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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
M-mode echocardiography was performed on 43 maintenance hemodialysis patients and 3 patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). Only seven patients had completely normal echocardiograms. Nine patients (20%) had pericardial effusions and 20 patients (44%) had left
ventricular dilatation
. Left ventricular hypertrophy was present in 26 patients (57%): in 18 patients this took the form of concentric hypertrophy and in 8 patients there was asymmetric septal hypertrophy. Left ventricular function was depressed in 12 patients (27%). Left
ventricular dilatation
was more common in patients with multiple vascular accesses, who also tended to have lower hematocrit values. Left ventricular hypertrophy tended to be more common in patients with prolonged
hypertension
and with excessive inter-dialytic weight gains. Younger patients and those who had been on dialysis for a longer period had less cardiac abnormalities, suggesting that chronic dialysis might reverse these changes. Echocardiography was more sensitive than chest X-ray and ECG in detecting clinically unsuspected abnormalities and provides useful information in the overall evaluation of maintenance dialysis patients.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of cardiac size and function in dialysis patients. 622 87
Echocardiographic findings and cardiac catheterization data were evaluated in 18 infants less than 1 year old in order to define anatomical or pathophysiological features that were associated with early cardiac decompensation. The infants could be divided into three groups: Group I (10 patients) had left
ventricular dilatation
and depressed contractility in response to the severe
systemic hypertension
. Group II (3 patients) had marked myocardial hypertrophy In response to the
systemic hypertension
. Group III (5 patients) were the youngest patients and had findings of right ventricular volume overload and pulmonary hypertension. This study demonstrates that, in early infancy, the ventricular response to simple coarctation of the aorta is variable in infants in a state of cardiac decompensation. The different echocardiographic and hemodynamic findings may be a consequence of the lesion exerting its influence at various stages of the patients' intrauterine or postnatal life. In most patients, resection of the coarctation results in rapid normalization of the echocardiographic findings.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic and hemodynamic findings in isolated symptomatic coarctation of the aorta in infancy. 622 61
This study analyzes and compares systemic and coronary hemodynamics in patients with essential hypertension in relation to hypertrophic heart disease of nonhypertensive origin. Left ventricular function (as assessed from the cardiac index, stroke volume index, ejection fraction, mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening, mean normalized systolic ejection rate, and isovolumic indexes) may be normal in patients with hypertensive hypertrophy, even with a large increase in muscle mass and in the presence of concomitant coronary artery disease. Left ventricular function is impaired when regional contraction abnormalities or
ventricular dilatation
, or both, occur and is inversely related to both cardiac size and systolic wall stress. Coronary blood flow (+ 18%), coronary resistance (+ 38%), and myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2) (+ 21%) are increased in essential hypertension. Coronary reserve is reduced even in hypertensive hypertrophy without evidence of coronary artery disease. MVO2 per mass unit was directly correlated with systolic wall stress per cross-sectional area of the left ventricular wall. Coronary reserve may remain normal in both moderate and excessive hypertrophy, provided systolic wall stress and hence the myocardial oxygen consumption are not increased. It is concluded that the appropriateness of left ventricular hypertrophy, as a result of mass-to-volume ratio and stress, is a major determinant of left ventricular performance, of coronary blood flow, and of myocardial oxygen consumption.
Hypertension
PMID:The coronary circulation in hypertensive heart disease. 624 Apr 56
Cardiovascular function and structure were evaluated by M-mode echocardiography and systemic hemodynamics in paired lean and obese patients, either hypertensive or normotensive. Compared to lean patients, obese patients had greater left atrial (p less than 0.0001), ventricular (p less than 0.001), and aortic root (p less than 0.002) diameters; posterior and septal wall thickness (p less than 0.001); and ventricular mass, cardiac output, stroke volume, and stroke work (all p less than 0.0001). Hypertensive patients had increased posterior wall thickness, end diastolic wall stress, stroke work (p less than 0.01), and a lower radius to posterior wall thickness ratio indicating concentric hypertrophy (p less than 0.001) when compared to normotensive patients. Cardiac adaptation to obesity consists of left
ventricular dilatation
and hypertrophy (eccentric hypertrophy) irrespective of arterial pressure levels. In contrast, essential hypertension solely produces concentric hypertrophy. Both obesity and
hypertension
increase left ventricular stroke work by disparate hemodynamic mechanisms; their presence in the same patient will tax the heart and increase the long-term risk of congestive failure.
...
