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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The physician who understands the pathophysiology of angina pectoris can apply rational therapeutic measures based on an appreciation of the determinants of myocardial
oxygen
supply and demand. Most patients with angina secondary to coronary atherosclerosis can be treated conservatively using a systematic approach that includes correction or removal of underlying causes or precipitating factors and the judicious use of sublingual nitroglycerin. In patients with more resistant angina, use of oral or topical nitroglycerin or sublingual isosorbide dinitrite as well as propranolol can be advised. Aortocoronary bypass surgery can offer significant improvement in carefully selected patients with frequent angina poorly controlled by medical therapy. The most important consideration in the treatment of angina is protection of coronary blood flow reserve by primary prevention of the atherosclerotic process itself. All individuals from families prone to coronary artery disease should be evaluated for alterable risk factors, the most important being cigarette smoking, hypertension, and hypercholesterolemia. Considering the high risk of unheralded sudden death in previously asymptomatic patients with coronary atherosclerosis, angina can, in a sense, be considered a fortunate harbinger of coronary stenosis, identifying candidates for secondary preventive measures aimed at retarding the progression of
vascular disease
. More importantly, angina serves as an index for detecting families at high risk of coronary artery disease, in whom early application of primary prevention may afford a more promising outlook.
...
PMID:Angina pectoris. Diagnosis and treatment. 0 83
The condition of patients with transposition of the great arteries, intact ventricular septum and severe pulmonary
vascular disease
is inoperable with present techniques. In a series of 260 surgically treated patients with transposition of the great arteries and intact ventricular spetum, 5 had severely increased pulmonary vascular resistance, and all 5 died; postmortem examination confirmed the presence of severe pulmonary
vascular disease
. The concept of the "palliative Mustard" procedure was applied in two children with transposition of the great arteries, intact ventricular spetum and pulmonary
vascular disease
who underwent the Mustard operation with creation of a ventricular septal defect. The postoperative course was uneventful in both patients. Thirteen and 5 months, respectively, after operation, both are physically active and have respective arterial
oxygen
saturation levels of 94 and 92 percent.
...
PMID:Mustard operation and creation of ventricular septal defect in two patients with transposition of the great arteries, intact ventricular septum and pulmonary vascular disease. 6 23
Fifteen unilateral below-knee amputees with no preexisting
vascular disease
were studied during free velocity walking to determine energy expenditure with and without a prosthesis. Expired air was collected, and heart rate and respiratory rate data were telemetered. Mean velocity for the unrestrained walking was 71 m/min, both during ambulation with a prosthesis and during crutch walking (without a prosthesis). Heart rates were within normal ranges during prosthetic walking (106 beats/min), but rose significantly to 135 beats/min for crutch walking. Energy cost also rose significantly from a mean of 15.5 ml O2/kg/min with a prosthesis of 22.3 ml O2/kg/min with crutches. The
oxygen
uptake measured in units of ml O2/kg/m increased when the subjects walked faster or slower than their free cadence. We concluded that the use of the prosthesis should be encouraged and that the amputee should be allowed to choose his natural velocity of walking.
...
PMID:Energy cost of walking of below-knee amputees having no vascular disease. 44 Nov 13
Central retinal artery occlusion is characterized by sudden, painless visual loss due to blockage of retinal blood flow. It has been reported in all age groups including children but is most frequent in the sixth decade. Both thrombosis and embolism have been suggested as possible mechanisms. The emergency treatment includes intravenous acetazolamide, digital ocular massage, and inhalation of 5% carbon dioxide -- 95%
oxygen
for ten minutes. Following emergency treatment, immediate ophthalmologic referral and consultation is required. Comprehensive medical evaluation should be initiated to exclude systemic
vascular disease
.
...
PMID:Central retinal artery occlusion. 47 Feb 79
Terbutaline sulphate was given intravenously to 10 patients with pulmonary
vascular disease
secondary to chronic hypoxia. The resting cardiac index increased after terbutaline in all the patients between 5 and 74% above the control level. The greatest change was seen in patients who had received the largest total dose. The rise in cardiac index was associated with a fall in pulmonary vascular resistance although mean pulmonary artery pressure remained unaltered. There was a significant increase in the venous admixture but this did not adversely affect the arterial
oxygen
tension. The peak expiratory flow rate did not change significantly but there was an increase in ventilation from a mean value of 4.36 1/min/m2 to 4.67 1/min/m2. The results show that terbutaline has little adverse effect on the pulmonary circulation or gas exchange in patients with irreversible airways disease who are in a stable state.
...
