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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to study factors influencing posterior wall thickness during diastole, echocardiograms showing the septum, mitral valve and posterior wall endocardium and epicardium in 15 normal subjects and 49 patients with heart disease were digitized. Maximum wall thickness, minimum cavity dimension and the onset of mitral valve opening are normally synchronous, and an early period of rapid wall thinning, at a peak rate of 10.7 +/- 1.7 cm/sec corresponds closely to rapid filling. In patients with ischaemic heart disease the peak rate and duration of rapid thinning were normal, but thinning preceded mitral valve opening (mean 50 msec). In 11 of 17 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy the peak rate of thinning was reduced and in 2 it was increased. There was a close correlation between the peak thinning rate in this group and the peak rate of increase in dimension. In mitral stenosis peak thinning rate was frequently reduced but in some patients was normal, with the reduced rate of increase in cavity dimension maintained by reversal of septal movement. We conclude that rapid thinning is an intrinsic property of the ventricular wall which is normally associated with rapid filling, but which may be dissociated from filling by asynchronous relaxation or inflow obstruction, or may be modified by myocardial disease.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1978 Mar
PMID:Diastolic changes in left ventricular wall thickness studied by echocardiography. 41 5

Analysis of a further series of 125 consecutive unselected adults who were admitted to hospital with hypertension has advanced the study of arterial abnormalities and parenchymal hypoplasia, as demonstrated by selective renal arteriography, further in the direction of the parenchyma. An index of arterioparenchymal thinning is described. The authors list the features and incidence of polar arteries arising from the aorta (46%), polar arteries of non-aortic origin (31%), stenosing dysplasia (26%) and other arterial malformations, as well as biapical hypoplasia (67%), monofocal hypoplasia (37%), and the main types of renal dysgenesis (30%) which they found. The incidence of these abnormalities confirms the previous study of polar arteries arising from the aorta, and gives much more extensive information on the topic of parenchymal hypoplasia in so-called essential hypertension in the adult.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1975 Nov
PMID:[Kidney parenchymatous hypoplasia and arterial dysplasia in adult arterial hypertension. Data of selective renal arteriography]. 81 82

The effect on the bones of immobilization was studied by means of quantitative histological methods on 34 biopsies of the iliac crest after different periods of immobilization in 28 patients, 22 of whom were immobilized by medullary lesions. At the same time a biochemical study was carried out on 68 immobilized patients over a 52-week period. This histomorphometric study included measurements of the absolute volume of trabecular bone, the volume of the osteoid matrix, the osteoclastic resorption surfaces, the size of the osteocyte lacunae, the thickness of the iliac cortical zones and the medullary adipose volume. 19 subjects received in addition double labeling with tetracycline with the object of carrying out a histodynamic study of the osteoblastic activity. The decrease in the absolute volume of the trabecular bone reached 33 percent of its original value and continued up to the 25th week, and was followed by stabilization at a value slightly higher than the vertebral fracture limit. Immobilization also led to an increase in the osteoclastic resorption surfaces and, secondarily, to an increase in the periosteocyte lacunae, a thinning of the iliac cortical zones, and a decrease in the volume of the osteoid matrix. Calciura increased as did total hydroxyprolinuria in parallel with an increase in the resorption surfaces. The histological and biochemical changes suggest a histodynamic hypothesis, according to which the longevity of the basic multicellular bone unit increases, leading to a new equilibrium characterized by very slow renewal of the bone.
Rev Rhum Mal Osteoartic
PMID:[Histomorphometric and biological data on osteoporosis due to immobilization]. 117 30

