. In cases of mitral regurgitation, however, the function curves were situated to the right and above those of lone atrial fibrillation and decreased in slope despite the fairly well-maintained ejection fraction. After treatment with digitalis and/or diuretics, the function curves shifted to the left and upward. In conclusion, left ventricular filling and function curves based on a newly-devised algorithm of ECG-gated blood pool scintigraphy are of considerable clinical value in evaluating cardiac performance in patients with atrial fibrillation. They are widely applicable to the assessment of therapeutic and interventional effects.
...
PMID:[Left ventricular function during atrial fibrillation assessed by left ventricular function curve using ECG-gated blood pool scintigraphy]. 350 42
The authors report 6 cases of severe and silent
aortic insufficiency
having simulated in all aspects the picture of a dilated cardiomyopathy at the stage of cardiac insufficiency with primary manifestations. They insist on signs leading to the diagnosis of this clinical entity: past history of rheumatism, signs of electrical left ventricular hypertrophy in the absence of arterial
hypertension
, aortic calcifications and mostly presence of a discrete mitral diastolic fluttering during echocardiographic examination. Supra-sigmoid aortic angiography confirms the diagnosis of severe
aortic regurgitation
. In order to explain the non-perception of the murmur, they invoke the alteration of the transmission secondary to an air cushion (3 cases the association of another valvulopathy with murmur (1 case) and mainly the decrease of the leakage by increase of the left ventricular telediastolic pressure and the decrease of the diastolic aortic pressure, with diminution of the turbulences. The advantage of knowing this entity rests on the possibility of valve replacement, even at the stage of myocardial failure, since the satisfactory long-term post-operative evolution in 4 patients stands in contrast with the dangerous nature of a spontaneous evolution.
...
PMID:[Silent aortic insufficiency mimicking dilated cardiomyopathy]. 359 58
This paper presents a 51 year old black female with known
hypertension
and an acute illness characterized by
aortic regurgitation
, cerebrovascular insufficiency, renal insufficiency, aortic valvular insufficiency, mediastinal widening and other features characteristic of acute Type I aortic dissection. An unusual feature in this individual is dissection extending into the membranous septum of the heart and into the aorto-atrial space with large hematoma, which partially disrupted the conduction system as well as dislodging the tricuspid septal leaflet in such fashion that major tricuspid regurgitation was present and interfered with termination of cardiopulmonary bypass. This patient presents a very unusual complication of which we wish to inform the readers.
...
PMID:Tricuspid incompetence resulting from retrograde aortic dissection. 365 43
Among 509 patients referred to our Institute for Holter monitoring, between 1st September, 1982-30th October, 1983, 28 patients aged 65-90 (mean 76) were referred for dizziness and syncope. There were 17 men and 11 women. Seven patients had a M.I. in their past, 4 angina pectoris, 5
hypertension
, 4 aortic stenosis or
aortic insufficiency
or both, hemodynamically significant, one had mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and one transient ischemic attacks (TIA). In our series 16 out of 28 patients received digoxin and antiarrhythmic drugs (quinidine, propranolol, procainamide, Neo-gilurythmal, amiodarone), 2 of them digoxin and quinidine in full doses and one digoxin and amiodarone. Other drugs administered to our patients included Aldomin, Isordil, Lasix, aminophylin, cromoglycate etc. In 10 patients (35.7%) we found complex ventricular arrhythmias (7 with M.I., 3 patients of 4 with significant aortic valve lesion, 2 patients of 2 with left anterior hemiblock (LAH), 1 patient with MVP, 1 patient with TIA). In another 5 patients (17.8%) we found atrial fibrillation, fast rhythm (2 with chronic obstructive lung disease, 2 with
hypertension
and 1 in post M.I.) which explained their symptomatology. From our data we conclude that the pluripathology found in old age as well as the multimedication administered, cause a plurietiology of syncope, arrhythmias playing an important role in its determination, in this particular age group.
...
PMID:Holter monitoring for dizziness and syncope in old age. 387 98
SLE affects most aspects of cardiac function, and recent studies have reported increasing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Pathologically, SLE is characterized by a pancarditis involving pericardium, myocardium, endocardium, and coronary arteries. In autopsy series, pericarditis has been found in 43% to 100% (mean 62%, Table I), and myocarditis was found in 8% to 78% (mean 40%, Table II), but both have been underdiagnosed clinically. Libman-Sacks lesions have been noted in 25% to 100% (mean 43%) and infective endocarditis in 1.1% to 4.9% of clinical and autopsy studies (Table III). Coronary disease may be due to arteritis, which should be treated with high-dose steroids, or it may be due to atherosclerosis, which is amenable to medical or surgical therapy. Valvular disease has been treated surgically, but with a combined surgical mortality as high as 25%.
