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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A new clinical entity is described in which free aortic regurgitation from congenital aortic valve disease caused rupture of the chordae to the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve in 7 men aged 45 to 63 years (mean 52 years); 2 of the patients also had rupture of chordae to the posterior leaflet. Comparing these patients with those with ruptured mitral chordae in association with rheumatic heart disease and patients with spontaneous chordal rupture, differences were evident. No patient had a history of rheumatic fever and none had active infection. The typical clinical presentation was of acute mitral regurgitation into a small left atrium, with severe pulmonary oedema which was often resistant to medical treatment. The cause of chordal rupture in these patients was in part the result of progressive left ventricular dilatation, of direct trauma to the anterior cusp of the mitral valve, and possibly of a genetic factor. The anatomical features of both aortic and mitral valves are described, and in 3 histology of the mitral valve was available; 2 had myxomatous degeneration similar to that seen in patients with spontaneous chordal rupture, and in 1 there was degeneration of collagen tissue. All patients were treated surgically but the mortality was high (5 out of 7,70%). Early operation with replacement of the aortic and mitral valves is recommended if this high mortality is to be reduced.
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PMID:Congenital aortic valve disease with rupture of mitral chordae tendineae. 97 89

Severe pathological changes in the cardiac valves are often observed at an early age in children in the developing countries. Mitral stenosis is best managed by closed commissurotomy. However, mitral insufficiency, aortic insufficiency and tricuspid lesions may lead to life-threatening hemodynamic effects which necessitate valve replacement. This differs from experience in the developed countries where surgery for rheumatic valvular disease is limited to the adult. Our experience includes 33 children aged 5 to 16 years. Twenty-four children underwent single valve replacement, eight had two valves replaced and one had triple valve replacement. All were classified Grade IV or late Grade III (New York Heart Association). Four children had to be operated on despite known rheumatic activity. Two children in shock and pulmonary edema underwent emergency operation. There were two hospital deaths and eight late deaths. Patients have been followed for up to eight years. Twenty children are now classified as Grade I and lead completely normal lives and the remaining three are classified as Grade II. Postoperative catheterization studies have documented improvement from severe preoperative hemodynamic changes to near normal values at rest after operation. The cardiothoracic ratio has decreased impressively. We conclude that the natural history of rheumatic heart disease in children with severely damaged heart valves is favorably modified by valve replacement.
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PMID:Long-term results of valve replacement in children suffering from rheumatic heart disease. 111

Tube thoracostomy is an invasive procedure caring about 1% complication rate. Most confronted complications include diaphragm or lung laceration [1-3], damage to intrabdominal organ, intercostal artery bleeding and unilateral pulmonary edema. Here we present another rare complication of perforation of the right atrium which occurred in a patient with rheumatic heart disease (RHD) who had received mitral valve replacement (MVR) and tricuspid annuloplasty. Severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR) with huge right atrium was noted. Chest tube was inserted for pleural effusion drainage. The lesion was proved to be in the right atrium by echocardiography and computerized tomography three days later. The penetrated hole was repaired with bovine pericardium patch with minimal blood loss. This case attests to the extreme caution warranted when performing tube thoracostomy in patient with huge cardiomegaly.
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PMID:Successful management of perforating injury of right atrium by chest tube. 133 95

The hemodynamics of pregnancy make this a time of great risk for the cardiac patient. RHD is still the most commonly seen lesion in women of childbearing age. When the mitral valve becomes stenotic, it severely limits flow into the left ventricle, resulting in a buildup of pressure in the left atrium and possibly the pulmonary artery. These patients are at risk for pulmonary edema and a decrease in cardiac output. Intrapartum care must focus on meticulous fluid management and alleviation of pain and anxiety to avoid the tachycardiac effect.
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PMID:Valvular disease in pregnancy. 188 Jul 40

