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Digitalis Toxicity: A Fading but Crucial Complication to Recognize
Digitalis Toxicity: A Fading but Crucial Complication to Recognize

... Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles; bDivision of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, Calif. ...
Absent Pulmonary Valve Associated with Tetralogy of Fallot and
Absent Pulmonary Valve Associated with Tetralogy of Fallot and

... valve syndrome have been reported. The lesion is rare in isolation and is more often associated with various heart defects, usually tetralogy of Fallot. A combination of absent pulmonary valve, tetralogy of Fallot and complete atrioventricular septal defect is extremely rare. To our knowledge, there ...
Digitalis Toxicity: A Fading but Crucial Complication to Recognize REVIEW
Digitalis Toxicity: A Fading but Crucial Complication to Recognize REVIEW

... Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles; bDivision of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, Calif. ...
Article Peripheral Edema, Central Venous Pressure, and Risk of AKI
Article Peripheral Edema, Central Venous Pressure, and Risk of AKI

... Design, setting, participants, & measurements Using an inception cohort of 12,778 critically ill adult patients admitted to an urban tertiary medical center between 2001 and 2008, we examined whether the presence of peripheral edema on admission physical examination was associated with an increased ...
Neural Control Hierarchy Of The Heart Has Not Evolved To Deal
Neural Control Hierarchy Of The Heart Has Not Evolved To Deal

... of heart function, specifically the view that this control resides largely in central com- ...
CLINICAL PROGRESS Living Man
CLINICAL PROGRESS Living Man

... were found satisfactory for human coronary visualization and they are now commercially produced by the United States Catheter and Instrument Corporation, according to our specification. The coronary venous catheter no. 1 is a modified Dotter-Lukas instrument having a much smaller balloon than the pa ...
Chapter_014 heart lecture
Chapter_014 heart lecture

... that draws blood into the ventricles as the atria contract, thereby moving blood from the atria to the ventricles. (Starling’s Law) Atria contract as ventricles almost filled. Causes complete emptying of atria (fourth heart sound). Copyright © 2015 by Mosby, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. ...
Noninvasive and invasive evaluation of pulmonary arterial pressure in highlanders
Noninvasive and invasive evaluation of pulmonary arterial pressure in highlanders

... In 44 subjects with one or more ECG-RVH patterns, the right ventricular anterior wall thickness was .0.5 cm on echocardiographic study in 22 subjects, giving an ECG sensitivity for diagnosing RVH of 50%. In 16 subjects with a normal ECG, the right ventricular wall thickness was normal (0.4¡0.05 cm), ...
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators and cardiac resynchronisation
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators and cardiac resynchronisation

...  treating people with previous serious ventricular arrhythmia, that is, for people who, without a treatable cause:  have survived a cardiac arrest caused by either ventricular tachycardia (VT) or ventricular fibrillation or  have spontaneous sustained VT causing syncope or significant haemodynami ...
Dilated heart failure in transgenic mice expressing the Epstein
Dilated heart failure in transgenic mice expressing the Epstein

... E B N A - L P detected in liver, kidney, lung and spleen. Each of these other tissues gave the same characteristic pattern of additional E B N A - L P bands as seen in the heart (top panel). The heart blot shown was overexposed in order to show the weaker E B N A - L P bands; in the 532B and -C subl ...
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia masquerading as right
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia masquerading as right

... episodes with palpitations and dizziness. An LBBB morphology with inferior axis suggested RVOT (Figure 1). On admission, the patient had no sign of cardiac failure. No previous similar medical history was found in her family. On physical examination, her blood pressure was 130/70 mmHg. Neither moist ...
rv_systolic_dysfunction
rv_systolic_dysfunction

... There was no significant change between the cases and control regardingage, sex, weight and body surface area which mean that the two groups were well matched, even the heart rate didn’t show significant change between patients and control despite >90% of patient were NYHAII&NYHAIIIand 55% of them h ...
Sudden Cardiac Death Thirty Years Ago and at Present. The Role of
Sudden Cardiac Death Thirty Years Ago and at Present. The Role of

... as standards to evaluate results of their experiments. The first group comprised dogs with preserved sympathetic innervation of the heart (Group S). The other group was made up by dogs with bilateral extirpation of the upper thoracic sympathetic ganglia 2 months before the actual experiment (Group D ...
The Aging Heart - UMass Medical School
The Aging Heart - UMass Medical School

... Advancing Geriatrics Education (AGE): A UMMS initiative funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation ...
Acute coronary syndromes
Acute coronary syndromes

... increased the risk of myocardial infarction, stroke and congestive heart failure with a strong additive adverse effect of diabetes while hypertension alone was not a marker of the risk of death. The 10% increase in the risk of myocardial infarction during follow-up by hypertension was quadrupled by ...
Inhalants: Not a Fad – a Deadly Fact
Inhalants: Not a Fad – a Deadly Fact

... Inhalants starve the body of oxygen and force the heart to beat irregularly and more rapidly. The heart may begin to quiver rather than function as an efficient pump. Blood is not pumped effectively through the body, resulting in sudden death. Inhalants damage other parts of your body. People who us ...
Effects of Increasing Left Ventricular Filling Pressure in Patients with
Effects of Increasing Left Ventricular Filling Pressure in Patients with

... myocardial infarction. Cohn, Khatri, and Hamosh (5) and Loeb, Gunnar, Pietras, and Tobin (6) monitored left ventricular pressure patients with shock following infarction. Rapaport and Scheinman (7) have estimated left ventricular filling pressure at the bedside from changes in pulmonary artery diast ...
Is Impedance Cardiography-Derived Systolic Time
Is Impedance Cardiography-Derived Systolic Time

