Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (myocardial ischemia)
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Estimated prevalence of diabetes mellitus in Malaysia was about 2%. Diabetes was most common in Indians especially males and least common in Chinese. There was a slight male preponderance seen in Malays and Indians. Positive family history was obtained in 14% of cases most commonly in Malays, almost 1/3 of whom had more than one family member with diabetes. Familial association was uncommon in Chinese. Over 50% of patients were overweight. Obesity was noted in nearly 70% of female Malays and Indians while the majority of Chinese were not overweight. More than 80% of patients were non insulin requiring. Youth onset diabetes was considered rare; those 10 years and below were estimated to be only 0.4% and below 20 years of age between 2%-4% of the diabetic population. Females were twice as common than males in this type of diabetes and familial association was greater. Malnutrition-related diabetes and pancreatic calcification were not well-documented but youth-onset non insulin requiring diabetics with mild symptoms but strong family history of diabetes were observed. More than half of hospital-based patients had evidence of complications, mainly amongst Malays and Indians. Hypertension was the most frequent associated disease followed by foot ulcers and ischaemic heart disease. Hypertension usually associated with chronic renal failure was most common amongst Malays while gangrenic ulcers and heart diseases were seen mainly in Indians. The major causes of death were chronic renal failure, myocardial infarction, ketoacidosis, stroke and septicaemia related to gangrene.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus in peninsular Malaysia: ethnic differences in prevalence and complications. 403 85

A 46-year-old black man with diabetes mellitus and hypertension was hospitalized because of myocardial ischemia and chronic renal failure. The electrophoretogram for protein in urine revealed proteins only in the alpha 1, alpha 2, and beta regions. These protein fractions were identified as small molecules by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. No albumin was detected in the urine. The molecular mass of albumin, the protein present in highest concentration in serum, is near the glomerular filtration threshold, and this protein is not reabsorbed by renal tubules; therefore, albumin is consistently present in proteinuric specimens. Thus this analbuminuric pattern is highly unusual. Although the mechanism of the analbuminuria in this case is not fully understood, we wished to document this extremely rare electrophoretic pattern to alert clinical chemists and pathologists of its existence.
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PMID:A case of proteinuria with analbuminuria. 405 63

The cardiac function in Hegglin syndrome (HS; prolonged QT interval and shortened QS2) remains unclear. In order to estimate cardiac function of HS, left ventricular echocardiographic parameters and systolic time intervals (STI) were analyzed, and compared with those of normal subjects (N) (n = 20). Forty-six patients (pts) of HS are constituted of 23 pts with chronic renal failure, 7 with cardiomyopathy, 5 with ischemic heart disease, 5 with essential hypertension, 4 with acquired valvular disease, 1 with effusive pericarditis and 1 with Romano-Ward syndrome. Corrected preejection period (PEPc) and PEP/ET were significantly larger (0.15 +/- 0.02 vs 0.13 +/- 0.01, p less than 0.001; 0.48 +/- 0.13 vs 0.35 +/- 0.04, p less than 0.001, respectively) in HS. Corrected ejection time (ETc) was significantly smaller (0.37 +/- 0.02 vs 0.41 +/- 0.01, p less than 0.001) in HS. Mitral EF slope (DDR), ejection fraction (EF), and mean ventricular circumferential fiber shortening (mVCF) were significantly decreased (58 +/- 29 vs 92 +/- 25, p less than 0.001; 0.52 +/- 0.15 vs 0.62 +/- 0.07; p less than 0.005; 0.98 +/- 0.33 vs 1.18 +/- 0.20; p less than 0.05, respectively) in HS, but cardiac index (C.I.) did not differ. Thus, patients with Hegglin syndrome showed heart failure pattern in STI and hypodynamic cardiac function in echocardiographic parameters, and our data suggest that hypodynamic cardiac function of HS is caused by both lowered pump function and decreased myocardial contractility.
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PMID:[Systolic time intervals and echocardiographic parameters in Hegglin syndrome (author's transl)]. 732 May 60

