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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prompted by a clinical observation of an increase in hospital admissions for acute myocardial infarction during an
influenza
outbreak, a study was designed to examine the number of deaths from
ischaemic heart disease
(
IHD
) at the time of
influenza
. Deaths from
IHD
were found to be increased at all ages, and particularly in younger age groups when deaths attributed specifically to acute myocardial infarction are considered. The question of whether
influenza
could act as a precipitating factor in acute myocardial infarction is discussed, together with a possible mechanism.
...
PMID:Influenza and ischaemic heart disease--a possible trigger for acute myocardial infarction? 72 58
Data are given on the changes in the hemostatic system in 42 patients with uncomplicated
influenza
and in complications (pneumonia, bronchitis, aggravation of
ischemic heart disease
). In the acute period of the disease they were characterized by hypercoagulation which was most pronounced in patients with
influenza
complicated by pneumonia. In cases of aggravation of
ischemic heart disease
functional platelet activity during convalescence decreases but the plasma link of hemostasis remains activated and fibrinolytic blood activity inhibited. Functional platelet activity in dynamics of the disease increases which should be taken into consideration in pathogenetic therapy.
...
PMID:[Hemostatic changes in various clinical courses of influenza]. 277 42
In the past decade most studies of coronary arterial aneurysms have been clinical; few have focused on morphology and etiopathogenesis. The subjects of the present autopsy study were 52 patients, 5 months to 80 years of age, with coronary arterial aneurysms. Patients were divided into two groups: 38 with atherosclerotic coronary aneurysms and 14 with aneurysms secondary to inflammation. Of the 38 patients with atherosclerotic aneurysms, 20 (53 per cent) had histories of
ischemic heart disease
; the aneurysms were in the right coronary artery in 18 (47 per cent), the left coronary artery in 13 (35 per cent), and in the right and left coronary arteries in seven (18 per cent). Of the four major coronary arteries, the average number of severely narrowed arteries (reduction of more than 75 per cent) in cross-sectional luminal area) was 1.8/patient; aortic aneurysms were present in eight of these patients (24 per cent). Of the 14 patients with coronary aneurysms secondary to inflammation, four had histories of
ischemic heart disease
; 10 had histories of an
influenza
-like syndrome. Isolated left coronary arterial aneurysms were seen in six of these patients (43 per cent), while eight (51 per cent) had multiple right and left coronary arterial aneurysms. The average number of severely narrowed coronary arteries in this group was 1.5/patient, and only one patient had an aortic aneurysm. Therefore, patients with atherosclerotic aneurysms are more often symptomatic; they have increased heart weights and equal numbers of coronary arterial aneurysms in the right and left vessels, and the majority (89 per cent) have single aneurysms with thrombi in the lumen. Patients with coronary arterial aneurysms secondary to inflammation are younger; the majority of these patients have a prodromal
influenza
-like syndrome, a low incidence of
ischemic heart disease
, and multiple coronary arterial aneurysms.
...
PMID:Acquired coronary arterial aneurysms: an autopsy study of 52 patients. 371 Apr 70
The effect of
influenza
epidemics on all major causes of death has been examined. The results showed an increase in total mortality, and a fall in life expectancy, during epidemic years. Using the 1974 epidemic as an example, an increase in mortality was found in all age groups, with the greatest percentage in increases occurring in the very young and the very old. For all ages combined, the greatest percentage increases in mortality were for respiratory diseases, while the greatest absolute increases in mortality were for cardiovascular diseases, especially
ischaemic heart disease
. A thrombotic mechanism is suggested to explain the increase in mortality from cardiovascular diseases.
...
PMID:Effect of influenza epidemics on Australian mortality. 396 19
The multiple regression statistical method has already been used to estimate excess deaths attributable to
influenza
in England and Wales by winter period. Now we report further studies of deaths by age group and certified cause of death. During the ten winters since the
influenza
A/Hong Kong (H3N2) virus first arrived (1968/69 to 1977/78) there have been about 120,000 excess deaths. Of these about 82% were estimated to be in those aged 65+ years, 17% in the 40-64 year age group and 1% in younger adults. Sixty-seven per cent were certified as due to respiratory disease and 31% due to circulatory system disease. Respiratory deaths increased in all age groups during an epidemic, but of the deaths certified as due to circulatory disease, cerebrovascular deaths were mostly in the 65+ age group and
ischaemic heart disease
deaths in the 40-64 year age group. In this 40-64 year age group there was evidence that the effects of cold weather and epidemic
influenza
were multiplicative rather than additive. During the worst
influenza
winter of 1969/70 respiratory deaths increased by approximately 55% and circulatory system deaths by 4%. Deaths in the elderly increased by 10%, in those aged 40-60 years by 8% and in younger adults by 4%. There was no evidence that excess deaths are followed by a deficit during the following year.
...
PMID:Excess deaths attributable to influenza in England and Wales: age at death and certified cause. 662 24
This study examines a large number of demographic, hospital, patient volume, and medical factors that may influence in-hospital mortality due to trauma. The authors use data from the 1977 and 1978 National Hospital Discharge Survey to assemble a case-control data set of severe injuries (n = 336). Cases are defined as "deaths from trauma," and control subjects are "injured survivors." Control subjects are frequency-matched to cases on the basis of overall severity, site of the most severe anatomic injury, and age. The analysis estimates the relative risk of mortality associated with different levels of the risk factors by the odds ratio. The unadjusted results indicate a significant impact of the following variables: sex (with males at higher risk), average severity of hospital case mix, number of severe trauma patients treated at a hospital (with high-volume hospitals at increased risk),
ischemic heart disease
and other forms of heart disease, malignant neoplasms,
influenza
and pneumonia, and emergency tracheotomy or tracheostomy. After adjustment using multiple logistic regression, the single significant risk factor is the presence of
ischemic heart disease
and other forms of heart disease. The implication of this finding is that hospitals exhibit little difference in mortality from severe trauma after adjustment for patient mix characteristics. Possible explanations for this result are tendered.
