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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study investigated cardiac disorders in 25 patients with diagnoses of progressive systemic sclerosis based on the criteria of the American College of Rheumatology. All were women, and the mean age was 59 +/- 11 (range 41-80) years old. The duration of the disease was 11 +/- 9 (range 3-40) years. The following complications were seen; Raynaud's phenomenon in all, esophageal disorders in 11, pulmonary fibrosis in 9, diabetes mellitus in 3, high blood pressure in 6, hyperlipidemia in 7, and positive anticardiolipin antibody in 8. Electrocardiography (ECG) and echocardiography were performed to assess the cardiac disorders. Abnormal ECG was seen in 11 patients (44%) and abnormal echocardiograms in 16 patients (64%). ECG abnormalities included incomplete right bundle branch block in 8 (32%), low voltage in 3 (12%), supraventricular arrhythmia in 3 (12%), ventricular arrhythmia in 1 (4%) and septal myocardial infarction pattern in 1 (4%). Echocardiographic abnormalities included valvular diseases in 13 (52%) and pericardial thickening in 7 (28%). No relationship was found between ECG and echocardiographic abnormalities. Echocardiographic abnormalities were more frequently observed in patients with positive anticardiolipin antibody (7/8, 88%) than in those with negative anticardiolipin antibody (9/17, 53%). Especially, pericardial thickening was seen in 63% (5/8) of positive patients, in comparison to 12% (2/17) of the negative patients (p < 0.05). Patients with progressive systemic sclerosis may have several cardiac disorders including conduction disturbances, low voltage ECG, valvular diseases and pericardial thickening. Pericardial thickening has a close relationship with positive anticardiolipin antibody.
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PMID:[Cardiac disorders associated with progressive systemic sclerosis]. 991 57

A twenty year follow up of a selected, community population with complete right and left bundle branch block is reviewed by comparative mortality analysis. In this population, where cases and controls were free of hypertension and heart disease at entry, the presence of complete right bundle branch block does not have excess mortality. Complete left bundle branch block exhibits excess total and cardiac mortality.
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PMID:Mortality analysis of complete right and left bundle branch block in a selected community population. 1016 36

It has been reported that electrocardiographic abnormalities may be associated with acute pancreatitis. However, the data are lacking or sketchy. The aim of this study was to assess the frequency and type of electrocardiographic abnormalities present in patients with acute pancreatitis. Fifty-six consecutive patients with acute pancreatitis and without previous history of heart disease were studied. Eleven patients had arterial hypertension. Forty-one patients had mild pancreatitis and 15 had the severe form of the disease. On admission, all patients underwent a standard 12-leads electrocardiogram and a serum electrolyte determination. Nineteen healthy subjects were also studied as controls. Twenty-seven patients (48.2%) (10 with severe pancreatitis and 17 with mild pancreatitis) had a normal electrocardiogram. In the remaining 29 patients (51.8%), one patient with severe pancreatitis had atrial extrasystoles and eight had bradycardia (less than 60 beats/minute) (two with severe pancreatitis and six with mild pancreatitis); 14 patients had changes of the T-wave and/or the ST-segment (two with severe pancreatitis and 12 with mild pancreatitis); seven patients showed disturbances of the intraventricular conduction (one with severe pancreatitis and six with mild pancreatitis): four had left anterior hemiblock, two had complete left bundle branch block and one had left anterior hemiblock and incomplete right bundle branch block; one patient with mild pancreatitis had atrioventricular block (first degree). No differences in heart rate, RR interval, PR interval and QT interval were found when patients with acute pancreatitis were compared with healthy subjects, nor when patients with severe pancreatitis were compared with those having the mild form of the disease. Seventeen of the 29 patients with electrocardiographic abnormalities (52.6%) also had serum electrolyte alterations. More than 50% of the patients with acute pancreatitis had electrocardiographic abnormalities and electrolyte alterations were also present in about one-half of these.
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PMID:Electrocardiographic abnormalities in acute pancreatitis. 1034 Jul 31