The authors have performed 631 urgent suprapubic transvesical adenomectomies in patients with prostate adenoma complicated by acute urine retention or hemorrhage. Prearranged and urgent interventions had, by the authors' experience, virtually the same rate of postoperative complications and lethal outcomes. The risk in urgent adenomectomy performed in 294 patients was attributed to their concurrent affections: postinfarction cardiosclerosis, myocardial ischemia or hypertensive crisis, hemiparesis after brain apoplexy, bronchial asthma, diabetes mellitus, hepatic cirrhosis, chronic lymphoid leukemia, drug polyallergy, multiple tumors of the urinary bladder, stomach, etc., in stage T1-3NOMO. 80 patients had intermittent chronic renal failure. In compensation of severe concurrent diseases and satisfactory condition of the patients urgent adenomectomy was conducted within 24 hours since hospitalization. Longer interval (within 24-72 hours) was necessary in subcompensation of the concurrent diseases, intermittent chronic renal failure which were intensively treated. The authors achieved uneventful postoperative course for 272 (92.5%) high-risk patients. Postoperative lethality made up 3.06%. According to 1-11-year follow-up 7 patients died, for the most part of blood and respiratory diseases. Functional long-term outcomes were good in 83.5% of the patients. Basing on their experience, the authors specify indications to urgent adenomectomy and optimal time of its conduction. Contraindications to urgent adenomectomy were revised and narrowed.
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PMID:[The indications and contraindications for emergency adenomectomy in patients with severe concomitant diseases]. 753 45

In recent years, several laboratories have suggested that serum levels of antioxidant activity and redox balance are reduced in patients with chronic renal failure. Some clinical reports have also proposed that defective serum antioxidative enzymes may contribute to a certain uremic toxicity through peroxidative cell damage. A 48-year-old woman was referred to us from the surgical department of our hospital because of consciousness disturbance, pancytopenia and acute acceleration of chronic azotemia after postoperative radiation therapy. We diagnosed acute acceleration of chronic renal failure with severe acidemia and started hemodialysis therapy immediately. Two days after admission to our department, she developed upper abdominal sharp pain and bradyarrhythmia. Serum amylase activity was elevated markedly and the ECG finding showed myocardial ischemia. On the 24th hospital day these complications were treated successfully with conservative therapy and hemodialysis. We considered that radiation therapy in this patient with chronic renal failure evoked marked oxidative stress and that deficiency of transferrin played an important role in peroxidative cell damage.
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PMID:[A case of multiple organ failure induced by postoperative radiation therapy probably evoking oxidative stress]. 769 60

We report the case of an 86-year-old man who was admitted with congestive cardiac failure and chronic renal failure. He was previously known to have a thoracic aortic aneurysm and chronic bronchitis. There was no history of myocardial infarction but his heart failure was assumed to be due to ischaemic heart disease. Despite treatment of the heart failure the patient died. At post-mortem he was found to have Toxoplasma gondii myocarditis.
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PMID:Toxoplasma gondii--an unusual cause of myocarditis in old age. 774 78

Eighteen patients with chronic renal failure had their cardiac status monitored during hemodialysis (HD). Ten studies were carried out using an ambulatory nuclear vest to assess ejection fraction (EF), heart rate (HR), relative end-systolic (ESV) and end-diastolic (EDV) volumes every 60 s. A total of 36 episodes of EF falls occurred in 9 patients, all asymptomatic. These EF falls were associated with a rise in ESV, while HR, BP, and EDV remained unchanged. The EF falls correlated best with the volume of ultrafiltrate removed. Ten patients had on-line ST-segment monitoring with sestamibi injection either at the time of ST depression (STD) or at the end of dialysis, if no STD occurred, in order to detect the presence of transient ischemia. Seven of ten patients had perfusion defects after dialysis, with STD occurring in 3 of 10 patients. Predialysis imaging was available in only 8 of 10 patients, and 6 of these patients had perfusion defects. Changes in perfusion defects were not significantly different in the 3 patients with STD compared with those without STD. EF falls and perfusion defects are common in HD patients even in the absence of known coronary artery disease; however, ST segment monitoring is not a sensitive tool for its detection. These changes in function and perfusion may represent myocardial ischemia and contribute to the high incidence of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in this patient population.
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PMID:Myocardial alterations during hemodialysis: insights from new noninvasive technology. 797 76

