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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient experienced episodic
pulmonary edema
accompanying nocturnal angina pectoris. The symptoms were provoked at cardiac catheterization by atrial pacing. Simultaneous onset of chest pain, shortness of breath, and sudden appearance of a large V wave in the pulmonary artery wedge pressure contour confirmed acute mitral valve
regurgitation
. Rapid reversal of these changes after nitroglycerin administration supported "papillary muscle dysfunction" as the explanation for these hemodynamic changes.
...
PMID:Severe papillary muscle dysfunction substantiated by atrial pacing during cardiac catheterization. 40 54
The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognosis and functional outcome of mitral regurgitation caused by ischemic papillary muscle dysfunction with respect to treatment, and to determine the role of coronary angioplasty in this context. Thirty patients with severe ischemic mitral regurgitation were followed up for 33 +/- 3 months. Thirteen patients were treated medically (group I) and 17 patients underwent surgery or angioplasty (group II). The 3-year survival was 59.5% (45.6% in group I and 70.2% in group II). Angioplasty was only used in paroxysmal mitral regurgitation caused by papillary muscle ischemia. This technique resulted in spectacular immediate results in three patients with
pulmonary edema
caused by mitral regurgitation during myocardial ischemia. Surgical correction of mitral regurgitation should be considered without delay if angioplasty is not feasible or if the
regurgitation
is permanent or severe. Widening the indications of surgery or angioplasty should result in an improvement of the prognosis of these high-risk patients.
...
PMID:Treatment of severe mitral regurgitation caused by ischemic papillary muscle dysfunction: indications for coronary angioplasty. 154 93
Seventy-nine patients with ischemic mitral regurgitation were followed up for a period of 20 +/- 8 months. The risk of death increased with age and cardiac failure at the time of inclusion. The risk of cardiac events increased with these factors and also with raised serum creatinine and decreased echocardiographic fractional shortening. The global 2 year survival was 72.8% and survival without a further cardiac event was 48.7%. Surgery and angioplasty increased global survival and freedom from cardiac events of patients with severe
regurgitation
(74.9% and 68.8% versus 59.4% and 46.1% for medical therapy alone). The functional improvement was also greater in patients undergoing surgery or angioplasty (80% of patients in NYHA Stage I versus 53.8% in the medical group). Angioplasty was only performed in cases of paroxysmal mitral regurgitation by reversible papillary muscle ischemia. Surgery (coronary bypass usually associated with mitral valve replacement) was associated with better results than medical therapy alone in permanent mitral regurgitation by papillary muscle dysfunction or rupture. Despite a high immediate mortality, this option should be considered rapidly in cases of severe ischemic mitral regurgitation with
pulmonary oedema
.
...
PMID:[Prognosis of ischemic mitral valve insufficiency]. 192 8
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.
...
PMID:[Mitral insufficiency due to ruptured chordae tendineae--clinical features, early and late results of valve replacement and repair]. 273 33
Measurement of hemodynamic parameters by noninvasive techniques is gaining more and more popularity in the face of severe complications associated with invasive methods. Thoracic electrical bioimpedance is a noninvasive means of estimating cardiac output (CO) and
pulmonary edema
formation. The validity of this method, however, has been controversial. In the present study a new bioimpedance monitoring system (NCCOM 3) was used in 10 intensive care patients undergoing mechanical hemofiltration (group I) and in 20 cardiac surgery patients undergoing either aortic valve replacement (AVR, group IIa, n = 10) or aorto-coronary bypass grafting (CABG, group IIb, n = 10). In cardiac surgery patients the measurements were performed before as well as after extracorporeal circulation (ECC). CO measured by the impedance monitor was compared to the standard thermodilution method; pulmonary fluids were estimated by a thermo-dye technique and by measurement of total electrical impedance (base impedance), expressed as the thoracic fluid index (TFI). The principal finding of the study was that CO as measured by the two techniques differed significantly in all groups with regard to absolute values. The relative changes in CO, however, were comparable in both intensive care patients and CABG patients. In patients with special thoracic blood flow conditions (
regurgitation
in aortic insufficiency patients), no corresponding course of CO could be found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Non-invasive versus invasive cardiovascular monitoring. Determination of stroke volume and pulmonary hydration using a new bioimpedance monitor]. 326 52
The mitral apparatus is a complex structure composed of several components, each of which can be affected by a variety of diseases, resulting in mitral regurgitation. The physiologic consequences of mitral regurgitation include reduced forward stroke volume; increased left atrial volume and pressure; and reduced resistance to left ventricular ejection. The latter explains why indices of systolic left ventricular function (ejection fraction) are often increased early in the course of mitral regurgitation. With the insidious development of mitral regurgitation, the left atrium dilates to accommodate the increase in volume, thereby reducing the atrial pressure. However, with the acute development of mitral regurgitation into a nondilated left atrium, pressure rises rapidly, producing
pulmonary edema
. The predominant clinical symptoms in chronic mitral regurgitation of dyspnea and fatigue result from pulmonary venous hypertension and low cardiac output. The cardinal physical finding is a mitral systolic murmur. Since the murmur can assume various configurations, the most reliable way to establish its correct origin is by bedside physiologic maneuvers. Typically, in the beat following a premature contraction or after a long pause during atrial fibrillation, the murmur of mitral regurgitation is unchanged in intensity, but murmurs due to left ventricular outflow obstruction increase. Also, isometric handgrip exercise increases the intensity of the murmur and a Valsalva maneuver decreases it during the strain phase. Echocardiography is the most useful noninvasive technique for evaluating patients with mitral regurgitation. Visualization of the mitral apparatus may establish the etiology of
regurgitation
, and measurement of left atrial size and left ventricular size and performance is useful for assessing the functional significance of the lesion. Doppler echocardiography can establish the diagnosis of mitral regurgitation in difficult cases with multi valve disease and can estimate the severity of the
regurgitation
. Cardiac catheterization and angiography are usually reserved for the patient being considered for valvular surgery. The natural history of chronic mitral regurgitation is characterized by slowly progressive symptoms, and often the onset of disabling symptoms is the result of irreversible left ventricular dysfunction. Medical therapy consists of digitalis, diuretics, and vasodilators for symptomatic patients. When symptoms occur despite this therapy, valvular surgery should be considered before left ventricular function becomes abnormal.