Raynaud's phenomenon, uncommon in childhood, often heralds connective tissue disorder. Since microvascular abnormalities can be detected at an early stage of the connective tissue disease, especially in scleroderma, a specific diagnosis can be made in patients presenting with Raynaud's phenomenon alone or Raynaud's phenomenon associated with symptoms suggestive of connective tissue disease. Raynaud's phenomenon was studied in 11 consecutive children, 10 girls and 1 boy, ages 6 to 15. One child had a definite diagnosis of cutaneous polyarteritis nodosa. In 6 others connective tissue disease was suspected: 4 had arthritis, 2 has telangiectasia, leg ulcers and antinuclear antibodies. Of the remaining 4, one had hemiplegia and 3 Raynaud's phenomenon only. Oscillometry of the radial artery was reduced in 7 of 9. Decreased capillary resistance was found in 2 of 6, while abrupt thinning in conjunctival vessels was seen in 3 of 7. On nailfold capillaroscopy, reduced vascularity was noted in 5 of 11, dilated capillaries in 4 of 11, tortuousity in 2 of 11, capillary thinning in 1 of 11, capillary spasm in 1 of 11 and normal pattern in 3 of 11. Two patients presenting with Raynaud's phenomenon were found to have "scleroderma-like pattern" on nailfold capillaroscopy. One of them died 2 years later of cardiopulmonary sclerosis, and another developed esophageal stricture and Barrett's esophagus. Neither has sclerodermatous skin. In childhood Raynaud's phenomenon, nailfold capillaroscopy is a non-invasive examination enabling early diagnosis of "systemic scleroderma sine scleroderma".
J Mal Vasc 1992
PMID:Raynaud's features in childhood. Clinical, immunological and capillaroscopic study. 149 54

Saphenous venous endoscopy, invasive and non-physiological, enables the in vivo and in situ observation of the valve system. A saphenous vein has a preferential flattening axis parallel to the outside of the skin with two walls, internal and external, and two borders. A valve is inserted on one vein wall, with the valve horns being on the borders. The free borders of a bivalve are parallel with the surface of the skin. The valve system has an antireflux function. There are three main causes of reflux in the saphenous veins: 1. Transitory functional incompetence affecting valves of normal appearance. This incompetence results from valve inertia, flattening of the valve against the sinus wall and loss of co-adaptation. Do active factors producing closure of the valve cup exist against such transitory incompetence? 2. Incongruity between the vein wall and valves. The intercorneal or commissural space allows reflux on the border of the vein. This is the commonest cause of reflux in varicose disease of the vein wall. 3. Actual valve lesions. A distinction is drawn between lesions due to thinning, elongation, stretching, splitting or tearing and those due to thickening, retraction or adhesion. Endoscopy has enabled us to discover cases of varicose disease with predominantly valvular lesions in young individuales in whom early lesions of the valve cup cannot be explained by venous wall disease and has led us to complete the classification of varicose disorders.
J Mal Vasc 1992
PMID:[Endoscopic study of reflux of the saphenous valve]. 160 45

Four cases of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy diagnosed on clinical, phonomechanographic, echocardiographic and haemodynamic criteria progressing to dilated cardiomyopathy are reported. This evolution was observed over a number of years (up to 20 years) and was accompanied by a clinical aggravation in all cases with 2 deaths and atrial fibrillation in 3 of the 4 cases. The signs of intraventricular obstruction [systolic murmur, bulge on the carotid pulse tracing, systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve (SAM) and intraventricular pressure gradient] disappeared as the left heart chambers dilated with a reduction in ventricular wall motion and parietal thinning but no change in myocardial mass.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1990 Apr
PMID:[Progression from hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy to dilated cardiomyopathy. Apropos of 4 cases]. 211 75

The extent of bone loss was measured and compared at three characteristic skeletal sites: the humerus, iliac crest and vertebrum. The most important effect of ageing is the fall in bone volume: reduction of bone trabeculae, thinning of compact bone and increase in intracortical porosity. Between 40 and 80 years of age, women lose 42 percent of their vertebral spongy tissue, 29 percent of their iliac spongy tissue and 31 percent of humerus cortical bone. The mean degree of mineralization of bone tissue remains constant between 40 and 80 years of age. Cortical bone is mineralized to a greater extent than spongy bone: 1.20 g/cm3 versus 1.0 g/cm3. Bone loss from different skeletal sites varies; within a given bone-organ it varies from one point to another. The mineral content of the iliac crest differs from that of the vertebrum, but the change is parallel at these two sites.
Rev Rhum Mal Osteoartic 1990 Nov
PMID:[Changes in bone volume and mineral density during aging in humans. In vitro study on 80 subjects]. 229 Oct 70

