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

Doppler echocardiography has become a very useful and widely employed imaging technique for evaluating valvular regurgitation, and has thus lead to the discovery of regurgitation in unexpected subjects. In this study, we examined left-sided valvular regurgitation in 31 healthy subjects, 35 patients with hypertension and 43 patients with old myocardial infarction by Doppler echocardiography. Aortic regurgitation was found in 3% of healthy subjects, 8% of hypertensive patients and 5% of patients with myocardial infarction. Mitral regurgitation was found in 35% of healthy subjects, 69% of hypertensive patients and 84% of patients with myocardial infarction. The pathogenesis of mitral regurgitation in hypertension is considered to be the impairment of the mitral leaflets, since neither anatomical nor functional abnormalities were found in the subvalvular mitral apparatus. Left ventricular dilatation and asynergy near the papillary muscles were related to the pathogenesis of mitral regurgitation in myocardial infarction. Mitral regurgitation in healthy subjects and hypertensive patients was mild and resistant to afterload stress, suggesting that it was less pathological. On the other hand, mitral regurgitation in myocardial infarction was easily worsened by afterload stress. Doppler echocardiography has thus provided us with new insights into valvular regurgitation in healthy subjects and patients without rheumatic valvular disease.
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PMID:Evaluation of left-sided valvular regurgitation in healthy, hypertensive and myocardial infarction subjects by Doppler echocardiography. 236 14

A group of 22 adults with Turner's syndrome, mean age 29.6 years, was subjected to a careful examination by one-dimensional, two-dimensional, pulsed and coloured Doppler echocardiography. The purpose was to assess the incidence and character of congenital and acquired abnormalities of the cardiovascular system which occur within the framework of this defined genetic syndrome. A quite normal echocardiographic finding was recorded in 13 patients, i. e. in 59.1%. In the remainder a wide spectrum of abnormalities was found such as prolapse of the mitral valve (in 13.6%), bicuspid aortal valve with a medium regurgitation (4.5%), hypoplasia of the coronary cusp of the aortal valve (4.5%), dilatation of the ascending aorta with a residual significant stenosis at the site after operation of coarctation of the thoracic aorta (4.5%), subaortal defect of the interventricular septum (4.5%) and slight left ventricular hypertrophy in patients with arterial hypertension (9.1%). Echocardiographic examination in Turner's syndrome makes early diagnosis of abnormalities of the cardiovascular system possible, incl. quantification of the haemodynamic impact. Some of these pathological changes (bicuspid aortal valve, dilatation of the root of the aorta) are for a long time clinically silent but may be nevertheless associated with serious complications. An echographic diagnosis made in time may be of decisive importance for the prevention of complications.
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PMID:[Disorders of the cardiovascular system in Turner's syndrome]. 239 89

The immediate post-operative results of conservative surgery were evaluated objectively in 31 children aged under 13 years referred to us for surgical correction of severe rheumatic mitral valve regurgitation. 16 patients had pure mitral regurgitation. In the others, lesions which required additional surgery were aortic regurgitation in 7 cases, tricuspid of the mitral valve and left ventricle was studied by two-dimensional TM-mode echocardiography. This examination was combined with a pulsed doppler study in search of a possible residual mitral regurgitation signal, with special attention to the depth at which it was recorded in the left atrium -- a semi-quantitative indication of the severity of residual leakage. Two mitral valve replacements were performed, and two early reoperations were needed for residual regurgitation developed between the 5th and 8th post-operative days. Three deaths occurred due to supra-systemic pulmonary arterial hypertension. The post-operative evaluation of mitral valvuloplasty results therefore involved 25 patients. In the absence of significant residual mitral regurgitation, two-dimensional echocardiography was inconclusive since the images obtained varied considerably according to the surgical procedures performed. There was a distinct reduction of end-diastolic diameters (43.5 +/- 5.9 versus 62.1 +/- 8.7 mm pre-operatively), reflecting the disappearance or marked decrease of the pre-operative ventricular volume overload consecutive to mitral regurgitation. The reduction of end-systolic diameters was also significant (31.2 +/- 6.7 mm versus 39.2 +/- 7.1 mm pre-operatively), though less pronounced than that of end-diastolic diameters, which explains the diminution observed in the percentage of fibre shortening, although the figures remained within normal limits (28.7 +/- 9.7 p. 100 versus 37.0 +/- 6.8 p. 100).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Immediate postoperative results following conservative surgery of rheumatic mitral valve insufficiency in children]. 250 90

