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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (
ventricular dilatation
)
2,163
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) exhibits both a compensated phase of cardiac hypertrophy in which forward output is maintained despite persistently elevated systemic arterial pressures and a decompensated phase in which cardiac performance has deteriorated in spite of further hypertrophic growth. To determine whether chronic antihypertensive therapy prevents the development of heart failure and the progression of cardiac hypertrophy in SHR with advanced hypertension, captopril (2 g/l of drinking water), a converting enzyme inhibitor, was administered to 14 month old female SHR and normotensive American Wistar rats (NWR) for 10 months. The severe left
ventricular hypertrophy
of the 24 month old untreated SHR (4.37 +/- 0.2 mg/g v. 2.50 +/- 0.06 mg/g, untreated NWR) was markedly reduced (P less than 0.02) by captopril (3.01 +/- 0.1 mg/g). Chronic therapy prevented the reduction of both baseline and maximal cardiac indices in SHR, but did not alter blood flow in NWR. Left
ventricular dilatation
was present in 24 month old SHR and, as peak stroke volume index was diminished, the ejection fraction index of the SHR was reduced. Captopril restored this index in SHR to normal. The relation of ejection fraction index and afterload (peak systolic wall stress) was depressed in untreated SHR, but was normal in treated SHR. Thus, chronic therapy with captopril prevented the development of severe cardiac dysfunction and produced a marked regression of cardiac hypertrophy in SHR with advanced hypertensive heart disease.
...
PMID:Prevention of the development of heart failure and the regression of cardiac hypertrophy by captopril in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. 622 Aug 93
We used echocardiography to study anatomic and functional changes of the heart in 25 patients with acromegaly. Asymmetric septal hypertrophy was found in 10 patients, in the range of 12 to 30 mm, with an average of 16 mm. The degree of septum-thickness was severe in 1 case, marked in 5 cases and mild in 4 cases. Concentric left
ventricular hypertrophy
was present in 1 patient. In 8 patients the left ventricle was normal and left
ventricular dilatation
of more than 60 mm was present in 6 cases. Except in one patient, the ejection fraction was decreased in the dilated group, indicating diminished myocardial contractility. The growth hormone level was higher in patients with left
ventricular hypertrophy
as compared to those patients with normal or dilated left ventricles. In acromegaly primary myocardial hypertrophy may be related to the growth hormone level.
...
PMID:The heart in acromegaly: an echocardiographic study. 622 Sep 83
M-mode echocardiography was performed on 43 maintenance hemodialysis patients and 3 patients on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). Only seven patients had completely normal echocardiograms. Nine patients (20%) had pericardial effusions and 20 patients (44%) had left
ventricular dilatation
. Left
ventricular hypertrophy
was present in 26 patients (57%): in 18 patients this took the form of concentric hypertrophy and in 8 patients there was asymmetric septal hypertrophy. Left ventricular function was depressed in 12 patients (27%). Left
ventricular dilatation
was more common in patients with multiple vascular accesses, who also tended to have lower hematocrit values. Left
ventricular hypertrophy
tended to be more common in patients with prolonged hypertension and with excessive inter-dialytic weight gains. Younger patients and those who had been on dialysis for a longer period had less cardiac abnormalities, suggesting that chronic dialysis might reverse these changes. Echocardiography was more sensitive than chest X-ray and ECG in detecting clinically unsuspected abnormalities and provides useful information in the overall evaluation of maintenance dialysis patients.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of cardiac size and function in dialysis patients. 622 87
Necropsy findings were examined in 20 male patients with end-stage renal disease associated with longstanding spinal cord injury and treated with maintenance hemodialysis. All patients exhibited cardiovascular abnormalities. Fibrinous pericarditis was found in 50% of the patients. Left and right
ventricular hypertrophy
was present in 45% and 20% of the cases, respectively. The respective incidences of left and right
ventricular dilatation
were 40% and 30%. Cardiac amyloidosis was noted in 25% of the cases, whereas myocardial fibrosis was found in 45% of the patients. Valvular abnormalities were limited to one case of aortic stenosis and two cases of mitral ring dilatation. No evidence of infective endocarditis was observed despite the high incidence of infections in this population. Whereas 45% of the patients exhibited some degree of coronary arteriosclerosis, none exhibited evidence of acute myocardial infarction and only one showed pathologic changes consistent with old myocardial infarction. Aortic atherosclerosis was noted in the majority of patients.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular pathology in dialysis patients with spinal cord injury. 622 12
Ventricular performance was assessed in rats three weeks following coronary artery ligation and the subsequent production of a wide range of infarct sizes. The entire spectrum of ventricular dysfunction was observed, from minimal impairment to overt congestive heart failure. Rats with small infarcts ejected normal baseline and volume-stressed forward outputs from a modestly dilated ventricular chamber. Rats with moderate infarcts exhibited normal baseline hemodynamics but had a reduced reserve flow capacity when challenged with a volume load despite considerable
ventricular dilatation
. Rats with large infarcts demonstrated frank congestive heart failure with elevations in both left and right ventricular filling pressures and consequent right
