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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (
emphysema
)
11,506
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One female patient--with slight pure mitral stenosis, mild hypertension and ischemic cardiomyopathy and disabling pulmonary
emphysema
--developed at 54 years of age permanent atrial fibrillation, had a gratuitous mitral commissurotomy four months later, sustained chronic fibrillation for 13 years, then spontaneously resumed sinus node command at age 67 without any discernible reason. Sinus rhythm was being maintained at follow-up nine months later. Her cardiac status of fair compensation under modest digitoxin and diuretic therapy has neither improved nor worsened with the return of atrial systole. The duration, in this observation, of permanent auricular fibrillation before spontaneous return of sinus rhythm, is one of the longest ever published, exceeded, to the best of my knowledge, only by one case of Lewis and by another one of Reeve and associates. Such an exceptional event points out a fascinating enigma: how can major longstanding atrial dysrhythmias (fibrillation,
flutter
), whose causes and pathogenesis seem at least partly elucidated, spontaneously disappeer in atria so badly diseased? I think we must humbly confess that no satisfactory explanation is at present available for this disconcerting phenomenon.
...
PMID:Spontaneous resumption of sinus rhythm in an elderly patient after 13 years of permanent atrial fibrillation. 47 82
Investigators suspect that arrhythmias are behind the high incidence of sudden death in patients with severe chronic bronchitis and
emphysema
. Continuous electrocardiographic monitoring may help boost survival statistics, since it has repeatedly shown its ability to detect irregularities that standard ECGs miss. So-called benign arrhythmias, such as atrial fibrillation, frequent ventricular premature contractions, and atrial
flutter
, are anything but harmless. In patients whose heart and lung function is already impaired by severe airway obstruction, these rhythm disorders can rapidly progress to a fatal cardiac arrest. Deciding how to treat the arrhythmia depends on the type of disturbance and the patient's clinical status. Direct-current shock or antiarrhythmic drugs can turn the tide in a desperately ill patient with acute respiratory failure. Correction of coexisting metabolic and ventilatory disorders often is crucial to successful therapy.
...
PMID:How to detect and treat arrhythmias in chronic lung disease. 108 66
In order to assess the sensitivity and specificity of the range-gated pulsed Doppler echocardiogram for the detection of aortic regurgitation, a study with use of this technique was carried out in 46 patients. They were classified into 3 groups: Group I was composed of 19 patients with a variety of heart diseases but with a competent aortic valve. Cardiac catheterization revealed no aortic regurgitation in any of the 19 patients, and the Doppler echocardiogram detected no turbulent diastolic flow in the left ventricular outflow tract. Group II was composed of 17 patients who clinically and by auscultation had aortic regurgitation, which was confirmed by cardiac catheterization in 6. In all 17 patients the Doppler echocardiogram detected several grades of turbulent diastolic flow compatible with aortic regurgitation in the left ventricular outflow tract. Group III was composed of 10 patients with aortic regurgitation but without the expected clinical or auscultatory evidence. The echocardiogram detected mitral valve
flutter
in only 1 patient. Cardiac catheterization revealed aortic regurgitation graded 1/4 and 2/4 in 9 patients, and the patient who did not undergo catheterization had a murmur of aortic insufficiency 6 months later. In all 10 patients the Doppler echocardiogram detected a regurgitating turbulent flow compatible with aortic regurgitation in the left ventricular outflow tract. It is concluded that the Doppler echocardiogram was more useful than auscultation and echocardiography for the detection of mild aortic regurgitation. In this study the range-gated pulsed Doppler echocardiogram proved 100% sensitive and specific. However, it will be necessary to study larger groups in order to assess its utility in more complicated conditions (obesity,
emphysema
, and heart failure) and the differential diagnosis with other diastolic murmurs.
...
PMID:Detection of mild aortic regurgitation by range-gated pulsed Doppler echocardiograhy. 713 29