PMID:Dimorphic cardiac adaptation to obesity and arterial hypertension. 665 Oct 22
To investigate the genesis of the third ( IIIs ) and fourth heart sounds (IVs), apical phonocardiograms were recorded simultaneously with pulsed Doppler signals of the mitral flow and interventricular septal (IVS) and left ventricular posterior wall (PW) echoes by M-mode echocardiography in 26 cases with the IIIs and 11 cases with the IVs. The following results were obtained: Cases with the IIIs were classified into the following three groups according to the time relationship between the IIIs and a rapid filling wave (D wave) of the mitral flow velocity pattern. IIIs -peak group: The IIIs occurred coincidently with the peak of the D wave in five healthy adolescents and in 12 cases with absolute left ventricular volume overload including mitral regurgitation (MR: eight cases), postoperative atrial septal defect (ASD: three cases) and ventricular septal defect (one case). IIIs -delay group: The IIIs occurred about 38 msec after the peak of the D wave in eight cases with relative left ventricular volume overload including congestive cardiomyopathy (CCM: three cases) and ischemic heart disease (IHD: five cases). IIIs -early phase group: The IIIs occurred about 35 msec before the peak of the D wave in a case with acute MR due to chordal rupture. In the IIIs -peak group, the IIIs coincided in time with the points of inflection (check points) of both the IVS and PW during rapid filling phase in three cases with MR of mild to moderate degree and one case of postoperative ASD. In the IIIs -delay group, the IIIs occurred simultaneously with either the check point of the IVS or PW in two cases with CCM and one case with IHD, and it occurred before the check points of both the IVS and PW in two cases with severe MR of IIIs -peak group and in a case with acute MR due to chordal rupture of IIIs -early phase group. Cases with the IVs were classified into following 2 groups according to the time relationship between the IVs and the atrial contraction wave (A wave) of the mitral flow velocity pattern. IVs-peak group: The IVs occurred coincidentally with the peak of the A wave in six cases with left ventricular hypertrophy including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (five cases) and
hypertension
(one case). IVs-delay group: The IVs occurred about 33 msec after the peak of the A wave in five cases with left
ventricular dilatation
or dysfunction including old myocardial infarction (two cases), CCM (one case), postoperative ASD (one case) and aortic regurgitation (one case). There were two types of IVs in time relationship between the IVs and the check points of the left ventricular wall during atrial contraction phase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Studies on the mechanisms of the third and fourth heart sounds: with special reference to the phase analysis of mitral flow velocity pattern]. 667 90
Six hundred and twenty-five patients with diabetes mellitus were studied by standardised clinical methods, resting and exercise electrocardiography (ECG) and digitised echocardiography to determine the prevalence of coronary and non-coronary heart disease. Clinical evidence of coronary artery disease (angina and infarction) was present in 110 (18 per cent) normotensive patients.
Hypertension
(blood pressure greater than 165/95 mmHg) was present in 172 (27 per cent) of whom 32 had cardiac symptoms. Heart failure or left
ventricular dilatation
was seen in 18 of whom 11 had either
hypertension
or coronary artery disease and six asymptomatic patients had unexplained ventricular hypertrophy. Echocardiograms in 245 of 290 asymptomatic patients with normal ECG showed that relaxation was prolonged (p less than 0.001) and mitral valve opening delayed (p less than 0.001) from normal especially in those with severe microangiopathy (proliferative retinopathy and/or heavy proteinuria). The peak rates of cavity dimension increase and posterior wall thinning were reduced from normal (both p less than 0.001) and patients with severe microangiopathy had the most marked changes. Redivision of these 245 diabetics by abnormalities of left ventricular function showed that 147 had normal function in whom only one of 23 (random 15 per cent sample) had a positive exercise ECG. Prolonged relaxation or delayed mitral valve opening alone (a nonspecific abnormality) was present in 41 and only three of 28 had a positive exercise ECG. Thirty-one had delayed mitral valve opening with inco-ordinate relaxation (abnormalities very suggestive of coronary artery disease) of whom 20 of 29 had a positive exercise ECG. Twenty-six had delayed mitral valve opening with slow cavity dimension increase or wall thinning (without hypertrophy) of whom 21 of 25 had a negative exercise ECG. This is a relatively specific abnormality similar to that found in left ventricular hypertrophy. Coronary artery disease is common in symptomatic and asymptomatic forms in diabetes mellitus. Non-coronary left ventricular diseases, such as dilation and hypertrophy, are probably no more common in diabetics than non-diabetics. A small number of diabetics with severe microangiopathy had abnormal relaxation and reduced peak rate of dimension increase or wall thinning which may represent left ventricular disease due to microangiopathy.
...