The usefulness of doppler-echocardiography for the assessment of pulmonary arterial hypertension in patients with chronic respiratory failure was evaluated in 24 consecutive patients with chronic obstructive lung disease. Seventeen of these 24 patients (71 p. 100) who had tricuspid valve regurgitation analysable by the continuous wave doppler technique were selected as study group; they included 15 men and 2 women aged from 33 to 78 years (mean 63 years). The highest maximum velocity value (method A) or the maximum velocity value averaged on several cycles (method B) of the tricuspid regurgitation jet was used to calculate the right ventriculo-atrial pressure gradient, using Bernouilli's equation. Right atrial pressure was determined by three methods: haemodynamic measurement, clinical evaluation or attribution of an arbitrary 10 mmHg value. The pulsed doppler study of the pulmonary ejection flow included measurement of the acceleration time and calculation of the acceleration time/ejection time ratio. The usual echocardiographic parameters were measured. Catheterization was performed 2.5 days on average after the doppler study. Correlations between doppler examination and catheterization to evaluate the right ventricular systolic pressure were significant (p less than 0.001) and better with method B than with method A. Depending on the method employed to evaluate the right atrial pressure, the correlation coefficients obtained with method B were: 0.93 (haemodynamic measurement), 0.91 (clinical evaluation) and 0.88 (arbitrary value of 10 mmHg). The right ventricular systolic pressure evaluated by doppler ultrasound using method B and by clinical evaluation of the right atrial pressure was 47 +/- 12 mmHg (22 to 70 mmHg), as against 51 +/- 13 mmHg (28 to 74 mmHg) measured by catheterization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Evaluation of pulmonary arterial hypertension by Doppler echocardiography in chronic respiratory insufficiency]. 251 Jun 78

It is common for patients to be diagnosed as having valvular regurgitation by Doppler echo when no such murmur has been heard by the referring clinician. To test the hypothesis that such patients have clinically unimportant heart disease, the authors evaluated the records of 213 consecutive men in whom mitral regurgitation had been found by pulsed Doppler. In 95 patients (group I) mitral regurgitation was audible, whereas in the other 118, it was not. In 97 patients with inaudible mitral regurgitation there were no structural mitral valve abnormalities by 2D echo. This group of 97 patients (group II) was defined as having unexpected Doppler mitral regurgitation. In group II patients there was a high prevalence of hypertension (50%), congestive heart failure (44%), alcohol abuse (46%), diabetes (27%), coronary artery disease (63%), and atrial fibrillation (13%). The following variables were distributed similarly in groups I and II: survival time, age, presence of congestive heart failure or coronary artery disease, left ventricular short-axis end diastolic and end systolic dimensions, E point septal separation, and the severity of dyssynergy. Atrial fibrillation was more common in group I (p = 0.017), and group I patients had a higher Quetelet's Index (weight/height squared) (p = 0.03). In group II, the factors most closely related to survival were the presence of dyssynergy, of atrial fibrillation, or of congestive heart failure. Although no group II patient had endocarditis or required mitral valve replacement, their survival was markedly decreased compared with people of similar age in the general population. The majority of cardiogenic deaths in group II patients were due to coronary artery disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The natural history of unexpected Doppler mitral regurgitation. 270 50

To evaluate the early and late results of mitral valve replacement and reconstruction for mitral insufficiency due to ruptured chordae tendineae respectively, 74 consecutive cases were analyzed. Fifty-five (74.3%) of the patients were men, and the mean age was 48 +/- 12 years old (range 16 to 76). The causes of the mitral disease were idiopathic in 50 (67.6%), rheumatic in 7 (9.4%) and infective endocarditis in 11 (14.9%) patients. In idiopathic 50 cases, 24 had mitral valve prolapse and 16 had both mitral valve prolapse and hypertension. Forty-one (55.4%) of the patients were in NYHA functional class III or IV preoperatively. Thirty (40.5%) cases underwent surgery within one year after their initial symptoms of heart failure onsets including six emergency operation cases due to uncontrollable acute lung edema. Chordae to anterior mitral leaflet were ruptured in 31 (a5, m16, p10)[41%] patients, to the posterior mitral leaflet in 45 (a4, m23, p18)[59%], and to both leaflets in one patient. Mitral valve replacement was performed in 68 patients (91.9%) and 6 patients (8.1%) underwent mitral valve repairs. Twenty cases underwent associated procedures that included tricuspid valve annuloplasty in 8, aortic valve replacement in 5 and myocardial revascularization in 4 cases. There were two operative deaths (2.4%); both occurred after replacement, left ventricular rupture in one and DIC in one. Mean follow-up period was 4.5 years (range 1 to 17) in 67 cases. There were four late deaths; all occurred after replacement. However five patients sustained mild mitral insufficiency after mitral valve repair including one that became worse of regurgitation three years after isolated Kay's annuloplasty, there were no cases that had needed reoperation and no late death after reconstruction. Left ventricular function and pulmonary arterial pressure were almost normalized in more than 90% cases postoperatively. Our data indicated that mitral valve reconstruction (McGoon's plus Kay's method as standardized maneuver) was the procedure of choice for selected patients with mitral insufficiency owing to ruptured chordae tendineae to the posterior mitral leaflet, including more limited patients with ruptured chordae to the anterior mitral leaflet.
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PMID:[Mitral insufficiency due to ruptured chordae tendineae--clinical features, early and late results of valve replacement and repair]. 273 33