Heart disease is the most important nonobstetric cause of maternal death; however, most young women with heart disease do well during pregnancy. If the physician is uncertain of the effects of pregnancy on a particular heart condition, needless restrictions may be imposed. The main hazards are: pulmonary edema when it occurs suddenly in mitral stenosis; pulmonary hypertension (because pulmonary vascular disease tends to be exacerbated by pregnancy); infective endocarditis (this is rare); and fulminating peripartum cardiomyopathy. The practical management of the pregnant patient with various concomitant heart conditions (congenital heart disease, pulmonary hypertension, rheumatic heart disease, anticoagulants and artificial valves, constrictive pericarditis, kyphoscoliosis, Marfan's syndrome, mitral prolapse, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, infective endocarditis, and arrhythmias) is discussed. An absolute indication for therapeutic abortion is severe pulmonary vascular disease; discretionary indications include 'chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension,' cardiomyopathies (depending on the hemodynamic disturbance), and Marfan's syndrome.
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PMID:Cardiovascular disease in pregnancy. 218 16

Ninety patients who underwent emergency cardiac valve surgery from January 1976 to December 1981 are reported. Patients were divided in two groups: those operated on native valves are included in group I; patients with prosthetic valves operated because of leakage or malfunction, in group II. In group I (57 patients) the aetiology was: rheumatic heart disease (34 cases); acute endocarditis (16 cases); sequelae of recent endocarditis (2 cases); luetic infection (1 case); sequelae of myocardial infarction (1 case); rupture of mitral chordae in mixomatous valve (3 cases). The emergency operation was prompted in 22 patients by cardiogenic shock, in 13 patients by intractable pulmonary edema, in 21 patients by low output syndrome, in one case by ventricular arrhythmias. In group II (33 cases) the causes of reoperation were: in 27 cases leakage (in 13 due to active endocarditis); in 6 cases variance of the occluder or thrombosis. The emergency originated in 12 cases from cardiogenic shock, in 11 cases from intractable pulmonary edema, in 9 cases from low output syndrome, in 1 case from ventricular arrhythmias. Twenty-six patients died perioperatively in group I and 17 in group II. Mean follow-up in group I was 26 months. Among 27 patients there were two deaths; 25 patients are alive and well (one has been reoperated again). Mean follow-up in group II was 21 months. Among the 15 patients observed there were 6 deaths (3 after re-reoperation); 9 patients are alive and well (one has been re-reoperated).' The Authors feel that surgery is mandatory in all such patients to ensure satisfying long term results, in spite of high perioperative mortality rate.
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PMID:[Emergencies in valvular surgery]. 667 91

Left ventricular end diastolic pressure (LVEDP) in 24 patients with coronary heart, hypertension or rheumatic heart disease (mainly aortic valve pathologic change, exclude mitral stenosis), who had unobvious clinical heart failure. Before left heart catheterization pulmonary function were tested by plethysmogram, results revealed: when LVEDP > 15 mmHg in the patients, pulmonary function parameter expectancy value percentage including FEF25-75%, V25, V50, V75, FVC, VC, FEV1.0 were obviously decreased. RV/TLC expectancy value percentage was obviously increased. Pulmonary function parameter expectancy value percentage including FEF25-75%, V25, V50, V75, FEV1.0, FVC, etc. had significant negative correlation with LVEDP (r = -0.715, P < 0.001; r = -0.699, P < 0.001; r = -0.678, P < 0.001; r = -0.671, P < 0.001; r = -0.648, P < 0.001; r = -0.516, P < 0.01; respectively). RV/TLC expectancy value percentage had significant positive correlation with LVEDP (r = 0.515, P < 0.05). The results indicate that testing pulmonary function parameter helps to evaluate left ventricular function and diagnose early (mesenchymal) pulmonary edema.
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PMID:[The investigation of the correlations between left ventricular end diastolic pressure and pulmonary function parameters]. 840 54