...
PMID:Mortality from traumatic injuries. A case-control study using data from the National Hospital Discharge Survey. 688 26
Members of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (RLDS) are dissuaded from the use of tobacco, alcohol, and hot drinks. A well-balanced diet is also stressed. This study compares the 1972-78 mortality experience of the Missouri RLDS with three other population groups. The findings show Missouri RLDS experiencing age-adjusted death rates which are 22.6 percent lower than rates for Missouri non-RLDs whites; 19.6 per cent lower than the non-RLDS of Independence, Missouri; and 14.4 per cent lower than Utah residents. The RLDS display lower death rates than the two Missouri comparison groups for each of seven selected causes-particularly lung cancer, pneumonia/
influenza
, and violent deaths. Comparisons between the Missouri RLDS and Utah residents show an inconsistent pattern, with Utah residents having non-significantly lower death rates for lung cancer and
ischemic heart disease
, but with the Missouri RLDS having significantly lower rates for pneumonia/
influenza
and violent deaths. These inconsistencies are of interest because 72 per cent of Utah's population belong to the Mormon Church which advocates life-styles similar to the RLDS. If these disparate mortality patterns persist under a more direct comparison between the Missouri RLDS and Utah Mormons, they could provide the opportunity to assess the impact of similar life-styles in separate settings.
...
PMID:Life-style and death patterns of the Missouri RLDS church members. 731
In Britain death rates from several important causes, particularly circulatory and respiratory diseases, rise markedly during the colder winter months. This close association between temperature and mortality suggests that climate change as a result of global warming may lead to a future reduction in excess winter deaths. This paper gives a brief introductory review of the literature on the links between cold conditions and health, and statistical models are subsequently developed of the associations between temperature and monthly mortality rates for the years 1968 to 1988 for England and Wales. Other factors, particularly the occurrence of
influenza
epidemics, are also taken into account. Highly significant negative associations were found between temperature and death rates from all causes and from chronic bronchitis, pneumonia,
ischaemic heart disease
and cerebrovascular disease. The statistical models developed from this analysis were used to compare death rates for current conditions with those that might be expected to occur in a future warmer climate. The results indicate that the higher temperatures predicted for 2050 might result in nearly 9000 fewer winter deaths each year with the largest contribution being from mortality from
ischaemic heart disease
. However, these preliminary estimates might change when further research is able to make into account a number of additional factors affecting the relationship between mortality and climate.
...
PMID:The potential effects of climate change on winter mortality in England and Wales. 774 29
In a prospective study on 340 cases with primary myocardial disease, eight patients (six males, two females, mean age 36 years, range 24-47) with an idiopathic left ventricular aneurysm were observed. All patients had normal coronary arteries, no angina or history of myocardial infarction; all but one had no risk factors for
ischaemic heart disease
; all had normal right ventricles; one patient had a history of familial dilated cardiomyopathy, two of '
flu
-like' syndrome at the time of first symptom and two of alcohol abuse. All patients had ventricular tachycardia (VT), five sustained (of right bundle branch block morphology in three, and of different morphologies in two), three non-sustained. Patients with sustained VT had inducible VT (resembling the clinical one) on electrophysiological study. Electrocardiogram (ECG) showed an infarction pattern in three cases. Aneurysms were of limited size (2.1 +/- 1/11 segments on echocardiography) and were located in the septum, apex or posterior wall. Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was reduced (< 0.50) in six patients and was not correlated with the aneurysm size. The duration of illness was inversely correlated with LVEF (P < 0.05). Endomyocardial biopsy showed evidence of diffuse pathological changes in all cases (cell hypertrophy, myofibrillar lysis, mitochondriosis). During follow-up (64 +/- 32 months), patients were successfully treated with anti-arrhythmic drugs: no patients required surgical treatment to control ventricular arrhythmia. Considering the clinical and pathological features of idiopathic left ventricular aneurysm, this primary myocardial disease could be classified as a novel peculiar form of cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Idiopathic left ventricular aneurysm: a clinical and pathological study of a new entity in the spectrum of cardiomyopathies. 797 43
It has been widely supposed that human mortality from all causes increases with age nearly exponentially (at a constant rate) through adult ages except for very old ages, and that this exponential increase also holds fairly well for most major causes of death (CODs). However, the present analysis of death registration data for Japan, 1951-1990, reveals that the rate of age-related relative increase in mortality (the life table aging rate) changes with age significantly and systematically for many CODs. Above age 75, the mortality increase decelerates for most CODs; under age 75, it remains at a relatively stable pace for
ischemic heart disease
, decelerates for most major cancers, and accelerates for diseases related to a declining ability to maintain homeostasis (pneumonia, bronchitis,
influenza
, gastroenteritis, and heart failure). These results seem to suggest that significantly different types of senescent processes may underlie atherogenesis, oncogenesis, and immunosenescence.
...
PMID:Age patterns of the life table aging rate for major causes of death in Japan, 1951-1990. 900 60
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