Upper urinary tract urodynamics are described through a linear deterministic chamber model. An analysis of possible urodynamic variants in vesico-ureteral reflux (VUR), using a mathematical model, has suggested that hydrodynamic situation in the refluxing ureter will be dependent on vesical and ureteral activity where ureterovesical incompetence and VUR are of similar grades. Where ureteral anatomy and function remain fairly intact, urinary regurgitation under high pressure shall be accompanied by the development of a considerable intraureteral hypertension. Besides, VUR-associated urodynamic disorder must have an obstructive component whose markedness will depend on the extent of arterial motor impairment, intravesical hypertension or a combination of the two. Urodynamic and radioisotopic studies have completely confirmed the theoretical postulations. In second- or third-degree VUR, for example, the highest intraureteral pressure developed in children with uninhibited bladder, while in fourth-degree VUR the bladder showed no response to gradual intravesical pressure rise. Urodynamic disturbance was already shown to have a functional/obstructive component in those cases of second-degree VUR where the bladder was uninhibited and be free of it in cases of normal bladder reflex and third-degree VUR.
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PMID:[Characteristics of the hydrodynamic situation in the urinary tract in vesico-ureteral reflux based on an analysis of a general type of equation of the linear transport model]. 280 72

A case of Takayasu's disease in a young Caucasian female is described. The major complications which developed over the ten year course of the disease include nephrotic syndrome, severe refractory hypertension, aortic valve regurgitation associated with aneurysmal dilatation of the ascending aorta, and recurrent congestive heart failure. Amyloid deposits have been demonstrated in the aorta, atrial appendage, aortic valve, and renal cortex. The association of amyloidosis and Takayasu's disease is discussed.
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PMID:Takayasu's disease associated with generalised amyloidosis. 286 47

The surface electrocardiogram remains an insensitive method for detection of ventricular hypertrophy. Technical problems related to body size and habitus and distance from the heart cannot be overcome. Coronary arterty disease and amyloidosis, although frequently associated with hypertrophy, tend to obscure the electrocardiographic changes because of the attendant loss of voltage. The progress made in the last 20 years is due primarily to re-evaluation of traditional criteria in terms of careful anatomic correlation. The studies cited have the advantage of using specific clinical diagnoses in a defined population, specific chamber weights, and a 97.5 percentile confidence level for distinguishing normal pathologic and electrocardiographic data from abnormal. They are limited because the results may not apply to females or patients with mitral stenosis and congenital heart disease. In general, the electrocardiogram can be expected to detect left ventricular hypertrophy in six out of ten patients with the disease, and will misdiagnose the problem in about one out of every ten without the disease. Methodology using multiple criteria will achieve the best sensitivity and specificity. Several methods are available and of comparable accuracy. Simplicity of these methods varies widely and will be a factor in the choice of the method selected. The electrocardiogram will perform best in the population of patients with hypertension and aortic stenosis or regurgitation and have its greatest limitation in patients with coronary artery disease and myocardial infarctions. Echocardiography is proven to be more sensitive than the electrocardiogram for detection of left ventricular hypertrophy. Sensitivity is around 90 per cent with 95 per cent specificity. Its major limitations lie in the expense as compared to the electrocardiogram and in inadequate image resolution in a small proportion of patients. In order to achieve the results reported by centers proficient in this technique, careful attention must be paid to precise standardization of measurements and selection of images to be measured. When this is done the echocardiogram certainly offers a distinct advantage over the electrocardiogram in detecting left ventricular hypertrophy. We recommend the use of left atrial abnormality as a criterion to diagnose left ventricular hypertrophy when there is right bundle branch block. When left bundle branch block is present on the electrocardiogram, traditional criteria are probably no more accurate than the bundle branch block itself.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Recent progress in the electrocardiographic diagnosis of ventricular hypertrophy. 296 47

Clinical signs of heart valve malfunction are often not specific so that recognition frequently depends on nonclinical methods. The chest radiographs of 34 patients with 41 prosthetic valve malfunctions (PVM) were compared before and after valve failure. The most frequent sign of PVM is postcapillary hypertension (90%). A marked increase in heart size occurs with regurgitation but not with obstruction. A change in attitude of a valve of more than 6 degrees. in the aortic and 12 degrees in the mitral position is virtually diagnostic of dehiscence. This was seen in 52% of patients with paravalvular regurgitation and in 29% of all patients with PVM. When dehiscence is suspected on clinical or radiologic grounds the valve should be examined fluoroscopically. Changes in the azygos vein and the vascular pedicle of the heart and the development of pleural effusions are less useful signs of PVM. Although the chest radiograph is often not diagnostic of PVM, it may point to the need for definitive investigation.
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PMID:Prosthetic heart valve malfunction: plain film findings. 297 Oct 51


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