... A total of 52 patients were evaluated. Baseline characteristics are shown in Table 1. MUGA EF was obtained on 23/52 (44.2%) and echo EF on 29/52 (55.8%). Mean EF was 37.6 ± 20.2%, range 10 to 80%. A total of 39/52 (75%) had EF < 50%. The mean time between EF and STR measurements was 3.54 ± 4.67 days ...
The effects of daily exercise on susceptibility to sudden
The effects of daily exercise on susceptibility to sudden

... 50 mm Hg. RR interval (and heart rate) were plotted against the preceding systolic arterial pressure and the slope was determined by least-squares fit linear regression (an index of baroreceptor reflex sensitivity). The heart rate change for a 30 mm Hg increase in arterial blood pressure was determi ...
Reservoir and conduit function of right atrium: impact on - AJP
Reservoir and conduit function of right atrium: impact on - AJP

... The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between right atrial (RA) reservoir and conduit function and to determine how hemodynamic changes influence this relationship and its impact on cardiac output. In 11 open-chest sheep, RA reservoir and conduit function were quantified as R ...
Sustained ventricular tachycardia in structural heart disease
Sustained ventricular tachycardia in structural heart disease

... Ventricular arrhythmias are responsible for the majority of sudden cardiac deaths (SCD), particularly in patients with structural heart disease. Coronary artery disease, essentially previous myocardial infarction, is the most common heart disease upon which sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) occ ...
Absent posterior interventricular artery
Absent posterior interventricular artery

... The anterior thoracic wall was opened and the heart and lungs were removed together. The heart was dissected to reveal the 4 cardiac valves and the coronary vasculature. The right and left coronary arteries emerged from the right and left coronary sinus respectively and not ectopically. The right co ...
Vitamin D signaling pathway plays an important role in the
Vitamin D signaling pathway plays an important role in the

... 7.9 million and 5.7 million US adults, respectively (39). Occurrence of left ventricular abnormalities related to remodeling (predominantly progressive chamber dilation, fibrosis, and systolic/diastolic dysfunction) and heart failure often complicates MI (1). Recent data suggest that the prevalent m ...
The Cardiovascular System
The Cardiovascular System

... of the knee. The arteries divide into smaller vessels called arterioles, which then divide into very narrow vessels called capillaries. The capillaries are the transfer station of the delivery system. The thin-walled capillaries allow the essential nutritents to leave the capillary via osmosis, the ...
Lethal Arrhythmias
Lethal Arrhythmias

... quickly interpret the rhythm, and to prioritize your nursing interventions. The different treatments for each of these rhythms will be discussed as well as the different defibrillators that are currently being used. The course begins with a brief overview of the heart, the conduction system and rhyt ...
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Heart failure



Heart failure (HF), often referred to as congestive heart failure (CHF), occurs when the heart is unable to pump sufficiently to maintain blood flow to meet the body's needs. The terms chronic heart failure (CHF) or congestive cardiac failure (CCF) are often used interchangeably with congestive heart failure. Signs and symptoms commonly include shortness of breath, excessive tiredness, and leg swelling. The shortness of breath is usually worse with exercise, while lying down, and may wake the person at night. A limited ability to exercise is also a common feature.Common causes of heart failure include coronary artery disease including a previous myocardial infarction (heart attack), high blood pressure, atrial fibrillation, valvular heart disease, excess alcohol use, infection, and cardiomyopathy of an unknown cause. These cause heart failure by changing either the structure or the functioning of the heart. There are two main types of heart failure: heart failure due to left ventricular dysfunction and heart failure with normal ejection fraction depending on if the ability of the left ventricle to contract is affected, or the heart's ability to relax. The severity of disease is usually graded by the degree of problems with exercise. Heart failure is not the same as myocardial infarction (in which part of the heart muscle dies) or cardiac arrest (in which blood flow stops altogether). Other diseases that may have symptoms similar to heart failure include obesity, kidney failure, liver problems, anemia and thyroid disease.The condition is diagnosed based on the history of the symptoms and a physical examination with confirmation by echocardiography. Blood tests, electrocardiography, and chest radiography may be useful to determine the underlying cause. Treatment depends on the severity and cause of the disease. In people with chronic stable mild heart failure, treatment commonly consists of lifestyle modifications such as stopping smoking, physical exercise, and dietary changes, as well as medications. In those with heart failure due to left ventricular dysfunction, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers along with beta blockers are recommended. For those with severe disease, aldosterone antagonists, or hydralazine plus a nitrate may be used. Diuretics are useful for preventing fluid retention. Sometimes, depending on the cause, an implanted device such as a pacemaker or an implantable cardiac defibrillator may be recommended. In some moderate or severe cases cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) may be suggested or cardiac contractility modulation may be of benefit. A ventricular assist device or occasionally a heart transplant may be recommended in those with severe disease despite all other measures.Heart failure is a common, costly, and potentially fatal condition. In developed countries, around 2% of adults have heart failure and in those over the age of 65, this increases to 6–10%. In the year after diagnosis the risk of death is about 35% after which it decreases to below 10% each year. This is similar to the risks with a number of types of cancer. In the United Kingdom the disease is the reason for 5% of emergency hospital admissions. Heart failure has been known since ancient times with the Ebers papyrus commenting on it around 1550 BCE.
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