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Thirty-seven diabetics with symptoms and clinical features suggestive of autonomic neuropathy were followed up for 33 months. Of the twenty with abnormal Valsalva or handgrip tests initially, ten (50%) died. There were no other features at presentation that differentiated those who subsequently died from those who survived. The causes of death were renal failure (six patients), cerebrovascular accident (two patients), hypoglycaemic coma (one patient), and "sudden death" (one patient). Of the survivors whose autonomic-function tests were repeated 18 months to 2 years later, five had new or worsening symptoms of autonomic neuropathy with corresponding deterioration of their autonomic-function tests; while two, with initially normal tests, had improved symptomatically. It is concluded that in diabetics with the clinical features of autonomic neuropathy simple autonomic-function tests give a good guide to prognosis, and that abnormal tests are associated with a high mortality.
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PMID:Mortality in diabetic autonomic neuropathy. 5 89

Cardiovascular accidents are the commonest cause of death in patients on intermittent haemodialysis. Our study concerns 158 adult patients in terminal renal failure who were treated by periodic dialysis; it was carried out at Necker Hospital between January 1967 and December 1970. Between these dates, 35 patients died, 17 of the deaths being due to unequivocal or probable cardiovascular complications. The diagnosis of cerebrovascular accident was made in 13 cases. The mean age of the patients who died was 38 years. Fatal cerebrovascular accidents occurred especially during the first 12 to 24 months of treatment. The incidence of fatal vascular accidents is greatest in patients who were hypertensive at the beginning of periodic dialysis, and who remained so after six months of dialysis. Our study has therefore shown that hypertension in patients on chronic haemodialysis is a major vascular risk factors; other risk factors, especially metabolic ones, may also play a part.
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PMID:[Arterial hypertension and mortality due to cardiovascular complications in patients on chronic hemodialysis]. 10 Nov 77

Abdominal aortic aneurysmectomy is being performed with progressively lower operative mortality and morbidity. Three hundred thirty seven patients have had elective aneurysm repair since 1954. Factors affecting mortality and morbidity in the last 108 cases are analyzed. Seventy-four per cent of patients had pre-existing disease, either cardiac, pulmonary, renal, cerebrovascular, diabetes mellitus, or hypertension. Six patients died following operation, a mortality rate of 5.5%. One died of pulmonary and 5 of cardiac causes. No patient died of renal failure or required dialysis. A signficant feature of management is the regimen of fluid therapy using dextrose in lactated Ringer's solution during and after operation to minimize hypotensive and renal complications. No patient developed a wound infection, graft infection, wound dehiscence, stroke, or intestinal ischemia. Serious postoperative complications were largely cardiac or pulmonary. Despite recent liberalization of indications for operation, comparative figures show continued reduction in operative mortality from 17% during 1954-1961, or 7.4% during 1962-1967, to 5.5% in the 1968-1974 era. This declining mortality is related to earlier diagnosis using non-invasive methods (sonogram), simplified operative techniques, improvement in fluid management, innovations in cardiopulmonary therapy, and recognition and proper handling of unusual manifestations of aortic aneurysms.
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PMID:Surgical management of abdominal aortic aneurysms: factors influencing mortality and morbidity--a 20-year experience. 12 60

Adequate antihypertensive therapy will lower blood pressure to normotensive or near normotensive levels in 80-85% of patients. Long-term treatment results in a marked decrease in strokes and stroke recurrence, heart failure, renal failure, and progression to accelerated hypertension. The effects of long-term therapy on the occurrence of coronary artery disease are unclear.
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PMID:Prognosis of adequately treated hypertensive patients. 14 27

Twelve stable patients with end-stage renal failure maintained on hemodialysis were studied by echocardiography before and after dialysis. The left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic wall thickness, interventricular septal thickness and LV mass were increaed suggesting concentric LV hypertrophy. The LV end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes, and cardiac output were increased before dialysis. Aortic root dimensions, aortic valve opening, left atrium, LV wall and septal excursions and per cent LV internal diameter shortening were normal before dialysis. Some pericardial effusion was found in 50% of the patients without any symptoms or signs. With dialysis the systolic and diastolic volumes and dimensions of the left ventricle and atrium decreased significantly as did the stroke volume. These changes were associated with a significant reduction of body weight, and thereby blood volume, induced by dialysis. The cardiac output remained unchanged despite significant reduction in the stroke volume due to an increase in heart rate.
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PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of the effect of hemodialysis on cardiac size and function in patients with end-stage renal disease. 16 78