Pectus excavatum is a common malformation in diseases of elastic tissue (Marfan, Ehlers-Danlos...). When observed apparently alone it may represent a minor form of dystrophy, implying the same risk of a cardiac lesion. Abnormalities of the thoracic skeleton and echocardiographic mitral valve prolapse is a well established association, suggesting a common disorder of connective tissue. However, there is no absolute proof that this is a statistically significant association. Histological connective tissue changes relating these two markers have yet to be found. Clinical and echocardiographic examinations and skin biopsies were performed in 17 patients with pectus excavatum. Mitral valve prolapse was detected in 65% of cases (associated in 1 out of 3 cases with tricuspid valve prolapse). In 53% of cases electron microscopy showed abnormal skin collagen and elastin. Collagen abnormalities were twice as common as those of elastin and could be associated. Mixed changes of thinning of elastin and collagen fibres of irregular calibre were particularly suggestive. Pectus excavatum would therefore seem to be the expression of a minor form of dystrophy of collagen and elastin tissues and a clinical marker of possible mitral valve prolapse.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1986 Apr
PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse and pectus excavatum. Expressions of connective tissue dystrophy?]. 309 Sep 60

Imagery by magnetic resonance (IMR) represents a new modality of medical imagery based on the interaction between the magnetic fields produced by radio-frequency waves and living substance. IMR finds an interesting application in the study of different stages of myocardial infarction. In 30 cases of myocardial infarction IMR was compared with thallium tomoscintigraphy and echocardiography. In the acute stage, myomalacia appears in IMR as a superbrilliant zone, and in the chronic stage parietal thinning and dyskinesias are apparent. Intraventricular thromboses, but also hemostasis in aneurysmatic or akinetic sites are visualised as a high-intensity signal within these areas. IMR represents therefore a new means of evaluation of size and evolution of the necrosis. This procedure provides also functional informations about the contraction and flow anomalies.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1986 Sep
PMID:[Importance of magnetic resonance imaging in myocardial infarct]. 309 74

A series of 45 adults with severe valvular aortic stenosis underwent echocardiographic examination before surgery. The echocardiographic indices of the severity of the stenosis were reviewed: In M mode: aortic valve opening was only clearly defined and quantifiable in 22 out of 45 cases. In these 22 cases, the separation of the valves was variable in 9 cases; the stenosis was underestimated in 2 cases both of which were unsuspected bicuspid valves; the stenosis were overestimated in 1 case leading to an erroneous diagnosis. In 2D: aortic valve opening was easier to detect than in M mode; it was quantifiable in 16 out of 21 patients (80 p. 100). The subcostal view was particularly valuable in patients with chronic pulmonary disease or with barrel-shaped chests. The 2D examination however, suffers from the same limitations as M mode: variability in the values of aortic valve opening in a third of cases and a general tendency to overestimate the severity of the stenosis. In two cases an erroneous diagnosis of severe stenosis was made in cases of simple aortic sclerosis either because of the inability to visualise a mobile 3rd left anterior cusp in the long axis view or because of artefact due to paravalvular calcification. The most reliable index of severity was the thickness of the left ventricular posterior wall: this measurement was never less than 13 mm, with a mean value of 15,8 +/- 1,8 mm in the 43 patients in whom it was measured. The measurement was also of prognostic significance; paradoxical thinning of the posterior wall and septum was a poor prognostic sign which was associated with cardiac failure and passive dilatation of the left ventricle sometimes shortly preceding sudden death. In the absence of cardiac failure, a posterior wall thickness of less than 13 mm excludes surgical aortic stenosis.
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss 1983 Jan
PMID:[Echocardiography in the diagnosis of severe aortic valve stenosis in adults]. 640 7


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