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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (vascular disease)
17,070 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 41-year-old man with fever, diarrhea and skin rash received a diagnosis of drug-induced lupus. He was given corticosteroids for 3 months and was subsequently admitted to a local hospital due to dyspnea. Pneumonia was then diagnosed and he was given a new quinolone antibacterial agent. Despite this treatment, his symptoms and signs gradually worsened and he was referred to our hospital. High resolution CT (HRCT) of the chest showed diffuse ground-glass opacities, reticular shadows, parenchymal abnormalities, traction bronchiectasis, a subpleural curvilinear shadow and septal lines. Serological examinations were positive for anti-myeloperoxidase antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (MPO-ANCA) and subsequent HRCT findings were consistent with ANCA-related lung disease. However, the patient had complications such as previous syphilis infection, oral candidiasis, herpes zoster, hepatitis B virus and cytomegalovirus infection. Additionally, his serum was positive for HIV antibody and HIV-1 RNA, and therefore we diagnosed AIDS. His bronchoalveolar lavage fluid revealed Pneumocystis jirovecii. It is known that HIV infection is associated with many types of autoantibodies including MPO-ANCA. Therefore, in HIV/AIDS patients with interstitial lung diseases, it is important to differentiate opportunistic Pneumocystis pneumonia infection from collagen vascular disease-associated interstitial lung diseases.
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PMID:[A case of AIDS with Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia which required differentiation from ANCA-related lung disease]. 2235 55

Exercise stress tests of the pulmonary circulation show promise for the detection of early or latent pulmonary vascular disease and may help us understand the clinical evolution and effects of treatments in patients with established disease. Exercise stresses the pulmonary circulation through increases in cardiac output and left atrial pressure. Recent studies have shown that exercise-induced increase in pulmonary artery pressure is associated with dyspnea-fatigue symptomatology, validating the notion of exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension. Exercise in established pulmonary hypertension has no diagnostic relevance, but may help in the understanding of changes in functional state and the effects of therapies.
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PMID:Exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension. 2274 8

In a review article peculiarities of cardiovascular disease among women are considered. The analysis of published data showed that cardiovascular disease (CVD) is common in women. Gender-specific risk factors include oral contraceptives and menopause. Clinical manifestations, major causes of various forms of cardiovascular disease in women are revealed. It was found that women most often than men have coronary micro vascular disease - X Syndrome, which affects the tiny coronary arteries. Coronary microvascular dysfunction is prevalent in women with chest pain. There is a greater prevalence of no coronary causes of chest pain in the female population, and chest pain is frequently accompanied by abdominal pain, dyspnea, nausea, fatigue, and greater functional disability. Women tend to suffer from more single vessel and two-vessel disease as opposed to the three-vessel disease seen more often in men. It is concluded that specific research is required to identify risk factors of cardiovascular disease in women in Georgia.
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PMID:Peculiarities of cardiovascular disease in women. 2289 8

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT), a genetic vascular disorder associated with epistaxis and hepatic shunts, is responsible for high-output cardiac failure in rare cases. Bevacizumab, which targets vascular endothelial growth factor, was shown to decrease both cardiac index (CI) and epistaxis duration in HHT patients with severe liver involvement. The relationship between its serum concentration and change in both CI and epistaxis duration was investigated to design the bevacizumab maintenance dosing regimen of future therapeutic studies. Twenty-five HHT patients with dyspnea and high CI were included in a prospective non-comparative study. They received bevacizumab at a dose of 5 mg/kg per infusion every 14 days for a total of 6 injections. The relationships between bevacizumab serum concentration and both CI and epistaxis duration were described using transit compartments and direct inhibition pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic models. The performances of different maintenance regimens were evaluated using simulation. Infusions every 3, 2 and one months were predicted to maintain 41%, 45% and 50% of patients with CI <4 L/min/m(2) at 24 months, respectively. The fraction of patients with <20 min epistaxis per month was predicted to be 34%, 43% and 60%, with infusion every 3, 2 or one months, respectively. Simulations of the effects of different maintenance dosing regimens predict that monthly 5 mg/kg infusions of bevacizumab should allow sustained control of both cardiac index and epistaxis.
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PMID:Dose - response relationship of bevacizumab in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. 2575 Dec 41

Surgical repair of congenital ventricular septal defects (VSDs) in adults is quite rare. Most congenital VSDs are repaired in children. Of those adult patients diagnosed as having VSDs, many are not repaired due to irreversible pulmonary vascular disease. Repair in a patient with a VSD and fistula is even more uncommon. From a review of the literature, we found no other case reports with our unique combination of echocardiographic and surgical findings: a supracristal VSD, right and left sinus of Valsalva fistulas into the right ventricular outflow tract, and a pulmonary artery to pulmonary vein fistula in the context of an aseptic endocarditis lesion. We review the important aspects of anesthetic management in an adult with an intracardiac shunt. An adult patient with unrepaired congenital VSD may develop multiple fistulas as a consequence of endocarditis. This patient refused surgery until the progressive dyspnea was worsened by the endocarditis and the fistulas. At the time of surgery, his ventricular ejection fraction measured 47%, the ventricular chambers were enlarged, and the pulmonary to systemic flow ratio measured 2:1. He did well clinically after the VSD and fistulae repair.
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PMID:Endocarditic sinus of valsalva fistulae to right ventricular outflow tract in adult ventricular septal defects. 2591 May 33

Pulmonary vascular diseases encompass a large and diverse group of underlying pathologies ranging from venous thromboembolism to congenital malformations to inflammatory vasculitides. As a result, patients can present either acutely with dyspnea and chest pain or chronically with dyspnea on exertion, hypoxia, and right heart failure. Imaging, particularly with multidetector CT, plays a key role in the evaluation and management of patients with suspected pulmonary vascular disease and, given the widespread routine use of high-quality CT pulmonary angiography, it is imperative that radiologists be familiar these pathologies.
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PMID:Pulmonary vascular diseases. 2602 2

