Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We encountered two children with chronic idiopathic myocarditis accompanied by marked right ventricular dilatation, who died of progressive right heart failure. A definitive diagnosis was made by histological examination of the myocardium at autopsy. The patients were both boys, aged 7 years and 1 year and 4 months, and a number of identical features were evident upon physical and laboratory examinations. No heart murmur was heard, and gallop rhythm was noted in distant heart sounds. Electrocardiogram revealed intraventricular block, low voltage QRS complex, and ST-T abnormality. Two-dimensional Doppler echocardiogram and right ventriculogram showed marked dilatation and decreased contractility of the right ventricle as well as tricuspid regurgitation. Thinning of the wall and marked dilatation of the right ventricle were confirmed at autopsy. Our observations showed that chronic myocarditis associated with tricuspid regurgitation may readily lead to marked right ventricular dilatation even exceeding the degree of left ventricular dilatation. Idiopathic myocarditis associated with such unusual features is relatively rare, and may present problems in differentiation from other congenital heart diseases causing dilatation and dysfunction of the right ventricle.
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PMID:Idiopathic myocarditis characterized by marked right ventricular dilatation. Report of two autopsy cases. 358 7

The significance of a combined echocardiographic study of patients who survived myocardial infarction for evaluation of ventricular hemodynamic disturbances was shown. According to the ultrasonic B-scanning data the left ventricular end-diastolic and endsystolic volumes in such patients were increased, and ejection fraction values, delta S and VCF were markedly decreased. The most pronounced left ventricular pump and contractility dysfunctions occurred in transmural and anterior myocardial infarctions. During M-mode echocardiography in patients with posterior wall hypokinesia, the prolongation of isovolumic relaxation and contraction followed by the shortening of rapid filling was observed. A significance correlation between the prolongation of isovolumic relaxation and polygraphic T interval was found. The thinning of the left ventricular hypokinetic posterior wall was observed during the ejection period, and that of hypokinetic ventricular septum was seen within the cardiac cycle. The signs of more marked left ventricular dilatation with its decreased contractility were found in patients with systolic murmur recorded soon after myocardial infarction development. Such a murmur phonocardiographically recorded was a sign of mitral valve insufficiency.
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PMID:[Left ventricular function in patients who have had a myocardial infarct, based on echocardiographic study data]. 650 23

When fed furazolidone, 700 ppm, with their mash, most turkey poults develop dilated cardiomyopathy characterized by gross left ventricular dilatation with thinning of both the left ventricular free wall and ventricular septum. Birds fed propranolol, but not digoxin, did not develop this cardiomyopathy. It is not known what pharmacologic property of propranolol conferred protection or if mammals would receive similar protection.
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PMID:Protection of turkeys against furazolidone-induced cardiomyopathy. 668 89

Six hundred and twenty-five patients with diabetes mellitus were studied by standardised clinical methods, resting and exercise electrocardiography (ECG) and digitised echocardiography to determine the prevalence of coronary and non-coronary heart disease. Clinical evidence of coronary artery disease (angina and infarction) was present in 110 (18 per cent) normotensive patients. Hypertension (blood pressure greater than 165/95 mmHg) was present in 172 (27 per cent) of whom 32 had cardiac symptoms. Heart failure or left ventricular dilatation was seen in 18 of whom 11 had either hypertension or coronary artery disease and six asymptomatic patients had unexplained ventricular hypertrophy. Echocardiograms in 245 of 290 asymptomatic patients with normal ECG showed that relaxation was prolonged (p less than 0.001) and mitral valve opening delayed (p less than 0.001) from normal especially in those with severe microangiopathy (proliferative retinopathy and/or heavy proteinuria). The peak rates of cavity dimension increase and posterior wall thinning were reduced from normal (both p less than 0.001) and patients with severe microangiopathy had the most marked changes. Redivision of these 245 diabetics by abnormalities of left ventricular function showed that 147 had normal function in whom only one of 23 (random 15 per cent sample) had a positive exercise ECG. Prolonged relaxation or delayed mitral valve opening alone (a nonspecific abnormality) was present in 41 and only three of 28 had a positive exercise ECG. Thirty-one had delayed mitral valve opening with inco-ordinate relaxation (abnormalities very suggestive of coronary artery disease) of whom 20 of 29 had a positive exercise ECG. Twenty-six had delayed mitral valve opening with slow cavity dimension increase or wall thinning (without hypertrophy) of whom 21 of 25 had a negative exercise ECG. This is a relatively specific abnormality similar to that found in left ventricular hypertrophy. Coronary artery disease is common in symptomatic and asymptomatic forms in diabetes mellitus. Non-coronary left ventricular diseases, such as dilation and hypertrophy, are probably no more common in diabetics than non-diabetics. A small number of diabetics with severe microangiopathy had abnormal relaxation and reduced peak rate of dimension increase or wall thinning which may represent left ventricular disease due to microangiopathy.
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PMID:A prospective study of heart disease in diabetes mellitus. 670 23

