Cardiology in review
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Cardiology in review · Nov 2005
ReviewPathophysiology and medical management of systemic hypertension in pregnancy.
Hypertension in pregnancy includes a group of distinct disorders that require special consideration in both prevention and pharmacologic treatment. In recent years, there have been few advances regarding the pathophysiology and prevention of preeclampsia or in the recommendations for first-line drug therapy for its hypertensive complications. Similarly, the recommendations for pharmacologic treatment of women with chronic hypertension antedating pregnancy have changed little primarily because first-line medications have the advantage of having had more extensive research experience. Recent clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy and safety of various second-line drugs for the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy; whether these therapies can eventually replace the standard recommended medications will require more extensive long-term investigation.
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Cardiology in review · Nov 2005
Case ReportsUse of long-term combined therapy with inhaled iloprost and oral sildenafil in an adult patient with eisenmenger syndrome.
Eisenmenger syndrome is characterized by elevated pulmonary vascular resistance and right-to-left shunting of blood through a systemic to pulmonary circulation connection. Treatment requires either lung transplantation with intracardiac repair or heart-lung transplantation. There are inadequate data regarding treatment alternatives when the patient is not a candidate for surgery. In this article, we report on the case of a 68-year-old woman with Eisenmenger syndrome related to congenital heart disease who was treated with inhaled iloprost and oral sildenafil for 2 years.
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Cardiology in review · Sep 2005
Diabetes and stress hyperglycemia associated with myocardial infarctions at an urban municipal hospital: prevalence and effect on mortality.
Municipal hospitals in large cities provide care for patients from immigrant and mixed ethnic communities that are at high risk for diabetes. Both diabetes and stress hyperglycemia increase the risk of adverse outcome after myocardial infarctions, and the impact of stress hyperglycemia on the outcome of myocardial infarctions in this particular setting has not been previously studied. We therefore undertook a retrospective cohort study to determine the prevalence of diabetes and stress hyperglycemia in patients presenting to a university-affiliated Bronx municipal hospital with myocardial infarction, and the relationship of these conditions to the extent of coronary disease and mortality. ⋯ These results show that the prevalence of both diabetes and stress hyperglycemia on presentation with myocardial infarction is strikingly high in this immigrant, mixed ethnic, urban population. Patients with diabetes and stress hyperglycemia had advanced disease on presentation and much higher mortality at 2 to 3 years than those with normal blood glucose. The mortality difference is the result of older age and more advanced disease rather than hyperglycemia per se.
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Cardiology in review · Jul 2005
Review Case ReportsLeft ventricular cardiac tamponade in the setting of cor pulmonale and circumferential pericardial effusion. Case report and review of the literature.
Circumferential pericardial effusion typically results in biventricular tamponade and equalization of intracardiac and pericardial pressure during diastole. However, tamponade may involve the right or left ventricle. ⋯ This case illustrates that when evaluating patients with circumferential pericardial effusions and associated pulmonary hypertension, the typical findings of cardiac tamponade (pulsus paradoxus, right ventricular diastolic compression and hypotension) may be masked. The echocardiogram must be reviewed carefully as it may reveal left ventricular diastolic compression, the hallmark of LVCT, which may significantly compromise left ventricular filling and cardiac output.