Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four consecutive years (1987-1990) outpatients attendance at a cardiology clinic was recorded in a district hospital with a catchment area of 200,000 inhabitants. The aim being to identify and evaluate the demand for cardiology consultations. A system for recording diagnoses was developed, based on the WONCA. The total number of consultations was 26,273, 27% being new patients, 78% of whom were referred by family doctors and health centers. Of the total, 57% were male. The most common age groups being from 60 to 69 (25%) and from 50 to 59 (23%); 22% were over 69. In 13.7% of the consultations, the find diagnosis was of "healthy hearts", in 16.7% valvular heart disease, in 31.5% ischaemic heart disease, in 15.1% arrhythmias, in 8.4% hypertension, and the remainder were other diseases. We carried out 4,406 echocardiograms, 1,408 exercise tests and 511 Holter monitoring traces. There were 322 direct hospital admissions, and 6,094 discharges in the four years period. We consider this type of records to be useful organizing cardiology outpatients clinics, analyzing the demand, and planning the use of health care resources, as well as estimating future needs and assessing quality of care.
...
PMID:[The cardiology consultation in a health-service area hospital. The clinical aspects and the demand for diagnostic procedures]. 160 32

It is claimed that long-term treatment with beta-blockers improves cardiac function and exercise capacity in patients with various forms of congestive heart failure. This was first reported by Waagstein and coworkers in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy in 1975 and was later confirmed in 8 further studies in this type of patient. A total of 211 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy were treated for 12-19 months. About two thirds of the patients have improved to some extent. Seven other studies reported favourable long-term effects of beta-blockers in 120 patients with other forms of dilated cardiomyopathy, e.g. caused by coronary artery disease, adriamycin, diabetes, or valvular heart disease. Pooled data from 10 studies on 153 patients with various forms of cardiomyopathy, showed that ejection fraction was improved by 40% from 27 to 38%. Only two studies were inconclusive, both with only one month's treatment. In all studies with favourable effects of long-term beta-blockade, treatment was given for more than 2 months and in most cases for about 6 months. A number of beta-blockers have been used in the studies, including acebutulol, alprenolol, bucindolol, labetalol, metoprolol, practolol and propranolol. In most cases, a rather low dose was given initially and there was a stepwise increase in the dosages. After 6-8 weeks most patients were given beta-blockers in daily doses comparable to those given in patients with angina pectoris and hypertension. There is at present no indication that one beta-blocker is superior to others. It therefore seems reasonable to believe that the effects are due to beta 1-blockade.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:New therapeutic strategies in chronic heart failure: challenge of long-term beta-blockade. 168 18

Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), an increase in the muscle mass of the left ventricle, has been identified as a powerful risk factor for future cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The risk of acute myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, sudden death, and other cardiovascular events increases six- to eightfold with the presence of LVH. The increase in myocardial mass lowers coronary reserve and enhances cardiac oxygen requirements, gives rise to ventricular ectopy, and impairs left ventricular filling and contractility. Hypertension, obesity, advanced age, valvular heart disease, and other disorders that cause an increase in the hemodynamic burden can lead to LVH. Left ventricular hypertrophy and its sequelae can be reduced by specific antihypertensive therapy but, despite these promising findings, future epidemiological studies are necessary to document the clinical benefits of a reduction of LVH.
...
PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy: an independent risk factor. 172 10

Thrombus formation in the left atrium and left ventricle is primarily due to stasis of blood which causes activation of the coagulation system. Migration of thrombotic material into the circulation depends on the dynamic forces of the circulation. Atrial fibrillation is the commonest underlying cardiac disorder predisposing to thromboembolism. Rheumatic mitral stenosis, left atrial enlargement, prior myocardial infarction, hypertension, and echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy are risk factors for thromboembolic stroke in elderly patients with chronic atrial fibrillation. Non-valvular atrial fibrillation accounts for 45% of cardiac sources of thromboembolic stroke and includes patients with ischemic heart disease, hypertension, thyrotoxic heart disease, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, chronic sinoatrial disorder, and idiopathic atrial fibrillation. 15% of cardiac sources of thromboembolic stroke are associated with acute myocardial infarction, 10% with left ventricular aneurysm and mural thrombi remote from an acute myocardial infarction, 10% with rheumatic valvular heart disease, and 10% with prosthetic cardiac valves. Mitral valve prolapse, mitral annular calcium, nonischemic cardiomyopathies, infective endocarditis, nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis, left atrial myxoma, paradoxical embolism associated with congenital heart disease, calcific aortic stenosis, and complex atherosclerotic plaque within the proximal aorta also contribute to thromboembolism.
...
PMID:Etiology and pathogenesis of thromboembolism. 176 43

