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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three infants developed greatly accelerated junctional ectopic tachycardia with a heart rate greater than 200 beats/min after open heart surgery. When the heart rate exceeded 200 beats/min for 5 hours, all the infants had congestive heart failure and clinical signs of low cardiac output. Conventional therapy (cardioversion, lidocaine, verapamil, digoxin and ice to face) has been shown in the past to be unsuccessful in controlling the heart rate. Because hypothermia is known to decrease automaticity of the heart, these patients were treated with induced hypothermia. The goal was to arbitrarily decrease the junctional ectopic rate to less than 180 beats/min to increase cardiac filling time. The duration of the junctional ectopic tachycardia greater than 180 beats/min ranged from 0.5 to 17 hours after cooling began. The duration of the hypothermia ranged from 4 to 24 hours. Spontaneous reversion to sinus rhythm occurred either during the hypothermia or shortly thereafter in all three patients. The blood pressure and urinary output remained stable during hypothermia. Hypothermia is an effective means of controlling the rate of greatly accelerated junctional ectopic tachycardia after open heart surgery in infants. Although hypothermia does not convert junctional ectopic tachycardia to sinus rhythm, it slows the rate to a more acceptable level, allowing the infants' survival and eventual recovery of sinus rhythm.
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PMID:Hypothermia for the treatment of postsurgical greatly accelerated junctional ectopic tachycardia. 366 5

Fifteen patients with intracavitary cardiac tumors were operated on at the Kobe University Hospital between September 1977 and January 1984. Three of the patients were men and twelve were women. They ranged in age from 9 to 75 years. Their symptoms were chest pain, dyspnea, cough, palpitation and syncope. Definite diagnosis was confirmed by echo- and cineangiocardiography. There were 14 benign tumors consisting of 13 myxomas, one leiomyoma and one malignant myxosarcoma. The left atrium was the most common chamber involved (12 instances), followed by the right atrium (3). Surgery was performed in all cases under cardiopulmonary bypass with moderate hypothermia and cold crystalloid cardioplegia. Tumors were removed en bloc at the base with their attachment to the atrial septum or free wall in all cases. Three patients underwent concomitant mitral annuloplasty or mitral commissurotomy. Two cases with left atrial myxoma died postoperatively: one case associated with mitral annuloplasty died of congestive heart failure due to newly developed chordal rupture two months after surgery, and the other died of congestive heart failure 13 months after the first operation. Re-excision for recurrence of the myxosarcoma in the left atrium was performed in the latter case as a second surgical procedure. The remaining 13 cases with benign tumors are doing well and are without recurrence. From these favorable results, surgical intervention should be recommended prior to the occurrence of heart failure and severe complications such as coronary or peripheral embolism whenever cardiac tumors are detected by non-invasive echocardiography and cineangiocardiography.
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PMID:Surgical management of intracavitary cardiac tumors. A review of fifteen patients and current status in Japan. 378 67

The indications for and results of surgical closure of ventricular septal defect (VSD), uncomplicated by other congenital cardiac defects, depend on the size of the VSD and its haemodynamic consequences. In infants the timing of surgical closure is determined largely by the persistence of symptoms of congestive cardiac failure unresponsive to maximal medical treatment. There is a high incidence of spontaneous closure of VSD with age, especially in defects of small size. Accompanying aortic regurgitation is a serious complication. Progress in surgical technique (e.g. deep hypothermia, cardioplegia, identification of the conduction tissue) has substantially decreased the hospital mortality of surgical closure and the incidence of late deaths. In selected series the hospital mortality has been reduced to as low as 1-2% in patients over one year of age. Unless there is intractable cardiac failure (rarely observed beyond infancy), surgical closure can be delayed: pulmonary vascular obstructive disease develops only very exceptionally below the age of two years. Late complications include re-opening of the patch repair, arrhythmias and conduction disorders. The prognosis of post-operative left axis deviation plus right bundle branch block (left anterior hemiblock) is good in the absence of serious arrhythmias. Late deaths are rare. Operation in early childhood prevents the occurrence or persistence of abnormal right ventricular function. Exercise tolerance is normal in the absence of complications in practically all patients, who can therefore lead a normal life in all respects. There is, however, still slight doubt to what extent surgical closure is truly "curative" rather than "corrective".
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PMID:The outlook for children after cardiac surgery: ventricular septal defects. 665 3