Twelve patients with clinical and hemodynamic evidence of severe congestive heart failure, unresponsive to the usual therapy of salt restriction, oxygen, bed rest, digitalis, and massive doses of diuretics, were studied during a control period and after intravenous dopamine. Seven patients survived and 5 died with intractable failure and shock despite transiently improved hemodynamic indices. At control period and after optimal dose of dopamine, there were no significant changes in heart rate (HR) and mean systemic arterial pressure. The mean pulmonary artery (PA) and pulmonary capillary wedge (PCW) pressures decreased slightly. Cardiac index (CI), stroke volume (SVI), and stroke work indices (SWI) rose (p less than 0.005) from the control values of 1.4 +/- 0.1, 15.3 +/- 5, and 13.6 +/- 1.7 to 2.2 +/- 0.1, 24.1 +/- 4, and 24 +/- 2.3, respectively; pulmonary arteriolar (PAR), total pulmonary vascular (TPVR), and systemic vascular (SVR) resistances fell (p less than 0.01). Urine output increased from 13.5 ml/hr before to 58.2 ml/hr after dopamine (p less than 0.005). After 24 and 48 hr of dopamine, in addition to the above hemodynamic changes, PA pressure fell from 38 +/- 4 to 33 +/- 3 and 28 +/- 2, and PCW from 30 +/- 2 to 24 +/- 3 and 18 +/- 3 (p less than 0.05). Compared with nonsurvivors, survivors had significant decreases in PA and PCW pressures, PAR, and TPVR and an increase in SWI. These data indicate that dopamine is effective in some patients with refractive congestive heart failure associated with acute oliguric renal failure and that the prognosis may be improved.
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PMID:Hemodynamic effects of dopamine in patients with resistant congestive heart failure. 35 38

Cardiac function was determined non-invasively in 7 patients (average age 24 years) with chronic uremia. Each was on maintenance hemodialysis. Echocardiograms and carotid pulse tracings were recorded 30 minutes prior to dialysis, and again 30 minutes, 24 and 48 hours following hemodialysis. End-diastolic and end-systolic diameters averaged 5.4 +/- 0.2 and 3.4 +/- 0.1 cm, respectively before and 5.0 +/- 0.2 and 3.2 +/- 0.1 cm immediately after hemodialysis (P less than 0.05 for both). Calculated stroke volume fell from 92.1 +/- 8.8 to 76.7 +/- 10.5 ml (P less than 0.025). Heart rate increased minimally, and average cardiac output was not significantly increased. Following dialysis, body weight and systolic and diastolic blood pressures fell significantly. Thus preload as well as afterload declined. Because of the fall in both stroke volume and end-diastolic volume, a shift along the ventricular function curve downwards and to the left occurred implying diminished cardiac pumping function. Nonetheless the indices of myocardial contractility were normal and showed no change from pre-dialysis value. During the 48 hour interval following hemodialysis all measured and calculated values returned to pre-dialysis levels. Thus organic heart disease as evaluated by non-invasive techniques does not appear to be a necessary sequel to kidney failure, at least in young patients in a hemodialysis program. Gross abnormalities of myocardial function may be absent for at least seven years after the onset of chronic uremia.
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PMID:Echocardiographic assessment of left ventricular function in patients with chronic uremia. 50 90

A 14-year-old patient with heat stroke, disseminated intravascular coagulation, central nervous system dysfunction, and renal failure was treated, in addition to conventional therapy, with heparin sodium for seven days. Despite very poor prognostic signs on addmission, the patient survived the acute episode and ultimately progressed to a complete recovery.
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PMID:Disseminated intravascular coagulation in heat stroke. Response to heparin therapy. 80 83

The cardiac response to volume loading was evaluated in fifty severely septic patients. After a rapid infusion of albumin or whole blood the cardiac index (CI) and left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI) were recorded as the pulmonary arterial wedge pressure (PAWP) increased. Initial values of PAWP, CI, and LVSWI were similar in both the nineteen surviving and thirty-one nonsurviving patients. Surviving patients, however, demonstrated greater increases in CI and LVSWI as PAWP rose. Nearly half of both patient groups developed decreases in CI and LVSWI as the PAWP continued to increase. These downslopes occurred at relatively low PAWP and are taken as evidence of an abnormality of myocardial function in both survivors and nonsurvivors. The lower upslope of the performance curves in nonsurvivors indicates myocardial depression or a negative inotropic effect. Cardiac ischemia, acute respiratory failure, and high affinity red cells were found to diminish the cardiac response to volume loading, whereas hepatic and renal failure were associated with a good CI and LVSWI response.
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PMID:Myocardial depression during sepsis. 84 86

A relationship has been established between the haematocrit and the resistivity of whole blood at 37 degrees C for neonates and adults not suffering from renal failure. Values of resistivity obtained in this way were substituted into Kubicek's equation for stroke volume by the electrical impedance technique, the signal pick-up electrodes being placed in standard positions. The calculated cardiac outputs were then compared with those obtained simultaneously from other techniques such as the dye dilution method for adults and the measurement of pulmonary effective capillary blood flow by rebreathing nitrous oxide in neonates. It was found that the impedance method overrestimates under these circumstances, and other workers have shown that this is likely to be due to a contribution from the right heart. A haemotocrit-dependent correction factor has been employed in the case of neonates to align the impedance and nitrous oxide results.
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PMID:Blood resistivity and its implications for the calculation of cardiac output by the thoracic electrical impedance technique. 89 75


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