To investigate the predictive value of nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) for sudden cardiac death (SCD), 104 patients (37 cases with myocardial disease, 17 with ischemic heart disease, 10 with hypertension, 5 with valvular heart disease, 5 with miscellaneous heart disease and 31 without heart disease) who had NSVT on 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiograms (DCG) were clinically followed. The first survey was performed when mean follow-up period reached to 26 months from the discovery of NSVT and the second one was done 60 months after the first survey. Seven SCD were found during 1st period and 4 additional SCD occurred during 2nd period. The patients with polymorphic NSVT showed more frequent SCD (6 in 11 cases with polymorphic NSVT) than with monomorphic NSVT (5 in 93 cases with monomorphic NSVT), however, the rate of VT, duration and number of episodes recorded on DCG were independent to SCD. Moreover, none of the patients without structural cardiac disease have died suddenly. In this follow-up study, SCD was occurred most frequently in the cases with cardiomyopathy, especially dilated type.
...
PMID:[A predictive value of ventricular tachycardia detected by long-term electrocardiography for sudden cardiac death]. 178 50

Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is one of the less common but ominous risk factors for coronary disease, stroke and cardiac failure. The chief determinants of LVH, aside from age, are elevated blood pressure, obesity, stature and glucose intolerance. Cardiac valve disease and chronic heart disease (CHD) also cause LVH. Downward trends in the prevalence of LVH over four decades indicate that LVH is preventable, and this has coincided with improved hypertension control. When evidence of LVH disappears, the risk of all-cause, cardiovascular and CHD mortality is substantially reduced. Cardiovascular events occur incrementally in relation to left ventricular mass with no discernible critical value identifying pathological hypertrophy. LVH as evidenced by electrocardiogram (ECG-LVH), manifested by repolarization abnormality as well as increased voltage, was a lethal finding; with 5 years, 33% of men and 21% of women were dead. ECG-LVH was associated with ventricular ectopy and a sudden death risk comparable to that of CHD or cardiac failure. ECG-LVH was associated with a 3-15-fold increase of cardiovascular events with greatest risk ratios for cardiac failure and stroke. However, CHD is the predominant clinical sequel. No other risk factor approaches LVH in potency. Anatomical (echocardiographic or X-ray) LVH and ECG-LVH each independently contribute to the risk of cardiovascular disease, and having both confers a greater risk than having either alone. LVH is a clinical finding which should be taken seriously and corrected as soon as detected. It should not be regarded as an innocuous adaptive process, augmenting cardiac function.
...
PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy as a risk factor: the Framingham experience. 183 65