An 86-year-old man had a history of hypertension and had been treated with calcium antagonist but no medications that could reduce heart rate. As a 12-lead electrocardiogram showed sinus bradycardia, complete right bundle branch block and left anterior fascicular hemiblock on his first visit to our hospital on January 1998, he was admitted to our hospital for further examination and treatment. A 24-hour Holter electrocardiogram demonstrated a total number of 74,182 heartbeats per day with pauses (> 2.0 sec) of 187/day. Overdrive atrial pacing study and His bundle electrogram revealed a prolonged corrected sinus node recovery time (5.820msec at a stimulation rate of 130/min) and H-V conduction time (80msec) with normal A-H conduction time, respectively. We diagnosed these abnormalities as sick sinus syndrome (Rubenstein II). His activity of daily living score was 30 points by the Barthel index on the day of admission. Oral administration of orciprenaline sulfate (30 mg/day), a beta-adrenoceptor agonist, was initially chosen rather than implantation of a cardiac pacemaker to increase his heart rate since he did not have any symptoms due to bradycardia and he did not give us an informed consent for the implantation. Orciprenaline sulfate, however, failed to increase total heartbeats (73,079/day). Then, oral cilostazol (100 mg/day), a phosphodiesterase III inhibitor, was administered. After two weeks of the regimen total heart beats were increased (85,642/day) with no pauses. The increase in heart rate resulted in the improvement of his activity of daily living (Barthel index: 55 points). Cilostazol could be the first line medication for elderly patients with bradyarrhythmia in whom implantation of cardiac pacemaker is not absolutely indicated.
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PMID:[Cilostazol increased heart rate with improvement of activity of daily living in an elderly patient with sick sinus syndrome]. 1055 64

A 69-year-old man was admitted with palpitations and syncope. His medical history included hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy. Arterial pulsation was not palpable on admission. Electrocardiography revealed ventricular tachycardia, and cardioversion restored normal sinus rhythm. An electrophysiological study reproducibly induced polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, so a cardioverter defibrillator was implanted. Echocardiography revealed mid-ventricular obstruction and an apical aneurysm, and Doppler color flow imaging showed a diastolic paradoxic jet from the apex toward the base. Coronary angiography showed no stenosis of the extramural coronary arteries. Ventricular tachycardia on admission showed a right bundle branch block pattern and a superior axis deviation, so the arrhythmia was thought to originate from the apical aneurysm. Apical aneurysm can result from elevated intraventricular pressure or relative myocardial ischemia. This is a rare case of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with mid-ventricular obstruction complicated with apical aneurysm and polymorphic ventricular tachycardia.
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PMID:[Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with mid-ventricular obstruction complicated with apical left ventricular aneurysm and ventricular tachycardia: a case report]. 1197 69

A 74-year-old patient was referred for a rapidly increasing pacing threshold 9 months after DDD pacemaker implantation because of symptomatic total atrioventricular (AV) block. She had a history of hypertension, diabetes with micro-angiopathy and a recent transient ischaemic attack. The paced electrocardiogram on admission had a right bundle branch block pattern and 3-dimensional transoesophageal echocardiography demonstrated passage of the lead through an atrial septal defect with a left ventricular position in addition to moderate atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta. No thrombus could be detected on the lead. Percutaneous extraction is usually not recommended because of the risk of mobilization of thrombus material. However, the risk of stroke during removal using cardiopulmonary bypass in this patient was considerably increased because of the presence of multiple independent risk factors. Therefore, percutaneous extraction using a locking device was selected and performed without complications: follow-up was uneventful.
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PMID:Successful percutaneous extraction of an inadvertently placed left ventricular pacing lead. 1263 46

We describe a case of fetal pulmonary hypertension and tricuspid regurgitation due to non pharmacologically induced ductal constriction observed at 36 weeks' gestational age. The hypertension resolved spontaneously soon after birth, with no functional consequences. Right bundle branch block is the only permanent anomaly, still being seen on the electrocardiogram at the age of 34 months.
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PMID:Pulmonary hypertension due to spontaneous premature ductal constriction in fetal life: association with right bundle branch block. 1263 8