...
PMID:Mitral valve regurgitation. 637 82
We report intermittent mitral valve
regurgitation
with 17 acute pulmonary edemas over a 16-month period after aortic valve replacement due to combined aortic valve disease in a 51-year-old man. The mechanism of mitral regurgitation was explained by the relatively large size of the prosthetic valve which had had to be sutured partly below the aortic annulus. It was suspected to interfere with the closure of the mildly diseased mitral valve when under pressure or subjected to volume loadings of the left ventricle which provoked free mitral regurgitation. There was no recurrence of
pulmonary edema
in the 50 months following mitral valve replacement.
...
PMID:Intermittent mitral regurgitation and pulmonary edema after aortic valve replacement. 762 84
One of the lesser known atypical forms of radiographic presentation of
pulmonary edema
is the isolated or predominant affection of the upper right lobe in patients with mitral valve insufficiency. As a possible cause of this distribution, it has been established that the
regurgitation
jet during the ventricular systole may be directed selectively toward the orifice of the right upper lobe vein, locally accentuating the forces responsible for edema formation. There are few cases with these characteristics in the literature reviewed. We present an additional three cases, concluding that localized
pulmonary edema
secondary to mitral insufficiency should be suspected in the presence of any type of airspace consolidation in the right upper lobe, with or without associated affection of the middle lobe, in patients with a history of mitral valve insufficiency, especially when there are radiologic signs of left heart failure.
...
PMID:Localized right upper lobe edema. 781 92
The first 2000 incidents reported to the Australian Incident Monitoring Study were analysed with respect to the role of the pulse oximeter. Of these 184 (9%) were first detected by a pulse oximeter and there were a further 177 (9%) in which desaturation was recorded. Of the 1256 incidents which occurred in association with general anaesthesia 48% were "human detected" and 52% "monitor detected". The pulse oximeter was ranked first and detected 27% of these monitor detected incidents; this figure would have been over 40% if an oximeter had always been used and its more informative modulated pulse tone relied upon instead of that of the "bleep" of the ECG. The pulse oximeter is the "front-line" monitor for endobronchial intubation, the fourth most common incident in association with general anaesthesia (it detected 87% of the 76 cases in which it was in use). It also played an invaluable role as a "back-up" monitor in 40 life-threatening situations in which "front-line" monitors (e.g. oxygen analyser, low pressure alarm, capnograph) were either not in use, were being used incorrectly or failed. Other situations detected, in order of frequency of detection, were: circuit disconnection, circuit leak, desaturation (severe shunt), oesophageal intubation, aspiration and/or
regurgitation
,
pulmonary oedema
, endotracheal tube obstruction, severe hypotension, failure of oxygen delivery, hypoxic gas mixture, hypoventilation, anaphylaxis, air embolism, bronchospasm, malignant hyperthermia, and tension pneumothorax.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The Australian Incident Monitoring Study. The pulse oximeter: applications and limitations--an analysis of 2000 incident reports. 827 73
A 37-year-old man with systemic lupus erythematosus, who underwent an aortic valve replacement with a Carpentier-Edwards porcine valve for severe aortic insufficiency, was admitted to the hospital with
pulmonary edema
. Transesophageal echocardiography revealed severe aortic insufficiency arising from partial dehiscence of the valve sewing ring, as well as centrally from the valve cusp. In addition, marked thickening of the mitral valve was observed with severe eccentric
regurgitation
. At surgery, valvulitis of the native mitral and bioprosthetic aortic valves was demonstrated, with a perforation of the porcine valve cusp. After replacement of both valves, the patient had a stormy postoperative course with recurrent communications between the left ventricle and atrium requiring multiple surgeries and eventually died. This case illustrates the severity of valvulopathy and ensuing complications that can affect patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and demonstrates that the valvulopathy can affect bioprosthetic valves, a finding that has significant implications as to the type of valve replacement in these patients.
...
PMID:Valvulitis involving a bioprosthetic valve in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus. 867 31
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