This study demonstrates the importance of analyzing survival by cause of death in order to achieve a better understanding of the prognostic indicators involved. It further emphasizes the need for analysis of risk factors in both univariate and multivariate models, and the danger of making judgements based on premature analysis of data on follow-up after heart transplantation. Survival following transplantation is characterized by the major hazards of early death due to infection and rejection and late graft loss due to coronary occlusive disease (COD). This study summarizes the first-graft survival experience for 323 transplant patients at Papworth Hospital, and assesses a number of potential risk factors for (1) early mortality, (2) late mortality from COD, and (3) development of COD. The potential risk factors considered for all hazards are donor and recipient age, sex, blood group, and matching of these factors; donor cause of death and recipient immunosuppression; inotropic support; waiting time; preoperative diagnosis and previous cardiac surgery; ischemic time; and extubation time. In addition, for development of, and graft loss from, COD, perioperative rejection and cytomegalovirus infection; hypertension at discharge; and cholesterol, triglycerides, and lipids at two years were assessed as risk factors. Advances in immunosuppression were observed to have increased overall survival rates and decreased mortality from infection, rejection, and COD, as well as decreasing morbidity from COD. Fatal rejection was found to be more likely in female recipients, recipients over 40 years, recipients of grafts from donors over 30 years old, patients who were transplanted for valvular heart disease, and patients who waited less than three months for their transplant. Male recipients of female donor organs were more likely to lose their grafts as a result of COD. Patients older than 50 and hearts from donors older than 40 conferred a high risk of development of and loss from COD. Patients transplanted for ischemic heart disease were more likely to develop COD. High cholesterol, low HDL, high LDL, and high triglycerides at two years after transplant showed some evidence of high risk for the subsequent development of COD, although these relationships are not statistically significant at this stage. Contrary to other recent studies, cytomegalovirus infection was not found to be a risk factor for the development of COD.
...
PMID:Risk factor analysis for the major hazards following heart transplantation--rejection, infection, and coronary occlusive disease. 187 97

The purpose of this study was to assess the influence of aging on the surgical results. The subjects which were 70-year or older included 13 cases of acute myocardial infarction with mechanical failure (AMI), 36 of elective aortocoronary bypass (CABG) and 33 of valvular heart disease (VHD). The control group younger than 70 included 32 cases of CABG and 32 of VHD. The complication rate of hypertension or diabetes mellitus in the older group was not significantly higher than in younger group. The characteristics of the preoperative status in the older group, however, seemed to be renal and hepatic hypofunction and anemia. The amount of intraoperative bleeding in older group was larger than in younger group. The periods of ICU stay, respiratory assist and postoperative hospitalization in older group were significantly longer than in younger group. The operative mortality rate of AMI was 61.5%, of CABG 8.3% and of VHD 12.1%. The operative mortality rate of emergent or urgent operation was 47.6% and of elective one 8.2%. The 4-year survival rate of CABG was 82% and the 6-year survival rate of VHD was 85%. Sixty four survivors (95.5%) improved to I-II of NYHA classification and of only 3 survivors (4.5%) remained in NYHA III class. The operative and long term results of elective surgery in older patients were comparable to those in younger ones. Therefore aging, itself, should not be a limiting factor in 70-year or older patients with good mental activity.
...
PMID:[Results and problems of open heart surgery in patients seventy years of age and older]. 194 70

Pulmonary edema is a common concomitant of valvular heart disease and ventricular dysfunction. In addition, left atrial dysfunction due to thrombus, myxoma, or cor triatriatum can produce the same clinical picture. We encountered a patient with intractable pulmonary edema secondary to obliteration of the left atrial cavity by an extrinsically compressing lung tumor. We believe extrinsic compression of the left atrium caused impaired left atrial filling, leading to pulmonary venous hypertension and pulmonary edema.
...
PMID:Pulmonary edema due to extreme left atrial compression. 200 Jan 87

Although several previous studies have been done on the nature and prevalence of cardiovascular disease in Papua New Guinea no study has looked exclusively at a highlander population. This article reviews 154 cardiac patients who first presented to the Mt Hagen adult outpatient department over a period of one year. The study excluded non-highlanders, patients under 12 years of age, and patients with heart disease secondary to anaemia or diseases of the blood vessels. Heart disease was found to constitute a significant proportion of outpatient visits and admissions. Cor pulmonale secondary to chronic lung disease was the commonest condition seen, occurring in higher frequency than reported elsewhere, and accounting for the majority of cases of congestive heart failure. Valvular heart disease was also common, often presenting in a precocious and severe form. Congenital bicuspid aortic values were important in the generation of aortic valve disease in this population. Arrhythmias and conduction disturbances were also common. Diseases of the myocardium and pericardium occurred infrequently and were of the same nature as those reported in other studies in Papua New Guinea. Hypertension was probably underreported in this study, with renal disease being a contributing factor in the cases seen. Ischaemic heart disease represented a small number of the total cases, but was probably underreported.
...
PMID:Adult heart disease in Mt Hagen: a study of 154 patients. 208 Jun 72


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>