The many changes in classification of cardiovascular disease during the twentieth century reflect changing etiology of diseases, clinical comprehension and technological advances. In particular, the etiology of valvular heart disease has changed dramatically in the last five decades. The significant reduction of acute rheumatic fever and its sequelae, and the recognition of non-rheumatic causes of valvular disease are responsible for the metamorphosis in the etiology of valvular disorders. Valvular heart disease can be classified as follows: 1) Heritable-congenital causes of valvular heart disease e.g., floppy mitral valve with mitral valve prolapse, bicuspid aortic valve, and the Marfan syndrome; 2) Inflammatory-immunologic causes such as rheumatic fever, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, endocardial proliferative disorders, and antiphospolipid syndrome; 3) Myocardial dysfunction-ischemic cardiomyopathy, dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-resulting in valvular heart disease; 4) Diseases and disorders of other organs as causes of valvular heart disease, e.g., chronic renal failure and carcinoid heart disease; 5) Valvular heart disease related to aging: calcific aortic stenosis and mitral annular calcification; 6) Valvular disease following interventions such as valvuloplasty, valve reconstructive surgery and valve replacement; and 7) Valvular disease related to drugs and physical agents, such as chronic ergotamine use, radiation therapy and trauma. In clinical practice the most common causes of mitral regurgitation are floppy mitral valve with mitral valve prolapse, ischemic heart disease, dilated cardiomyopathy and mitral annular calcification, while the most common cause of mitral stenosis is rheumatic fever. The most common causes of isolated aortic regurgitation are bicuspid aortic valve and floppy aortic valve, while the most common causes of isolated aortic stenosis are related to the bicuspid aortic valve and the development of calcific senile aortic stenosis. The most common causes of tricuspid regurgitation are dilated cardiomyopathy, ischemic cardiomyopathy, floppy tricuspid valve with tricuspid valve prolapse and infectious endocarditis. Combined mitral and tricuspid regurgitation occur with heritable connective tissue disorders, dilated or ischemic cardiomyopathy, while the most common cause of mitral stenosis plus aortic regurgitation is rheumatic fever. Statistics obtained from cardiac surgery and necropsy may underestimate the true incidence of certain valvular diseases by selection bias. This is particularly so with valvular disease associated with significant ventricular dysfunction, or in the elderly who may not be surgical candidates, or in cases where the valvular disease is not severe enough to require surgical intervention. Recent advances in hemodynamic and imaging technology allow clinicians to define valvular structure and function and to accurately classify valvular heart disease in clinical practice.
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PMID:Valvular heart disease: the influence of changing etiology on nosology. 800 Jun 16

In this paper the authors have evaluated the incidence and the clinical implications of sick euthyroid syndrome (SES) in a group of 144 patients in a department of internal medicine. SES is an alteration of thyroid hormone values in the absence of a thyroid disease, which is seen in patients suffering from serious diseases. Having classified SES into 3 subgroups according to the different alterations seen in the values of T3, T4, FT3, FT4, TSH, rT3 and TBG, they show the hypotheses that explain the biochemical mechanisms which are at the basis of these hormonal alterations. Fourteen of the 144 patients under observation were excluded as they were suffering from ascertained or subclinical thyroid disease. Thirty (23% of cases) of the remaining 130 patients had alterations of the thyroid hormones in accordance with SES diagnosis. Of these 30 patients, 19 had hormone values found in SES type I (63%), 2 in SES type II (6.5%) and 9 in SES type III (30.5%). In SES type I the diseases seen, in order of frequency, were: obstructive chronic bronchopneumopathy with acute respiratory failure, diabetic ketoacidosis, neoplasms, ischemic heart disease, cardiac failure, chronic renal failure, liver diseases, acute cerebral vasculopathies, sepsis and collagenopathies. The disease seen in the 2 cases of SES type II was obstructive chronic bronchopneumopathy with acute respiratory failure. In SES type III the diseases seen were, in order of frequency: diabetic ketoacidosis, lung diseases, ischemic heart disease, cardiac failure, peripheral arteriopathies, acute cerebral vasculopathies, neoplasms, liver diseases, acute renal failure. The incidence of SES in 23% of the admitted to hospital patients was found to be slightly higher than in other studies; this could be explained by a stricter selection of inpatients: in fact self-sufficient patients or those not needing urgent admission, were sent to an efficient out patient clinic where necessary examinations were quickly carried out, hospitalization being reserved for patients with more serious illnesses. We would like to underline how the incidence of SES is much greater than that of what is known as thyroid disease (23% compared to 5%), thereby confirming that it is the most frequent cause of alterations of thyroid hormones. With regard to the pathogenetical hypotheses, it is confirmed that in SES, the reduction of T3 values is accompanied by an increase in the values of rT3 as for reduced activity of 5-desiodinasis enzyme. In SES type III the increase of T4 values is due to the increase of TBG resulting in an increase in the link for T4 and therefore a reduced peripheral hormone activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The euthyroid sick syndrome. Its incidence and clinical significance in an internal medicine department]. 802 42

A seventy-six-year-old man with ischemic heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, and chronic renal failure developed bilateral cyanotic toes, which upon muscle biopsy, were shown to be caused by atheromatous emboli. The probable source was atheromatosis of the abdominal aorta. The toes became gangrenous, but surgical therapy was deferred because the patient was considered a high risk. With lovastatin therapy there was complete healing and except for transient cyanosis related to temporary cessation of therapy, there has been no recurrence for the past thirty months. The possible role of lovastatin in the conservative treatment of this disorder is discussed.
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PMID:Reversal of gangrenous lesions in the blue toe syndrome with lovastatin--a case report. 821 80


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