Cardiac contusion is a potentially fatal complication of blunt chest trauma. The diagnosis is obscured because cardiac contusion usually occurs in a setting of multisystem trauma. Furthermore, the electrocardiographic changes are nonspecific. Experience with 2-dimensional echocardiography in evaluating cardiac trauma has not previously been emphasized. This report examines the results of 2-dimensional echocardiographic examinations in 7 patients after significant blunt chest trauma. Generalized right ventricular dilatation was identified in 4 cases; superimposed segmental areas of right ventricular dilatation occurred in 3. Three patients had localized myocardial thinning, and segmental wall motion abnormalities occurred in 2. Additional abnormalities identified included ventricular thrombi (4 right and 1 left ventricular), fibrinous pericardial effusion (1), ruptured tricuspid chordae with flail leaflet (1), and a small aneurysm of the sinus of Valsalva (1). It is concluded that 2-dimensional echocardiography is useful for diagnosing cardiac contusion, for estimating the extent of myocardial damage, and for identifying accompanying cardiac lesions such as thrombi, pericardial effusion, and valvular disruption.
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PMID:Two-dimensional echocardiographic findings in cardiac trauma. 713 27

To determine the effects of chronic constriction of the left coronary artery on the function and structure of the heart, coronary artery narrowing was surgically induced in rats and ventricular pump performance, extent and distribution of myocardial damage, and the hypertrophic and hyperplastic response of myocytes were examined. Alterations in cardiac hemodynamics were found in all rats, but the characteristics of the physiological properties of the heart allowed a separation of the animals into two groups which exhibited left ventricular dysfunction and failure, respectively. Left ventricular hypertrophy occurred in both groups and was characterized by ventricular dilatation and wall thinning which were more severe in the failing animals. Multiple foci of myocardial damage across the wall were seen in all animals but tissue injury was more prominent in the endomyocardium and in failing rats. The anatomical and hemodynamic changes resulted in a significant increase in diastolic wall stress which paralleled the depression in ventricular performance. Myocyte cell loss and myocyte cellular hypertrophy were more severe with ventricular failure than with dysfunction. Finally, diastolic overload appeared to be coupled with activation of the DNA synthetic machinery of myocytes and nuclear mitotic division. In conclusion, a fixed lesion of the left coronary artery leads to abnormalities in cardiac dynamics with marked increases in diastolic wall stress and extensive ventricular remodeling in spite of compensatory myocyte cellular hypertrophy and hyperplasia in the remaining viable tissue.
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PMID:Ventricular remodeling in global ischemia. 757 15

The interactions of the systemic and myocardial adaptations during and after rapid ventricular pacing, a model of heart failure, were assessed in conscious, unstressed dogs. Ultrasonic probes and vascular catheters were surgically implanted into dogs for measurements of blood flows and pressures during 3 weeks of pacing and after 2 months of recovery. Three weeks of tachycardia (260 beats/min) resulted in a marked reduction in hemodynamic parameters and left ventricular dilatation, with caudal wall thinning throughout the pacing period and 1 week of recovery. Sinus rhythm resumed after the pacer was turned off, with return toward normal in hemodynamic parameters; however, left ventricular dilatation and ventricular remodeling, with significant fibrosis, loss of myocytes, and hypertrophy of the surviving cells were still present after 2 months of recovery. In conclusion, even though hemodynamic parameters normalized during recovery, adaptive myocardial remodeling caused permanent ventricular fibrosis, hypertrophy, and increased cardiac filling pressures.
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PMID:Myocardial effects of repetitive episodes of rapid ventricular pacing in conscious dogs: surgical creation, echocardiographic evaluation, and morphometric analysis. 784 53

To analyze the clinical features of cardiac sarcoidosis, we reviewed case reports and clinical investigations from Japan and other countries. Female patients were more frequently affected in this disease in Japan. Cardiac sarcoidosis is characterized by a high incidence of complete atrioventricular block, right bundle branch block, and ventricular arrhythmias on the electrocardiogram. Echocardiography often reveals left ventricular dilatation with systolic dysfunction and wall thickening or thinning. Radionuclide testings, such as, thallium-201, gallium-67 or technetium-99m pyrophosphate, are useful for detecting cardiac involvement and evaluating efficacy of corticosteroid therapy in patients with sarcoidosis. Most of the patients died due to recurrent or refractory heart failure. It is noteworthy that cases of sudden death during stable cardiac function have become infrequent.
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PMID:[Cardiac sarcoidosis]. 804 45

Left ventricular apical aneurysms are present in Chagasic patients who have normal cardiac parasympathetic innervation. Cardiac parasympathetic abnormalities are found, in later stages of the disease, when diffuse myocardial damage and ventricular dilatation are already present. The apical region of the left ventricle is also affected in several acute and chronic non-Chagasic cardiac diseases. Therefore, thinning of the left ventricular apex, with aneurysm formation, may be a non-specific myocardial sequelae, secondary to myocardial damage.
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PMID:Apical left ventricular aneurysms and cardiac parasympathetic innervation in Chagas' heart disease. 819 62

Collagen which is present in the myocardium in relatively small amounts is the most abundant structural protein of the connective tissue network. Its structural organization consists of a complex weave of collagen fibers that surrounds and interconnects myocytes, groups of myocytes, muscle fibers and muscle bundles. The conformation of interstitial fibrillar collagen makes it highly resistant to degradation by all proteinases other than specific collagenases. In hearts with myocardial damage secondary to myocardial infarction, chronic ischemia, inflammation, or cardiomyopathy, a complex sequence of compensatory events occur that eventually result in an adverse left ventricular remodeling. This continual state of remodeling is characterized by persistent collagenase activity, fibrillar collagen degradation, and progressive myocyte loss. The net effect is a shift in the balance between collagen synthesis and degradation which leads to an inadequate fibrillar collagen matrix, progressive ventricular dilatation and sphericalization with wall thinning and eventual congestive heart failure.
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PMID:Ventricular remodeling in heart failure: the role of myocardial collagen. 854 Apr 1


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