Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 37-year-old man with a benign variant of scleroderma (CRST syndrome: calcinosis circumscripta, Raynaud's phenomenon, sclerodactyly, and telangiectasia) presented with recurrent ventricular tachycardia. Preoperative electrophysiologic study suggested that the mechanism of tachycardia was an ectopic pacemaker focus in the right ventricle. Right ventricular dilatation, tricuspid insufficiency, normal pulmonary pressures, and normal coronary arteries were also demonstrated. At surgery, epicardial mapping localized the site of origin of ventricular tachycardia to the anterior right ventricle near the crista supraventricular. Intramural recordings of the site of tachycardia demonstrated autonomous activity unreflected on the peripheral ECG during brief periods of sinus rhythm. Local epicardial cooling of this area with a cryoprobe promptly terminated ventricular tachycardia with resumption of tachycardia on warming. The focus was ablated by freezing the area at -60 degrees C. The patient remained free of dysrhythmia on no anti-arrhythmic agents for eight months at which time he had a single recurrence of ventricular tachycardia from a different site in the right ventricle. This technique offers a method for ablating sites of dysrhythmia arising in diffusely diseased myocardium.
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PMID:Cryoablation of drug-resistant ventricular tachycardia in a patient with a variant of scleroderma. 61 89

A 40-year-old woman was admitted because of increasing exertional dyspnea. Right heart failure was suggested by the presence of hepatomegaly, pretibial edema and also echocardiographic findings. Physical examination and echocardiography showed no evidence of valvular disease or congenital heart disease except for right ventricular dilatation and tricuspid regurgitation. The ventricular septum deviated toward the left ventricle throughout the cardiac cycle, but left ventricular function was preserved. Severe pulmonary hypertension averaging 44 mmHg was revealed by cardiac catheterization. Digital subtraction angiography and pulmonary blood flow scintigraphy showed no evidence of pulmonary artery embolism, and no interstitial pulmonary lesions that might have caused pulmonary hypertension were recognized. Hypergammaglobulinemia suggested an autoimmune disorder, and signs of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), such as pleural effusion, proteinuria, lymphocytopenia, LE cell phenomenon and antinuclear antibodies were present. Several autoimmune diseases are known to be causative factors of pulmonary hypertension. However, only ten cases of SLE complicated by pulmonary hypertension have been reported the present one. These cases were characterized by a high incidence of Raynaud's phenomenon and positivity for anti-RNP antibody. In our present case, SLE activity was suppressed using prednisolone, but pulmonary hypertension persisted and the patient eventually died due to right cardiac failure. Judging from the clinical course of the ten reported cases of SLE-pulmonary hypertension, there seems to be no hope of improving the pulmonary hypertension once it has become established. Therefore it is important to detect and cure pulmonary hypertension as early as possible.
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PMID:[A case of lupus erythematosus preceded by right heart failure due to pulmonary hypertension]. 174 69