We reported a case of pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (PCH) and introduced its diagnosis, differential diagnosis, pathogenesis and development of treatment based on the review of Dana Point 2008 Classification of Pulmonary Hypertensiona and current literatures. A 43-year-old female presented progressive dyspnea, elevated pulmonary arterial pressures and CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA) imaging of main pulmonary arterial enlargement and wide spread ill-defined centrilobular nodules of ground-glass opacity. Her histologic features were proliferation of capillary channels within alveolar walls as well as muscularization of arterioles and medial hypertrophy of muscular pulmonary arteries. The treatment with diuretics and warfarin was used promptly, but unfortunately was ineffective. The patient died three months after diagnosis. PCH is a very rare vascular disease with poor prognosis. The diagnosis of PCH rests on the integration of clinical and radiographic information with pathologic features, however pathology is the most reliable means. Because clinical symptoms, imaging and histological features of pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD) and PCH broadly overlap, differential diagnosis should be made carefully. Among the various pathologic features proliferation of capillaries within alveolar walls is the key point for diagnosing PCH, which is also the most critical criteria for differentiating PCH from PVOD. So far the only definitive treatment for PCH is lung transplantation, without which the patient will die several months after diagnosis.
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PMID:[Pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis: a case report and literature review]. 2647 32

'Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TCM)' or 'stress cardiomyopathy' is a reversible cardiomyopathy that is precipitated by intense emotional or physical stress. This syndrome is characterised by symptoms mimicking acute coronary syndrome with transient systolic dysfunction associated with regional wall motion abnormalities, which extend beyond a single coronary vascular bed in the absence of obstructive coronary vascular disease. The presentation of TCM and myocardial infarction is similar with sudden onset of chest pain, breathlessness as well as abnormalities in both the electrocardiogram and cardiac enzymes. It is difficult to differentiate between the two until cardiac catheterisation establishes the diagnosis. We report a case of TCM in a post-menopausal female, precipitated by negative pressure pulmonary oedema following total thyroidectomy in whom timely cardiac catheterisation established the diagnosis and influenced the management. Heightened awareness of this unique cardiomyopathy is essential to have a high index of suspicion in at-risk population for the prompt diagnosis of stress-related cardiomyopathy syndromes occurring in the perioperative period.
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PMID:Takotsubo cardiomyopathy precipitated by negative pressure pulmonary oedema following total thyroidectomy. 2705 85

Patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) have morphologic changes to the pulmonary vasculature. These include pruning of the distal vessels, dilation of the proximal vessels, and increased vascular tortuosity. Advances in image processing and computer vision enable objective detection and quantification of these processes in clinically acquired computed tomographic (CT) scans. Three-dimensional reconstructions of the pulmonary vasculature were created from the CT angiograms of 18 patients with CTEPH diagnosed using imaging and hemodynamics as well as 15 control patients referred to our Dyspnea Clinic and found to have no evidence of pulmonary vascular disease. Compared to controls, CTEPH patients exhibited greater pruning of the distal vasculature (median density of small-vessel volume: 2.7 [interquartile range (IQR): 2.5-3.0] vs. 3.2 [3.0-3.8]; P = 0.008), greater dilation of proximal arteries (median fraction of blood in large arteries: 0.35 [IQR: 0.30-0.41] vs. 0.23 [0.21-0.31]; P = 0.0005), and increased tortuosity in the pulmonary arterial tree (median: 4.92% [IQR: 4.85%-5.21%] vs. 4.63% [4.39%-4.92%]; P = 0.004). CTEPH was not associated with dilation of proximal veins or increased tortuosity in the venous system. Distal pruning of the vasculature was correlated with the cardiac index (R = 0.51, P = 0.04). Quantitative models derived from CT scans can be used to measure changes in vascular morphology previously described subjectively in CTEPH. These measurements are also correlated with invasive metrics of pulmonary hemodynamics, suggesting that they may be used to assess disease severity. Further work in a larger cohort may enable the use of such measures as a biomarker for diagnostic, phenotyping, and prognostic purposes.
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PMID:Pulmonary vascular morphology as an imaging biomarker in chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. 2716 16

The diagnosis of pulmonary vascular disease (PVD) is usually based on hemodynamic and/or clinical criteria. Noninvasive imaging of the heart and proximal vasculature can also provide useful information. An alternate approach to such criteria in the diagnosis of PVD is to image the vascular abnormalities in the lungs themselves. Hyperpolarized (HP) (129)Xe magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a novel technique for assessing abnormalities in ventilation and gas exchange in the lungs. We applied this technique to two patients for whom there was clinical suspicion of PVD. Two patients who had significant hypoxemia and dyspnea with no significant abnormalities on computed tomography imaging or ventilation-perfusion scan and only mild or borderline pulmonary arterial hypertension at catheterization were evaluated. They underwent HP (129)Xe imaging and subsequently had tissue diagnosis obtained from lung pathology. In both patients, HP (129)Xe imaging demonstrated normal ventilation but markedly decreased gas transfer to red blood cells with focal defects on imaging, a pattern distinct from those previously described for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis or obstructive lung disease. Pathology on both patients later demonstrated severe PVD. These findings suggest that HP (129)Xe MRI may be useful in the diagnosis of PVD and monitoring response to therapy. Further studies are required to determine its sensitivity and specificity in these settings.
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PMID:Abnormalities in hyperpolarized (129)Xe magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy in two patients with pulmonary vascular disease. 2716 20


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