ventricular hypertrophy
; marked reductions in both baseline and volume-stressed forward outputs; and ventricular volumes that were twice those of rats without infarcts. Thus, a progressive impairment in ventricular performance and an increase in chamber volume occurred in relation to infarct size in rats with healed myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Ventricular performance in rats with myocardial infarction and failure. 623 4
This study analyzes and compares systemic and coronary hemodynamics in patients with essential hypertension in relation to hypertrophic heart disease of nonhypertensive origin. Left ventricular function (as assessed from the cardiac index, stroke volume index, ejection fraction, mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening, mean normalized systolic ejection rate, and isovolumic indexes) may be normal in patients with hypertensive hypertrophy, even with a large increase in muscle mass and in the presence of concomitant coronary artery disease. Left ventricular function is impaired when regional contraction abnormalities or
ventricular dilatation
, or both, occur and is inversely related to both cardiac size and systolic wall stress. Coronary blood flow (+ 18%), coronary resistance (+ 38%), and myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2) (+ 21%) are increased in essential hypertension. Coronary reserve is reduced even in hypertensive hypertrophy without evidence of coronary artery disease. MVO2 per mass unit was directly correlated with systolic wall stress per cross-sectional area of the left ventricular wall. Coronary reserve may remain normal in both moderate and excessive hypertrophy, provided systolic wall stress and hence the myocardial oxygen consumption are not increased. It is concluded that the appropriateness of left
ventricular hypertrophy
, as a result of mass-to-volume ratio and stress, is a major determinant of left ventricular performance, of coronary blood flow, and of myocardial oxygen consumption.
...
PMID:The coronary circulation in hypertensive heart disease. 624 Apr 56
An echocardiographic (echo), vectorcardiographic (VCG) and electrocardiographic (ECG) study of the right ventricle was carried out in 27 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and cor pulmonale. The subxiphoid echocardiographic approach was applied in all patients. The right ventricular internal diameter index (RVIDd), anterior right ventricular wall thickness (RVWT) and the ratio (R) intraventricular septum thickness/anterior right ventricular wall thickness were statistically different in the 27 patients compared to the 33 normals. All 27 patients had a RVIDd greater than 1.33 cm while in only 17 (63%, P less than 0.01) of these was right
ventricular hypertrophy
(RVH) detected with VCG or ECg criteria. In 20 patients the RVWT was measured and in 19 of these the RVWT was greater than 0.56 cm. In only one patient was the RVWT less than 0.56 cm. VCG or ECG criteria showed RVH in only 14 (70%) of these patients. The R was measured in 18 patients. All patients had R less than 1.99 and in only 12 (67%, P less than 0.01) of these was RVH diagnosed with VCG or ECG criteria. It seems that the RVIDd, the RVWT and the R are useful indexes for the detection of right
ventricular dilatation
and hypertrophy. Therefore echocardiography is superior to the conventional ECG and VCG in the recognition of right
ventricular hypertrophy
and dilatation.
...
PMID:Right ventricular echocardiographic, vectorcardiographic and electrocardiographic study in cor pulmonale. 645 92
The purpose of this study was to determine whether two-dimensional echocardiography (2DE) can differentiate ischemic myocardial disease (IMD) from dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). The subjects consisted of six cases of IMD which showed left
ventricular dilatation
(LVDd greater than or equal to 60 mm) and diffuse abnormality of wall motion, but did not show obvious localized myocardial infarction or left ventricular aneurysm on 2DE, and 16 cases of DCM. Two cases of IMD had previous myocardial infarction, and five cases of DCM had cardiomegaly following myocarditis. A short-axis image of the left ventricle was recorded at the chordal and the papillary muscle levels. Each image was divided into 4 segments, which were comprised of the septum, anterior wall, lateral (posterolateral) wall, and posterior (posteromedial) wall. Regional wall motion abnormality with reference to systolic thickening was analyzed qualitatively in each segment. The results were as follows: In ECG findings in IMD group, only one case showed abnormal Q waves and five cases showed left
ventricular hypertrophy
(LVH) similar to intraventricular conduction defect. On the other hand, in DCM group seven cases showed abnormal Q waves and five cases showed LVH. Two cases of IMD had two-vessel disease and four three-vessel disease, respectively. Left ventricular ejection fraction by cine-angiography ranged from 0.10 to 0.39 (mean 0.24) in IMD group and from 0.22 to 0.42 (mean 0.36) in DCM group. Mean LVDd showed no significant difference between these two groups. Five cases of DCM showed marked left
ventricular dilatation
(LVDd greater than or equal to 75 mm), but there were no such cases in IMD group. B-B' step was recognized in only one case of IMD, though it was present in eight cases in DCM. In regional wall motion, incidence of asynergy such as akinesis or dyskinesis was higher in IMD group than in DCM group. Left ventricular asynergy was more serious in the posteromedial wall than the posterolateral wall at the same image in five cases of IMD. However, in 12 cases of DCM, the degree of asynergy was equal at the both walls. In conclusion, it is recommended to examine echocardiographically the extent of severe asynergy in the posteromedial and posterolateral walls in order to differentiate IMD from DCM.