The preoperative evaluation, surgical course, and early follow-up results of 11 newborn infants less than 30 days of age who underwent aortic valvotomy for severe valvular aortic stenosis between 1976 and 1983 were reviewed to determine our current surgical mortality and the early prognosis of these neonates. Ten of the 11 patients had severe congestive heart failure and dyspnea. Preoperative cardiac catheterization and angiography detected features characteristic of congenital aortic valvular stenosis in newborn infants. Emergency aortic valvotomy was performed in all during cardiopulmonary bypass, for which a cold (4 degrees C) blood prime and moderate systemic hypothermia were used. An effort was made to achieve maximal relief of the stenosis without causing aortic insufficiency. Mean cardiopulmonary bypass time was 21 minutes and mean cross-clamp time was 6.4 minutes. There was a single operative death, and there have been no late deaths during a mean follow-up period of 2.2 years. All patients are currently free of heart failure. Four patients underwent postoperative cardiac catheterization for clinical suspicion of severe residual stenosis. However, three had only mild or moderate residual stenosis. The fourth had a large gradient, 70 mm Hg, and has since undergone successful repeat valvotomy. These results indicate that neonates with severe valvular aortic stenosis can undergo valvotomy safely and have a favorable early prognosis. The factors responsible for the low mortality appear to include prompt recognition and diagnosis followed by emergency operation, use of a 4 degree C cold pump prime, brief cross-clamp times, and conservative valvotomy to avoid the development of significant aortic insufficiency.
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PMID:Successful aortic valvotomy for severe congenital valvular aortic stenosis in the newborn infant. 673 6

We report the occurrence of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in association with uncontrolled diabetes in nine patients. In reviewing the literature we found nine similar cases reported in little over a decade. In most cases no condition known to precipitate ARDS was discovered. The evidence suggests that the severely uncontrolled diabetic state in some way may initiate pathologic events leading to the capillary leak of ARDS. This description of the association of these two entities not commonly recognized as occurring simultaneously has important clinical implications: the entity should be anticipated in uncontrolled diabetic patients who present with acidosis, hypotension, hypothermia, and/or coma. The clinical or radiologic diagnosis of pneumonia or fluid overload should not be made in the uncontrolled diabetic patient in the absence of unequivocal evidence of infection or congestive heart failure. The development of dyspnea, hypoxemia, rales, or infiltrates in the otherwise routine resuscitation of these patients should lead the clinician to suspect the development of ARDS. Prompt invasive monitoring in these cases is indicated to aid in their management and may help to improve survival. We found calculation of the A-a gradient to be useful in patients with uncontrolled diabetes. Although not necessarily predictive, widened gradients were the earliest detectable abnormality found in all patients who developed ARDS.
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PMID:Adult respiratory distress syndrome complicating severely uncontrolled diabetes mellitus: report of nine cases and a review of the literature. 682 90

Three patients with aneurysms of the internal carotid artery (ICA) situated in the cavernous sinus (CS), and four patients with traumatic carotid-cavernous fistulas (CCF's) were treated by direct surgical approach. Two aneurysms were clipped, whereas the third (a giant aneurysm) was resected and the wall of the ICA reconstructed using interrupted sutures. In two CCF's, the shunt was excluded during reconstruction of the ICA wall by suturing. In the remaining two patients with CCF's, the shunt was excluded by clipping. The CS was attacked directly using a combination of three different techniques: the pterional, the subtemporal, and the petrosal approach. The ICA in its whole course through the CS, as well as the third through the sixth cranial nerves, were exposed. No special measures, such as hypotension, hypothermia, extracorporeal circulation and cardiac arrest, or dehydration, were taken during surgery. The aim of the direct approach to the CS was to exclude the aneurysm and/or the CCF and preserve the ICA patency. In all seven cases operated on, the lesions were excluded without inflicting any additional damage to the third through sixth cranial nerves, and in five cases carotid patency was preserved.
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PMID:Direct microsurgical repair of intracavernous vascular lesions. 685 74

Clinical features and specific aspects of treatment were evaluated in 612 patients with gram-negative bacteremia observed over a 10 year period. Coagulation abnormalities or thrombocytopenia were observed in 64 per cent of the patients. Evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) was found in approximately 10 per cent of them but was of sufficient severity to be associated with subcutaneous or visceral bleeding in 3 per cent of them. The frequency of coagulation abnormalities, other than DIC, was greater in patients with more severe underlying disease but DIC occurred with similar frequency irrespective of the severity of underyling host disease. Coagulation abnormalities of all types were associated with increased fatality rates. Hypothermia was noted in 13 per cent of the patients at the onset of bacteremia but was transient and was not associated with increased fatality. Failure to mount a febrile response greater than 99.6 degrees F within the first 24 hours of bacteremia was associated with a significant increase in fatality rates. Prior corticosteroid therapy diminished the febrile response to bacteremia. Age, underlying host disease, granulocytopenia, congestive heart failure, diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency, nosocomial infections, and antecedent treatment with antibiotics, corticosteroids, and antimetabolites significantly increased fatality rates. Appropriate antibiotic treatment reduced the fatality rate of those with bacteremia by approximately one-half among patients in each category of severity of underlying host disease. In addition, it was shown that early appropriate antibiotic therapy also reduced the frequency with which shock developed by one half. Even after development of shock, appropriate antibiotic therapy significantly reduced fatality rates. The use of combinations of antibiotics could not be demonstrated to significantly improve survival rates. Minimal differences in therapeutic efficacy could be demonstrated between individual antibiotics and various combinations of antimicrobials. Shock occurred in approximately 40 per cent of the patients and its frequency was not influenced by the species of etiologic agent. Contrary to previous reports, corticosteroid therapy in patients with shock did not enhance survival and treatment with an average of 4.0 g/day of hydrocortisone or its equivalents was associated with a significant increase in fatality rates.
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PMID:Gram-negative bacteremia. IV. Re-evaluation of clinical features and treatment in 612 patients. 698 71

