Polski tygodnik lekarski (Warsaw, Poland : 1960)
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The aim of the study was to investigate whether oxygen causes a further decrease in pulmonary artery pressure after administration of calcium channel blocker-verapamil-or angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor-captopril-in the secondary pulmonary hypertension. We studied 37 patients with the secondary pulmonary hypertension (mean pulmonary artery systolic pressure = 56.1 mm Hg) due to mitral stenosis. After having completed hemodynamic diagnostic procedures, basal oxygen test was performed and pulmonary artery pressure was recorded at 10 min of oxygen breathing. ⋯ Verapamil and captopril also lowered pulmonary artery systolic and diastolic pressures. The second oxygen test did not cause a further decrease in the pulmonary artery pressure; mean pulmonary artery systolic pressure was 52.3 +/- 23.7 mm Hg, pulmonary artery diastolic pressure 22.7 +/- 10.6 mm Hg before and 49.1 +/- 23.8 mm Hg and 23.0 +/- 13.5 mm Hg, respectively after the test in verapamil group, and 47.0 +/- 15.5 mm Hg and 21.7 +/- 8.4 mm Hg before and 46.6 +/- 15.4 mm Hg, respectively in captopril subset. The results may support the thesis that vasodilating effect depends rather on the degree of pulmonary vascular changes than on the vasodilatory mechanism of particular drugs.
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Case Reports
[Chronic hepatitis B exacerbation following a short prednisone therapy resulting in death].
A case of a 36-year male patient with chronic active hepatitis B is described. A short-term prednisone therapy resulted in the exacerbation of the disease leading to hepatic failure and patient's death. A short-term corticotherapy in some patients with chronic active hepatitis B may prove fatal.
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Causes, symptoms, clinical forms, and methods of diagnosis of pericarditis were analysed in a group of 30 patients. Chest pain, dyspnea, and tachycardia were prevailing clinical symptoms of the disease. ⋯ The most frequent cause of cardiac tamponade was malignant pericarditis. Diagnostic problems with particular reference to tuberculous etiology of pericarditis have also been discussed.
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To estimate frequency of the posterior mitral valve leaflet prolapse in routinely performed left ventriculography, 1000 consecutive ventriculograms of the right anterior oblique projection were analyzed. A group of patients consisted of 511 women and 489 men at mean age 46,5 years. Clinical diagnosis of heart lesions, myocardial disease, pulmonary hypertension or arrhythmias were indications for hemodynamic studies. ⋯ Prolapse of the posterior mitral valve leaflet was most frequent in atrial septal defect (16.6%), myocardial lesion (12.5%), and after mitral commissurotomy (8.9%). Posterior mitral valve leaflet prolapse is not a frequent anomaly in routinely performed left ventriculography. Relatively often occurrence of the mitral valve prolapse in atrial septal defect and only occasional in the aortic lesions and dilated cardiomyopathy seems to point out at a role of the left ventricle size in pathogenesis of this syndrome.
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Four cases of fawism are presented. The disease was seen in one male patient, one homozygote and in 3 carriers of G6PD deficit. Diagnostic procedures, course of the haemolytic crisis in these patients, and possibility of prophylaxis in the families with fawism are discussed.