PMID:Effect of intravenous terbutaline on arterial blood gas tensions, ventilation, and pulmonary circulation in patients with chronic bronchitis and cor pulmonale. 59 42
The ratio of the right ventricular preejection period to the right ventricular ejection time was calculated from the echocardiogram of the pulmonic valve before and after inhalation of a high concentration of
oxygen
in pulmonary hypertensive patients. The results showed that this non-invasive method could differentiate pulmonary
vascular disease
from non-pulmonary
vascular disease
and hence useful for evaluating the change of the pulmonary vascular bed in the pulmonary hypertensive patients.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of pulmonary hypertension by oxygen inhalation method. 76 Feb 67
A simplified method for estimation of one-minute
oxygen
uptake (VO2-1) during treadmill grade walking at vertical power requirements of 250, 750, and 1,000 kg-meters/min was devised, where power=weight (kg) X grade (fractional) X walking speed. All subjects were men. There were 29 controls, 34 subjects with coronary arterial disease (of whom 18 had had myocardial infarction), nine subjects with diffuse pulmonary disease, and four subjects with ischemic
vascular disease
. Abnormally reduced values for VO2-1 were related to these diseases and, more specifically, to a history of myocardial infarction and (in pulmonary subjects) to reduced single-breath diffusing capacity. Lowest values of VO2-1 for a group were found in ischemic
vascular disease
. Reduced response of VO2-1 may therefore be caused by central defects of
oxygen
transport.
...
PMID:Effect of cardiac, pulmonary, and vascular disease on one-minute oxygen uptake. 78 26
The most important adaptive mechanism to acute hypoxia is alveolar hyperventilation which improves the
oxygen
uptake in the lung. The delivery of
oxygen
to the particular organs is regulated according to their vital function. An essential adaptive mechanism can not be observed above an inspiratory O2 partial pressure of 100 mm mercury, corresponding to an altitude of about 3000 m in normals. In contrast, in patients with cardio-pulmonary disturbances adaptive mechanisms take place at far lower altitudes. Especially in patients with arterial hypoxemia, pulmonary hypertension and occlusive
vascular disease
moderate hypoxia may lead to decompensation of an a priori unstable equilibirum.
...
PMID:[Cardiopulmonary adaptation to acute hypoxia (author's transl)]. 79 74
One unit (500 ml) of 10% Intralipid (an intravenous soy bean oil-egg yolk lecithin preparation) was infused into 20 normal subjects over 4 hr. Serum triglyceride concentration and plasma optic density (at 700 nm) increased to maximal levels of 339 +/- 102 mg/100 ml and 1.14 +/- 0.41, respectively, at the completion of the infusion, and returned to basal levels in most subjects within 4 hr. Pulmonary membrane diffusion was decreased in six subjects at rest and with exercise at 25 and 50% maximum
oxygen
uptake. Only one subject showed a minor change in PO2 and none showed clinical signs of ischemia. The changes in pulmonary diffusion reverted to basal levels when serum lipids were cleared. Heparin (60 IU/kg) prevented the marked increase in serum lipids and, as a consequence, the changes in pulmonary function. Changes in pulmonary function from Intralipid-induced lipemia are similar to those known to result from diet-induced lipemia. The findings suggest that in the presence of normal vasculature and pulmonary function, Intralipid-induced lipemia should cause no clinical consequences. However, patients with preexisting pulmonary or
vascular disease
may be at greater risk after Intralipid-induced lipemia.
...
PMID:Relationship between Intralipid-induced hyperlipemia and pulmonary function. 81 3
At the time of initial balloon atrial septostomy a patent ductus arteriosus was found with angiography in 39 of 81 infants with transposition of the great arteries with intact ventricular septum. By angiographic criteria the ductus shunt was considered small in 21 infants and large and significant in 18. In contrast to the usual clinical presentation of neonates with transposition and intact ventricular septum, 12 of these 18 infants with a significant patent ductus arteriosus had only slight cyanosis and 8 presented with tachypnea out of proportion to the degree of cyanosis. Ten of the 18 infants had no continuous murmur, bounding pulses, mid-diastolic rumble or differential cyanosis. Clinically occult narrowing or closure occurred, presumably gradually and relatively late, in six infants. Acute early narrowing or closure, spontaneous (six infants) or surgically produced (three infants), occurred usually within the 1st month of life and was associated with a marked decrease in arterial
oxygen
saturation in eight infants, often with a rapid clinical deterioration. Persistence of a large patent ductus arteriosus for several months appears to be associated with an increased incidence of early pulmonary
vascular disease
. Therapeutic considerations for the infant with a large patent ductus arteriosus after initial balloon atrial septostomy include: (1) careful initial follow-up of the infant in clinically stable condition in case the ductus arteriosus should acutely narrow or close and the patient require urgent palliative or corrective surgery; (2) urgent early closure of the ductus in the infant with overt left heart failure with concurrent atrial septectomy or preferably primary corrective surgery; and (3) elective closure of a persistent significant patent ductus arteriosus before age 4 months with concurrent corrective surgery in the infant in clinically stable condition.
...
PMID:Transposition of the great arteries with intact ventricular septum and patent ductus arteriosus. 83 81
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