Congestive heart failure in patients surviving aortic valve replacement has been associated with a high late mortality. To determine whether myocardial dysfunction in these patients occurred preoperatively, perioperatively, or during the early postoperative period, 19 consecutive patients undergoing aortic valve replacement using cardioplegia and hypothermia were studied by multiple-gated cardiac blood pool imaging. The resting ejection fractions for 8 patients with aortic stenosis did not show significant changes following operation. The 11 patients with aortic insufficiency has resting preoperative values of 58 +/- 15%, which fell to 38 +/- 18% immediately postoperatively (p less than 0.01), with the late values being 51 +/- 16%. Eight of 18 patients (44%) showed deterioration of regional wall motion immediately after operation, which persisted in 3 during the late evaluation. The occurrence of new perioperative regional wall motion abnormalities and persistent perioperative depression in left ventricular function in some patients suggest the need for further improvement in myocardial protection during cardiopulmonary bypass for aortic valve replacement.
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PMID:Radionuclide angiography in evaluation of left ventricular function following aortic valve replacement. 722 96

High mortality rates (20% to 60%) have been reported in the repair of coarctation of the aorta in infancy. During a 4 year period, 34 infants less than 6 months of age had coarctation repair (two prior to 1976). Eleven were less than 2 weeks of age, nine were 2 weeks to 1 month, eight were 1 to 2 months, and six were 2 to 6 months. Associated lesions were patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) (82%), ventricular septal defect (VSD) (53%), and other intracardiac lesions (35%). Twenty-three patients (67%) had emergency operations; the other procedures were semielective. The indications for operation included congestive cardiac failure (91%), acidosis (32%), hypertension (29%), cardiogenic shock (26%), and cardiac arrest (18%). There was one operative death (2.9%) in a patient with severe pulmonary valve insufficiency and multiple VSDs. There was one late death a 4 months (Taussig-Bing complex). Primary repair was used in 15, patch-graft angioplasty in 19 (left subclavian artery in nine, left common carotid in one, and Dacron or pericardial patch in nine). Two (6%) required reoperation for recurrent coarctation (follow-up 3 to 36 months with a mean of 25.8). Of 15 patients with a large VSD, six had pulmonary artery banding with two deaths (one operative and one late), two had debanding plus VSD repair, and two are awaiting operation. The remaining nine patients did not have banding (no operative or late deaths), four patients required late VSD closure, two VSDs closed spontaneously, two VSDs became smaller, and one patient is awaiting VSD closure. The infrequent need for pulmonary artery banding may be partly due to "physiological banding" seen at Denver's high altitude. The VSD spontaneously closed or became smaller in 44% of nonbanded patients. The low operative mortality can be ascribed to (1) aggressive medical therapy, (2) emergency catheterization and repair, (3) avoidance of hypothermia, and (4) adequate relief of the coarctation.
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PMID:Surgical repair of coarctation of the aorta in infants less than six months of age: including the question of pulmonary artery banding. 745 26

A prospective randomized trial comparing retrograde warm blood cardioplegia with cold oxygenated crystalloid cardioplegia in coronary bypass patients at Emory University revealed an increased risk of adverse neurological events in the warm group (4.5% vs 1.4%, p < 0.005). Multivariant analysis found four variables to be independent predictors of adverse neurological outcome: congestive heart failure (p = 0.002); age (p = 0.002); aortic cross-clamp time (p = 0.02); and randomization to the warm group (p = 0.026). In Toronto, a prospective randomized trial compared antegrade warm blood cardioplegia with antegrade cold blood cardioplegia. Compared to the Emory trial, the Toronto series contained fewer female patients (16% vs 25%), fewer patients older than age 70 (16% vs 30%), and fewer redo operations (4% vs 14%). The other prominent differences between the Emory series and the Toronto series were: extensive use of retrograde cardioplegia in the Emory series; mild hypothermia in the warm group in the Toronto series; and elevated serum glucose in the warm group in the Emory series. The Toronto series showed no difference in adverse neurological events comparing cold versus warm cardioplegia groups. A comparison of these two series suggests that mild hypothermia in the Toronto series, elevated glucose in the Emory series, or the use of retrograde cardioplegia may be operative in the elevated incidence of adverse neurological events seen in the Emory series in addition to a relatively larger number of high-risk patients (female, elderly, and redo) in the Emory series.
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PMID:A critical assessment of neurological risk during warm heart surgery. 757 47


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