Aortic insufficiency
and mitral regurgitation are the most common valvular problems, although aortic and mitral stenosis have also been reported.
Hypertension
has been noted in 14% to 69%, and heart failure in 5% to 44%. Evidence for a lupus cardiomyopathy, which may be subclinical, is reviewed. While steroids may ameliorate SLE pancarditis, they have also been associated with
hypertension
, LV hypertrophy, purulent and constrictive pericarditis, mitral regurgitation, and perhaps accelerated atherosclerosis. It remains to be seen if improved diagnosis and treatment of the cardiovascular manifestations of SLE can enhance survival.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus. 390 17
Between 1963 and 1983, 55 patients presented to our hospital with a clinical picture that suggested aortic dissection but with aortograms that were interpreted as negative for that entity. In 4 patients, the aortographic findings subsequently proved to be false negative. The remaining 51 patients had the following diagnoses: myocardial infarction in 9 patients;
aortic regurgitation
in 5; thoracic nondissecting aneurysm in 4; musculoskeletal pain in 4; mediastinal tumor in 4; pericarditis in 3; acute coronary insufficiency in 3; cholecystitis in 2; miscellaneous in 3; and unknown in 14. The clinical features in these patients were compared with those of 125 patients with true aortic dissection. Three features were significantly more prevalent in patients with than without dissection: prior
systemic hypertension
, pain for 24 hours or less, and migratory pain. Patients without dissection were younger than those with distal dissection and had significantly less
systemic hypertension
, posterior thoracic pain and migratory pain. Patients without dissection had significantly less frequent congestive heart failure, pulse deficits and
aortic regurgitation
, and more frequent
hypertension
and pain for more than 24 hours than patients with proximal dissection. This study defines the actual differential diagnosis of aortic dissection at our hospital, the frequency of false-negative aortographic findings and contrasts the clinical features of patients with and without dissection.
...
PMID:Spectrum of conditions initially suggesting acute aortic dissection but with negative aortograms. 394 23
Clinical and pathologic data were reviewed in 55 patients who had valve replacement for pure
aortic regurgitation
(AR) during a 6-year period. The clinical histories established the cause for AR in 34 cases: 11 rheumatic, 13 infective endocarditis, 4 congenital, 4 associated with aortic aneurysms and 2 the Marfan syndrome. In the valves from the other 21 patients, 13 had myxoid degeneration, defined as significant disruption of the valve fibrosa and its replacement by acid mucopolysaccharides and cystic change. Myxoid degeneration was also the primary pathologic abnormality in the 2 patients with the Marfan's syndrome, in 3 patients with a history of rheumatic disease and in 1 patient with a history of infective endocarditis. The patients with myxoid degeneration of uncertain origin were predominantly elderly (average age 63 years), had a long-standing history of
systemic hypertension
(77%) and had coronary artery disease (46%); 85% were male. In these patients the replacement valves were not larger than those of the other groups studied, indicating that dilatation of the aortic anulus was not a significant factor in the pathogenesis of the valve disease. These findings indicate that myxoid degeneration of the aortic valve is common (36% of all valves examined) and, in many cases, may be secondary to long-standing
systemic hypertension
.
...
PMID:Myxoid degeneration of the aortic valve and isolated severe aortic regurgitation. 396 82
Postoperative right (RV) and left ventricular (LV) volume characteristics in patients with complete transposition of the great arteries were studied to compare ventricular function after Senning and Jatene procedures and to analyze RV dimensional change during systole in patients after the Senning procedures. RV end-diastolic volume (EDV) was 181 +/- 74% of normal (mean +/- standard deviation) and RV ejection fraction (EF) was 0.48 +/- 0.09 in 15 patients who underwent the Senning procedure. In 9 patients who underwent the Jatene procedure, LVEDV was 152 +/- 27% of normal and LVEF was 0.61 +/- 0.09. One patient with
aortic regurgitation
, 1 with
aortic regurgitation
and residual ventricular septal defect, and 1 with
aortic regurgitation
and generalized LV wall hypokinesia of unknown cause had large LVEDVs. Pulmonary ventricular EDV and EF were within normal ranges except in the patients with persistent pulmonary hypertension, who had large EDVs and low EFs regardless of the anatomic type of ventricle, either the left or right. The study of RV dimensional change in the Senning group showed a reduced systolic shortening of the anteroposterior diameter compared with the preoperative transposition of the great arteries and normal. This reduced shortening may be related to postoperative adhesion of the RV free wall to the anterior chest wall and fixation of the atrium secondary to the intraatrial repair. In conclusion, systemic ventricular function after intraatrial repair for complete transposition of the great arteries is depressed by unavoidable residua and sequelae: persistent RV
hypertension
, anatomy of the right ventricle and, possibly, postoperative adhesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Comparison of ventricular function after Senning and Jatene procedures for complete transposition of the great arteries. 396 95
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