PMID:A prospective study of heart disease in diabetes mellitus. 670 23
Report of the observations of 40 patients suffering from neurocysticercosis, submitted to treatment by praziquantel, administered per os. Dexamethasone was associated to praziquantel in 20 patients. Side effects observed had a transient character. Transient exacerbation or reappearance of the cerebrospinal fluid neurocysticercosis syndrome, both related to the periods of treatment, can be considered an indirect rating of praziquantel action on cysticerci. This episode was observed in 31 patients. Dexamethasone proved sufficient to reduce the intensity of these episodes and of the effects. Evaluation of the 20 patients suffering from forms of the disease characterized by intracranial
hypertension
, and who had a follow-up of more than 3 months (up to 19 months) showed: disappearance of corticoid-dependence (5/5); disappearance of
ventricular dilatation
(4/6) appearance or increase inthe number of nodular calcifications (3/6); non-occurrence of new outbreaks of intracranial
hypertension
in 15 of the 20 cases. Repetitive characteristics of the clinical symptomatology, call for a longer-period observation of patients to allow for conclusion as to the effectiveness of the drug in the treatment of neurocysticercosis.
...
PMID:Administration of praziquantel in neurocysticercosis. 710 35
Survivors of perinatal intraventricular hemorrhage often develop a distinct clinical syndrome characterized by hydrocephalus and biochemical abnormalities in cerebrospinal fluid. The authors investigated six neonates with post-hemorrhagic obstructive hydrocephalus in order to identify cerebral metabolic disturbances responsible for the hypoglycorrhachia observed in this disorder. Lactic acid concentraions and lactate/pyruvate ratios in ventricular fluid were significantly elevated in infants with post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus compared with the values in five with congenital (non-hemorrhagic) obstructive hydrocephalus. Comparable degrees of
ventricular dilatation
and intracranial
hypertension
were present in the two groups. There is evidence that neither residual cellular elements in ventricular fluid nor a disrupted blood-CSF barrier can fully explain the observed alterations in ventricular-fluid glucose, lactate or lactate/pyruvate ratios. It is suggested that when periventricular hemorrhage occurs, the associated cerebral ischemia leads to focal anaerobic glycolysis and increased glucose requirement. With inadequate cerebral glucose glycolysis and increased glucose requirement. With inadequate cerebral glucose delivery from the blood, glucose diffuses into the brain from the ventricular fluid, resulting in hypoglycorrhachia. Cerebral lactic acid production is enhanced, which accumulates in ventricular fluid in the presence of ventricular obstruction.
...
PMID:Cerebral oxidative metabolism in perinatal post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus. 739 28
The severity of myocardial damage following acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is essentially influenced by the duration of coronary flow interruption during the acute episode. Furthermore the duration and severity of "culprit" lesion before AMI, as well as the presence of adequate collaterals to the culprit vessel represent important factors able to influence the severity of myocardial dysfunction after AMI. Left ventricular damage might evolve progressively depending on the infarct size, the presence of diffuse and severe coronary artery disease and concomitant systemic disease, such as diabetes and
systemic hypertension
. From a therapeutic point of view, in the presence of irreversible myocardial damage (scar tissue) following AMI medical therapy must be addressed to reduce myocardial consumption and to prevent
ventricular dilatation
. However myocardial dysfunction following AMI might be reversible (hibernated myocardium). It is of remarkable value the recognition of the hibernated but viable tissue because restoration of normal blood flow, which is the gold standard therapy in these patients, improves myocardial function and clinical outcome in AMI patients. In the presence of hibernated tissue following AMI, pharmacological therapy might temporarily protect the hibernated areas; however, when restoration of normal blood flow (myocardial revascularization) is not performed early, myocardial dysfunction might worsen and progressively evolve becoming irreversible event with restoration of normal coronary flow.
...
PMID:[Elements conditioning the severity of myocardial infarction damage]. 763 64
To estimate the relationship between aging, dementia and changes observed on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) seen in elderly patients with cerebral thrombosis, MRI findings in 103 patients with an initial stroke event (thrombosis group) were compared with those of 37 patients with
hypertension
/diabetes (high risk group) and 78 patients without those disorders (low risk group). In addition to the causative lesions in the thrombosis group, periventricular hyperintensities (PVH), spotty lesions (SL), silent infarctions (SI),
ventricular dilatation
(VD), and cortical atrophy (CA) were analyzed in these groups. Infarctions located in the internal capsule/corona radiata were the most frequent causative lesion. Compared to the low risk group, a high incidence of patchy/diffuse PVH, SI, and severe CA was seen in both the thrombosis group and the high risk group. Widespread PVH and multiple SL increased with age in the thrombosis group, while severe CA was seen in each group. SI and VD tended to increase after age 60, though they were not significant. Dementia, diagnosed in 40 out of 78 patients, increased with age. Multivariate analysis revealed the degree of the effects of MRI findings on dementia to be marked in PVH, brain atrophy, causative lesions, and SL, in that order. These results indicated that diffuse PVH and brain atrophy, developing with age, promoted dementia in the elderly with vascular lesions. Moreover, they suggested that a variety of silent brain lesions recognized on MRI other than infarction can affect symptoms in the elderly.
...
PMID:[Brain MRI findings in patients with initial cerebral thrombosis and the relationship between incidental findings, aging and dementia]. 772 91
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