A 65-year-old male patient with a long standing history of chronic obstructive lung disease had permanent pacemaker implantation for symptomatic atrioventricular nodal blocks. Preoperative echocardiography showed dilated right heart chambers and moderate pulmonary arterial hypertension without any demonstrable intracardiac shunt. Postoperative twelve-lead ECG showed right bundle branch block configuration of paced complexes. This suggested left ventricular pacing which was confirmed by transthoracic echocardiography. Later, transoesophageal echocardiography showed the lead entering into left atrium from right atrium through a sinus venosus type of atrial septal defect. The patient refused any further intervention and continues to remain asymptomatic with stable pacing on aspirin-anticoagulant therapy at end of four years.
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PMID:Inadvertent transvenous left ventricular pacing through an unsuspected atrial septal defect. 1738 12

This study had the aim of evaluating the clinical presentation of chronic Chagas disease among the elderly. It was a retrospective analysis of clinical records at an outpatient referral service. The sample was divided into two groups: elderly (>or= 60 years old) and non-elderly. Sex, comorbidities, clinical form, electrocardiogram and serological titers were evaluated. In the elderly group (61 cases), the mean age was 66.03+/-5 years; 67.2% were female; 59% presented comorbidities (most frequently systemic arterial hypertension, in 39.3%); 1.6% had the indeterminate clinical form, 88.5% the cardiac form and 36% the digestive form; and abnormalities were frequently found on electrocardiograms: 41% presented anterosuperior left bundle branch block (AS-LBBB), 32.8% presented right bundle branch block (RBBB) and 22.9% presented ventricular ectopic beats (VEB). In the non-elderly group (61 cases), the mean age was 39.30+/-8.36 years; 54.1% were female; 50.8% presented comorbidities (most frequently systemic arterial hypertension, in 26.2%); 18% had the indeterminate clinical form (p<0.05), 78.7% the cardiac form and 32.8% the digestive form; and abnormalities were frequently found on electrocardiogram: 24.6% presented AS-LBBB, 21.3% RBBB and 18% VEB. It was concluded that there were no clinical differences between elderly and non-elderly Chagas patients. The indeterminate clinical form predominated in patients less than 60 years old.
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PMID:[Clinical presentation of chronic Chagas disease in elderly individuals]. 1765 67

The literature on the effect of excess thyroid hormone on ventricular repolarization is controversial. To study whether free thyroxine (T(4)) and TSH are associated with QTc prolongation we conducted population-based cohort study. This study was conducted as part of the Rotterdam Study and included 365 men and 574 women aged 55 years and older with an electrocardiogram, who were randomly sampled for the assessment of thyroid status (free T(4)/TSH) at baseline, after exclusion of participants with hypothyroidism, use of antithyroid drugs, thyroid hormones or digoxin, left ventricular hypertrophy, and left and right bundle branch block. Endpoints were the length of the QTc interval and risk of borderline QTc prolongation. The associations were examined by means of linear and logistic regression analysis, adjusted for age and gender, diabetes mellitus, myocardial infarction, hypertension, and heart failure. Overall, there was no significant association between TSH and QTc interval (0.8 ms (95% confidence interval (CI) -3.5, 5.2) in the first quintile compared with the fifth quintile). Subjects in the fifth quintile of free T(4) did not have an increased QTc interval (3.2 ms (95% CI -1.1, 7.6)); stratification on gender showed an increment of 10.9 ms (95% CI 3.4, 18.3) in the fifth quintile in men and 1.1 ms (95% CI -4.2, 6.3) in the fifth quintile of free T(4) in women. When compared with subjects in the first quintile, male subjects in the fifth quintile of free T(4) had a significantly increased risk of a borderline QTc interval and QTc prolongation (odds ratio 2.40 (95% CI 1.20, 4.80)). High levels of free T(4) are associated with substantial QTc prolongation in men of up to 10 ms. The fact that free T(4) is also associated with a significantly increased risk of borderline and prolonged QTc values with its risk of sudden cardiac death, endorses the clinical importance of our findings.
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PMID:High free thyroxine levels are associated with QTc prolongation in males. 1846 46


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