To assess the clinical characteristics and management of patients with atrial fibrillation (AF), we performed a prospective survey of all acute medical admissions over six months to our hospital. Of 7,451 such admissions, 245 had AF (110 male, 135 female; mean age 74.4 years). Of these, 213 were Caucasian, 10 black/Afro-Caribbean and 22 Asian. Complete data were available for 185 patients. Of these, 82 had newly diagnosed AF, 83 had previous chronic AF and 20 had paroxysmal AF. The main presenting features was dyspnoea, stroke and syncope. A history of ischaemic heart disease was present in 64, heart failure in 46, hypertension in 51 and rheumatic heart disease in 13, while 31 had a previous stroke. Chest X-ray showed cardiomegaly and pulmonary oedema in 121 patients, but was normal in 28. Echocardiography showed poor cardiac function in eight patients and enlarged left atria in five. Only 28% of those with previously diagnosed AF were on anticoagulation. Of the newly diagnosed patients, only 18% were started on anticoagulants. Cardioversion was attempted or planned in only 6%. The primary diagnosis on discharge was heart failure in 45, stroke in 24 and myocardial infarction in 12. AF remains a common arrhythmia among acute medical admissions and is commonly associated with heart failure and a high mortality. There is still a reluctance to start anticoagulant therapy or to perform cardioversion in such patients.
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PMID:Acute admissions with atrial fibrillation in a British multiracial hospital population. 915 52

The study was held in order to analyze the main causes of death in cases of rheumatic diseases (RD) in Moscow. The authors studied the pathology records of autopsies performed in 1999-2002 in two pathology departments of Moscow clinics. Cases with RD were selected. The study found 165 cases of RD, which constituted 2% of all autopsies performed in these departments. There were 99 cases (60%) of rheumatic heart disease (RHD), 4 cases (2.4%) of rheumatic fever (RF) relapse, 28 cases (17%) of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 8 cases (4.8%) of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), 3 cases (1.8%) of scleroderma systematica (SS), 2 cases (1.2%) of ankylosing spondylitis (AS), 2 cases (1.2%) of systemic vasculitis (SPV), 11 cases (7.3%) of osteoarthrosis, 3 cases (1.8%) of gout, 1 case (0.6%) of polymyositis. The death of patients with RHD had been caused by hemodynamic decompensation (HD) in 54% of the cases, acute cardiovascular collapse (ACC) in 14% of the cases, 6% of the patients had died from thromboembolism (TE) and 26%--from other conditions (intoxication, uremia, brain and lung edema etc). The death of patients with RF was caused by TE in 2 cases, by HD in 1 case and by ACC in 1 case. Secondary amyloidosis resulting in chronic renal failure and uremia occurred in 5 out of 28 cases of RA, HD--in 3, ACC--in 7, TE--in 1, infectious complications--in 5, other complications--in 7 cases. Patients with SLE died from various conditions: uremia in 2 cases, acute adrenal failure in 1 case, infectious complications in 2, ACC--in 2, brain edema--in 1 case. The complications of SS were uremia and intoxication. ACC was the cause of death in cases of gout and SS. The majority of RD cases were patients with RHD. The main cause of death in RD was cardiovascular disorders.
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PMID:[The causes of death of patients with rheumatic diseases in Moscow]. 1575 89

The onset of the clinical expression of rheumatic heart disease (RHD) is variable. Exercise or other states that necessitate increased cardiac output often precipitate symptoms. Mitral stenosis (MS) is present in 25% of patients with RHD, and 40% of patients have concomitant MS and mitral regurgitation. About two third of patients with MS have concurrent aortic insufficiency. Pulmonary and tricuspid insufficiency may occur from rheumatic involvement of these valves, or secondary to dilatation of valve annuli from pulmonary hypertension secondary to mitral and/or aortic valve disease. Pregnancy is associated with many hemodynamic changes including expanded intravascular volume, tachycardia, increased intracardiac dimensions, and valvular regurgitation. We report a case of a young female who developed flash pulmonary edema during parturition and was found to have abnormal rheumatic involvement of her aortic, mitral, and tricuspid valves. Successful triple valve repair was performed in a single operation. A review of rheumatic valvular abnormalities, and literature supporting multivalvular repair for rheumatic heart disease is provided.
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PMID:Triple valve repair for rheumatic heart disease. 1598 39


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