...
PMID:[Echocardiography of ischemic heart disease simulating dilated cardiomyopathy, with special reference to abnormal wall movement on the short-axis]. 664 20
To investigate the genesis of the third ( IIIs ) and fourth heart sounds (IVs), apical phonocardiograms were recorded simultaneously with pulsed Doppler signals of the mitral flow and interventricular septal (IVS) and left ventricular posterior wall (PW) echoes by M-mode echocardiography in 26 cases with the IIIs and 11 cases with the IVs. The following results were obtained: Cases with the IIIs were classified into the following three groups according to the time relationship between the IIIs and a rapid filling wave (D wave) of the mitral flow velocity pattern. IIIs -peak group: The IIIs occurred coincidently with the peak of the D wave in five healthy adolescents and in 12 cases with absolute left ventricular volume overload including mitral regurgitation (MR: eight cases), postoperative atrial septal defect (ASD: three cases) and ventricular septal defect (one case). IIIs -delay group: The IIIs occurred about 38 msec after the peak of the D wave in eight cases with relative left ventricular volume overload including congestive cardiomyopathy (CCM: three cases) and ischemic heart disease (IHD: five cases). IIIs -early phase group: The IIIs occurred about 35 msec before the peak of the D wave in a case with acute MR due to chordal rupture. In the IIIs -peak group, the IIIs coincided in time with the points of inflection (check points) of both the IVS and PW during rapid filling phase in three cases with MR of mild to moderate degree and one case of postoperative ASD. In the IIIs -delay group, the IIIs occurred simultaneously with either the check point of the IVS or PW in two cases with CCM and one case with IHD, and it occurred before the check points of both the IVS and PW in two cases with severe MR of IIIs -peak group and in a case with acute MR due to chordal rupture of IIIs -early phase group. Cases with the IVs were classified into following 2 groups according to the time relationship between the IVs and the atrial contraction wave (A wave) of the mitral flow velocity pattern. IVs-peak group: The IVs occurred coincidentally with the peak of the A wave in six cases with left
ventricular hypertrophy
including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (five cases) and hypertension (one case). IVs-delay group: The IVs occurred about 33 msec after the peak of the A wave in five cases with left
ventricular dilatation
or dysfunction including old myocardial infarction (two cases), CCM (one case), postoperative ASD (one case) and aortic regurgitation (one case). There were two types of IVs in time relationship between the IVs and the check points of the left ventricular wall during atrial contraction phase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Studies on the mechanisms of the third and fourth heart sounds: with special reference to the phase analysis of mitral flow velocity pattern]. 667 90
"Cardiomyopathies" are a disparate group of myocardial disorders, usually of unknown or obscure origin, characterized by systolic or diastolic myocardial dysfunction but involving conditions of widely divergent pathophysiology. For purposes of devising appropriate clinical management, a useful classification scheme can be created with reference to the type of pathophysiologic abnormality exhibited. On this basis, three major types can be identified: (1) congestive (poor systolic function, normal diastolic function, left
ventricular dilatation
without the expected degree of compensatory hypertrophy), (2) hypertrophic (supernormal systolic function, subnormal diastolic function, and pronounced left
ventricular hypertrophy
, usually asymmetric, without dilatation), and (3) restrictive (normal or near-normal systolic function and subnormal diastolic function, usually mild symmetrical left ventricular, without dilatation). Noninvasive identification of these pathophysiologic features can be useful in optimizing management programs.
...
PMID:The cardiomyopathies. A pathophysiologic approach to therapeutic management. 668 65
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